heatnormal

heatnormal

Member
Jan 3, 2026
28
have you ever lurked on suicide bereavement support groups, like the reddit one? from what i've seen, they seem to receive more support than their loved ones ever received. some even start their replies with "they were a lost cause. nothing could be done." it's a weird feeling to see people move on; claiming that they'll never replace their loved one, but at the same time meeting new people. maybe it touches that spot of "i thought i made a bigger impact on your life". at times, it feels attention-seeking -- adding phrases like "we were never close," but bawling their eyes out in the description, and others patting them on the back, congratulating them on winning the empathy championship. being mischaracterized after my successful ctb is one of my worries -- i can't imagine ceasing to exist only for my close ones to farm karma on reddit. anyway, please tell me what you think.
 
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amor.dor

amor.dor

Anima
Dec 24, 2025
193
Although I witnessed a suicide, I was never part of any group. I just wrote about my grief for myself.
That's true. I remember my partner's sister starting to blame everyone after their death, when in life my partner always said their sister wouldn't leave them in peace, only made things harder. I know there are cases where the family is truly devastated, and that's valid. What upsets me is seeing relatives play the victim when, in life, the suicidal person was constantly being diminished.
have you ever lurked on suicide bereavement support groups, like the reddit one? from what i've seen, they seem to receive more support than their loved ones ever received.
 
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W

weallhaveourghosts

Experienced
Mar 2, 2025
226
have you ever lurked on suicide bereavement support groups, like the reddit one? from what i've seen, they seem to receive more support than their loved ones ever received. some even start their replies with "they were a lost cause. nothing could be done." it's a weird feeling to see people move on; claiming that they'll never replace their loved one, but at the same time meeting new people. maybe it touches that spot of "i thought i made a bigger impact on your life". at times, it feels attention-seeking -- adding phrases like "we were never close," but bawling their eyes out in the description, and others patting them on the back, congratulating them on winning the empathy championship. being mischaracterized after my successful ctb is one of my worries -- i can't imagine ceasing to exist only for my close ones to farm karma on reddit. anyway, please tell me what you think.
its interesting to compare suicide and I guess natural death support groups.
 
InDefenseImNumb

InDefenseImNumb

Don't go there to mourn, but to celebrate
Dec 27, 2025
9
Although I witnessed a suicide, I was never part of any group. I just wrote about my grief for myself.
That's true. I remember my partner's sister starting to blame everyone after their death, when in life my partner always said their sister wouldn't leave them in peace, only made things harder. I know there are cases where the family is truly devastated, and that's valid. What upsets me is seeing relatives play the victim when, in life, the suicidal person was constantly being diminished.
Thats kinda what I fear for myself. My mom is like that. She'd try to profit off of my suicide like she did with her sister, and even her other one that succumbed to her anorexia. However, for my entire life my mother has been my main antagonist, and she is the root cause of all of my problems. She would look for sympathy when all she did was antagonize me. One time I told her I was gonna do it on the phone, and she laughed then responded with "I hope you kill yourself, I'll laugh at you at your funeral"

Im just one person though, and things are different for everyone. My own personal experience does not equate for others, especially people who I know nothing about in a "support group". We have no idea how they treated their loved ones, they could have egged them on. Redditors will believe anything if it fits their specific worldview. My guess is that a lot of those loved ones are at least downplaying their role in the whole thing so they can look like the true victims. They have a guilty conscience for their role, and they want to feel better. "They were a lost cause, nothing could be done" sounds like someone trying to cope with reality in a poor, immature way.

P.S. most reddit support groups about "loved ones with mental illness" are actually dogpile groups, the telltale sign is if they're run by the actual group of people thats being discussed or not
 
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