Mental health first response for community stewards and leaders. Covers: crisis recognition (depression, mania, psychosis, panic, dissociation), de-escalation approaches, suicidality assessment, outside resource navigation (988, mobile crisis, emergency psychiatric), and reintegration support after crisis. Activate when a community member is in or approaching acute mental health crisis — visible breakdown, suicidal communication, psychotic episode, severe panic, or concerning behavior that suggests a mental health emergency. Also activate when a steward is supporting a member returning to community after hospitalization or crisis. This skill is MANDATORY when suicidality is present or when behavior suggests imminent risk to self or others. The stakes are too high for generic helpfulness.
As a steward or leader, you are not a clinician. You don't diagnose, you don't provide therapy, and you are not a substitute for professional mental health care. What you are providing is first response — being present when something happens, responding in a way that helps rather than harms, connecting someone to the right level of care, and holding the community through difficult moments.
This role is meaningful and real. First response matters enormously. A skilled non-clinical first responder can de-escalate a crisis, keep someone safe in the immediate moment, prevent the additional trauma that often comes from uninformed or punitive responses, and create the relational bridge that makes professional help feel accessible and worth seeking. Don't underestimate this — and don't overextend it.
The two most common errors: doing too little (hoping it will pass, not asking directly, avoiding the conversation because it's uncomfortable) and doing too much (trying to be the person's therapist, making promises you can't keep, becoming someone's only support in a way that's not sustainable). This skill helps you find the space in between.
An acute crisis involves immediate risk — someone is in severe distress, is potentially unsafe, or is behaving in ways that suggest a break with reality or severe functional impairment requiring immediate presence.
A concerning situation is one where someone is clearly struggling — possibly severely — but is not in immediate danger, allowing for more deliberate response.
Both deserve attention. The distinction shapes urgency, not whether you act.
Severe depression: Extreme withdrawal, inability to function in daily life, expressions of hopelessness or worthlessness, significant changes in sleep (sleeping too much or not sleeping), changes in eating, slowed movement and speech. In severe depression, someone may move slowly, speak in a flat monotone, cry without apparent reason or be unable to cry at all, or be unable to get out of bed for days. They may speak of themselves as a burden to others, express that things will never get better, or say they have no reason to continue.
Pay particular attention to the person who seems fine after a period of severe depression — this can indicate they've made a decision about ending their life, which reduces the inner conflict that was producing visible distress.
Mania (bipolar highs): Elevated or irritable mood; decreased need for sleep without corresponding fatigue ("I only slept two hours but I feel amazing"); racing thoughts; rapid, pressured speech; grandiose beliefs about one's abilities or importance; impulsive and potentially destructive decisions (spending money, sexual behavior, business schemes, sudden relationship changes); sometimes euphoria but also sometimes intense agitation that quickly becomes rage when met with limits. Mania can feel like genius or joy to the person experiencing it, which makes them resistant to the idea that anything is wrong.
Mild mania (hypomania) can be productive and feel good; full mania often ends in wreckage. The community steward's role is not to pathologize productivity but to notice when someone seems to be outrunning their own judgment.
Psychosis: Hallucinations (most commonly auditory — hearing voices — but can include visual, tactile, or other sensory experiences), delusions (fixed false beliefs that persist against evidence and feel completely real), disorganized thinking (speech that loses its thread, jumps between unrelated topics, or seems to follow a logic others can't follow), and functional impairment. Someone in psychosis may be frightened, may be responding to stimuli you can't perceive, may hold beliefs about persecution, special mission, or reality-altering significance of ordinary events, or may seem disconnected from ordinary life in a fundamental way.
Psychosis can occur in the context of several different mental health conditions (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, severe depression), as well as as a side effect of certain medications or substances, severe sleep deprivation, or medical conditions.
Panic attacks: Sudden, intense fear with prominent physical symptoms — racing heart, chest tightness or pain, shortness of breath, dizziness, numbness or tingling, sweating, and often a sense of unreality or of dying. Panic attacks are not medically dangerous but are terrifying, particularly to people who don't know what they are. They typically peak within 10 minutes and subside within 30. The person may be convinced they are having a heart attack or dying.
Dissociation: A spectrum ranging from mild (spacing out, daydreaming during stress) to severe (depersonalization — feeling detached from one's own body; derealization — the world feels unreal or dreamlike; or in more extreme cases, identity fragmentation). In community settings, dissociation often appears as someone seeming to "check out" — becoming very still and vacant, not responding to their name, not registering what's happening around them. It is almost always a trauma response. Don't interpret it as defiance or manipulation.
Mixed states and presentations: These categories don't always appear in pure form. Someone in a mixed bipolar state may be simultaneously depressed and agitated. Someone with chronic suicidal ideation may not present as acutely distressed. Someone in psychosis may be calm and pleasant while holding beliefs that indicate significant disconnection from reality. Stay curious and avoid assuming that calm means fine.
De-escalation is the practice of reducing crisis intensity rather than amplifying it. The core insight: your nervous system state is contagious. If you are calm, regulated, and grounded, this genuinely helps the other person's nervous system. If you are anxious, reactive, or urgent, it amplifies theirs. Your internal state is your primary tool.
Slow down. Urgency serves crisis. Move more slowly than feels natural. Speak more quietly. Take up less physical space. Urgency communicates danger, and when someone is already dysregulated, perceived danger makes things worse.
Prioritize connection over correction. The goal in the immediate moment is not to fix anything — it is to let the person know they are not alone. "I'm here" is more immediately useful than "everything will be okay" (which isn't something you can promise and may feel dismissive).
Match and gradually shift. Mirror some of their emotional intensity initially (don't be artificially calm if that reads as dismissive or robotic), then gradually slow your speech, lower your volume, and deepen your breathing. The person's nervous system may begin to follow yours.
Follow their lead on physical proximity. Some people in crisis need closeness; others need space. Ask or pay careful attention to their signals — leaning away, flinching, or tensing when you approach. Don't assume that physical contact helps. Don't touch without permission, and be prepared to give more space than you think is necessary.
Use their name. Names ground people in reality and in relationship. Hearing your name from someone who cares about you activates social connection, which is the nervous system's fastest route out of threat response.
Don't argue with the content of the crisis. You will not think someone out of a panic attack. You will not argue someone out of psychosis. You will not convince a suicidal person of their worth through reasoning. These states are not produced by wrong thinking — they are produced by neurological and emotional states that are downstream of thinking. Engaging with the content as if it's just a logical error to be corrected is ineffective and often harmful.
Validate the experience without endorsing the interpretation. "It sounds like you're feeling terrified" is different from "you're right that people are out to get you." You can acknowledge how someone feels without agreeing with the content of their distress.
Someone in psychosis: Don't challenge their reality directly ("there's no one following you"), as this often increases fear and agitation. Instead, engage with the emotional content: "It sounds like you're really scared." Keep the environment quiet and simple — turn off screens, reduce background noise, limit the number of people present. Speak slowly and matter-of-factly. Don't call police unless there is genuine, immediate danger — police involvement in psychosis crises frequently escalates and is statistically dangerous, particularly for Black and Brown community members.
Someone in panic: Breathe visibly and slowly — this genuinely models regulation for their nervous system. Name what you observe: "I think you might be having a panic attack. That's very uncomfortable but it's not going to hurt you. I'll stay with you." Counting slow breaths together — "breathe in for four, hold for four, out for four" — can help. Don't tell them to calm down (this is both ineffective and usually maddening); help them by being genuinely calm yourself. Grounding: name five things you can see, four you can touch, and so on.
Someone in a rage or in manic agitation: Give them space — literal physical space. Don't match their volume or try to talk over them. Don't issue commands, don't block their exit, don't get physically close unless there's immediate safety need. Speak slowly in short sentences. Validate: "I can see you're really angry." If there is physical danger to others, your first job is to get others out of the space, not to contain the person. Your safety matters.
Someone who has gone very quiet, flat, and withdrawn: This is often the most dangerous presentation and the most easily overlooked. Someone barely responding, speaking in a monotone about being tired, moving very slowly, saying things like "it doesn't matter anymore" — this is a serious presentation. Do not be reassured by their calm. Stay with them, ask directly about suicidal thoughts (see next section), and do not leave them alone if there is genuine risk.
The most important thing to internalize: asking someone directly if they are thinking about suicide does not plant the idea or increase risk. This is a persistent myth that causes direct harm by preventing the question from being asked. Research consistently shows that asking directly does not increase suicidal ideation and often decreases shame and isolation, which are among the most dangerous conditions for suicidal people.
If you are worried, ask. Ask plainly and without hedging: "Are you thinking about suicide?" or "Are you having thoughts of ending your life?" Both are clear, direct, and non-euphemistic. The word "suicide" matters — don't dance around it.
Accept whatever answer you get without panicking, minimizing, or immediately trying to fix. If they say yes, your next response should communicate that you're glad they told you, not that you're overwhelmed by the disclosure: "Thank you for telling me. I'm here. Can we talk about it?"
You are not doing clinical risk assessment. But you can pay attention to factors that meaningfully affect risk:
Plan: Does the person have a specific plan for how they would do it? General "I don't want to be here" is different from "I've been thinking I would do X." Specificity of plan increases risk.
Means: Do they have access to what they need to carry out the plan? Particularly: firearms, stockpiled medications, or other lethal means. Access to means is one of the strongest risk factors. Means restriction (reducing access to lethal methods) is one of the most effective suicide prevention interventions.
Timeline: Are they thinking about a specific time — "tonight," "after my kids leave," "before the end of the month"? Specificity of timeline significantly increases risk.
Connection: What do they still feel connected to? What would they stay for? Connection to people, animals, projects, hope — these are protective. The absence of anything they'd stay for is a significant warning sign.
Previous attempts: Have they attempted before? A history of previous attempts is the single strongest predictor of future attempts.
Recent stressors: Has something acute happened recently — loss, humiliation, isolation, a relationship ending, a crisis? Acute stressors on top of chronic suicidal ideation increase immediate risk.
You don't need to assess all of these formally. The purpose is to help you gauge whether this is a general expression of pain and despair versus an active, specific plan.
Passive ideation, no plan: Someone expressing that they often feel like they don't want to be here, that they're tired of life, that things would be easier if they weren't around — but without a specific plan, intent, or means. This is serious and deserves genuine response: stay present, listen, validate, don't try to talk them out of the feeling. Connect them to ongoing support (therapy, crisis line, peer support, regular check-ins from you or others). Follow up. Don't treat the conversation as resolved once the immediate moment passes.
Active ideation with some plan: Do not leave them alone. Contact 988 (Suicide and Crisis Lifeline) together or ask if you can call on their behalf. Means restriction: if there are firearms, medications, or other means in the home, can they be less accessible? This might mean asking someone to hold their medications, temporarily storing a firearm elsewhere, or similar concrete steps. If possible, connect them to a professional who can do a proper safety plan. If they're willing, help them make an appointment.
Imminent risk (plan, means, timeline, or stated intent): Stay with them. This is not the moment to leave them alone to go call for help. If there's someone else you can call while staying with them, do that. 988 is the first call; they can help you assess and can dispatch mobile crisis in many areas. Mobile crisis teams (mental health professionals who respond to calls instead of police) are available in a growing number of areas and are the better option in most situations. If 911 is genuinely the only option, tell the dispatcher this is a mental health crisis, provide as much information as you can, and request a crisis-trained officer if available.
After an attempt: An attempt has occurred and the person is alive. Get emergency medical care first if there is any medical need. Then: stay with them, follow their lead on conversation, connect to professional care. The period immediately following an attempt is high risk for another attempt. Do not leave them with access to means.
Lethal means restriction is one of the most effective suicide prevention strategies known. Firearms are particularly significant: they are present in roughly 50% of suicide deaths and are the method with the highest case fatality rate. If a suicidal community member has access to firearms, reducing that access — even temporarily — saves lives. This may mean asking a trusted person to store the firearms, or asking the person if they'd be willing to put distance between themselves and the weapon.
This is a conversation worth having even when it feels uncomfortable.
988 connects to trained crisis counselors available 24/7 by call or text. You can call on behalf of someone, call with them, or help them call themselves. Counselors can help you assess a situation, provide guidance on next steps, and in many areas can dispatch mobile crisis response. 988 is not just for suicide — it's for any mental health crisis.
Calling 988 does not automatically result in police being sent. Counselors try first to resolve the situation through conversation.
An expanding set of areas now have mobile crisis teams — mental health professionals who respond to crisis calls rather than police. These are generally significantly safer and more therapeutically useful for mental health crises than police response. Research what exists in your area before you need it, so you have that information ready.
ERs can provide psychiatric evaluation and emergency stabilization. They are often poor environments for mental health crisis — loud, stimulating, slow, depersonalizing — but are the right call when medical care is needed alongside psychiatric care, or when no other option is available.
Police involvement in mental health crises carries genuine risk, particularly for Black, Brown, Indigenous, and disabled community members. Police are rarely trained for mental health response and are statistically associated with escalation and, in a meaningful percentage of cases, death. Treat police as a last resort rather than a first call, especially for vulnerable community members. When calling, specify that it is a mental health crisis and ask specifically for whatever mental health resources your jurisdiction has deployed.
When a community member has experienced a visible mental health crisis, both the person and the community need intentional attention.
Before assuming what the person wants, ask them directly. Some people want the community to acknowledge what happened explicitly; some want to return to normal life without processing; some want to talk about it with some people and not others. Both disclosure and privacy are legitimate choices, and respecting the person's own authority over their narrative matters.
Address stigma if it emerges — directly and by name. Mental health crises do not make someone dangerous, unreliable, or a problem. If you hear community members talking about someone who had a crisis in ways that are stigmatizing, interrupt it.
Plan for the long tail. Communities tend to mobilize in the acute phase and then gradually withdraw as the crisis recedes. The sixth week of someone's depression, when everyone has stopped checking in because things seemed better, is often when support matters most. Build in explicit follow-up structure.
People who witnessed a severe crisis — particularly psychosis, a suicide attempt, or a meltdown — will carry it. This is physiological; the nervous system responds to others' extreme distress. Create space for debrief — not gossip, but genuine acknowledgment that what happened was hard and that people may have feelings about it that deserve acknowledgment.
This is especially important for children in community who witnessed something intense. Children need age-appropriate explanation, reassurance that the person is being cared for, and permission to have whatever feelings they're having.
When someone has experienced a psychotic episode and is returning to community as they stabilize, the situation is often awkward in ways that can isolate them further. People don't know what to say; they may treat the person as fragile, or alternatively pretend nothing happened; they may be frightened of recurrence.
What helps: normalcy alongside genuine care. Treat the person as themselves, not as their episode. Include them in community life. Check in privately if you have relationship with them. Don't quiz them on the content of their psychosis or treat it as something shameful. And if community members are frightened or confused by what they witnessed, address that separately from the person who had the episode — don't burden them with managing others' discomfort on top of their own recovery.
Witnessing someone in acute mental health crisis takes something out of you. This is physiological, not weakness. Your nervous system responds to others' extreme distress — it's supposed to. After a significant crisis response, you may notice your own anxiety, hypervigilance, replaying of events, sleep disturbance, or emotional numbness.
Debrief with someone you trust — ideally someone who wasn't in the crisis with you, so they can be genuinely present rather than also processing. Take the time you need before returning to normal community function. Don't treat your own recovery as optional.
If you are regularly in a first-responder role for community mental health crises — which community stewards in at-risk communities often are — pay attention to the cumulative effects: growing emotional numbness, difficulty being fully present with people, cynicism about whether anything helps, loss of the sense of meaning that used to sustain the work. These are signs of vicarious trauma or compassion fatigue, not weakness of character.
Address it seriously: peer support, therapy, genuine rest, reduction of load where possible. Burned-out stewards are less effective and may do inadvertent harm from exhaustion.
You should not be the only person in your community who can respond to a mental health crisis. This is both a practical resilience issue (you won't always be available) and a care issue (one person shouldn't carry that weight indefinitely).
Build capacity by:
Prevention is first response. The community that holds its members through ordinary difficulty produces fewer acute crises. The relational investment you make in non-crisis times is mental health infrastructure.
Don't say: "Don't say that," "You don't really mean that," "You have so much to live for," "Think about how this would affect your family."
Do say: "Thank you for telling me. I'm really glad you did. Can you tell me more about what's been happening?" Then listen. Then ask directly: "Are you having thoughts about actually doing it?"
Don't leave without arranging for someone else to be present, or without a clear and specific plan for follow-up: "I have to go, but I'm going to call you in an hour, and I want you to call me if things get worse before then. Will you do that?"
"You said you've been having thoughts of suicide, and now you're saying it's not a big deal. I'm still taking it seriously, even if you are. That's not a criticism — I just care about what you said."
You cannot force an adult to accept help. What you can do: stay in relationship, keep checking in, keep the door open, connect them to resources they can use on their own timeline, and consult with professionals yourself about how to support someone who is refusing care. At some point, if someone is in imminent danger and won't accept help, the calculus shifts — consult 988 for guidance on the options available to you.
When Louisoix activates this skill, the core question is: what does this person need right now, and what can I actually provide? Mental health first response is the skill of matching response to moment — being present enough to read what's needed, skilled enough to provide it, clear-eyed enough about your own limits to call for more when the situation exceeds your capacity. The goal is not to be the person who fixes it. It's to be the person who stays.
For stewards and caregivers who have been sustaining others through mental health crises and are now depleted themselves — compassion fatigue, secondary traumatic stress, role boundary collapse — invoke the caregiver-support skill.
When a mental health crisis is being shaped by trauma history — freeze, dissociation, hypervigilance, retraumatization risk — invoke the trauma-informed-care skill to understand the nervous system dynamics before intervening.
When someone is in crisis and there is also a genuine physical safety concern — invoke the safety-planning skill.