Warm milk
Desperate
★★
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2026
- Posts
- 100
The topic of suicide is one of the disgustingly romanticized pieces shown in media in the world, overtime this has made it so suicide is viewed as a global "exit" button, a way out when you have nowhere to go. However this is very far from the truth, filmmakers themselves often depict suicide very wrongly for 2 main reasons, 1 because they're seeking to capture the emotion behind the action, and 2 because they have no general idea of bodily anatomy and responses.
A very common shared statement and experience from people who have survived things like jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge in an attempt to end their life is instant regret, nearly 100% of survivors state that the moment they jumped they "immediately felt like every single problem in their life was fixable." This is a shared, universal experience by all suicide survivors. This is something you will feel no matter what the second you jump because the depressive brain fog immediately disappears without a trace and is replaced by your hyper-aware conscious, which doesn't want to die
THE TRUTH ABOUT SUICIDE & SUICIDE METHODS
96% of all suicide attempts fail. - according to nearly all major studies done on it.
The hollywood-ized idea of suicide is that it's a quick, emotional, clean, and a guaranteed escape. It's been romanticized so much to the point of where some of the majority believes suicide is an "honorable act." The reality could not be further from the truth. You are not meant to die, you are not meant to go through any traumatic physical event that could result in death either, all successful suicides (and unsuccessful suicides) go through a gruesome, painful, struggling, sweaty feat of effort and extreme pain that is so horrific that the biggest risk of suicide (and this is not ironic) isn't even the risk of ending your life, it's the significantly larger (25x higher chance) that you will end up with a permanent, agonizing disability. The 25x number isn't a hyperbole, for every 1 person that succeeds in a suicide, there are 25 people that end up with an extremely painful, lifelong disability.
This thread is inspired from a thread I saw in online. And i FUCKING DIDN'T USE ANY AI TOOLS only for the data and some analytics. I just want to say you can still live a satisfactory life.
A very common shared statement and experience from people who have survived things like jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge in an attempt to end their life is instant regret, nearly 100% of survivors state that the moment they jumped they "immediately felt like every single problem in their life was fixable." This is a shared, universal experience by all suicide survivors. This is something you will feel no matter what the second you jump because the depressive brain fog immediately disappears without a trace and is replaced by your hyper-aware conscious, which doesn't want to die
THE TRUTH ABOUT SUICIDE & SUICIDE METHODS
96% of all suicide attempts fail. - according to nearly all major studies done on it.
The hollywood-ized idea of suicide is that it's a quick, emotional, clean, and a guaranteed escape. It's been romanticized so much to the point of where some of the majority believes suicide is an "honorable act." The reality could not be further from the truth. You are not meant to die, you are not meant to go through any traumatic physical event that could result in death either, all successful suicides (and unsuccessful suicides) go through a gruesome, painful, struggling, sweaty feat of effort and extreme pain that is so horrific that the biggest risk of suicide (and this is not ironic) isn't even the risk of ending your life, it's the significantly larger (25x higher chance) that you will end up with a permanent, agonizing disability. The 25x number isn't a hyperbole, for every 1 person that succeeds in a suicide, there are 25 people that end up with an extremely painful, lifelong disability.
This thread is inspired from a thread I saw in online. And i FUCKING DIDN'T USE ANY AI TOOLS only for the data and some analytics. I just want to say you can still live a satisfactory life.





