DR. WALLACE:
A month ago, my cousin and his girlfriend overdosed on drugs and both of them
died. We know it was suicide because they left suicide notes to their parents.
I went to the funeral, and it was the saddest moment of my life. They were
buried side by side. Friends and relatives of both teens were in total shock
and grief. He was a star athlete, and she was a senior homecoming princess.
They were the perfect couple and seemed to have everything to live for.
I can understand people killing
themselves when they are sick or old or have huge financial problems. However,
it is difficult to comprehend why two young adults who seem to have the world
by the tail would commit suicide. Since you are an expert on teenagers, I'm
hoping you can shed light on this very complex issue of teen suicide. Why does
this happen? —Carla, San Francisco, Calif.
CARLA: Suicide is an enormous tragedy
that leaves a family filled with grief and guilt, but when a young person is
involved, emotions are compounded. According to the American Mental Health
Association, suicide is the 10th leading cause of death for adults, but for
teens it's the third leading cause. Every day, an estimated 18 teens take their
own lives and another 57 teens and preteens attempt suicide. For many, the teen
years are the most trying and painful of their lives. There seems to be no
middle ground. It's either happiness or despair.
Teens are trying to establish an
identity, learning to operate independently, growing physically and
intellectually, choosing a career and developing relationships.
In a period when family instability is on
the rise, some teenagers find they cannot cope with life. Parents may
contribute by making impossible demands on teens and by rejecting them for
failing to live up to Mom and Dad's expectations, or by making the teen feel
worthless.
When a teen commits suicide, family
factors are the most commonly cited cause. Death, divorce, alcoholism, drug
abuse and child abuse — any of these — add to loneliness and depression.
Researchers at the University of Southern California interviewed 6,000 teens
who had attempted suicide and compared their life histories with those of a
group of teens who had never tried suicide. The self-destructive teens had a much
higher percentage of parents who had divorced, separated or remarried within
the past five years. Multiple separations — being shunted from relatives to
foster homes, missing the support of parents — deprived the suicide-prone teens
of the necessary love every child needs.
The study traced the path to suicide from
family problems to a second stage, school failures, truancy, loneliness and
depression. In the third and final phase, the teen tries to fasten onto
someone. It is so clinging, so smothering, that it can't last. When this
relationship fails, the teen feels hopeless and isolated. He or she thinks the
only solution left is self-destruction.
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