A
taboo exists around teen suicide – it is a problem that is not
openly talked about.
Suicide
is a major social problem. It is complex and dealing with it
can be difficult. There is justified community alarm at the
level of suicidal behaviour among young people. A lot of lives
are touched when a teenager takes his or her life.
Many
more young people make an attempt on their lives than actually
achieve the end result – death!
Australia
has one of the highest teen suicide rates in the world. America
and England are not that far behind. Countries like Spain, Italy
and Greece have the lowest. People in those countries sing and
dance in the streets, tak e siesta time and seem to balance
work, relaxation and fun. Families seem close knit, with an
extended network of relatives, grandparents, aunts and uncles.
They have a passion for life that filters down to the young
ones. Things may have changed since I visited but recent statistics
reveal that something healthy is happening that keeps the suicide
rate so low.
An old
woman came and sat beside me in a park in San Francisco. She
told me about her grandson who had recently committed suicide.
I asked if she knew why. Shaking her head she said, “These young
ones they don’t know how to live.”
The
stresses of living in our technological and industrial world
press upon us. Body image and achieving at school have become
over-emphasised. Consumerism and the pressure to own material
possessions has increased ridiculously. The world is speeding
up! Suicide figures have escalated alarmingly in the last two
decades.
Thank
goodness for good news – teenage suicide rates have decreased
in the last couple of years.
| Read
more about teen suicide from page 197 of Amritas Book "Getting
Real" by clicking on the icon right. |
 |
You
can purchase your own copy of "Getting Real" by
CLICKING HERE.