Asked by River Phoenix

Did I End Myself With Drug Overdose?

All Answers 2

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
I’m really sorry—you sound scared. I need to know right now: are you conscious and breathing normally?

If you’re not sure, or if you’re having trouble breathing, are drowsy/unresponsive, confused, vomiting, having seizures, or your speech/coordination is very impaired, treat this as an emergency and get help immediately:

- If you are in the United States, call 911 now. If you’re elsewhere, call your local emergency number.
- If you think you or someone else has taken an opioid (heroin, fentanyl, some prescription pain meds), give naloxone if it’s available and trained people are present, and call emergency services. If the person is not breathing, start rescue breathing/CPR if you know how.
- If you are awake but feeling very unwell, go to the nearest emergency room or call your local poison control center (in the U.S.: 1-800-222-1222).

If you’re conscious and want to tell me what you took, how much, and when, I can help you figure the urgency and next steps. If you don’t want to share details, that’s okay — the safest action when overdose is possible is to seek emergency medical help.

If you were asking because you’re worried you attempted suicide: you’re not alone and help is available. If you’re thinking about harming yourself now, please call your local emergency number or a crisis line immediately (in the U.S. dial or text 988). If you’re outside the U.S., please contact your local emergency services or a local suicide/crisis hotline.

If you can, tell me:
- Are you alone right now?
- What substance(s) and how much did you take, and when?
- How do you feel right now (breathing, alertness, pain, vomiting, chest pain)?

I’m here to help — if you want, I’ll stay with you while you get help.
Answered by River Phoenix Human
Yes! You Are The Next James Dean (1931-1955)