L
lunious
Member
- Jan 10, 2026
- 11
Suicide rates are 80% higher in men than in women. What are some genuine reasons that drive men to suicide more?
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Yes. And when unable to meet expectations, men become useless apparently so the combination of above.I'm was not AMAB so I don't know from experience, but I'd guess it has something to do with the fact that men are taught it's shameful to show emotions. Their expected to be tougher then any human should be. Also, as a person above said, men normally choose more lethal methods
Actually, men are more likely to succeed, women are more likely to attempt. I guess it depends which statistic we wanna skew.They aren't "driven to suicide more". As others have pointed out, you're misrepresenting the stats.
You're not wrong eitherWhy do more men kill themselves?
In a word: Women.
(Sorry. Just a bit of comic relief)
I'm sure it has everything to do with what's already been said.
Respectfully, that is precisely the stat I was referring to, so I'm not sure why you're trying to argue my own point back to meActually, men are more likely to succeed, women are more likely to attempt. I guess it depends which statistic we wanna skew.
I'm not really arguing, just helping to clarify what's being misunderstood. For all I know, the topic poster has a hard time with English and couldn't clarified what they meant. Either way, I think we all agree what we all meant. :/Respectfully, that is precisely the stat I was referring to, so I'm not sure why you're trying to argue my own point back to me.
I'm not sure what this means. What is being skewed? Women are more likely to use pills, which is a non method and not really an attempt in my opinion. When they fail and try more and more, is that really suicidal? The same lethal methods available to men are available to women, so I'm not sure what you mean by skewed.Actually, men are more likely to succeed, women are more likely to attempt. I guess it depends which statistic we wanna skew.
Skewed can probably mean anything right now. I think the topic poster framed his question in a way where he probably meant one thing (why are suicides higher in men and what drives them to do it more).I'm not sure what this means. What is being skewed? Women are more likely to use pills, which is a non method and not really an attempt in my opinion. When they fail and try more and more, is that really suicidal? The same lethal methods available to men are available to women, so I'm not sure what you mean by skewed.
A suicidal attempt is a failure to complete the act. So if the statistic, was women attempt suicide more, then to answer your question, yes."When they fail and try more and more, is that really suicidal? "
In fairness, I think some of the statistics might be skewed because they rely on either self-reported data, or hospital visits. Obviously completed suicides are easy to see, but what about a guy like me who has held a gun to their head but was unable to pull the trigger? Is that a suicide attempt? Well, according to the statistics it isn't because nobody knows about it. If I OD'd on pills and went to the hospital however I'd be counted in the attempt statistics. If I had to take a guess, I'd say the overall suicide attempt rate is equal, and if women choose more lethal methods the completed suicides would also be equal.
However, let's talk about why men would be more driven to completing suicides, as that's what the statistics show.
I heard from a psychiatrist who runs a YouTube channel that half of men who kill themselves in his experience don't have any mental illness, but kill themselves because they think through things a lot, and genuinely believe that suicide is the only answer. Their job sucks, their relationships suck, maybe they don't have a job or relationships. They see no way out. They've tried going to therapy, they've tried getting help. Many men don't have any social support. They don't have anyone they can talk to. They're not allowed to talk to anyone.
Most homeless people are men. Most prisoners are men. Men are also more likely to abuse drugs. There are huge problems men face in society and this drives us to drug use, suicide, etc. Unfortunately, the problems I mentioned aren't the ones to worry about. The biggest problem that men face is even talking about the issue brings a lot of people in to shame us for even discussing it. This made me feel completely invisible. Not only that, but I don't care about anything anymore. I don't care that I'm addicted to drugs, and the only reason I'm not part of the prison population is because the consequences of committing a crime would be too severe for me.
Those things I just listed about homelessness and the prison population. Those aren't the problems. They're symptoms of the problem.
I was taught in school that I bear the original sin of oppressing people hundreds of years ago when I was born in 2001. I am taught that I have to step aside and give my opportunities over to marginalized groups for the sake of equality, but wouldn't that make me marginalized? At work and school we have to take training on how not to be racist or sexually abusive, as though that's inherent in our nature somehow. When I look at the news or social media it's become normalized to be misandrist and just hate men. I was also taught that I can't discuss these things because I have it better than everyone else. I sure hope the latter part is true because I'm still waiting.
With all of this, people still wonder why men are checking out of society. The reasons are so obvious if you just ask men them. Unfortunately, due to not being allowed to talk about them, and having no spaces to talk about them, we're silent about it. This makes it even more difficult because when we are given an opportunity to discuss these things, we find it very difficult to articulate our experience because we've been taught not to talk about it.
So I can't talk about my problems. I have a lot of problems. I don't have a future, and I'm expected to sacrifice my future for everyone else. People see men as threatening and inherently bad, and in need of re-education. Gee, I wonder why guys have given up.
In fairness, I think some of the statistics might be skewed because they rely on either self-reported data, or hospital visits. Obviously completed suicides are easy to see, but what about a guy like me who has held a gun to their head but was unable to pull the trigger? Is that a suicide attempt? Well, according to the statistics it isn't because nobody knows about it. If I OD'd on pills and went to the hospital however I'd be counted in the attempt statistics. If I had to take a guess, I'd say the overall suicide attempt rate is equal, and if women choose more lethal methods the completed suicides would also be equal.
However, let's talk about why men would be more driven to completing suicides, as that's what the statistics show.
I heard from a psychiatrist who runs a YouTube channel that half of men who kill themselves in his experience don't have any mental illness, but kill themselves because they think through things a lot, and genuinely believe that suicide is the only answer. Their job sucks, their relationships suck, maybe they don't have a job or relationships. They see no way out. They've tried going to therapy, they've tried getting help. Many men don't have any social support. They don't have anyone they can talk to. They're not allowed to talk to anyone.
Most homeless people are men. Most prisoners are men. Men are also more likely to abuse drugs. There are huge problems men face in society and this drives us to drug use, suicide, etc. Unfortunately, the problems I mentioned aren't the ones to worry about. The biggest problem that men face is even talking about the issue brings a lot of people in to shame us for even discussing it. This made me feel completely invisible. Not only that, but I don't care about anything anymore. I don't care that I'm addicted to drugs, and the only reason I'm not part of the prison population is because the consequences of committing a crime would be too severe for me.
Those things I just listed about homelessness and the prison population. Those aren't the problems. They're symptoms of the problem.
I was taught in school that I bear the original sin of oppressing people hundreds of years ago when I was born in 2001. I am taught that I have to step aside and give my opportunities over to marginalized groups for the sake of equality, but wouldn't that make me marginalized? At work and school we have to take training on how not to be racist or sexually abusive, as though that's inherent in our nature somehow. When I look at the news or social media it's become normalized to be misandrist and just hate men. I was also taught that I can't discuss these things because I have it better than everyone else. I sure hope the latter part is true because I'm still waiting.
With all of this, people still wonder why men are checking out of society. The reasons are so obvious if you just ask men them. Unfortunately, due to not being allowed to talk about them, and having no spaces to talk about them, we're silent about it. This makes it even more difficult because when we are given an opportunity to discuss these things, we find it very difficult to articulate our experience because we've been taught not to talk about it.
So I can't talk about my problems. I have a lot of problems. I don't have a future, and I'm expected to sacrifice my future for everyone else. People see men as threatening and inherently bad, and in need of re-education. Gee, I wonder why guys have given up.
what did i doSkewed can probably mean anything right now. I think the topic poster framed his question in a way where he probably meant one thing (why are suicides higher in men and what drives them to do it more).
So from a vague or "skewed" context (for all I know, English is the topic poster's second language, so my presumption was a general inquiry vs an analytical one).
I can totally relate to this. I've been there multiple times. I'm so tired of worrying about layoffs, mergers/acquisitions, bad economy, jobs being outsourced or automated, etc. Why can't I just have the same job until I retire? I'm so sick of this crap.But once again having a company being sold and being on the losing end of a merger is destroying me. And the market sucks. And I'm just sick of this nonsense anyway.
Well said dude. So many people argue against this saying, "talk to someone" or "seek out a therapist", etc., but the reality is far more complicated than they care to admit.In fairness, I think some of the statistics might be skewed because they rely on either self-reported data, or hospital visits. Obviously completed suicides are easy to see, but what about a guy like me who has held a gun to their head but was unable to pull the trigger? Is that a suicide attempt? Well, according to the statistics it isn't because nobody knows about it. If I OD'd on pills and went to the hospital however I'd be counted in the attempt statistics. If I had to take a guess, I'd say the overall suicide attempt rate is equal, and if women choose more lethal methods the completed suicides would also be equal.
However, let's talk about why men would be more driven to completing suicides, as that's what the statistics show.
I heard from a psychiatrist who runs a YouTube channel that half of men who kill themselves in his experience don't have any mental illness, but kill themselves because they think through things a lot, and genuinely believe that suicide is the only answer. Their job sucks, their relationships suck, maybe they don't have a job or relationships. They see no way out. They've tried going to therapy, they've tried getting help. Many men don't have any social support. They don't have anyone they can talk to. They're not allowed to talk to anyone.
Most homeless people are men. Most prisoners are men. Men are also more likely to abuse drugs. There are huge problems men face in society and this drives us to drug use, suicide, etc. Unfortunately, the problems I mentioned aren't the ones to worry about. The biggest problem that men face is even talking about the issue brings a lot of people in to shame us for even discussing it. This made me feel completely invisible. Not only that, but I don't care about anything anymore. I don't care that I'm addicted to drugs, and the only reason I'm not part of the prison population is because the consequences of committing a crime would be too severe for me.
Those things I just listed about homelessness and the prison population. Those aren't the problems. They're symptoms of the problem.
I was taught in school that I bear the original sin of oppressing people hundreds of years ago when I was born in 2001. I am taught that I have to step aside and give my opportunities over to marginalized groups for the sake of equality, but wouldn't that make me marginalized? At work and school we have to take training on how not to be racist or sexually abusive, as though that's inherent in our nature somehow. When I look at the news or social media it's become normalized to be misandrist and just hate men. I was also taught that I can't discuss these things because I have it better than everyone else. I sure hope the latter part is true because I'm still waiting.
With all of this, people still wonder why men are checking out of society. The reasons are so obvious if you just ask men them. Unfortunately, due to not being allowed to talk about them, and having no spaces to talk about them, we're silent about it. This makes it even more difficult because when we are given an opportunity to discuss these things, we find it very difficult to articulate our experience because we've been taught not to talk about it.
So I can't talk about my problems. I have a lot of problems. I don't have a future, and I'm expected to sacrifice my future for everyone else. People see men as threatening and inherently bad, and in need of re-education. Gee, I wonder why guys have given up.
Yes, I relate to this so hard. There is so much that is out of our control and yet we are blamed for it regardless. I'm currently in the recruiting process for the military since I was never able to find a lifelong job that I could stay in the private sector. Some of my past jobs involved working at a motorcycle/powersports dealership, and I absolutely loved working there, the atmosphere was great, etc. Unfortunately because of the economy, and because of some of the decisions made by the owners, there were layoffs, massive negative changes, etc. I would gladly stay there permanently if I could, but no, this world just loves to tear everything apart.I can totally relate to this. I've been there multiple times. I'm so tired of worrying about layoffs, mergers/acquisitions, bad economy, jobs being outsourced or automated, etc. Why can't I just have the same job until I retire? I'm so sick of this crap.
Men have shittier lives. Less safety nets. If you fail it's seen more as your problem while women aren't judged as harshly it's very simple if you actually care about evolution and aren't some neoliberal that actually believes the sexes are exactly the same.Suicide rates are 80% higher in men than in women. What are some genuine reasons that drive men to suicide more?
Holy shit you managed to even blame the victim. It's "toxic masculinity" that makes men kill themsevles and it's their own fault. Amazing. Maybe men and women are actually different due to the hormones that course through them? Nah let's just blame men. They are just toxic and that's why they kill themselves. I think you zoomers are just doomed lmao. I can't wait to leave this world soon if this the the average person going to be in it. Absolutely shocking. Men wanting to be masculine is just evil but the ideal woman is just larping as a "toxic" man. Fuck you youngins are so fucked. And there's literally zero issue with men "needing to be strong." It's in our DNA. It's our nature. The modern world has zero adventure or things that bring out the masculine ethos that literally created the nice little insular safe world you currently live in. My god, this forum becomes more Reddit by the day. Midwit as fuck. For "atheists" you sure have tons of dogmatic beliefs based on nothing but what you want the world to be. Disgusting.For two reasons.
One: Men choose more fatal methods then women
Two: Their often scared to seek help because of toxic masculinity and "needing to be strong"
While this is true, testosterone also inhibits men's ability to cry. There's also issues of alexithymia that most men have that makes therapy very challenging for them. Not only that, but when men have a problem we have identified it and want to fix it. Therapy doesn't do that. Medications won't fix your problem. A lot of men who kill themselves don't have mental illness, they have shit lives, and therapy doesn't fix a shit life. Coaching however, can help.I do feel that in general men are socialized to be tough. I recently read that women are twice as likely seek therapy than men. A long time ago I had a friend told me that the only time men should cry is when someone dies. This is toxic masculinity and it's not healthy. We shouldn't keep our feelings bottled up inside. I have a small inner circle I can talk to. I think it's healthy to do this and even go to therapy, which I've done several times in my life. If you don't have anyone to talk to and can't afford therapy, AI can be helpful as a last resort. Whatever you do, don't tell anyone you are thinking of CTB. In my state, a therapist is obligated to break confidentiality and have you committed for evaluation.
Toxic masculinity isn't the reason. This is an oversimplified way of looking at the problem without attempting to address it. In the 1950s when gender roles were at their height, suicide rates are lower than they are now. More people than ever are attending therapy, yet the problems are getting worse. So how would it be toxic masculinity? In fact, in my experience, whenever I tried to get help, I was blatantly ignored. My own mother even said "I don't care" when I told her I was suicidal. This is not a one-sided issue. A lot of men do seek out help, but we're dismissed, and eventually we turn into people like me who don't trust the systems that failed them. Most men today do seek out help because it's accessible, but that help doesn't work for them because therapy as it is today isn't designed for men. Men have much different ways of coping and solving their problems than women do. The solution isn't giving a blanket term of "oh toxic masculinity is the problem" but rather discussing solutions that will work for men since a lot of us haven't been able to find them yet.Two: Their often scared to seek help because of toxic masculinity and "needing to be strong"