
mushroomdug
New Member
- Sep 28, 2022
- 4
People who suffer from suicidal ideation or who have attempted suicide, what was the timeline like of your mental health decline? were there any significant points that plotted a clear downward trajectory?
Especially curious in regards to your thoughts and thinking process. I know many people can point to significant life events (job loss, break up, etc.) as markers for when their mental health began to decline but i'm really more interested in learning how your actual thinking evolved. Did you have any sort of epiphany that nudged you closer to attempting? Were there any fears that you consciously or subconsciously overcame to make peace with the possibility that you might actually take your own life? Did you research or take on any new philosophies that may have influenced you to now consider suicide a viable option?
For some context, I'm really scared that i've crossed into a new phase of ideation recently. I have been passively suicidal for a few years now but in that time I was never too worried that i would ever act on those thoughts. Any serious contemplation would usually lead me to thinking about all the reasons why I should not kill myself (the pain my death would cause my loved ones, the hope that things will get better eventually, etc.) For years those few things did a great job at stopping me in my tracks when it came to ever truly considering suicide.
Fast forward to about two months ago. I seemingly woke up one morning without a single care in regards to that list of reasons why I should stay alive. Of course i'm still able to consider those reasons to live but now it feels like they have virtually no influence when I catch myself weighing out pros and cons.
Ive been trying really hard to "reinstate" the gravity those reasons to stay alive for carried but I fear that there isn't a way to revert my thinking. It feels like the curtain has been pulled back and Ill never be able to rely on those old coping strategies again in a sincere way.
Can anyone relate to this type of "mental threshold" crossing? Did your old coping strategies evolve to a new degree? How much time passed between your earliest passive suicidal thoughts and you actually attempting suicide? What would be some seriously concerning warning signs that I should keep an eye out for with my own thoughts and behavior? Was there a "straw that broke the camels back" moment that turned your mental rumination into real physical urges or impulses?
Especially curious in regards to your thoughts and thinking process. I know many people can point to significant life events (job loss, break up, etc.) as markers for when their mental health began to decline but i'm really more interested in learning how your actual thinking evolved. Did you have any sort of epiphany that nudged you closer to attempting? Were there any fears that you consciously or subconsciously overcame to make peace with the possibility that you might actually take your own life? Did you research or take on any new philosophies that may have influenced you to now consider suicide a viable option?
For some context, I'm really scared that i've crossed into a new phase of ideation recently. I have been passively suicidal for a few years now but in that time I was never too worried that i would ever act on those thoughts. Any serious contemplation would usually lead me to thinking about all the reasons why I should not kill myself (the pain my death would cause my loved ones, the hope that things will get better eventually, etc.) For years those few things did a great job at stopping me in my tracks when it came to ever truly considering suicide.
Fast forward to about two months ago. I seemingly woke up one morning without a single care in regards to that list of reasons why I should stay alive. Of course i'm still able to consider those reasons to live but now it feels like they have virtually no influence when I catch myself weighing out pros and cons.
Ive been trying really hard to "reinstate" the gravity those reasons to stay alive for carried but I fear that there isn't a way to revert my thinking. It feels like the curtain has been pulled back and Ill never be able to rely on those old coping strategies again in a sincere way.
Can anyone relate to this type of "mental threshold" crossing? Did your old coping strategies evolve to a new degree? How much time passed between your earliest passive suicidal thoughts and you actually attempting suicide? What would be some seriously concerning warning signs that I should keep an eye out for with my own thoughts and behavior? Was there a "straw that broke the camels back" moment that turned your mental rumination into real physical urges or impulses?