
KuriGohan&Kamehameha
想死不能 - 想活不能
- Nov 23, 2020
- 1,797
After watching a documentary about ctb yesterday, I started to think about something.
In most news reports and documentaries, they tend to focus on the suicides of young students, aged 18-22 usually, who are very charismatic, popular, loving family (on the surface at least), academically talented, loads of friends and they usually have a bf/gf as well. The typical, never saw it coming story.
However, I am beginning to wonder what percentage of suicides are that type of person I just described. Most of the prevention narratives seem to assume that you are in a situation where you have loving people around you who care, and you're suffering from a temporary affliction that will likely pass. I don't think this is reality.
They always focus on someone being beautiful and talented, but what if you are neither of those? While I'm not the world's ugliest girl, very few would tout me as beautiful. It is as if the attempts to include and support those who would be outcast and ostracised are total visages when the suicide prevention narrative only focuses on people who they describe in their own words as "normal boys/girls next door".
What was interesting to me was that in one of these documentaries, they got so close to recognising that there were societal factors at play when it came to the ctb of these people, but yet, the producers and the family members interviewed never seemed to acknowledge it. They were all convinced that the people who died were merely depressed and if they had taken more pills or talked to someone more they could have been helped.
Case in point, one of the deceased was a very accomplished academic studying at an extremely prestigious uni in the UK. The University is well known for putting far too much stress and pressure on its students, and he succumbed to the demanding nature of the institution. It was always his dream to study there, and it had just been crushed when he started doing poorly in school.
Another person on the documentary was in debt or something and was about to lose their flat due to back rent, at like 19 or 20 years old. Those aren't really temporary problems, more like longterm ones that have implications and consequences.
Of course I never see anyone in these programs who is chronically ill like me, no family, you get the gist. Feels like the depiction of the average suicidal person isn't really correct.
In most news reports and documentaries, they tend to focus on the suicides of young students, aged 18-22 usually, who are very charismatic, popular, loving family (on the surface at least), academically talented, loads of friends and they usually have a bf/gf as well. The typical, never saw it coming story.
However, I am beginning to wonder what percentage of suicides are that type of person I just described. Most of the prevention narratives seem to assume that you are in a situation where you have loving people around you who care, and you're suffering from a temporary affliction that will likely pass. I don't think this is reality.
They always focus on someone being beautiful and talented, but what if you are neither of those? While I'm not the world's ugliest girl, very few would tout me as beautiful. It is as if the attempts to include and support those who would be outcast and ostracised are total visages when the suicide prevention narrative only focuses on people who they describe in their own words as "normal boys/girls next door".
What was interesting to me was that in one of these documentaries, they got so close to recognising that there were societal factors at play when it came to the ctb of these people, but yet, the producers and the family members interviewed never seemed to acknowledge it. They were all convinced that the people who died were merely depressed and if they had taken more pills or talked to someone more they could have been helped.
Case in point, one of the deceased was a very accomplished academic studying at an extremely prestigious uni in the UK. The University is well known for putting far too much stress and pressure on its students, and he succumbed to the demanding nature of the institution. It was always his dream to study there, and it had just been crushed when he started doing poorly in school.
Another person on the documentary was in debt or something and was about to lose their flat due to back rent, at like 19 or 20 years old. Those aren't really temporary problems, more like longterm ones that have implications and consequences.
Of course I never see anyone in these programs who is chronically ill like me, no family, you get the gist. Feels like the depiction of the average suicidal person isn't really correct.