I think it's partially the fact that suicide is of course a choice (as we understand choice) at the end of the day, and that years of fiercely accrued mental struggle aren't visible. It just feels to me as though if you were losing another incredibly exhausting health battle, you'd be able to be surrounded by medical professionals and perhaps wellwishers and loved ones, showered in support, rest and education about what might come next, rather than people who can't realistically make an assessment of the proceedings of your internal conflict telling you to keep fighting it at all costs. They are often right that good times are around the corner, but they don't understand the raw exertion that it can take to get there. That's not to say that I haven't had lots of incredibly helpful support, but it all comes with the caveat - you must get better. Depression - and other MH issues - are the only possibly life-threatening illnesses that you are banned from succumbing to.
The same people who would be kind and understanding if you had a fatal disease of the body will abandon those who have a fatal disease of psyche, of the mind.
I think the fact that suicidal people have no one to simply listen to them and help people understand why they're suicidal is a huge contributor to the suicide rate.
Maybe the topic is just too disturbing and traumatic for those who cannot fathom taking their own lives but this leaves a suicidal person who on top of suffering constant pain and anguish profoundly, terrifyingly and agonizingly isolated.
Canada, Portugal and European countries have added mental illness under their criteria for assisted suicide.
I wish people could just learn to try and listen to the suicidal person. Honestly listen to them.
Maybe if they listened to them they could help the suicidal person find some solutions.
By the same token, mental illness is not always curable and if the general population could learn to understand that and learn to handle that more friends and loved ones might be able to learn to accept death by suicide, or, more accurately, death by mental illness the same way they are able to accept deaths caused by terminal physical illness.
The pharmaceutical, psychiatric drug market must be too lucrative to ever hope that this could ever happen. As long as these companies and mental health industry continue to profit the mantra of suicide prevention will go on and on.