:dry: What ridiculous comments.
I stand by what I said. Most suicidal teens cannot see beyond their own problems and emotions. What a lot of them need is to be taken to a soup kitchen or to South Central Los Angeles to see people who REALLY have it bad.
As opposed to adults, who of course can see beyond their own problems and emotions when they're suicidal? :rolleyes: At the end of the day, it is an incredibly dangerous thing to generalise with emotions - what you perceive is the norm, probably isn't, as everyone's experiences when they're suicidal / in love / grieving / any other intense emotion are different.
If you've felt suicidal yourself, then that's an even worse comment to say. No doubt if someone told you that when you were suicidal, that you should be taken to some soup kitchen in LA to see those who have it bad, you'd go ballistic at them. How is this any different?
Barring abuse, death, or a severe chemical imbalance or behavioral disorder of some sort, 99% of the problems teenagers have will be gone by the time they graduate high school. Bullying, not being liked, getting dumped by a boy/girlfriend, being betrayed by a best friend, feeling like your parents don't understand you, etc. These all seem very monumental to a teenager, when in reality, they are very temporary problems.
Really? What about those who have been through abuse, have depression - be it diagnosed or not, seen things, had experiences etc, that scar them for life. I know that many teenagers here have been through that, as have adult members.
Despite they may be temporary - you, I, no-one is to judge what effect they have on people. I know that I myself was suicidal because of my first breakup, thus I came here. I still get low periods now - not through that anylonger, but perhaps it's unmasked or created depression - I don't know, but what I do know is that it is not your, or anyone's, place to put problems in a 'hierarchy'.
While it may only be a temporary problem to you - to others it may be the end of their world. Those people deserve just as much support as you, as others who have more long term issues.
Many teenagers indulge in these feelings and bring themselves even lower by wallowing in their problems, listening to depressing music, writing depressing stories or poetry and re-enforcing in their minds that their pain is unique and that they somehow have a better understanding of the depth of human emotion and the meaninglessness of life.
Perhaps the poetry / writing stories is a way of getting things out, rather than ''wallowing in their problems'' ? A question here: have you ever been depressed / suicidal? If you have, then I ask you: Have you never ''wallowed in your problems'', or listened to music that made you feel more low? Most people - indeed, I would say 99% of people indulge in their feelings at some point.
Once we reach adulthood, we realize that our parents understood EXACTLY what we were going through because chances are, they went through it as well. Chances are, they weren't the most popular kids in school, struggled with grades, got dumped by a boyfriend or girlfriend who they thought was "the one", had rumors spread about them behind their backs and cried themselves to sleep at sleep many, many nights.
''EXACTLY'' is a dangerous word to use with emotion. No-one can
ever understand
exactly how anyone else is feeling - emotion is a highly individual thing, regardless of how we like to see it, as being a universal feeling. Like it or not - two people who feel suicidal / depressed / happy / in love / grief will never experience it the same exactly, even if they feel they do.
By indulging in this "nobody can understand my true pain" fantasy (and yes, it IS a fantasy), teenagers are only making it worse on themselves. The sad fact is that almost EVERYBODY understands your pain because they have themselves been there. This is what bonds us as human beings. As romantic as it seems to think of oneself as the only person who has ever felt such searing emotional pain, it is simply not true. And the sooner some teens can realize this, the easier their lives will become.
Again - have you never ever felt that?
And no, a YEAR is not a long time to be going through this. A year (while it may seem long at the time) is a blip on the radar. Teens need to understand that once they get out of the little bubbles they put us all in during those years, there is a vast world out there waiting for them and that loser they dated in high school or that "best friend" who screwed around with said loser and all those people whose opinions mattered SO much will not be given a second though a few years from now.
No. A year IS a long time. It doesn't feel like it to you, because (presumably), you've been feeling suicidal, depressed etc for much longer than that, and all the days, months, years blur together. To be honest, this trivialising of teenagers' problems, believing us all to be the same is, quite frankly insulting. You're effectively saying that our problems are less important than yours, because they're just trivial little things. Well, ok - perhaps they are.
But 1) Who are you to judge anyone else's feelings?
2) Why they may feel trivial and pointless to you, they may mean the world to someone else.
Indeed. I could fire this back at you, and say that perspective is the buzzword of the thread - while you believe you have all the answers, and that all our problems are trivial. I can solidly assure you - they're not.