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Siamese Believe

Siamese Believe

Student
Dec 8, 2025
136
Does autism affect your approach to suicide? Does it make you plan for longer to ensure maximum lethality, assessing all the possible variables and outcomes of what could go wrong and right, moving more cautiously?

I ask since I know that autism can make you hyper analyze everything. Does this make autistic individuals better at suicide?
 
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underairpressure

underairpressure

Member
Nov 30, 2025
51
I'm...... not sure, honestly. Autism manifests a little differently in everyone who has it, so while having an almost clinic/scientific approach might happen with some autistic people, for others it might be overwhelming to them and make them unable to think clearly about it.

For me, it's kind of a mix of both. I've approached the topic of suicide in a very clinical, analytical way in the past, weighing possible outcomes and variables like you described...... but, in the end, the sheer amount of information and variables became overwhelming for me. It actually made me less likely to succeed, because when I get overwhelmed, I avoid whatever is causing it, meaning the only times I ever actually ATTEMPTED suicide were on reckless impulses, not coherently planned out.
 
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madameviolette

madameviolette

Another Big Pharma victim
Oct 9, 2025
516
I don't think so idk. Not long ago I met an autistic member here who ctb without thinking too much. I thought they were very courageous because I found a lot of flaws in their method
 
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meiherasoru_

meiherasoru_

Member
Nov 27, 2025
61
Being autistic really made my life very difficult, so it greatly influenced who I am now
 
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NeuroAtypical

NeuroAtypical

bearer of bad news
Dec 5, 2025
16
Speaking for myself, In the past my attempts have been very on the spot and not thought out at all. But currently I've got somewhat of a fixation on researching and planning my chosen method to CTB. I've become dead set (pun not intended) on succeeding. I want to know absolutely everything I can, and I find it fulfilling to learn more about it.

In a weird way I consider it a challenge to be overcame, as it is surprisingly difficult to succeed with this method where I live (New Zealand).

Its hard say how much of this can be attributed to my autism though, maybe I'm just at my wits end.
I hope I can help cure your curiosity in some way :wink:
 
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