When someone you love is in pain, you want to fix it. You want to say something that will take the hurt away, or do something that will make them feel safe again. But when that pain runs deep enough to touch thoughts of suicide, most of us freeze. We second-guess ourselves. We worry that saying the wrong thing will make it worse, or that bringing it up directly will somehow plant an idea that wasn’t already there.
Here’s what’s worth knowing first: you don’t have to be perfect at this. You don’t need a script or a therapy degree. What matters most isn’t finding the right words — it’s showing up. It’s letting someone know that they matter to you, that you see them, and that you’re not going anywhere. That kind of presence, quiet and consistent, can genuinely save a life.
This guide is for anyone who wants to help but isn’t sure where to start. It won’t give you magic words. What it will give you is a clearer picture of what actually helps — and what to do if things become urgent.
Start With Listening — Really Listening
There’s a difference between hearing someone and actually listening to them. We’ve all been in conversations where we’re nodding along while mentally composing our response. When someone is struggling, that kind of half-presence isn’t enough — and people in pain can usually feel the difference.
Real listening means putting your phone down. It means making eye contact. It means letting there be silence when there needs to be silence, instead of rushing to fill it. It means resisting the urge to problem-solve before the person has even finished telling you how they feel.
When someone opens up about thoughts of suicide or severe emotional distress, the instinct to immediately offer solutions is natural — and usually counterproductive. What they often need first isn’t answers. They need to feel heard. They need someone to sit with them in the weight of what they’re carrying, even for just a few minutes, without trying to lift it away prematurely.
Simple phrases can go a long way: “I’m glad you told me.” “I’m here.” “Tell me more about what’s been going on.” These aren’t magic words, but they open doors rather than closing them.
Take Their Feelings Seriously — Even If You Don’t Fully Understand Them
One of the most painful experiences for someone in crisis is having their feelings minimized. It doesn’t always come from a bad place — sometimes people say things like “you have so much to live for” or “it could be so much worse” because they genuinely want to help. But statements like these, even when well-meaning, can communicate that the person’s pain isn’t real, isn’t valid, or isn’t worth taking seriously.
Taking someone’s feelings seriously doesn’t mean agreeing that the situation is hopeless. It means acknowledging that what they’re going through is genuinely hard. It means not rushing past their pain to get to reassurance. “That sounds incredibly difficult” or “I can hear how much you’re hurting” does more than any silver lining you might point to.
It can also help to ask directly if you’re worried. Research consistently shows that asking someone if they’re thinking about suicide does not plant the idea — it often brings relief. A direct question says: I see you. I’m not afraid of what you’re going through. You can tell me the truth.
Encourage Professional Help — and Offer to Help Make It Happen
Being someone’s support system is one of the most important things you can do. It’s also not something you have to do alone, and it was never meant to be. Friends and family provide warmth, connection, and continuity — but mental health professionals are trained specifically to help people navigate serious psychological crises. Both matter. Neither replaces the other.
Gently encouraging your loved one to speak with a therapist, counselor, or doctor is one of the most practical things you can do. For many people, the barrier isn’t wanting help — it’s the overwhelming logistics of finding it. The thought of searching for a provider, making a call, explaining everything from scratch, and navigating insurance can feel like too much when you’re already barely getting by.
That’s where you can help. Offer to sit with them while they make the call. Help them research options in your area. Offer to drive them to an appointment. These small acts of practical support can be the difference between someone getting help and someone putting it off indefinitely.
Crisis lines are also an important resource — not just for emergencies, but for moments of acute distress when a human voice is what’s needed most. In the United States, you can reach the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988. These lines are staffed by trained counselors, available around the clock.
Stay Connected — Even When It Feels Awkward
One of the loneliest feelings in the world is being in pain and believing that no one notices — or worse, that people noticed and pulled away. Isolation has a way of deepening despair, turning what might be a manageable darkness into something that feels total and permanent.
Staying connected doesn’t require grand gestures. A text that says “I was thinking about you today” takes thirty seconds and might mean everything to someone who’s been wondering if anyone cares. A standing invitation — “I’m going for a walk Saturday morning, come with me if you want” — removes the pressure to ask for company while still leaving the door open.
It’s normal to feel like you don’t know what to say after a heavy conversation. You don’t have to address the hard stuff every time you reach out. Sometimes just being a normal, warm presence in someone’s life — someone who talks about ordinary things, who asks how their day went, who shares a funny video — is exactly what’s needed.
Try not to disappear after the initial crisis passes, either. People often need support most in the weeks and months after a difficult period, when the urgency has faded for everyone else but the underlying pain hasn’t.
Take Care of Yourself Too
Supporting someone through a mental health crisis is emotionally demanding work. It’s okay to feel scared, exhausted, helpless, or overwhelmed. These feelings don’t make you a bad friend or family member — they make you human.
Make sure you’re leaning on your own support systems during this time. Talk to someone you trust. Consider speaking with a therapist yourself if the weight feels like too much. You cannot pour from an empty cup, and burning yourself out doesn’t help either of you.
It’s also worth remembering that you are not responsible for another person’s choices. You can love someone fiercely, show up for them consistently, and do everything right — and still not be able to control what happens. That’s a painful truth, but it’s an important one. Your role is to be present and to help connect them to support. The rest is not yours to carry alone.
Know When to Seek Immediate Help
Sometimes a situation becomes urgent, and knowing when to act quickly can make a critical difference. If someone tells you they have a plan to end their life, or if they are in immediate danger, don’t try to manage it on your own.
Call emergency services or take them to an emergency room. You can also call or text 988 (in the US) for guidance on how to respond in a crisis. If you’re unsure whether the situation is serious enough to warrant emergency help, err on the side of caution. It is always better to seek help and not need it than to need it and not seek it.
Signs that a situation may require immediate attention include: talking about wanting to die or having no reason to live, saying goodbye to people as if they won’t see them again, giving away prized possessions, sudden calmness after a period of deep distress, or access to a method of self-harm.
Protecting someone’s safety is always the priority. Everything else — privacy, avoiding awkwardness, not wanting to overreact — comes second.
You Matter in This Too
The fact that you’re reading this means you care. That matters more than you might realize. Many people who have survived a suicidal crisis look back and point to one person — sometimes just one — who stayed. Who showed up. Who didn’t flinch.
You don’t have to be a mental health professional to be that person. You just have to be willing to be present, to take what you hear seriously, and to keep showing up even when it’s hard.
That’s not a small thing. In the middle of someone’s darkest moment, it can be everything.