Suicide and the Survival Architecture of Coping: A Model of Arousal Regulation from Contemplation to Collapse
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The Survival Architecture of Coping (SArC) reframes the concept of suicide not as a failure of will or morality, but as the terminal phase of an overwhelmed regulatory system. Drawing from affective neuroscience, developmental psychology, and contemporary suicidology, SArC conceptualizes despair as the point at which the human coping architecture; biological regulation, cognitive flexibility, relational co-regulation, and existential meaning; can no longer reorganize mounting activation into workable forms of thought, action, feeling, and rest. In regulatory terms, suicide emerges when arousal continues to rise while usable capacity narrows, and the system progressively loses its ability to bind experience into coherent, livable patterns. Building on Freud’s notion of binding (Freud, 1895/1966) and the tension between Eros and Thanatos (Freud, 1920/1955), SArC interprets coping as the ongoing work of integration: channeling activation into connection, comprehension, and constructive action, rather than fragmentation and collapse. This framework integrates McEwen’s concept of allostatic load, Bowlby’s attachment models, and process-based therapies with recent regulatory accounts of arousal and appraisal, including the Arousal Appraisal Model (Passaro, 2025a). It situates suicidal crises along a continuum; from low-load contemplation, through matched-load engagement and excess-load emotion, to overload states in which collapse or shutdown becomes the only remaining form of relief. Rather than treating suicide as an inexplicable choice or a discrete symptom cluster, SArC views it as a systemic outcome: the exhaustion of a survival architecture that has been operating beyond its sustainable limits. Prevention and treatment are therefore reconceived as the restoration of coping capacity; reactivating rhythm across body, mind, relationship, and meaning; rather than merely suppressing suicidal ideation. In doing so, SArC offers a unifying model in which healing is understood not as the elimination of pain, but as the renewed ability of the system to move, integrate, and remain intact while in pain.