
batman1997
Broken but still standing
- Joined
- Mar 18, 2025
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Suicide is a permanent solution—but to what is often a temporary or treatable problem.
That's the tragedy of it: in a moment of extreme pain or hopelessness, a person may make a final, irreversible choice—one that ends all chances for healing, change, connection, or better days.
What feels unbearable today—like heartbreak, failure, shame, or deep depression—can shift with time, support, therapy, or new life circumstances. But suicide cuts off the possibility of that future.
To someone in deep pain, suicide may seem like the only way out. But with help, many people who once felt that way come to see things differently and are glad they survived.
So yes—it is a permanent act, but rarely the best answer to the struggles it’s trying to solve. It's important to hold on or reach out, even when it feels impossible. There's often more hope than it seems.
If you're wrestling with this personally, you're not alone—and I'm here to talk about anything, honestly an
d safely.
That's the tragedy of it: in a moment of extreme pain or hopelessness, a person may make a final, irreversible choice—one that ends all chances for healing, change, connection, or better days.
What feels unbearable today—like heartbreak, failure, shame, or deep depression—can shift with time, support, therapy, or new life circumstances. But suicide cuts off the possibility of that future.
To someone in deep pain, suicide may seem like the only way out. But with help, many people who once felt that way come to see things differently and are glad they survived.
So yes—it is a permanent act, but rarely the best answer to the struggles it’s trying to solve. It's important to hold on or reach out, even when it feels impossible. There's often more hope than it seems.
If you're wrestling with this personally, you're not alone—and I'm here to talk about anything, honestly an
d safely.