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🛡️ Teen Suicide Series
Course overview
Lesson Overview

1.84 – Counseling After a Peer Suicide: Talking to a counselor after a suicide can feel uncomfortable at first, but it often becomes a safe space to unload your emotions. Counselors are trained to listen without judgment and help you untangle confusing feelings. You might cry, stay quiet, or even laugh — all are normal ways to process grief. Sometimes it’s easier to talk to someone outside your family who can see the situation clearly. Counseling helps you learn healthy ways to cope and move through guilt or anger. It can also help you support others who are grieving. Some schools or communities offer group sessions where you can share experiences and feel less alone. Asking for help doesn’t mean you’re weak; it shows you’re taking care of yourself. Over time, those talks can bring peace, strength, and understanding that healing takes time but is possible.

About this course

A powerful, compassionate series that helps teens recognize warning signs, speak up, and find hope—even in their darkest moments.

This course includes:
  • A full library of guided lessons on suicide awareness, survival, and prevention
  • Candid conversations about emotional pain, isolation, and mental illness
  • Scripts for how to talk to a trusted adult, counselor, or friend about suicidal thoughts
  • Techniques like grounding, emotional regulation, and crisis de-escalation
  • Case studies of teens who survived suicide attempts and turned their lives around

Our platform is HIPAA, Medicaid, Medicare, and GDPR-compliant. We protect your data with secure systems, never sell your information, and only collect what is necessary to support your care and wellness. learn more

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