• Hey Guest,

    We wanted to share a quick update with the community.

    Our public expense ledger is now live, allowing anyone to see how donations are used to support the ongoing operation of the site.

    👉 View the ledger here

    Over the past year, increased regulatory pressure in multiple regions like UK OFCOM and Australia's eSafety has led to higher operational costs, including infrastructure, security, and the need to work with more specialized service providers to keep the site online and stable.

    If you value the community and would like to help support its continued operation, donations are greatly appreciated. If you wish to donate via Bank Transfer or other options, please open a ticket.

    Donate via cryptocurrency:

    Bitcoin (BTC):
    Ethereum (ETH):
    Monero (XMR):
Abort!

Abort!

Orange is objectively the best color.
Jan 3, 2026
79
TLDR: how do you, personally, overcome the survival instinct?

I believe the trajectory of ones life is mostly predetermined by their starting conditions, their geneology, and their influences in growing up. I can confidently say that I have been quite miserable for the vast majority of my time here and that improvement, while not impossible, is rather improbable.

(Self loathing inbound!)
My biology is a regrettable, weak, and shameful display of manhood. My mind is unfixably broken from the trauma and the abandonment I endured. I feel rather incompetent and inferior in the intelligence department as well. IEPs, special classes, the whole 9 yards. I'm "lucky" to have had the bare minimum requirements to sustain human life.

But beyond that? Community? Friendship? Belonging? I fit in here like a rectangle fits into a circular hole. It just ain't gonna fit, no matter how much you grease it up.

I really want to die soon. I hung in there, white knuckling it for 25 long years, just hoping for a scrap of some genuine love waiting for me around the corner like this pathetic disgusting kicked puppy. It wasn't ever coming. On top of that, completely losing faith in the delusional idea of "God" making it all "right" in the end really pulled the rug out from under me.

Humans are social creatures and I cannot help my nature. To be alone is not natural to me. Solitary confinement and alienation is not natural. It's cruel and inhumane. We don't treat prisoners like that for a reason.

The verdict is clear, whether by circumstance or some ridiculous notion of "inherent worth" superceding all is irrelevant: I am defective. Unchosen. Unloved. Unseen. Used, unwanted goods. Bored out of my fucking mind and all out of cope. I can confidently say it's over at this point in time. Reality corpus has spoken. That's game.

In the meantime, I'm just waiting to build up the balls to squeeze the trigger. The human survival instinct is quite an extraordinary thing... or maybe I'm just a coward. There's some lingering guilt there for my mother as well unfortunately. Which leads me to my next point: do you guys have any tips and tricks to come to terms with it? I know that whatever awaits me on the other side cannot possibly be subjectively worse than this hell... right?

I personally believe reincarnation is most probable, followed up closely by permanent nonexistence. But whatever happens, I don't believe our identities will follow us there. I think this game was most likely always zero-sum to begin with. I'd love your inputs. Thanks.

(Sorry for the rambling.)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Love
  • Hugs
Reactions: howtounborn, BGman89, un.exist and 12 others
Lov3

Lov3

Amor(Autistic)
Dec 24, 2025
382
"But, paradoxically, the attachment to life is usually stronger than all the miseries of the world. And, even if one judges that life is not worth living, few people ultimately act on this premise."- Camus

As long as there is hope, resentment, or attachment, death will always be seen as something completely negative.The attachment to life seems much stronger because we think we can solve the problems we have. But the truth, from what I've observed, is that we always die with many problems unresolved. Some traumas we never fully resolve. We think we can have control over things, but it's a mere illusion. Many things escape our sight.
I don't expect an afterlife to exist. No religion has ever proven itself 100% true. I look at the facts; most religions were just a form of social control. So, what I expect in death is nothingness—and I'm okay with that. If life is marked by wear and tear, where merely being alive and still causes you to deteriorate and thus you always have to seek energy, work, and tire yourself out, then death is the perfect rest from this life whose finish line is always death.
For me, falling out of love with life is what has made my SI decrease a lot. But that brings a lot of calm, which paradoxically, for now, keeps me from killing myself.
 
  • Like
  • Hugs
Reactions: Nightingale93, Hollowman, BrighterMoon and 8 others
Spite

Spite

I don't like this world.
Aug 20, 2025
387
I feel like I could have written this, only I'm 27.

I'm also struggling with survival instinct holding me back, as well as fear of the unknown. I'm not sure I can suggest much other than to just remember that death is inevitable - it's going to happen to you whether you like it or not. Committing suicide will just "quicken" the process.

One thing I try to remind myself is that being dead is probably like being asleep for eternity, and the best part if that's true? You won't even know it. It will be as if you never existed. You may worry about hurting your mother/others, but understand that you are literally dead, you won't even be alive to see their reactions let alone feel or experience anything at all. And at that point, nothing truly matters.

Another thing - and I usually repeat this to myself like a mantra, is that life is inherently unfair. Why should I settle for this mediocre, unfulfilling life? Why play a game that's rigged from the start? The only way to beat the game is to quit.
 
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: howtounborn, Hollowman, Chronical_Suicidal and 7 others
ILiveAlone

ILiveAlone

NEET
Dec 31, 2025
14
I feel like I could have written this, only I'm 27.

I'm also struggling with survival instinct holding me back, as well as fear of the unknown. I'm not sure I can suggest much other than to just remember that death is inevitable - it's going to happen to you whether you like it or not. Committing suicide will just "quicken" the process.

One thing I try to remind myself is that being dead is probably like being asleep for eternity, and the best part if that's true? You won't even know it. It will be as if you never existed. You may worry about hurting your mother/others, but understand that you are literally dead, you won't even be alive to see their reactions let alone feel or experience anything at all. And at that point, nothing truly matters.

Another thing - and I usually repeat this to myself like a mantra, is that life is inherently unfair. Why should I settle for this mediocre, unfulfilling life? Why play a game that's rigged from the start? The only way to beat the game is to quit.
This.

I feel like if I ever were to kill myself, it'd have to be out of impulsivity, so I don't have time to think and end up changing my mind.
Ultimately, like you said, when it's over, it's over. There is no bargaining with God for more time. Eventually, you'll have to accept your fate. At least through suicide, you can choose your end.
 
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: BrighterMoon, fishperson, Abort! and 1 other person
Captive_Mind515

Captive_Mind515

King or street sweeper, dance with grim reaper!
Jul 18, 2023
695
I don't think most people do overcome SI... most people are scared but somehow still find a way.

These two quotes sort of sum it up for me:

"Feel the fear and do it anyway"

"Courage isn't the absence of fear, courage is moving forward even when afraid"

It's a very difficult thing, choosing to move towards something we fear. It's almost the ability to deny/reject our biological impulses. Which if you think about it, is something very few people have experience or practice with in everyday life. It is in fact completely the opposite - we obey our biological needs/impulses... often slavishly and seemingly without much power to resist them.
 
  • Like
Reactions: AreWeWinning, Unlucky777, Abort! and 2 others
Spite

Spite

I don't like this world.
Aug 20, 2025
387
I don't think most people do overcome SI... most people are scared but somehow still find a way.

These two quotes sort of sum it up for me:

"Feel the fear and do it anyway"

"Courage isn't the absence of fear, courage is moving forward even when afraid"

It's a very difficult thing, choosing to move towards something we fear. It's almost the ability to deny/reject our biological impulses. Which if you think about it, is something very few people have experience or practice with in everyday life. It is in fact completely the opposite - we obey our biological needs/impulses... often slavishly and seemingly without much power to resist them.
This is why I've always thought that those who actually do CTB are incredibly brave. It takes an unfathomable amount of courage to reject your survival instincts and embrace the unknown (that is, the cessation of one's life).

It's also why it always greatly frustrates me whenever I hear people try to guilt-trip those who are suicidal by saying things like "suicide is selfish and cowardly".
 
  • Like
Reactions: canoekit, InevitableDeath, Unlucky777 and 4 others
perishsong

perishsong

it/she
Sep 10, 2025
89
I could've written the same thing. I help my mind "cement" my CTB as inevitable, like I say to myself "that's my last holiday" etc.

I had to let my feelings boil and tip over severely before I could make sure my plan isn't impulsive, and I'm determined to follow through.
 
  • Like
Reactions: kouna, Abort! and Spite
pthnrdnojvsc

pthnrdnojvsc

Extreme Pain is much worse than people know
Aug 12, 2019
4,341
imo some of the basic questions :

is life good or bad .

is Death good or bad

what is Death.

would someone want to stay in something that is very bad?

i think Life is the most horrible thing and that Death is the opposite so Death is the most beautiful thing .

i believe Death is Non-Existence forever the ultimate perfection.

for example to most people . if a gang kidnaps you and makes you a slave torturing you every day. do you have a doubt that you want to escape that situation?

no, because you know that is a bad situation.

it's obvoius to anyone that is a very bad situation to be in . And while you might get some pleasure from eating the food they give you or videos they let you watch. you know that the horrible things far outweigh the pleasure of eating food or watching vidoes . so you're not going to stay as a slave being turtured having to work just so you can get pleasure of eating food. or at least you are sure you want to leave that nightmare as soon as you get an opportunity. then when you get a good opportunity you won't hesitate you escape. you're not going to think well i do get food and to watch videos no you say to hell with that i'm out of here.

so imo the first thing is to be certain of what you want and believe.
 
Last edited:
  • Love
  • Like
Reactions: sulvumnolo and Unlucky777
B

Bitch With An Apple

"Student"
Jul 10, 2019
270
For me it's music, drugs and meditation.
And I wax and wane about how accepting of it I am.

I think it needs to be self-possessed. I think about people who are awaiting natural death and can do so openly and the qualities they have. They take ownership of it, they let go of self-judgment, and they can reflect back and see that what they experienced had enough meaning, and that they were enough.

You're describing circumstances that can be either externalized into incompatibility or internalized into shame.

I'm being 300% pseud so if you disagree please do but if you're motivated by shame, I don't think it comes as easily, because it doesn't come from within. You're taking on what you think others want from you, and you're basically murdering yourself on their behalf. There's a distinction between suicide as an act of rejection of the world and suicide as an act of the world rejecting you. In real, physical terms, I think the two are often one and the same. But the mindset is totally different.

I think it comes down to acknowledging your value, and then deciding from there what to do with it. Otherwise it's just an oppressive system pressuring you into it and even if it logically makes sense to you, internally you'll always resist that and it'll feel like it's coming out of nowhere because you're not listening to yourself.
 
  • Like
Reactions: sulvumnolo and Abort!
Abort!

Abort!

Orange is objectively the best color.
Jan 3, 2026
79
For me it's music, drugs and meditation.
And I wax and wane about how accepting of it I am.

I think it needs to be self-possessed. I think about people who are awaiting natural death and can do so openly and the qualities they have. They take ownership of it, they let go of self-judgment, and they can reflect back and see that what they experienced had enough meaning, and that they were enough.

You're describing circumstances that can be either externalized into incompatibility or internalized into shame.

I'm being 300% pseud so if you disagree please do but if you're motivated by shame, I don't think it comes as easily, because it doesn't come from within. You're taking on what you think others want from you, and you're basically murdering yourself on their behalf. There's a distinction between suicide as an act of rejection of the world and suicide as an act of the world rejecting you. In real, physical terms, I think the two are often one and the same. But the mindset is totally different.

I think it comes down to acknowledging your value, and then deciding from there what to do with it. Otherwise it's just an oppressive system pressuring you into it and even if it logically makes sense to you, internally you'll always resist that and it'll feel like it's coming out of nowhere because you're not listening to yourself.
I most definitely agree that my circumstances have pressured me into this mindset, and that I've internalized much of it as a verdict on my worth. I curse the system for its cruelty just as much myself for that. Appeals to 'intrinsic worth' don't register for me because they haven't changed my lived outcomes.

I can't dissociate from the pain of isolation or pretend it doesn't hurt. My mind and body feel like an inescapable prison. If your framework works for you, I'm genuinely glad. It hasn't for me. I feel like I've run out of cope. Regardless, thank you for the thoughtful reply. I guess I'm still open to other suggestions, even if I can't see the point from where I stand.

All the best.
 
  • Hugs
Reactions: Bitch With An Apple
InevitableDeath

InevitableDeath

Already Dead
Jan 4, 2026
292
This is why I've always thought that those who actually do CTB are incredibly brave. It takes an unfathomable amount of courage to reject your survival instincts and embrace the unknown (that is, the cessation of one's life).

It's also why it always greatly frustrates me whenever I hear people try to guilt-trip those who are suicidal by saying things like "suicide is selfish and cowardly".
Indeed. Anyone who says that is the selfish cowardly one. Its like the human version of AI slop
 
  • Like
Reactions: Spite
T

ToANewWorld

Rarity
Apr 16, 2025
94
TLDR: how do you, personally, overcome the survival instinct?
I've never tried to CTB but wouldn't the method you choose have a lot to do with it?

If all I need to do is 'pull the trigger" or swallow pills, then overcoming SI would come down to 10 seconds of bravery.
 
InevitableDeath

InevitableDeath

Already Dead
Jan 4, 2026
292
Once you've attempted a few times and failed, you've come to terms with death. You're already dead really. The void holds no fear whatsoever.

That being said, it doesn't stop SI being a bitch. But that's Selfish-Life for you. Biological imperative. It doesn't give a fuck about your suffering it just wants you to keep going, make more life, you're its mule which it will ride into the ground. Like capitalist society.
 
  • Like
  • Wow
Reactions: No surprises, BrighterMoon, kouna and 1 other person
T

ToANewWorld

Rarity
Apr 16, 2025
94
I feel I did not answer OPs question and got too sidetrack on a minor point. So here I go...

The thought of living another 3-4 decades with the life of a cockaroach is unbearable to me and I might as well be dead.

I died the day I lost hope for the future.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: cursedlife
AreWeWinning

AreWeWinning

·
Nov 1, 2021
585
TLDR: how do you, personally, overcome the survival instinct?

I believe the trajectory of ones life is mostly predetermined by their starting conditions, their geneology, and their influences in growing up. I can confidently say that I have been quite miserable for the vast majority of my time here and that improvement, while not impossible, is rather improbable.

(Self loathing inbound!)
My biology is a regrettable, weak, and shameful display of manhood. My mind is unfixably broken from the trauma and the abandonment I endured. I feel rather incompetent and inferior in the intelligence department as well. IEPs, special classes, the whole 9 yards. I'm "lucky" to have had the bare minimum requirements to sustain human life.

But beyond that? Community? Friendship? Belonging? I fit in here like a rectangle fits into a circular hole. It just ain't gonna fit, no matter how much you grease it up.

I really want to die soon. I hung in there, white knuckling it for 25 long years, just hoping for a scrap of some genuine love waiting for me around the corner like this pathetic disgusting kicked puppy. It wasn't ever coming. On top of that, completely losing faith in the delusional idea of "God" making it all "right" in the end really pulled the rug out from under me.

Humans are social creatures and I cannot help my nature. To be alone is not natural to me. Solitary confinement and alienation is not natural. It's cruel and inhumane. We don't treat prisoners like that for a reason.

The verdict is clear, whether by circumstance or some ridiculous notion of "inherent worth" superceding all is irrelevant: I am defective. Unchosen. Unloved. Unseen. Used, unwanted goods. Bored out of my fucking mind and all out of cope. I can confidently say it's over at this point in time. Reality corpus has spoken. That's game.

In the meantime, I'm just waiting to build up the balls to squeeze the trigger. The human survival instinct is quite an extraordinary thing... or maybe I'm just a coward. There's some lingering guilt there for my mother as well unfortunately. Which leads me to my next point: do you guys have any tips and tricks to come to terms with it? I know that whatever awaits me on the other side cannot possibly be subjectively worse than this hell... right?

I personally believe reincarnation is most probable, followed up closely by permanent nonexistence. But whatever happens, I don't believe our identities will follow us there. I think this game was most likely always zero-sum to begin with. I'd love your inputs. Thanks.

(Sorry for the rambling.)

The way I think about this is pretty much the same as what @Captive_Mind515 said. I believe it's impossible to get into a mindset where it becomes easy. You can't eliminate SI per se. Our only option is to do it anyway, despite the doubts and fear.

And the doubt and fear will always be there, no matter what.

I've thought my life over a million times. I've considered all possibilities, my situation, my options, my feelings, and whether it's worth it to carry on or to end it. In my experience, when it comes to SI, none of this matters, because SI will always be there. No amount of thinking and reasoning will eliminate it. We can't be at peace with it.

When it comes to seriously considering, "Okay, I'm going to do it. I will end my life", I notice that I always fall back to the same thought pattern:

I think about my life and come to the decision that suicide is my only option, it's the 'reasonable' choice, and this is what I want. ⏩ I start planning it. I start taking steps. ⏩ Doubt creeps in, like "What if my life changes because of some miracle?", "What's so bad about carrying on despite feeling miserable?" Fear of death and SI also become problems. A sense of gut-wrenching fear, a feeling of doom starts to set in as I'm realising my life is about to end. ⏩ I snap out of it. I find other things to do. My exit gets delayed. ⏩ Life still feels shit. I think things over again, and come to the same conclusion: I want to end it. ⏩ REPEAT.

There is no way out of this loop, other then just doing it. I've realised that if I'm ever going to do it for real, it'll have to be done despite the fear and the doubts. Easier said than done. I'm still here, after all. And there is still the main question: "How? How to actually do it?"

As for the "how", the only thing I can think of is not thinking. If I'm ever going to be able to do it, it'll be by not thinking. I've realised that as soon as I start to think – about anything at all – I'll always just fall back to the same loop again and end up not doing it. If I'm ever going to do it, I have to be in a state of mind where I just don't think at all. I imagine it as a trance-like state.

Okay, but how? How do you actually do that? The way I look at it, this is sort of a technical question. How do you get into that state of 'not thinking'? I think the way to achieve this can be different from person to person. Some people might be able to do it impulsively. They might set up everything and wait for the right moment. This isn't exactly my approach, though.

The way I'm planning to do it is by practice. Do practice runs: go through the motions the exact same way as on my final attempt, except for the last step. I'll do everything except I won't jump (or pull the trigger). I think this helps a lot with getting into that trance-like state. This is what elite athletes do – or anyone who operates in a high-performance environment (think of airline pilots, military operations, etc.). They practice everything to the finest detail, so when it comes to action, they can just do it mechanically, without even thinking about it. They can do extraordinarily hard things almost from muscle memory.

But again, I'm still here, so what do I know... The thing about overcoming SI is that no one who's alive can tell you. All the people who have figured it out are dead. I've seen and personally talked to people (both in public comments and DMs) on this forum who eventually CTB'd, and non of them had any magic methods or strategies for overcoming SI. It seems they just did it somehow. They took their time planning their attempts carefully, thought through the details, took action and made preparations, and then they just did it. They did the very thing that most people cannot do. How were they able to do it? We'll never know – they are no longer here to tell.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Hugs
Reactions: thanos9, badatparties, BrighterMoon and 4 others
T

T22222222

Student
Feb 3, 2026
141
The way I think about this is pretty much the same as what @Captive_Mind515 said. I believe it's impossible to get into a mindset where it becomes easy. You can't eliminate SI per se. Our only option is to do it anyway, despite the doubts and fear.

And the doubt and fear will always be there, no matter what.

I've thought my life over a million times. I've considered all possibilities, my situation, my options, my feelings, and whether it's worth it to carry on or to end it. In my experience, when it comes to SI, none of this matters, because SI will always be there. No amount of thinking and reasoning will eliminate it. We can't be at peace with it.

When it comes to seriously considering, "Okay, I'm going to do it. I will end my life", I notice that I always fall back to the same thought pattern:

I think about my life and come to the decision that suicide is my only option, it's the 'reasonable' choice, and this is what I want. ⏩ I start planning it. I start taking steps. ⏩ Doubt creeps in, like "What if my life changes because of some miracle?", "What's so bad about carrying on despite feeling miserable?" Fear of death and SI also become problems. A sense of gut-wrenching fear, a feeling of doom starts to set in as I'm realising my life is about to end. ⏩ I snap out of it. I find other things to do. My exit gets delayed. ⏩ Life still feels shit. I think things over again, and come to the same conclusion: I want to end it. ⏩ REPEAT.

There is no way out of this loop, other then just doing it. I've realised that if I'm ever going to do it for real, it'll have to be done despite the fear and the doubts. Easier said than done. I'm still here, after all. And there is still the main question: "How? How to actually do it?"

As for the "how", the only thing I can think of is not thinking. If I'm ever going to be able to do it, it'll be by not thinking. I've realised that as soon as I start to think – about anything at all – I'll always just fall back to the same loop again and end up not doing it. If I'm ever going to do it, I have to be in a state of mind where I just don't think at all. I imagine it as a trance-like state.

Okay, but how? How do you actually do that? The way I look at it, this is sort of a technical question. How do you get into that state of 'not thinking'? I think the way to achieve this can be different from person to person. Some people might be able to do it impulsively. They might set up everything and wait for the right moment. This isn't exactly my approach, though.

The way I'm planning to do it is by practice. Do practice runs: go through the motions the exact same way as on my final attempt, except for the last step. I'll do everything except I won't jump (or pull the trigger). I think this helps a lot with getting into that trance-like state. This is what elite athletes do – or anyone who operates in a high-performance environment (think of airline pilots, military operations, etc.). They practice everything to the finest detail, so when it comes to action, they can just do it mechanically, without even thinking about it. They can do extraordinarily hard things almost from muscle memory.

But again, I'm still here, so what do I know... The thing about overcoming SI is that no one who's alive can tell you. All the people who have figured it out are dead. I've seen and personally talked to people (both in public comments and DMs) on this forum who eventually CTB'd, and non of them had any magic methods or strategies for overcoming SI. It seems they just did it somehow. They took their time planning their attempts carefully, thought through the details, took action and made preparations, and then they just did it. They did the very thing that most people cannot do. How were they able to do it? We'll never know – they are no longer here to tell.
i've gone to the building i want to jump from and looked down, it really sucks lmao
 
  • Aww..
  • Hugs
Reactions: SweetMemories and AreWeWinning
T

T22222222

Student
Feb 3, 2026
141
it will be hard for me to. i think i will lay down and roll myself down.
That sounds like a good alternative. The only issue with that for me is that I've to climb a railing to access the drop onto concrete 🙏
 
BrighterMoon

BrighterMoon

Member
Mar 13, 2024
29
I relate so much to not only what you said, but what replies this thread has gotten as well. I find it truly comforting to know that many others feel and think eerily similar to myself. For me, what holds me back is the fear of the unknown along with my chronic indecisiveness, always wondering up till the end if it is the right choice. But, as another already said, you're literally dead, you do not have the capacity to regret, you will feel and experience absolutely nothing. Also, as another already said, you're going to die anyway, this will only move the goal post closer. These are what I tell myself but, obviously, the survival instinct is still too strong.

I have many methods, most of which would probably work, but the biggest thing holding me back is the fear of failure. Being caught, possibly gravely injured or disabled, possibly put into a vegetative state, or just caught and committed into a psychiatric ward, revealing to everybody in my life that I am truly suicidal are the most horrific concepts to me, and all come from failure which - unfortunately - is very possible as the human body does everything in it's power to keep it's systems running, there is no plug to pull for most of us. I also want to leave this life, I was dealt a horrible hand in a game that truly was rigged from the start, 18k run of bad luck, F:NV references galore all the way, but I do not like myself nor the restrictions placed upon my life, things I cannot change, or things not worth it to try, and I as well am forever alone in the body of a species not designed for isolation. I really hope you find peace in one way or another and no longer have to feel like this, I wish that for everyone here and for myself, good luck <3
 
  • Like
Reactions: thanos9
Chronical_Suicidal

Chronical_Suicidal

Member
Dec 9, 2025
57
To sum: the fear of death will inevitably appear, but there are ways to diminish it: alcohol, drugs, meditation. Thinking too much about the aftermath won't help, once there isn't a consensus about what happens with the spirit, so you can have your own belief (nonexistence, reincarnation, transcendental world).
 
  • Like
Reactions: stiarling
D

Deathpositive

Member
Jan 14, 2026
21
I dont understand your question rly. I lit have no issue with death. Life is the problem given its mostly misery and needless suffering.

Bigger issue and whats actually scaring me is livin past 60. I work on to drop between ages 50-60 and hopefully would achieve that.

Look for death positive movement.

Read some Cioran, Schopenhauer, Mainlander., even Stoics given they have such view too. Watch Naked (1993) and True Detective S1 and search fr more pessimistic films n shows.

Also remember one of the best things abt death is that only in that we are all equal!
 
  • Like
Reactions: stiarling

Similar threads

princeseadove
Replies
0
Views
140
Suicide Discussion
princeseadove
princeseadove
xaxs
Replies
0
Views
150
Suicide Discussion
xaxs
xaxs
watashiwastar
Replies
1
Views
169
Suicide Discussion
thelostautistic
T
moldyara2002
Replies
0
Views
168
Suicide Discussion
moldyara2002
moldyara2002
The Disqualified
Replies
0
Views
266
Suicide Discussion
The Disqualified
The Disqualified