A
AngelBritney
New Member
- Sep 14, 2025
- 3
This is my first post here. I am happy that this forum exists and that we can talk openly about suicide.
I had some failed attempts. All of them trying to bleed to death through cutting.
It didn't work, bleeding stopped after a few minutes. I couldn't go deeper even though the razor blade was very sharp.
I watched that deleted suicide scene from 13 reasons why. She bled out but some people on reddit wrote that this would take longer to die and therefore is not realistically portrayed.
On a website that compares several suicide methods, it's listed as the least lethal method and it would take a long time before you could eventually die from it (no bathtub included).
I joined some subreddits on reddit which show pictures of fresh cuts and some did cut very deep and yet they didn't bleed that much so that they could have died from that cut.
What I truly know: It's likely that you could hit a specific spot which could cause permanent damage to your hand/arm. (The hand of a family relative has some permanent numbness now because she cut her wrist)
If this low lethality is known to paramedics then why are they so alarmed if they are called to someone who intended to end their life with cutting themselves?
Why is cutting still considered a suicide method (especially in the media, like 13 reasons why) when its lethality is low?
What would be needed to bleed to death through cutting? How much blood loss would be necessary?
If I accidentally spread misinformations through my post, please tell me so me and others will know about it.
I had some failed attempts. All of them trying to bleed to death through cutting.
It didn't work, bleeding stopped after a few minutes. I couldn't go deeper even though the razor blade was very sharp.
I watched that deleted suicide scene from 13 reasons why. She bled out but some people on reddit wrote that this would take longer to die and therefore is not realistically portrayed.
On a website that compares several suicide methods, it's listed as the least lethal method and it would take a long time before you could eventually die from it (no bathtub included).
I joined some subreddits on reddit which show pictures of fresh cuts and some did cut very deep and yet they didn't bleed that much so that they could have died from that cut.
What I truly know: It's likely that you could hit a specific spot which could cause permanent damage to your hand/arm. (The hand of a family relative has some permanent numbness now because she cut her wrist)
If this low lethality is known to paramedics then why are they so alarmed if they are called to someone who intended to end their life with cutting themselves?
Why is cutting still considered a suicide method (especially in the media, like 13 reasons why) when its lethality is low?
What would be needed to bleed to death through cutting? How much blood loss would be necessary?
If I accidentally spread misinformations through my post, please tell me so me and others will know about it.