Just stop the bleeding already.

The Mets dropped their fifth straight game on Friday night to the Miami Marlins, right on the heels of being swept by the crosstown rival New York Yankees in four games.

It’s been a rough week. Month. Year.

The Wilpon’s and company have pulled the plug on the 2017 season, but unfortunately, there’s still more than a month left to be played.

Chris Flexen (2-2), who wouldn’t even be in the majors had the majority of the starting rotation not gotten hurt, toed the rubber for New York and handed in a good outing, but got no support from the quiet Mets offense.

“He threw the ball very well,” manager Terry Collins said. “I think he’s certainly improving. I think his stuff is getting better and his command is on the up-tick. He made some good pitches.”

After the start of the game was delayed nearly two hours, Flexen took the mound and registered a clean first inning, but served up a two-run bomb to J.T. Realmuto in the second.

Marcell Ozuna plated another run for Miami in the third with a sacrifice fly after Christian Yelich doubled, but the 23-year-old righty buckled down and kept the Fish at bay into the sixth inning.

All in all, the rookie turned in 5 1/3 innings, allowing three runs on five hits while walking four and striking out one. The bullpen was also strong, going 3 2/3 scoreless frames for New York

Not a sparkling outing, but a good one for a pitcher trying to ease his way into big league life.

“He’s got a good fastball,” pitcher Zack Wheeler said. “He has a tight slider and he has some plus pitches. He has a lot to work on. But everybody has a lot to work on when they first come up to the big leagues. He had a lot to adjust to. It’s all a learning process.”

The Mets offense was silent behind Flexen, only scoring one run, a single from Wilmer Flores in the third inning.

Asdrubal Cabrera and Amed Rosario accounted for four of the Mets seven hits on the evening.

To add insult to injury, the Mets parted ways with yet another veteran, shipping Curtis Granderson to the Dodgers shortly after the conclusion of the game.

“It’s a punch in the gut,” said Michael Conforto on losing yet another player to trade.

In the last month, the Mets have lost Lucas Duda, Addison Reed, Jay Bruce, and Neil Walker in addition to Granderson as they continue to strip down this team.

While general manager Sandy Alderson refuses to call it a rebuild, it certainly feels like one as the team is a shell of what it was on opening day.

If there’s any silver lining, the trades have opened the door for players like Rosario, Dominic Smith and now Brandon Nimmo to get longer looks at their respective positions.

All sights now set on 2018 for the Mets and it can’t come soon enough.