You have seen people who committed suicide in some News Paper you have read, News on TV or even in some Comics you read. But why do people really want to Suicide?
1. Depression and Other Mental Illness
People who are depressed, bipolar, or have post-traumatic stress, are more vulnerable to suicidal thoughts or action. While there are many factors that can influence a person's decision to commit suicide, the most common one is severe depression.
Depression can make people feel great emotional pain and loss of hope, making them unable to see another way to relieve the pain other than ending their own life.
Depression is the common cause of suicidal!
2. Hopelessness
Hopelessness, either in the short-term or as a longer-lasting trait, has been found in many studies to contribute to the decision to commit suicide. The person may be facing a social or physical challenge and may see no way the situation can improve.
Often people engage in suicidal thinking or suicidal behaviors because they feel like they can no longer withstand the psychological emotional pain that they’re currently in.
There are so many cause of why people committed suicide so I only wrote 5 cause!
3. Feeling like a Burden
This leads to a sense of inappropriate guilt and can give a person the idea of not going on living.
A person with chronic pain or a terminal illness can also feel like a burden to others, as it becomes harder and harder to ask for yet another ride to the doctor's office or more help with household duties or assistance paying for hospital bills.
In fact, many people who decide to commit suicide often state that their loved ones or the world, in general, would be better off without them.
4. Isolation
Additional risk factors for suicide include previous suicide attempts, a family member who has died of suicide, alcohol or substance abuse, or a history of abuse or trauma.Not having mental health resources available is another risk factor, as is ready access to drugs, alcohol, and weapons.
I hope this will help you in the near future!
5. Traumatic Stress
A person who has had a traumatic experience, including childhood sexual abuse, rape, physical abuse, or war trauma, is at a greater risk for suicide, even many years after the trauma.
Nice article unfortunately not exclusive.