somethingshiny
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2007
- Messages
- 6,746
Thank you for all of your replies.
I don't think that teachers are to blame in any way. However, I do think that one suicide initiates the next. Obviously the kids are around it at school more so than home. So, it seems that the schools have to be more on the ball to deter it. Obviously the parents are supposed to be parenting. Unfortunately, it seems that there is more and more "to do" and less time with children. Teachers do have more time with some students than parents have with the kids. There has got to be some sort of education available to teachers to identify at-risk students and also for students to help each other out. Oddly, of the 4 deaths, none of the parents saw it coming. I don't believe this. There are many signs of depression that aren't outright "cries for help." Our entire community needs to learn what these signs are and what to do when they're identified. If the woman whose yard he mowed could have identified something wrong, perhaps one of the boys would still be alive. If the soccer coach saw that he was stressed to the breaking point, perhaps that boy would be alive.
It sounds cruel of me, but I see the rising suicide rate going hand in hand with the sense of entitlement that so many kids have these days. So many kids expect everything handed to them and when it's not they literally don't know how to deal with it. This is also a lack of parenting. But, parent or no parent, this is affecting the entire community, every family, every child. I'm beginning to think that every child should undergo a psychiatric evaluation at the same time as their standardized tests.
I also think that part of the problem is people trying to mind their own business. When we stop caring about one another, this is what happens.
eta~ sb~ The poster idea is along my train of thought too. It has to stop being swept under the rug. It has to be put out there. Just starting the conversation could save a child.
I don't think that teachers are to blame in any way. However, I do think that one suicide initiates the next. Obviously the kids are around it at school more so than home. So, it seems that the schools have to be more on the ball to deter it. Obviously the parents are supposed to be parenting. Unfortunately, it seems that there is more and more "to do" and less time with children. Teachers do have more time with some students than parents have with the kids. There has got to be some sort of education available to teachers to identify at-risk students and also for students to help each other out. Oddly, of the 4 deaths, none of the parents saw it coming. I don't believe this. There are many signs of depression that aren't outright "cries for help." Our entire community needs to learn what these signs are and what to do when they're identified. If the woman whose yard he mowed could have identified something wrong, perhaps one of the boys would still be alive. If the soccer coach saw that he was stressed to the breaking point, perhaps that boy would be alive.
It sounds cruel of me, but I see the rising suicide rate going hand in hand with the sense of entitlement that so many kids have these days. So many kids expect everything handed to them and when it's not they literally don't know how to deal with it. This is also a lack of parenting. But, parent or no parent, this is affecting the entire community, every family, every child. I'm beginning to think that every child should undergo a psychiatric evaluation at the same time as their standardized tests.
I also think that part of the problem is people trying to mind their own business. When we stop caring about one another, this is what happens.
eta~ sb~ The poster idea is along my train of thought too. It has to stop being swept under the rug. It has to be put out there. Just starting the conversation could save a child.