J
JimG
Guest
This article suggests some possible reasons but gives nothing really definitive to explain the reason for the 70% increase in teen suicide. Something is wrong, but I don’t know what, and I’m not sure if anyone is paying attention.
I’ve never really believed that the school years were the happiest or most carefree—even in what we might call the “good old days.” My own recollection of my youth at a time of general prosperity and social stability is that the school years were often happy yet often subject to persistent bouts of worry and melancholy. I remember reading a comment by Winston Churchill that he had a very happy life “except, of course, for the terrible school years.” The things I worried about then would have seemed insignificant to adults. But what is causing kids now to be so much more depressed? What is making them so unhappy as to be despairing of life?
I’ve never really believed that the school years were the happiest or most carefree—even in what we might call the “good old days.” My own recollection of my youth at a time of general prosperity and social stability is that the school years were often happy yet often subject to persistent bouts of worry and melancholy. I remember reading a comment by Winston Churchill that he had a very happy life “except, of course, for the terrible school years.” The things I worried about then would have seemed insignificant to adults. But what is causing kids now to be so much more depressed? What is making them so unhappy as to be despairing of life?