Posts

Showing posts with the label exhaustion

The Relationship between Anxiety and Suicide

Image
  When people think about suicide, they often picture depression — the heaviness, the hopelessness, the emotional collapse. Anxiety rarely gets mentioned. It’s seen as nervousness, worry, overthinking. But anxiety, especially when chronic or severe, has its own quiet relationship with suicide risk. It’s not the same relationship as depression. It’s sharper, more frantic, more driven by fear than despair. But it’s real. What the Research Shows Studies consistently find that people with anxiety disorders — panic disorder, generalized anxiety, PTSD, OCD, social anxiety — have higher rates of suicidal thoughts and behaviors than the general population. The risk increases when: anxiety is long-standing or untreated anxiety coexists with depression anxiety leads to avoidance, isolation, or functional collapse anxiety triggers panic, agitation, or a sense of being trapped Anxiety doesn’t always look like a risk factor. Sometimes it looks like someone who’s “high-functioning,” “on edge...

The Relationship Between Work Stress and Suicide

Image
  We talk about work stress as if it’s just part of modern life — inboxes overflowing, deadlines multiplying, calendars stacked like Jenga towers. But for some people, work stress isn’t just exhausting. It can become overwhelming, destabilizing, and, in the most painful cases, a contributor to suicidal thoughts. Work stress doesn’t cause suicide on its own. But it can create the conditions in which despair grows. What the Research Shows Studies consistently find that chronic work stress — especially when paired with long hours, low control, high demands, or workplace conflict — is associated with higher rates of suicidal thoughts and behaviors. The risk increases when: someone feels trapped in their job work becomes the primary source of identity or self-worth there is bullying, harassment, or discrimination job insecurity or financial pressure is constant work stress spills into sleep, relationships, and health Work stress is not “just stress.” It can become a form of c...