So sorry to hear of your loss.
Thanks.
Yes. But the strange thing is I only knew of one adult who committed suicide (he was addicted to drugs as far as I know) and in the 6 years we have lived here have heard of maybe 10. And many of them are young people.
Honestly, I was never connected to a suicide until very recently. A man in California recently took his own life.
Iāve read different reports, some say it is the concentration of people from northern European descent in UT. Apparently, the suicide rate is high in northern European countries. (?) So the thinking is there is a genetic predisposition. I havenāt seen any scientific publications that would support this (doesnāt mean they donāt exist).
Okay. I wonder what they are saying these days because I can tell you, that just since school started this August, there have been several teen suicides in Utah county.
I guess the Trib did an article in yesterdayās paper on the problem but I have not yet read it.
It is the high profile suicide of the jr. high boy. So sad.
Iāve lived in Utah my whole life, and anecdotally, I never head of any suicides at all, until the mid 1980ās. Since then I have friends, family and co-workers, who have had someone close to them kill themselves.
Interesting. I know we had some issues with our Mormon friends years ago (who are now all divorced) because they didnāt understand how we had blessings in our family (success, nice kids etc) and were not Mormon. They always asked us why we would live such a āconservative lifestyleā if no one was forcing us to do so.
I never knew how to answer them. If only I had the right words to say back thenā¦
Why do the LDS have this view of God and his distribution of blessings (or not)?
I have no idea why they take the view they do.
Thanks for your insight. Honestly, we are thinking of moving out of state due to the large number of suicides that we hear about every few weeks or so (and we are not reading about them, it is people we know sharing the info).
We had one of our friends from our parish move recently, back to California. They didnāt have children, but the cultural thing here around failure was too much for them to take. By failure, I mean it isnāt allowed in the Mormon culture, and when that is infused in a business environment, it makes for a very odd place to work.
One of the things Iāve read recently is that those who have suicidal thoughts have them around personal failure. A failed job, a failed marriage, or other failed relationships. The person being interviewed said that people arenāt being taught how to deal with failure in a healthy manner.
In Utah culture, failure is viewed as having a spiritual aspect to it. Mormons have the goal of being perfect. IMO, so concentrated a group all trying to be more perfect, more successful, more āblessedā than everyone around them, can become toxic. The pressure to not fail, to be āperfectā, can be intense.