[HN Gopher] The mystifying rise of child suicide
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The mystifying rise of child suicide
 
Author : IdEntities
Score  : 27 points
Date   : 2022-04-04 21:50 UTC (1 hours ago)
 
web link (www.newyorker.com)
w3m dump (www.newyorker.com)
 
| Overtonwindow wrote:
| The article goes out of its way to avoid discussing the damage
| the pandemic and the lockdowns did to children. We will reap that
| mistake for a long time.
 
  | travisathougies wrote:
  | Exactly, I remember distinctly at age 16 thinking my life was
  | going to be ruined because my parents wouldn't let me 'party'
  | [1] during high school. Children have neither perspectitve nor
  | sense, nor should they be expected to be. The truth is two
  | years of little socialization and stimulation may be okay for
  | mentally well adults, but it is criminal to impose that on
  | children
  | 
  | [1] As in... my parents had a curfew and didn't let me
  | drink..., so totally normal rules for a high schooler, but I
  | felt that the world was ending and everything was so unfair.
 
    | saila wrote:
    | It would be criminal to allow children to rampantly spread
    | COVID too, even if they themselves were/are at low risk.
    | Imagine the damage when a child brings home COVID and one of
    | their parents ends up dying or even "just" disabled with long
    | COVID. There's no simple answer here.
 
      | travisathougies wrote:
      | Parents of a normal age (which these seem to be) are
      | extremely unlikely to die from COVID. This is just fear
      | mongering.
 
  | mikeyouse wrote:
  | It explicitly mentions it several times.. did we read the same
  | article?
  | 
  | > _Although it is too early to quantify fully the long-term
  | impact of the pandemic, it has exacerbated the burgeoning
  | crisis. The C.D.C. found that in 2020 mental-health-related
  | visits to hospital emergency departments by people between the
  | ages of twelve and twenty-seven were a third higher than in
  | 2019. The C.D.C. also reported that, during the first seven
  | months of lockdown, U.S. hospitals experienced a twenty-four-
  | per-cent increase in mental-health-related emergency visits for
  | children aged five to eleven, and a thirty-one-per-cent
  | increase for those aged twelve to seventeen. Among the general
  | population, suicides declined, but this change masks a slight
  | increase among younger people and a spike among the country's
  | Black, Latinx, and Native American populations. Last October,
  | the American Academy of Pediatrics declared that the pandemic
  | had accelerated the worrying trends in child and adolescent
  | mental health, resulting in what it described as a "national
  | emergency."_
 
  | saila wrote:
  | "Although it is too early to quantify fully the long-term
  | impact of the pandemic, it has exacerbated the burgeoning
  | crisis..."
 
| scarmig wrote:
| Oddly, the article doesn't mention anything about gender roles or
| the disproportionate impact of suicide on young boys, even though
| they commit suicide at 4x the rate of young girls[0]. This is
| especially odd because the author of the article does feel
| comfortable discussing other demographic trends, like elevated
| rates among LGBT and non-white youth, even though those trends
| are much smaller in magnitude than that of boys compared to
| girls.
| 
| [0] https://www.kidsdata.org/topic/210/suicides-gender/table
 
  | cultofmetatron wrote:
 
    | dang wrote:
    | Please point it out without taking HN threads further into
    | flamewar. That doesn't do anybody any good.
    | 
    | https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
 
      | cultofmetatron wrote:
      | I'm merely pointing out a fact. That this is contentious in
      | and of itself shows how aggressively apathetic society is
      | towards boys.
      | 
      | I'm especially concerned about the mental health of young
      | white boys in this country and I say that as a brown man.
      | 
      | Racism is rooted in insecurity. Those little boys will grow
      | up into men and the way they are treated now will affect us
      | all negatively in the future.
 
        | scarmig wrote:
        | I'm obviously sympathetic to your concerns, but
        | particularly when it comes to pointing out things that
        | don't mesh with the mainstream narrative, it's most
        | effective to state the facts and let them speak for
        | themselves. That's enough to get people interested in the
        | truth to draw their own conclusions.
 
        | dang wrote:
        | "No one gives a shit about young boys" is not a fact.
        | That's flamewar rhetoric.
        | 
        | I realize that you're expressing a feeling there and I'm
        | sure the feeling is a good and well-intentioned one, but
        | the problem is that inflammatory rhetoric like that, on
        | the internet, just runs into other people's intense
        | feelings and blows up. Then we get a dumb and nasty
        | thread instead of a thoughtful curious one.
        | 
        | There are much better ways to express your concerns that
        | don't break the HN guidelines. I'm just asking you to use
        | one of those ways, instead of this way.
        | 
        | https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
 
  | saila wrote:
  | The abstract you linked to says "female youth more often
  | attempt suicide," which might indicate that girls are more
  | troubled growing up.
  | 
  | It also mentions other gender differences.
 
    | scarmig wrote:
    | It's also odd that somehow the fact that boys commit suicide
    | at four times the rate of girls can be used as a soapbox to
    | try to prove that girls are more troubled growing up.
    | 
    | But the point here is that the article omits this critical
    | fact, even though being male identified is overwhelmingly the
    | strongest demographic factor indicating risk of suicide.
    | Doesn't that warrant at least a sentence?
 
      | bluefirebrand wrote:
      | Girls attempt it more, boys succeed more.
      | 
      | It's not entirely unreasonable to suggest that "more
      | attempts overall" = "more troubled"
      | 
      | Maybe boys are overall less troubled than girls but just
      | choose more effective forms of suicide.
      | 
      | Maybe boys choose more effective forms of suicide because
      | they are in fact way more troubled.
      | 
      | Really though, it's not a competition. We should be able to
      | help both boys and girls, in ways that are effective for
      | each group.
 
    | thr0wawayf00 wrote:
    | The abstract also makes the distinction that boys are much
    | more successful in actually committing suicide than girls, so
    | I don't see how this proves that girls are more troubled.
 
| candiodari wrote:
| Strange how little attention is given to the perspective of
| Trevor:
| 
| 1) he was intense, smarter than his peers (probably a lot), and
| also physicially superior to them. You might think this is good,
| but think about it for 5 seconds: it's extremely isolating.
| 
| 2) he got rejected ... and rejected ... and rejected. First, by
| his classmates and schoolmates ... then
| 
| 3) the schools responded to this, not by figuring out both sides
| of the story, but by dumping schools him, despite Trevor
| obviously putting in extra effort to satisfy everything demanded
| of him
| 
| 4) Trevor's skiing is striking: clearly, 99.9% of the time,
| Trevor was using willpower to satisfy whatever he thought others
| wanted of him. He must have done this a _lot_ since even in
| situations where it was beyond obvious nobody suspected this is
| what he was doing.
| 
| 5) it is mentioned that both of his parents had similar habits.
| Both parents were driven, and kind, really trying to help people.
| 
| This paints an entirely different picture, doesn't it?
| 
| In short confrontations with others, Trevor was irresistibly
| nice. In longer confrontations (willpower will falter
| occasionally), nobody likes him (because he _is_ superior to the
| other children).
| 
| And of course, the problem these parents and children have with
| this ... is how it affects _them_. That, perhaps, they ... how to
| put it ...  "weren't letting Trevor be Trevor", does not register
| to anyone at all. That they put him through hell, probably asking
| more and more of him, until he lost control, then punished him,
| and then dumped him ... not a second's thought is wasted on that.
| Everyone is just protecting themselves, and most are simply
| protecting themselves
| 
| Trevor wasn't depressed at all, I'd bet. I bet he was working on
| 5 side projects the week he killed himself.
| 
| What would have helped? _NOT_ rejecting him. Certainly not
| throwing him out of school. Instead, provide him with a real
| challenge. But for the same reason these people can 't see what
| happened (they're completely caught up in their own feelings),
| they couldn't allow Trevor to, for instance, move up a grade (or
| two). That, obviously, would have hurt _many_ feelings.
| 
| Trevor killed himself because he was rejected by everyone around
| him because he performed better than them, and because probably
| his parents and everyone else kept repeating to him that this
| happened because he still wasn't good enough. Reality is that he
| cared deeply about people who couldn't give a rat's ass about
| him, thought his life worth less than satisfying their immediate
| feeling on the spot, and after the x-thousandth dumping he got
| blamed for for reasons he couldn't understand, he ended it. He
| died because he was not average, trying to be better, in a sea of
| people who cannot deal with even a fleeting moment of impression
| that someone might be better than them, or that they might need
| to put in some work to catch up to him.
 
| thr0wawayf00 wrote:
| I've struggled with suicidal thoughts throughout my entire life,
| as far back as I can remember. Both of my parents struggle with
| untreated mental illness that had a major impact on my
| upbringing. They were often very emotionally abusive and sometime
| physically abusive throughout my childhood. There was no such
| thing as positive reinforcement in our household, we lived our
| childhoods just trying not be punished and it was at times very
| difficult. When I went through a divorce in my early 30's, I
| called my mom to break the news and she responded by screaming at
| the top of her lungs at me. She would later tell me that she was
| trying to scare me into making sure that I had made the right
| decision. That night was closest I had come to crossing the
| rubicon in many years. I still don't fully understand how a
| mother could talk their child this way in such a difficult
| moment, but such is life.
| 
| Years later, I was diagnosed with ADHD which answered so many
| deep questions about why I am the way I am (and why my parents
| are the way they are). Life is simply harder for folks with ADHD,
| we struggle with executive function in ways that neurotypical
| folks don't often think about.
| 
| Strangely, one of most impactful moments towards reducing my
| recurring suicidal thoughts involved magic mushrooms. During a
| trip, I visualized telling all of the people in my life that I
| wanted to leave, explaining in detail why I didn't want to live
| anymore. It was the first time that I gave myself the space to
| ask myself if I really, truly wanted to leave. And I realized
| that I wasn't ready. Not yet.
 
| dang wrote:
| http://web.archive.org/web/20220404223206/https://www.newyor...
| 
| https://archive.ph/NIRCs
 
| WalterBright wrote:
| My hypothesis, unencumbered with any evidence, is that modern
| society and parents have gotten very good at shielding small
| children from adversity and failure of any sort.
| 
| Hence, the children do not acquire any ability to deal with
| adversity and failure.
| 
| When they get older, parents can no longer control their
| environment such that they do not experience failure. By then the
| failures are more serious and the kids have no coping skills.
 
  | ausbah wrote:
  | amazing how people can be so bold as to share their uninformed
  | opinion even when they acknowledge it's uninformed
 
  | goat_whisperer wrote:
  | Ah yes, let me guess -- you had to walk 5 miles in the snow to
  | school everyday, uphill both ways, right?
 
| travisathougies wrote:
| It's sad but when I read about children who are 'precocious', I
| think either their parents are driving them too hard, or (because
| of the example of a 4th grade boy bringing a girl to a school
| event...) there's been some sexual / emotional abuse [1]. None of
| what is being described here is normal childhood behavior, which
| makes sense, since the family is not at all normal. Both parents
| are hotshot career-focused individuals. It begs the question if
| the kids ever had time to just be kids. As I've discovered over
| the years going from a 'work hard, play hard' youth to a more
| mellow adult, is that balance is the key, and most people today
| simply lack it, and these parents sure sound like it.
| 
| I mean... just reading about their life before the suicides
| already stressed me out.
| 
| EDIT: Also, the article spent very little time talking about the
| human impact of COVID lockdowns (it mentioned them, but did not
| dwell). Passages like this:
| 
| > I asked Angela if we could come by for a condolence call. She
| said yes, if we were vaccinated. Because vaccines were not yet
| available to children, she added, "Don't bring George." She
| paused, then explained, "It's just--because of Agnes. She can't
| get vaccinated yet, either. And she's all I have left." In the
| following weeks, Angela told her story over and over to any
| friend who asked, as though she could contain it through
| repetition. For Billy, even conversational boilerplate was a
| struggle.
| 
| Make me think the parents were a bit over the top with regards to
| covid lockdowns. Children not being able to see friends? Human
| companionship (physical presence) is a basic human need on par
| with food and water. No one's surprised when a child dies from
| lack of food. Lack of intimate friendship is the same.
| 
| EDIT 2:
| 
| > Trevor, the child of well-off, educated parents, had far better
| mental-health support than most American children, but was not
| saved by it
| 
| In my experience, it's better to come from a lower middle class
| family (so enough money to eat and have everything you _need_ ,
| but not too much), than to come from outright wealth. Money is
| not a solution to every problem, and too much money and luxury is
| the root cause of many mental illness.
| 
| [1] I wrote this comment before reading the article, but the
| article later goes on to talk about how we was abused. I don't
| want to say 'I told you so', but the signs were all there. It's
| interesting... the New Yorker doesn't even stop to question
| whether the rise in child suicide rates may be due to a rise in
| child sex abuse.
 
  | jeffbee wrote:
  | Just because a family doesn't want hundreds of acquaintances
  | visiting their home does not imply that their children were
  | unable to see their friends. Many families throughout the COVID
  | era have adopted the stable cohort, where the people in that
  | cohort freely intermix, but limit interactions and take
  | precautions with outsiders.
 
  | oneoff786 wrote:
  | > Both parents are hotshot career-focused individuals. It begs
  | the question if the kids ever had time to just be kids.
  | 
  | Yeah I'm gonna doubt that. Not that dual career households
  | don't have their own difficulties but that's nothing compared
  | to the effects of poverty. The article mentions a huge effect
  | size of being black. I would guess wealthy families have
  | drastically lower rates of child suicide.
 
    | cflewis wrote:
    | Honestly I just think we all think kids should have easier
    | lives, but they are never going to get that idealized
    | version, be it poverty, war, issues with the family,
    | racism... the list goes on and on.
    | 
    | We can only try to do the best with the tools we have, but
    | the candy-coated life we think kids should have I doubt ever
    | really existed. Maybe in the nuclear family 1950s. If you
    | were white, at least.
 
    | travisathougies wrote:
    | I would imagine there's a U shaped curve. If you have too
    | little and can't feed yourself / meet basic needs, I imagine
    | suicide is a problem. If you have too much and can't spend
    | time with your kids because you're working too much (mom
    | being a hot shot lawyer and dad being a hotshot financier is
    | not a 'normal' situation), then I imagine it's also a
    | problem.
    | 
    | Both money and family time are necessary for kids to thrive.
    | If you have one and not the other, it's going to be a
    | problem.
 
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