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Need support or information? Look no further. gURL's put together the following list of resources to help you out.

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Call a national suicide hotline
(the calls are confidential and usually free). Usually staffed by trained volunteers and professional counselors who help callers identify their problems, explore options and develop a plan of action, these hotlines also offer referrals to community-based services, support groups and shelters if necessary.
phone: 1-800-876-5309

Boys and Girls Town National Hotline
(Open 24 hours). Provides a bilingual suicide prevention hotline for boys and girls.
phone: 800-448-3000

KID SAVE: 800-KID-SAVE
(Open 24 hours). Gives information and referrals to shelters, mental health services, sexual abuse treatment, substance abuse, family counseling, residential care, adoption/foster care, and the like for teens in crisis.
phone: 800-543-7283

TEEN LINE
operates every night from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m., Pacific Standard Time. In California, call 800-TLC-TEEN (800-852-8336). In other states, call 310-855-4673. Somebody will call you back immediately so there won't be a big charge.
phone: 800-TLC-TEEN (800-852-8336) in CA
310-855-4673 Other Sates

The Samaritans Hotline
(Opern 24 hours). The Samaritans Hotline is a non-religious, completely confidential hotline.
phone: 212-673-3000 (24 hours)

National Hopeline Network
is a 24-hour national hotline that routes your call to the nearest resource:
phone: 800-SUICIDE (800-784-2433).

If someone you know has taken their own life (or died any other way), contact one of the following groups for information on coping and referrals to a local support group:

American Association of Suicidology
phone: 202-237-2280
address: 4201 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 408, Washington, DC 20008
website: www.suicidology.org

SA\VE (Suicide Awareness\Voices of Education
phone: 952-946-7998
address: 7317 Cahill Road, Suite 207Minneapolis, MN 55439-2080
website: www.save.org




You Mean I Don't Have to Feel This Way?: New Help for Depression, Anxiety and Addiction
by Colette Dowling (Bantam Books). Helps readers to deal with suicidal depression.

Some reads on why some people commit suicide and how it affects those left behind:

Another Country
by James Baldwin (Vintage Books). A classic novel in which a black jazz musician commits suicide, compelling his friends to search for the meaning of his death and, consequently, for a deeper understanding of their own identities.

Face at the Edge of the World
by Eve Bunting (Clarion Books). A novel in which the main character, haunted by the suicide of his best friend, attempts to re-create his friend's last weeks and discover why he took his own life.

What Are They Saying about Me?
by Maureen Wartski (Juniper). A moving story of how gossip makes a teenage girl not want to live.

Searching for Mercy Street
by Linda Gray Sexton (Little Brown). A memoir of the author's conflicted relationship with her mother, the poet Anne Sexton, who killed herself at 45.



For more information on suicide, to chat with someone who is going through similar experiences, or to read about another teen's own suicidal feelings, log onto these sites:

Suicide @ Rochford is an essential resource for anyone contemplating suicide.

How to Help Someone Who Is Threatening Suicide gives valuable advice to deal with the situation.

The Samaritans Online.This Samaritans website provides crisis support through email.

TEEN LINE is a website for teens in crisis, staffed by trained teen volunteers.




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