Showing posts with label Suicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suicide. Show all posts
Gowain Reid Patrick McKenna writes On the mental health and suicide epidemic in Ireland: the war continues but the map is no longer the territory.
 
To set the scene for this article let me first provide an introduction to myself. My name is Gowain Reid Patrick McKenna and I am an academic, writer, community activist and republican socialist. But this article is not about me, this is about the failure of the state, and the onus republicans and loyalists have to address what is a mental health and suicide epidemic in uncertain times. We have a collective responsibility to rise up and let it be heard that this is unacceptable. So let me set the scene. 

Since the inception of the Good Friday Agreement, 22 years ago, more people have died from suicide than all the fatalities spanning the 29 years of what was known as ‘The Troubles’ in the North of Ireland. The Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) produces statistical data on suicide deaths. Indeed in the 18 years spanning 2000 and 2018 a total number of 4,783 deaths were registered as suicide in the North of Ireland. In contrast, the total number of deaths registered as a direct result of the conflict spanning 29 years is recorded at 3532, although some sources vary on this it is within the region of 3500. This is telling in so far that during a time when bombs and shootings were commonplace, and over a longer period, there were less deaths than in a time of so called peace facilitated by the Good Friday Agreement and Stormont. It is clear that Stormont and its Executive has failed lamentably, and continues to do so, and worse still perhaps unbeknownst to themselves. 

Obviously it would be extremely ‘black and white’ of me to point the finger of blame at the Good Friday Agreement alone. For the cause for this worrying trend is in no way deterministic and is therefore complex in nature. But the current government infrastructure and the subsets thereof (policing, health care, education, social security etc.) have a lot to answer for, especially in terms of financial expenditure and resources. Too much time has and continues to be wasted on ‘the past’ as well as unhelpful rhetoric which reinforces duality (us versus them). 

This has to stop. The exact same social issues and pressures are being faced by people on ‘both sides of the proverbial fence’ - we are not so different yet our educational system makes us believe otherwise. For example: Where is the education in schools on the role Protestants played in the formation of Irish Republicanism in the late 18th Century? Where is the education in schools on the role Catholic’s played in the Monaghan Militia in the torture and murder of United Irishmen? Why isn’t William Orr taught in schools across the country? Such a founding Presbyterian revolutionary would surely eradicate the ‘us and them’ mentality that appears to be on the rise for our young people today. This is just one facet of a myriad of profound problems faced by our society today, and worse still all such things can be addressed if we had unity and direction and a cohesive and well-funded committee dedicated to alleviating these issues, step by step. 

Although the root cause of the suicide and mental health epidemic is highly complex in nature, a war continues, albeit the map is no longer the territory and the battlefield has changed. The majority of suicides are from young men in working class areas. The figures continue to rise year on year both in the North and in the South of Ireland, yet mass media has swept such pressing matters under the proverbial rug and dares not bring attention to what is a tragedy of epidemic proportions.
 
Over the last week there have been rumours of 30 plus suicides in rural areas in the West of Ireland, also relating to the impact of COVID-19 regulations. The Irish Health Service (HSE) denies this, and perhaps they are right to do so, but there can be no doubt that some residual effects have played a part. I have spoken to a lot of local people on my travels who are convinced that there is an underlying and malicious agenda at play behind inordinate COVID-19 regulations, local rural economies have been devastated and cancer treatment and A&E departments have effectively been shut down. There are no resources for mental health and elderly people are being held prisoner in their own homes by what can best be described as fear mongering on a massive scale. 

The question we must ask ourselves is whether Covid-19 remains a health issue or has it been hijacked for some underlying agenda of control and behavioural modification. Although extremely hard to gauge, what I want to see, and others like me, is the number of deaths caused by the impact of lockdown, the shutting down of the health service along with inadequate furlough and benefit schemes during a time of crisis, manufactured or not.

So how can we as a collective fight this battle? As a republican socialist I believe in a complete revolutionary overthrow of the current system in all it’s forms, the subsets thereof, and in the emancipation of the working class. It is telling the majority of suicides are in rural or working class urban areas where jobs are few and resources scarce. If true republicanism is to flourish, it can no longer put its head in the sand and adopt the ‘hard man’ approach. This is unhelpful. There is nothing ‘hard’ about being unable to express ones feelings and face reality amidst a ‘murder machine’ facilitated by the state, north and south. 

To conclude, we must fight this as if we were fighting a war, collectively alongside the loyalist and unionist community who suffer on an equal basis. It is time for every political group to have dedicated mental health training and mental health officers, for their own members and the community they represent. In addition an understanding of stigmatised disorders that go beyond ‘depression’ such as personality disorders is paramount. The evidence shows that in approximately 60 percent of cases, depression and anxiety are reactive symptoms to underlying personality disorders and trauma, that are not understood and horribly stigmatised. People will forgive you for falling and breaking your leg, but they won’t forgive or see past behaviours they cannot understand. 

I hope this provides food for thought to all readers from all backgrounds and walks of life. To quote Cicero: ‘where there is life there is hope.’ 

Gowain Reid Patrick McKenna is a M.Phil. M.Sc B.Eng (Hons).


A Mental Health And Suicide Epidemic In Uncertain Times

From People a piece by Char Adams on a 13 year old girl, who hanged herself  after enduring years of bullying at school.  

Before 13-year-old Rosalie Avila hanged herself in her Yucaipa, California, bedroom last month, she left several notes for her family to read when they found her body.

“She left one note that was for my wife, and it said, ‘I love you, mom. I’m sorry you’re gonna find me like this,’ ” Rosalie’s father, Freddie Avila, tells People. “Another note said, ‘Please, don’t post any pictures of me at my funeral.’ Those were her goodbye notes.”...

... Rosalie was declared brain dead on Dec. 1 and was taken off of life support three days later. According to the family, Rosalie’s suicide attempt followed months of relentless bullying. Avila says Yucaipa-Calimesa School District officials did nothing to protect the teen.

“She said, ‘They’re calling me a whore. They’re telling me that I have herpes,’ and other bad stuff,” Avila tells People. “They made fun of her teeth, everything about her. And she left a bunch of notes, they called her ugly and she had ones of her looking in the mirror saying, ‘Ugly.’ Everything they told her, she believed.”

Continue Reading A @ People.

Bullied Teen Who Killed Herself Apologized For Being Ugly, Didn't Want Any Photos At Funeral

Christopher Owens teases out hypocrisy in the suicide discourse.

When, when we were young
We had no history, so nothing to lose
Meant we could choose, choose what we wanted then
Without any fear or thought of revenge 
➨Swans

It's often claimed that Twitter is not real life.

To a certain extent, that's true. On Twitter (or any social media platform) we present the side of us that we consider our best. A thoughtful, amusing side with the correct views and a killer taste in pop culture.

But the ugly, hate filled, nihilistic side that we find all too often in real life is on Twitter as well.

And all too often, the boundaries between the two sides are blurred.

Because the ugly side, if it has the right viewpoints, can be accepted.

***

On Sunday 16th February, while scrolling through the various posts about Love Island/X Factor presenter Caroline Flack taking her own life, I came across an article, written by Douglas Murray about the renowned Canadian psychologist and best selling author Jordan Peterson. In it, Murray discusses the recent video posted by Peterson's daughter Mikhaila:

She revealed that her father...was in intensive care in Russia after being hospitalised following a severe dependence on benzodiazepines – a class of anti-anxiety pills.
'He nearly died several times,' she says solemnly in the clip that has been viewed more than 2.4 million times. 'He almost died from what the medical system did to him in the West.' Explaining why he was in Russia, not exactly a free society, Mikhaila Peterson says: 'The doctors here aren't influenced by the pharmaceutical companies.
They don't believe in treating symptoms caused by medications, by adding in more medications and have the guts to medically detox someone from benzodiazepines.

Of course, for the Canadian psychologist's family, the notion that he's been left with 'neurological damage', as Mikhaila says, is a tragedy."

Reading that, I couldn't help but reflect on how Peterson could have taken the same approach taken by Flack.

And, honestly, who would blame him?

***

A massively misunderstood, misinterpreted and misquoted figure, he has helped imbue meaning into the lives of people crying out for a sense of direction, be they male, female, liberal, conservative, whatever. He's also been a relentless champion of freedom of speech, coming to prominence for openly stating that he would not be obeying Bill C-16, a Canadian human rights legislation that prohibits discrimination based on gender identity or expression. While the bill covers the government and industries like banks or airlines, it also extends hate speech provisions under the law to transgender people.

"I've studied authoritarianism for a very long time - for 40 years - and they're started by people's attempts to control the ideological and linguistic territory," Peterson told the BBC in 2016. "There's no way I'm going to use words made up by people who are doing that - not a chance."

Whether or not you agree with this stance or any of his viewpoints, the fact that he has helped change so many lives for the better (as well as beginning the public debate about the state of free speech in the 21st century) is something to be celebrated.

In a place like Belfast, where suicides are at an all time high - more people are being diagnosed with some form of mental illness and our recent conflict is used to wield control and stifle discussions (be those of republicans, loyalists or security forces) - we need the likes of Peterson. Someone who understands that history and life are messy, but is prepared to accept these contradictions by contributing something positive to the world, therefore finding meaning in chaos.

***

Those vilifying Peterson while crying crocodile tears over Flack should be ashamed of themselves.

They won't be, however.

Why?

Because Peterson is an old white male. A part of the patriarchy.

Whereas Flack (a young, conventionally attractive woman) was a reflection of what people wanted from celebrity culture at one point before the tide turned. Someone who lived out vicarious fantasies about instant fame, instant status, instant wealth and sleeping with younger hook-ups. Someone who was once celebrated for doing so quickly saw that her lifestyle was no longer en vogue.

Becoming someone for people to hate.

Someone to turn their frustrations onto whenever the contradictions of the world ate away at them.

Of course, there has always been a gladiatorial element to celebrity status (and the advent of reality TV and social media has exacerbated these facets). But there is something undeniably ugly and primeval about how the mob mentality can suddenly sway public opinion. Just ask Bill Clinton, Jeremy Corbyn or Jolene Bunting.

***

This leads me to the following thought. 

People aren't that serious about tackling suicide.

That suicide is, merely, the final act in the wheel of fortune that is public life. An act which allows people (who were, at one point, gleefully getting stuck into said public figure) to show how solemn and reflective they are when such news is delivered.

You want proof of this? Look at how Peterson's situation has been covered on places like Twitter (i.e. with utter glee). Yet there have been numerous testimonies as to how his work has saved the lives of young, directionless men.

Whereas The Sun has, reportedly, been deleting negative articles about Flack from their website. Because such articles helped contribute to the nihilistic mob mentality that, arguably, drove her to take her own life.

Yet similar articles and think pieces about Peterson remain online.

The double standards are sickening.

Just like real life.

Christopher Owens was a reviewer for Metal Ireland and finds time to study the history and inherent contradictions of Ireland.

Jordan Peterson Vs. Caroline Flack

A disturbing report - France Telecom and former CEO stand trial for 'harassment' after 35 employees commit suicide.

France Telecom and its former CEO stood trial on Monday accused of creating a system of workplace harassment in a brutal bid to downsize, which prosecutors say triggered a wave of 35 suicides in less than two years.

In the first such case of its case for a company this big, France Telecom, since renamed Orange, its ex-boss Didier Lombard, and six former colleagues face charges of “moral harassment” for enforcing a “corporate policy aimed at destabilising their employees and agents by creating a stressful professional climate”.

Continue Reading @ the Daily Telegraph.

35 Employees Commit Suicide

In a reminiscence written in two short parts, Padraic Mac Coitir recalls a friend who chose suicide. 

Michael Barrett