Let’s be honest, talking about suicide isn’t easy. The word itself can feel heavy in the air, like it doesn’t belong in casual conversation. Maybe you’ve avoided bringing it up before, or maybe you’ve been on the other side, wishing desperately that someone would just notice you weren’t okay.
Today, on World Suicide Prevention Day, I want you to sit with one simple truth, conversations save lives. Not perfect conversations. Not rehearsed, polished speeches. Just the kind that start with, “How are you, really?”
If you’ve ever been through a dark time, you’ll know that silence can feel suffocating. When no one asks, when no one sees you, it’s easy to believe the lie that you don’t matter. But the smallest act of reaching out can puncture that silence.
I remember someone once asking me, “What’s been the hardest part of your week?” Not “How’s it going?” which we all answer with “fine” but a real question. That moment cracked something open for me. It reminded me that even when life feels unbearably heavy, there are people who care enough to carry part of it with you.
Too often, we treat mental health struggles as something to hide. “Don’t bring it up.” “Be strong.” “Shake it off.” Sound familiar? These messages don’t protect us, they isolate us. But when we talk honestly, openly, even clumsily, we create room for healing. You don’t need to have the right words. Sometimes, the greatest gift you can give is to sit with someone in their pain without rushing to fix it.
Professional help, therapy, medication, helplines, absolutely saves lives. But everyday people save lives too. A text that says, “I’m thinking of you.” A coffee shared in silence. A hug that lingers just long enough. These are the threads that hold us together. And if you’re the one struggling right now, please know this, your story isn’t finished yet. There are people who want to listen, people who want to help you carry this weight. Reaching out isn’t weakness, it’s survival.
Amongst the little things that we can all do ischeck in. If someone crosses your mind, don’t ignore it. Send the message, make the call. Listen without judgment. You don’t have to solve their problems. Just being there matters.
And Speak openly. Share your own struggles if you feel safe doing so, it helps others feel less alone.
Hope doesn’t always arrive like a sunrise. Sometimes, it shows up in the shape of a conversation, a hand held, or the courage to say, “I’m not okay.”
This World Suicide Prevention Day, let’s choose to talk. To listen. To stand with each other in the dark until the light breaks through. Because none of us should have to fight this battle in silence.
