There is more. But please know that your commitment to never land in the hospital again is going to mean that you need to take big time responsibility - minute by minute, second by second - to be watchful, mindful and diligent, as to your daily schedule; commitment to eating well, drinking enough water, moving your body when you feel like lying in bed all day, attending to self care seriously, etc.
I 100% agree with this. It's going to be hard, but you have shown some very worrying signs and that is why your therapist called. They are legally obligated to report when they believe someone might harm themselves and they should have told you that on day one before starting your therapy, so if you keep insisting that you're done trying and someone hears you, they're going to do something about it.
But maybe it's more like, "Idk how to get better', rather than I don't 'want' to? Because not wanting to feel the same, means you want to.
Listen, we're here for you. If you don't want to go to inpatient care, I'm not going to tell you to do so. I also 100% agree with this above quote. You're saying that you don't want to get better because you don't want to do what other people are telling you to do, but you DO want things to change. You are not satisfied living life the way you are living it and you see two options: follow orders or kill yourself. Those are not the only two options. You don't want meds? Okay, fine. You don't like therapy? Sure, but we are here giving you options that don't involve follwing orders.
1. Write down EVERY good thing that happens each day. Every. Little. Thing. You woke up? Good, write that down. You put on clean clothes? Good, write that down. You went to work? Amazing. Like honestly, when you mentioned that you were taken from work I was like "Whaaaaaa you are still able to get up every day and work even when you are battling such a terrible illness right now?" That's AMAZING. Write that shit down. "I went to work" "I completed a task a work" "I ate lunch" "I said hello to my coworkers" "I made it home" "I read a post on MyPTSD." "I posted on MyPTSD" "I went to bed" You can keep a separate notebook or write this on scrap paper and keep it in a box. You can re-read it later or just look at the volume of paper you have after just a couple days. You do this and you are one large step closer to never going back to inpatient care.
2. Find a self-help book. I have one for Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). I have it because an outpaitent nurse practitioner suggested it to me. I was only allowed to have 5 sessions with her, and she was the only one who did this therapy with me and I loved it. Some activities seem stupid, so I skip them, or I laugh at them, or I write criticisms in the margins. I have control over this book. Then write on your good list that you bought the book and worked on the book. Use the book a few times a week? Then you're another large step to avoiding inpatient care and following orders.
3. Keep a healthy diet. I know it's hard. It's super hard and can get expensive, but you deserve it. You deserve to be healthy. Drink vitamin water or gatorade with that electrolyte stuff once a day or once a week or something. Make sure to eat fresh vegetables and fruit when you have the option. Try to avoid caffeine, alcohol, and reined sugar (the last one is my downfall). Write down what you've eaten to keep track of things like calorie intake (too much is better than not enough in this situation), then write on your good list that you've eaten food. I drink meal replacement shakes because I am terrible at eating properly and I believe that they have largely contributed to my recent mood improvement, maybe they will work for you too. Omega 3 and 6 are good for battling depression. Things like fish and ground flax are good sources. Keep snacks around like trail mix, good source of protein and fat and you don't need to prepare a meal to eat well... plus you can add candy to them if you want :) Eating better will help you sleep better and make you feel a bit better. PLus you have 100% control over your own food. No one can tell you what to eat because by now you're killing it. You don't need inpatient care, you're eating well and taking charge of your treatment.
4. Exercise. I HATE this part, but some people swear by it. It's supposed to be best to exercise in the morning because it wakes you up, but if you exercise when you can, you're already doing great.
5. Look at these replies to your post. Come here for help every day.
You CAN do this, you already are, and we are here. There are dozens of people giving you suggestions here and I just took them all and made a list. If you don't like my suggestions, then guess what? You get to choose to ignore them. You get to choose to call them stupid and walk away. You reached out to us and we want to help you heal your way.