Loki, on 02 July 2017 - 04:05 AM, said:
Tsundoku, on 02 July 2017 - 02:01 AM, said:
They need to talk to someone qualified, like a counsellor or doctor. They probably shouldn't be left alone, either.
But I'm not saying anything that Lifeline or a good website (beyondblue et al) doesn't already say.
You're married to someone who might be handy in this situation.
My friend lives in Indiana. The only possible support people I can contact are her family her in Queensland (who are notoriously horrid people) or her boyfriend but his Nan died two days ago on his birthday (his grandmother died suddenly last month too and it's his first time dealing with a family death) so not sure whether to tell him his girlfriend is thinking suicidal thoughts. Plus I don't really know him at all beyond sharing the occasional meme.
Twitter was helpful. I put out a call for local services in the Gibson County area and received several helpline and prevention services numbers which I've forwarded to my friend. She's promised to call them but idk. I wanted to be able to pass her number onto a service and have them call her but I couldn't find a way of requesting contact from outside of the States. It's night there now I'm pretty sure and she's promised to text me in the morning. I hate this. I really really hate this.
Wow, that sucks, Kel. If you do need to like call said helplines yourself, I believe Skype lets you call international freephone numbers (like our 1800 ones) no matter where you are in the world (and for free, too). That might be a way to get them to contact your friend directly?
Not knowing the boyfriend I don't *know* what to do there, but I'd say he's the best bet for in-person support right now and I can safely say that I'd rather be aware that my girlfriend is suicidal ahead of time - because the alternative would ultimately be worse to go through, even if he's already upset over his Nan. But yeah, I appreciate that without knowing him yourself it can be hard to make that call, especially if he may not be in a state to offer the *proper* support. Plus, he might know someone else who can help (a close friend, for example) even if he can't.