Supporting Women and Youth Girls

Prevention Begins With Connection

Building awareness, resilience, and community-based prevention skills through compassion and understanding
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Why Connection Matters

Suicide prevention is not about having all the answers—it’s about showing up, listening with compassion, and strengthening the bonds that help people feel seen and supported. For women and youth girls, pressures can intersect with caregiving roles, identity development, online environments, and experiences of trauma or marginalization.

Connection is protective. Caring adults, peers, and mentors can notice changes early and create safe spaces to talk. Simple acts—checking in, validating emotions, and keeping promises—build trust.

Culture and community matter. Faith, family, and cultural identity are sources of resilience. When prevention efforts honor these strengths and practice trauma‑informed care, they foster dignity and hope.

Show Up

Be present and listen with compassion. Your presence matters more than having all the answers.

Listen

Create safe spaces to talk. Validate emotions and build trust through consistent support.

Protect

Strengthen bonds and reduce barriers to care. Walk alongside someone as they seek help

If You're Worried About Someone

Reach out. Ask directly but kindly, listen without judgment, and involve supports when needed.

And if you’re struggling, you deserve help—now, not later. Support is available, and recovery is possible.

Suicide Prevention Training

Who Should Attend
Designed for people supporting youth, families, and communities.

  • Community leaders

  • Educators

  • Parents/Caregivers

  • Youth mentors

  • Peer counselors

  • Faith & nonprofit staff

Training Format
Choose the option that fits your schedule and learning style.
Live Workshop
2–3 hour interactive session
Self-Paced Online
4–6 micro-modules remotely
What You’ll Learn
Practical skills you can apply immediately.
  • 1

     

    Recognize risk and protective factors
  • 2

     

    Identify warning signs & respond safely
  • 3

     

    Apply trauma-informed approaches
  • 4

     

    Activate professional supports
  • 5

     

    Promote resilience & help-seeking

Assessment & Certification
Learning validation designed to reinforce understanding and real-world application.

  • Scenario-based quiz
    Apply concepts through realistic situations and guided decision-making.
  • Participation reflection
    Personal reflection to reinforce learning and community impact.
  • Certificate of Completion
    Issued upon successful completion of training requirements.

Safety & Help Resources (U.S.)
Confidential, no-cost support options available anytime.

988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline
Call, text, or chat — available 24/7 across the United States.

Crisis Text Line
Text HOME to 741741 to connect with a trained crisis counselor.

Outside the U.S.
Use local emergency services or trusted community clinics in your area.

Purpose: This training and companion blog are designed to build awareness,
resilience, and community-based prevention skills. They are not intended to diagnose
conditions or replace professional care.
If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, contact local emergency services right away.

Key Concepts
Foundational ideas that guide understanding, awareness, and prevention.

Mental health exists on a spectrum and can fluctuate with stress, life transitions, loss,
or trauma.

Women and youth girls may face unique stressors, including caregiving burdens, body image
pressure, gender-based violence, social comparison, and cyberbullying.

Protective factors include connectedness, affirming adults, healthy coping skills,
spiritual or cultural identity, and access to care.

Activity
Interactive learning to challenge misconceptions and build understanding.

Myths vs. Facts Discussion
A guided conversation designed to address stigma, clarify misconceptions, and encourage
accurate, compassionate understanding of mental health.

Warning Signs & Risk Factors
Estimated time: 30–40 minutes

Possible Warning Signs
Persistent withdrawal, hopelessness, or drastic mood changes
Changes in sleep, appetite, or school or work performance
Expressions of feeling like a burden or being isolated
Increased risk-taking behaviors or substance use

Note: Warning signs do not look the same for everyone. Pay attention to
patterns over time and trust your intuition.

Risk Factors
Prior mental health challenges or significant trauma
Interpersonal violence or ongoing chronic stress
Social isolation, discrimination, or sudden and significant losses

Activity
Practice-based learning to strengthen awareness and response.

Supportive Conversations That Help
Estimated time: 30–40 minutes

The CARE Approach
Connect: Listen without judgment and validate feelings.
Ask: Check in directly and compassionately about safety.
Respond: Stay calm; avoid minimizing, lecturing, or reacting with alarm.
Engage supports: Identify trusted adults and professional resources.

Language Tips
Helpful
“I’m really glad you told me.”

Avoid
Debating feelings, giving ultimatums, or promising secrecy.

Activity
Skill-building practice in a safe, supportive setting.

Role-Play Practice
Guided role-plays using reflective listening and boundary-setting to build confidence
in supportive, respectful conversations.

Trauma-Informed & Culturally Responsive Practice
Estimated time: 25–30 minutes

Prioritize safety, choice, collaboration, trust, and empowerment in all interactions.
Honor cultural strengths, faith traditions, and family structures that support healing
and resilience.
Reduce barriers to care by using warm handoffs and clear, plain-language resources.

When & How to Escalate
Estimated time: 20–30 minutes

Know When to Get Immediate Help
If there is imminent risk or an inability to stay safe, contact emergency services
immediately to ensure protection and timely support.

Build a Referral Map
Identify and maintain a network of trusted resources for timely referrals.
School counselors, primary care providers, community clinics, and licensed therapists
Crisis lines, text or chat services, and local mobile crisis response teams

Resilience & Prevention in Everyday Life
Estimated time: 20–30 minutes

Skill-building: Develop emotion regulation, problem-solving,
and help-seeking skills for everyday challenges.
Connection rituals: Strengthen relationships through mentoring
circles, affinity groups, and regular family check-ins.
Digital wellbeing: Encourage healthy social media boundaries
and balanced online engagement.

Take-Home Plan
Turning learning into action beyond the session.

30-Day Commitment
Each participant identifies one specific action they will implement
within the next 30 days to support resilience and prevention in daily life.

Resources