Self-Harm & Suicide
Immediate support for suicidal thoughts, self-harm, urges, plans, or emotional crisis situations.
Open page
Choose a topic below to find crisis support pathways, helplines, and resources that match the situation. This page is here to help people move from “something is wrong” toward a clearer next step.
Use these starting points if you are unsure which topic to choose.
Use emergency services, local crisis support, domestic violence support, legal/personal safety support, or urgent medical help first.
Choose self-harm, suicide, mental health crisis, or immediate safety support.
Look at housing, financial, workplace, grief, relationship, health, immigration/refugee, or family crisis topics.
Use trauma, abuse, eating disorder, addiction, neurodivergent, ADHD, accessibility, language, or digital safety pathways.
Search by topic, need, situation, or type of crisis.
Immediate support for suicidal thoughts, self-harm, urges, plans, or emotional crisis situations.
Open pageSupport for panic, severe anxiety, depression, overwhelm, shutdown, or intense emotional distress.
Open pageHelp for people experiencing harm, coercive control, unsafe environments, family violence, or needing protection.
Open pageConfidential support for survivors of sexual harm, assault, trauma, and unsafe experiences.
Open pageSupport for trauma responses, flashbacks, panic, dissociation, and distress after difficult experiences.
Open pageSupport during bereavement, sudden loss, complicated grief, or overwhelming emotional pain.
Open pageSupport for drug, alcohol, gambling, and substance-related crisis situations.
Open pageImmediate help for overdose, withdrawal, substance emergencies, or unsafe intoxication.
Open pageSupport for disordered eating, body distress, health concerns, and eating disorder-related crisis.
Open pageHelp with homelessness, housing insecurity, financial stress, debt, and urgent life instability.
Open pageSupport for overwhelm, burnout, shutdown, meltdown, communication barriers, and sensory distress.
Open pageSupport for emotional dysregulation, impulsivity, rejection sensitivity, overwhelm, and ADHD burnout.
Open pageSupport for threats, stalking, harassment, unsafe situations, or times when personal safety is at risk.
Open pageSupport for people without safe housing, including emergency accommodation and shelter access.
Open pageSupport for families navigating crisis situations, including supporting a loved one in distress.
Open parents & carersSpecialised crisis support for children and teenagers experiencing emotional distress or risk.
Open children & youthSupport for job loss, workplace stress, burnout, employment instability, bullying, discrimination, or work-related crisis.
Open pageSupport for displacement, migration stress, refugee experiences, relocation, immigration-related crisis, safety worries, legal concerns, housing, and urgent help pathways.
Open pageSupport for online abuse, cyberbullying, harassment, stalking, image-based harm, and digital safety concerns.
Open pageSupport for serious health-related distress, medical emergencies, illness-related crisis, medication access worries, or urgent health concerns.
Open pageThe topic cards above are the main crisis-topic pages. Some larger topics may later grow into deeper sibling pages when a specific pathway needs its own page. For now, the main topic layer is the priority so visitors can find support quickly without the hub becoming overwhelming.
Suggested structure: most topics can stay as one main page or have 0–3 deeper pages later. Larger topics may grow to 3–5 deeper pages. Only the biggest areas should ever reach around 6 deeper pages, and only if the content genuinely needs that much separation.
Possible future sibling pages: workplace bullying, job loss/redundancy, workplace burnout, disability discrimination at work, employment rights/advocacy, and returning to work after crisis.
Possible future sibling pages: asylum seeker support, refugee family support, migrant mental health, immigration legal help, language/translation support, and newcomer housing/settlement.
Possible future sibling pages: stalking and harassment, protection orders, personal safety planning, online threats, unsafe living situations, and advocacy support.
Possible future sibling pages: medication access, hospital navigation, chronic illness crisis, urgent health anxiety, medical trauma, and disability-related health barriers.
Possible future sibling pages: emergency shelter, rent arrears, food insecurity, debt stress, benefits/income support, and family housing instability.
Possible future sibling pages: autistic burnout, sensory overwhelm, non-speaking/AAC support, ADHD crisis, meltdown/shutdown support, and accessible crisis planning tools.
Topic-based support can help when the crisis is connected to a specific situation, risk, or life pressure. It can make it easier to find the right type of service instead of searching through every support option at once.
Some people may need more than one pathway. For example, someone experiencing family violence may also need housing support, legal safety, trauma support, financial help, and child-safe support. It is okay to use more than one topic page.
If there is immediate risk, choose the pathway connected to urgent safety, emergency support, or crisis contact first.
Once immediate safety is addressed, practical needs like housing, finances, work, school, family, immigration/refugee support, legal safety, or health support may also matter.
Topic support can work alongside audience, location, accessibility, and specialist support pages.
Choose support by age, role, identity, disability, or who needs help.
Open audience supportFind regional or country-based support and emergency options.
Open location supportFor communication, sensory, disability, language, neurodivergent, cultural, digital, and access-related crisis needs.
Open accessibility supportYou do not need to describe everything perfectly. Choose the topic that feels closest, follow the safest next step, and come back later if you need another pathway.
Aspie Answers provides education, signposting, and supportive information. This page is not a replacement for emergency care, medical advice, therapy, legal advice, safeguarding procedures, domestic violence support, addiction treatment, immigration advice, employment advice, or professional crisis assessment. In an emergency, contact local emergency services immediately.
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