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daley

daley

Experienced
May 11, 2024
222
I found this research paper and although the findings are weak, I thought it might be interesting for people here.
Especially for considering whether to leave a note, and what it's contents might be.

The paper is : Suicide Notes: Assessing Their Impact on the Bereaved , published in Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 2018 , The American Association of Suicidology

Trying to summarize what I understood from it.

1) They try to understand whether those who had a close one commit suicide, are impacted differently depending on whether or not they got a suicide note.
2) Furthermore, if they got a note, does it matter if it's content were "helpful" (e.g. expressed love) or "non-helpful" (e.g blaming others).
3) Furthermore, if the did not get a note, does it matter if they wanted a note or not.

They only manged to show 3. In particular, if a person was expecting to get a note, and did not get a note, their mental outcomes were worse.

There are significant methodological problems, because the people surveyed are such that they are likely to have worse outcomes to begin with.

Still you might find it an interesting read, if you are inclined to read academic papers.
 
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LaVieEnRose

LaVieEnRose

Angelic
Jul 23, 2022
4,416
When people have loved ones kill themselves, their initial reaction tends to be to take it personally. They internalize the suicide and see it as an indictment of the role they played in the decedent's life. In cruder terms, the unavoidable message that a suicide tends to communicate is that you weren't worth it. Of course, as stated these emotional reactions are what people often experience in the very direct aftermath of the suicide. Ideally as people go through the mourning process they shed that way of viewing their loved one's action that they had in the beginning.

Not leaving a single word, especially if the other people was not wholly aware of your feelings and intentions (and yes, of course many considerations complicate that), only serves to exacerbate and solidify those initial feelings, however limited the utility of suicide notes in that regard may be.

Of course, a different story holds if your final communication contains nothing but venom and bile. Even if it's not unmerited, maybe it would still be better to abstain from that. Depending.
 
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MyRightMyWay

MyRightMyWay

Member
Feb 23, 2025
14
I hope my parents read my suicide note, there to blame for it all !
 
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JesiBel

JesiBel

Harpy
Dec 5, 2024
184
Leaving a note is your last chance to be heard, to 'go free' and to put all your emotions and feelings down on paper.

I prefer to make everything clear beforehand, so that there are no assumptions or suspicions about "why", just facts, the truth. Without falsehoods, without lies, without filters.

After all, their lives will go on as usual after a while. As if you had never existed. Perhaps some memory will make you "exist again" in their memories, but no one is indispensable.
 
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I

inverse-weibull

Member
Feb 20, 2025
9
This is a really interesting read, thank you for sharing! Like you mentioned the overall conclusion was a bit shaky, but I think it has some good discussion of the topic which I don't see much on the academic side
 

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