JayC9
Well-known member
There has been a recent outpouring of concern recently in the euro press regarding teenagers and their vulnerability, their mood changes and instinct for self dramatization, about the role of the internet and media coverage in encouraging young people to imitate those who have committed suicide.
None of this is new of course, there is no suicide epidemic, though it’s surprisingly common, nearly twice as many people kill themselves as die on the on the roads each year, it’s the biggest killer of boys and men between the ages of fifteen and thirty five. But the finality of this ultimate rejection of life and the living is still chilling and strikes a nerve with a morally confused society.
Killing yourself is no longer illegal though helping or encouraging someone to do so remains a crime, but in an age the values personal autonomy over stoicism or duty we’re no longer sure it’s always wrong. Impressionable teenagers are one thing but surely doubly tragic for those that might not have lived. How can a healthy well balanced adult come to a rational conclusion that life is no longer worth living and act upon it?
None of this is new of course, there is no suicide epidemic, though it’s surprisingly common, nearly twice as many people kill themselves as die on the on the roads each year, it’s the biggest killer of boys and men between the ages of fifteen and thirty five. But the finality of this ultimate rejection of life and the living is still chilling and strikes a nerve with a morally confused society.
Killing yourself is no longer illegal though helping or encouraging someone to do so remains a crime, but in an age the values personal autonomy over stoicism or duty we’re no longer sure it’s always wrong. Impressionable teenagers are one thing but surely doubly tragic for those that might not have lived. How can a healthy well balanced adult come to a rational conclusion that life is no longer worth living and act upon it?