Sand Branch Suicide Cleanup

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Sand Branch Suicide Cleanup

This web page for Dallas Suicide Cleanup serves families and businesses in and around Dallas, Texas. Call for information any time, any day, no obligation. A professional suicide cleanup technician answers all calls.

Technicians clean more than suicides. Technicians clean after homicide and unattended deaths with decomposition. Accidental death cleanup and traumatic injury cleanup sometimes require professional, biohazard cleanup technicians.

Expect an experienced Suicide Cleanup technician to help clarify what to expect. With years of experience cleaning after most types of suicides, most answers will be answered. Do not expect prying questions. Do expect questions related to place of death.

What Suicide Cleanup means

Suicide Cleanup services for Dallas include source material removal, thorough cleaning, removal of blood soiled furnishings and garments. Thorough cleaning, disinfecting, and inspecting return biologically safe rooms.

A first and last concern must lead to safe and orderly condition for our callers. We plan ahead for Dallas's residents to reach this point.

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Suicide Cleanup and Janitors

Similarities and differences exist between a janitor's work and a Suicide Cleanup technician's work. In fact, Some janitors work as Suicide Cleanup technicians.

Janitors must often clean up blood and perform infectious waste cleanup as part of their world Blood soiled feminine napkin disposal, blood removal from nose bleeds create infectious waste conditions. Sometimes janitors come into contact with biohazards.

Like other schools, Dallas's schools become contaminated by blood soiled waste. Principals cannot allow blood soiled materials on school grounds for long. Janitors must make all school areas safe by applying cleaning solutions and 1 part bleach to 10 parts water to soiled areas. Janitors use mops frequently for this type of cleanup.

Suicide Cleanup workers have equipment, experience, and information related to suicide cleanup. Janitors do not.

 

 

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Addison - Balch Springs - Cedar Hill - Carrollton - Cockrell Hill - Combine - Coppell - Dallas - DeSoto - Duncanville - Farmers Branch
Ferris - Garland - Glenn Heights - Grand Prairie - Grapevine - Highland Park - Hutchins - Irving - Lancaster - Lewisville - Mesquite - Ovilla - Richardson - Rowlett - Sachse - Sand Branch - Seagoville - Sunnyvale - University Park - Wilmer - Wylie


 

Why Suicide?

   

Facts about suicide show we all consider suicide as an option, sooner or later. We consider suicide for these reasons: Language - Pain - Shame - Drugs and Alcohol - Victim doesn't Understand - No one to Blame - Who commits suicide?

  1. Language allows or leads us to placing ourselves in the "others" shoes, whatever "others" may do. Young boys play at "fireman" and "policeman." Young girls play at "doctor" and "truck driver." Eventually, we come to other roles and ideas. We place these roles up against our self-concept. We measure these ideas and roles against our self-concept. When suicide comes to our attention, we place this negative act up against our self-concept. We either reject it, consider it, question it, and place it in our "odd ideas" area of our minds. We may not ever endorse it, but we must sooner or later consider it.
  2. Pain leads to some suicides and it's hard to justify. But then we have no idea what pain or anticipation of pain may do to some of us. Burning to death leads to suicidal acts to end our burning pain sensation. On September 11, 2001, we witnessed people jumping from New York's Twin Towers, rather than burn to death. They knew the pain inflicted by fire. They knew because fires of extreme heat lead them to jump from suicidal heights. They had an option to jumping, burning to death. Personally, I too would have jumped. We find pain leads to suicides when arriving at a death scene. It's hard to blame anyone for suicide when they suffer daily by the moment. No judgments follow suicide cleaners, usually. Experience tells us there's much more going on then we could ever hope to imagine. Perhaps we should not "blame" anyone for suicide. Perhaps we must try to persuade others not to take their own lives.
  3. Shame leads some to suicide. What some of us consider as "embarrassing" others consider shameful. Shame creates great guilt and anxiety in some of us. We cannot imagine the discomfort shame causes. Relating to others after the "worst of shames" surpasses the extremes of death's quiet and such. My first suicide job followed a young man's suicide. He had done something shameful, something so shameful he could no longer face his family, fiends, or co-workers. He had dishonored a community trust and as a result he could no longer live, at least he thought so. He tried several different steps in destroying his life. He finally succeeded with a high-powered rifle. Personally, I too would at least consider suicide had I performed the lieud acts he had inflicted on young, unsuspecting children. In my family and social circle, abusing children ranks high in dishonor and resulting shame.
  4. Drugs and Alcohol: Drugs and alcohol sometimes lead to suicide. They do not cause suicide, so much as diminish inhibitions against suicide. In fact, older white males found decomposing after weeks of alcohol abuse lead me to believe they used alcohol as their weapon of choice. It serves two purposes for them. One, it nullifies their critical thinking skills. Two, it slowly poisons the suicide victim beyond recovery while anesthetizing them.
  5. Our victim doesn't understand: Suicide cleanup has shown us that usually, people cannot explain why they take their own lives. Suicide notes show us trivial thoughts. Even when causation arises in their notes, their causes do not rate self-murder. Blaming others for the suicide makes little sense. There's usually a way away from "despicable" others.
  6. There's no one to blame, usually. There are no others to blame for one's suicide. We cannot find the thought processes that lead to suicide. We cannot find a causal agent when it comes to suicide, outside of excruciating pain.
  7. Who commits suicide? Most suicides in the Unties States are committed by white males using handguns. Other demographic groups do not even come close to white males, older white males taking their own lives most often. Overall, in the United States, white males commit about 73% of suicides. White women commit about 17% of suicides in the Unites States. Oddly, black women attempt suicide most often, but succeed least often. Philippine women attempt suicide the least of any other demographic group.

 

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