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If you are in crisis right now: Call or text 988, then press 1 for the Veterans Crisis Line. Real person. Free. Confidential. 24/7. Chat: VeteransCrisisLine.net/Chat | Text: 838255
Stop here. You do not need to read the rest of this page first.
Veterans Crisis Line: Call or text 988, press 1 | Chat: VeteransCrisisLine.net/Chat | Text: 838255 | Free. Confidential. 24/7. Many counselors are veterans themselves.
Vets4Warriors: 1-855-838-8255 | Vets4Warriors. Peer support from veterans and service members. Available 24/7. Not a crisis line. A conversation.
If you are in immediate danger, call 911 or go to your nearest emergency room. Tell them you are a veteran and ask for a behavioral health evaluation.
Maybe the Veterans Crisis Line is the only number you take from this page, that is enough.
If you found this page because something feels wrong, that matters. Maybe you are in a place you do not know how to get out of, or a thought crossed your mind that scared you, that matters too. The fact that you are reading this means some part of you is still looking for a way through.</p>
You do not need to have the right words to c
all. You do not need to explain everything perfectly. You can call the Veterans Crisis Line at 988, press 1, and just say you are a veteran and you are struggling. That is enough to start.
What you are carrying is real. What happened in service is real. The gap between who you were trained to be and the world you came home to is real. None of that makes you weak. It means you have been through things most people will never understand, and you are still here trying to figure out what to do next.
The rest of this page is here when you need it. Right now, the only thing that matters is that you stay.
988, press 1. You do not have to be ready. You just have to call.
If you are here because you are worried about a veteran in your life, your instinct to look is the right one. Most people who are struggling do not ask directly. They say something sideways. Their behavior changes. They pull back. Then they wait to see if anyone notices.
You noticed. That matters.
This page includes warning signs and guidance on how to have the conversation. The short version is simple: ask directly. Research consistently shows that asking someone if they are thinking about suicide does not plant the idea or increase risk. It opens a door that was already there.
Ask clearly. Listen without trying to fix it. Help them connect to a resource.
If you believe someone is in immediate danger, do not leave them alone. Call 988 together, or call 911 and say it is a mental health crisis involving a veteran.
If you are a family member of a veteran who died by suicide, the Veterans Crisis Line also serves survivors. You deserve support too. Call 988, press 1.
In 2022, 170 Michigan veterans died by suicide, a rate of 31.9 per 100,000. Nationally in 2023, the VA recorded 6,398 veteran suicides, an average of 17.6 veterans each day.
One of the most important things the data shows is this: 61 percent of veterans who died by suicide in 2023 were not receiving VA healthcare in the last year of their life. Most veteran suicides happen outside the VA system. Reaching veterans who stepped away from care, or never enrolled, remains one of the biggest challenges.
Veteran suicide is rarely about one thing. It is usually the result of several factors arriving at the same time. Understanding those factors matters because that is how people recognize risk and intervene earlier.
PTSD, traumatic brain injury, and military sexual trauma are among the most documented contributors to suicide risk in veterans. These conditions change how the brain processes threat, regulates emotion, and maintains hope. They are not character flaws. They are real consequences of service.
VA behavioral health data shows that chronic pain, sleep problems, worsening health, and loss of physical ability appear often in the histories of veterans who died by suicide. These are not side issues. They are major drivers of hopelessness and deserve to be treated that way.
Military service gives structure, identity, community, and purpose all at once. When it ends, all of that can disappear at the same time. For many veterans, the civilian world never fully replaces what service provided. Isolation grows in that gap, and isolation is one of the strongest predictors of crisis.
Moral injury is different from PTSD, though they often overlap. It can grow out of actions, events, or betrayals that fracture a person’s sense of who they are and whether they deserve to keep going. It is tied less to fear and more to shame, guilt, and spiritual injury. Moral injury is real, and it is treatable.
Key takeaway: veteran suicide is usually not caused by one thing. It is more often the result of service connected conditions, isolation, physical suffering, and acute life stress landing all at once.
Warning signs are not the same as risk factors. Risk factors increase vulnerability over time. Warning signs suggest someone may be moving toward a crisis now. They require a response.
Not every warning sign means someone is about to act. And the absence of warning signs does not mean someone is safe. But when multiple warning signs show up together, especially as a change from how someone usually is, take that seriously.
Ask directly. Say, “Are you thinking about suicide?” Use the word. A vague question gets a vague answer.
Listen without trying to fix everything. You do not need a solution on the spot. You need to stay present and hear what they are saying.
Help them connect to support. Do not just hand them a number. Offer to call with them, sit with them while they text, or drive them somewhere safe.
If someone is in immediate danger, call 911. Tell them it is a mental health crisis involving a veteran. Stay with the person if it is safe to do so.
The Veterans Crisis Line is the main crisis resource for veterans, service members, and their families. Call or text 988, then press 1. Chat at VeteransCrisisLine.net/Chat. Text 838255. Free. Confidential. 24/7.
Every VA Medical Center in Michigan has mental health services and a suicide prevention coordinator. You do not need to be in immediate crisis to use them. If you are not enrolled in VA healthcare, you can start that process at a VA facility or by calling 877-222-8387. Use the VA mental health locator to find care near you.
Vets4Warriors is a peer support network staffed by veterans and service members. It is not clinical. It is a real conversation with someone who understands service from the inside. Call 1-855-838-8255.
Give an Hour connects veterans, service members, and families with free counseling from licensed mental health professionals. It can be a useful option for people who want support outside the VA system.
NAMI Michigan provides support groups, education, and community based help for people living with mental health conditions and for their families. NAMI’s national helpline is 1-800-950-6264.
Make the Connection shares stories from veterans who have struggled and come through it. It is not a crisis resource. It is a way to see that what you are feeling is survivable and that other veterans have found a path through it.
If you call 988 without pressing 1, you still reach trained crisis counselors through the broader 988 system. Veterans should press 1 to reach the Veterans Crisis Line directly, but help is still there either way. You can also learn more through SAMHSA’s 988 information page.
Key takeaway: Michigan has real, staffed resources for veterans in crisis and veterans who are struggling but not yet in crisis. They do not require money, insurance, or a referral. They require only a call, text, or click.
This section is here because it matters.
Firearms are involved in more than half of suicide deaths in Michigan. Among veterans, who tend to own firearms at higher rates and be more comfortable using them, access during a crisis can sharply raise the risk of death. Suicidal crises are often brief. Creating time and distance during that window saves lives.
This is not a conversation about politics or rights. It is a conversation about staying alive.
If you are struggling right now, consider asking someone you trust to temporarily hold your firearms while you get through this period, or let them help you secure them. That is not giving up ownership. It is a short term safety step during a dangerous window.
If you are worried about a veteran in your life, it is appropriate to have a direct conversation about temporary off-site storage or locked storage. You can say, “I’ve been worried about you. Would you be willing to store your firearms somewhere else for a while, or let me help you lock them up?”
Michigan law allows certain people to ask a court for a temporary order restricting access to firearms when there is credible evidence of imminent risk of harm. These are civil orders, not criminal charges. If you need information on how that process works, review the resources from Michigan Medicine’s Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention and the Michigan courts. This section is here because safety matters more than discomfort.
Asking a struggling veteran to voluntarily secure firearms is not a betrayal. It is care.
This intersection is real, and it does not get talked about enough.
A criminal arrest can be one of the most destabilizing events in a veteran’s post-service life. It can make it feel like everything is collapsing at once: career, clearance, firearms, family, housing, reputation, access to children. That weight is real. It lands hard.
Veterans in contact with the criminal justice system face elevated suicide risk. That is not surprising. It is what happens when acute stressors pile onto a person already carrying service related trauma, pain, or isolation.
If you are a veteran dealing with a criminal case and you are in a dark place because of it, hear this clearly: the legal situation is not the end of everything. It feels that way. It is not.
There are legal tools designed specifically for veterans, including treatment court options and other outcomes that recognize the role service connected conditions can play. Those options exist. They are real. And they require you to still be here to use them.
If you are in crisis because of a legal situation, call 988, press 1 first. The legal problem can be addressed after you are safe.
Say the word. Ask, “Are you thinking about suicide?” Research shows that asking directly does not increase risk. It reduces isolation and opens the door to help.
When someone says they are struggling, the instinct is to reassure them or jump into problem solving. Try not to. What they often need first is to be heard without being argued out of what they feel. Say, “I’m glad you told me.” Then ask, “Can you tell me more?”
Do not minimize it. If someone says they have been having thoughts about not wanting to be here, treat that as serious. The myth that people who talk about suicide will not act on it is false.
There is a big difference between handing someone a phone number and helping them use it. Offer to sit with them while they call. Offer to text with them, drive them to a VA or an emergency room if that is what is needed.
One conversation is not a safety plan. Check in the next day and the day after. Stay present. Not in a surveillance way. In a human way.
You do not need to be a mental health professional to help someone survive a crisis. You need to be willing to ask, listen, and stay.
The Veterans Crisis Line is a free, confidential, 24/7 support service for veterans, service members, and their families. Call or text 988 and press 1. You can also chat at VeteransCrisisLine.net/Chat or text 838255. You do not need to be enrolled in VA healthcare to use it.
No. Research consistently shows that asking directly does not plant the idea or increase risk. It reduces isolation and makes it easier for someone to tell the truth about what is going on.
Call 911 and say it is a mental health crisis involving a veteran. If possible, stay with the person until help arrives. You can also call 988 and explain the situation. Crisis counselors can help guide next steps.
Yes. Mental health services are available to enrolled veterans for a wide range of conditions, not only emergencies. Every Michigan VA Medical Center has mental health staff and a suicide prevention coordinator. If you are not enrolled in VA healthcare, you can begin that process through a VA facility.
You can call the Veterans Crisis Line at 988, press 1. Family members and survivors can use it too. NAMI Michigan may also help connect you to support groups and local resources. You do not have to carry this alone.
One More Thing
This page was written because the intersection of veteran mental health, crisis, and real life pressure is too often named too late.
If you came here because you are in a dark place, you are not done yet. The Veterans Crisis Line is 988, press 1. It works. Use it.
If you came here because you are worried about someone, trust that instinct. Ask the question. Stay in it with them.
Veterans Crisis Line: 988, press 1 | Chat: VeteransCrisisLine.net/Chat | Text: 838255
This page was prepared by Ben Hall Law, East Lansing, Michigan. Attorney Ben Hall is a Marine Corps combat veteran, former Ingham County prosecutor, and former Michigan law enforcement officer. Bar No. P84975. This page provides general information and follows responsible reporting guidelines for suicide prevention content. It is not a substitute for professional mental health care. If you are in crisis, call 988, press 1.