Monday, October 31, 2022

#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - 130 People Die By #Suicide Each Day, So Hundreds Walked To Raise #MentalHealthAwareness
Hundreds walk in Jacksonville Beach to raise awareness for #mentalhealth during Out of the Darkness Jacksonville Walk

JACKSONVILLE BEACH, Fla. – Volunteers from Jacksonville came together Sunday for the annual “Out of the Darkness Walk” for #suicide and #mentalhealthawareness.

The #AmericanFoundationforSuicideandPrevention’s North Florida Chapter organized the walk in Jacksonville Beach.

The money raised will help provide resources for those battling #mentalhealthissues.

Pamela Howard is walking on behalf of her son and others who couldn’t make it into the light.

“We are supporting people and letting them know that life still matters and we’re here for them so. We’re here to celebrate life, those who didn’t make it and for those who are still fighting the fight,” said #mentalhealthadvocate Pamela Howard.

#Suicide is the 12th leading cause of death in the #UnitedStates, according to research by the #AmericanFoundationforSuicideandPrevention. On average, the AFSP says there are 130 suicides a day.

“Everybody in some way shape or form has been impacted by #mentalhealthissues or has a loved one that has lost somebody by #suicide,” said walk chair Stefanie Shaughnessy.

#AmericanFoundationforSuicideandPrevention’s North Florida Chapter hopes to raise $100,000 dollars.

Its goal is to put an end to #suicide and help everyone make it into the light and stay there.

If you would like to donate to the #AmericanFoundationforSuicideandPrevention, click here.

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/?p=10183

Sunday, October 30, 2022

#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - 'You Matter': Stand Against #Suicide Elevates Awareness, Brings Hope
Stand Against #Suicide elevates awareness, brings hope

- By David KronkeTribune-Star

People’s rally: Those attending Team of Mercy’s Stand Against #Suicide event Tuesday toted signs offering encouragement to 12 Points motorists.

It was an evening for transforming anguish into hope: Team of Mercy’s Stand Against #Suicide event Tuesday night at Grace Community Church in 12 Points sought to elevate awareness of the scourge of #mentalillness and #suicide and offer encouragement to the passing motorists.

“In our world today, people’s #mental and emotional health is so stressed, and we want people to know that they don’t have to be alone, there are better alternatives to #suicide and we can provide that,” said Mike Pringle, pastor of the church. “We’re here wanting to provide help.”

Christina Crist, executive director of Team of Mercy, said, “Our Stand Against #Suicide events are to bring the community together, to talk about a hard topic and bring awareness to #suicide and to spread love. Most of our signs have a loving message to just get drivers’ attentions. Every time that we’ve had our event — this is the fourth one — we usually get one to three calls that somebody in fact actually had a plan and one of our signs caught their attention.”

Most of the signs at the rally included the #suicide hotline’s phone number (800-273-8255) and recommended those in need texting “HELP” to 741741. Some placards read “You Matter,” “You are not alone” and “#Suicide Sucks.”

#Suicide is the 12th leading cause of death in the #UnitedStates, causing 130 deaths every day. In 2020, there were over a million estimated suicide attempts. Team of Mercy reported on its #Facebook page that there have been six suicides in the Wabash Valley this past week.

#Suicide remains difficult for many to address because a persisting #stigma envelopes the very subject, Crist said. “We at Team of Mercy believe that people find it difficult because there is so much that is unknown about #suicide and that’s what makes people scared. When you don’t know about something, you tend to pretend that it doesn’t exist because if we don’t look at it, then it’s not there. But unfortunately, that is helping kill people.”

She added, “We need to make #mentalhealth conversations as normal as anything else.”

Many participating had lost loved ones to #suicide or even struggled with #suicideideation themselves. Pat Moore carried a sign reading “I Miss Him” in honor of her father, who took his life with a gun.

“It’s something you never get over,” she said. “You wonder why and the questions go unanswered, but you have to find peace. My mother was home when it happened and she was getting ready to cook dinner. He had been diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer and he hadn’t been himself because they put him on all kinds of medication. My mother finally came to terms and forgave him for what he did.”

Moore found peace for herself through prayer and talking to family members. “I just think of the good things” about her father, she said. “One thing I can’t get out of my mind is when I drove up there after I got the phone call, the sound of a helicopter. I keep remembering that sound, but he had signed a do-not-resuscitate order so we had to let him go.”

Kristy Kingsbury recently moved to Terre Haute but has already attended several Team of Mercy events. She has lost several friends and family members to #suicide.

“Death is one of those things where you get used to it and you start living every day, but you never get over it,” she said. “You miss them every day.”

In participating in Team of Mercy activities, Kingsbury finds solace. “By doing these events, it really helps,” she said. “Communicating with other people and just understanding that it’s OK not to be OK.”

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com

Mark Baker, who has quickly become a 12 Points mainstay, was there with his wife, Tiffany, and their children. As his 4-year-old daughter rummaged through the available signs, he noted with a chuckle, “This one can’t pick a sign — she’s changed her mind about 15 times already.”

Baker himself is a #suicide survivor, having lost his father in 2018 to a self-inflicted bullet wound.

“It was a shock,” he recalled. “We found out when we were living in Japan, and we had 48 hours of travel time to try to process it. It was the first time I realized that everybody who’s traveling through an airport is not traveling for business or for pleasure, some people are actually experiencing the worst day of their life and that happened to be us at that given time.

“I had 20 hours of flights to sit and reflect on it and what I was going through,” he continued. “Hitting the ground in Terre Haute, I got slapped in the face with it when you see the reality of it.”

He added, “Luckily, we have an organization like Team of Mercy here that has the resources and can help you get through something like that.”

Leah Myers was there representing #MentalHealth America of West Central Indiana, where she serves as director of education. #Mentalillness runs in her family, she said, “So it’s important to me. I want to make sure that anybody who needs help can get it.”

Myers said this event was just another invaluable service Team of Mercy was providing (the organization also offers #grief counseling and biohazard cleanup resources).

“When people are driving by and they see the signs and how much everyone cares, Team of Mercy is helping to save lives with this event,” she said. “I think we need more of this, just standing on a corner holding up a sign saying we care about you — we want you to be here. These events really do make a difference. They really matter.”
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/2022/10/jamesdonaldson-on-mentalhealth-you-matter-stand-against-suicide-elevates-awareness-brings-hope/
#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - 'You Matter': Stand Against #Suicide Elevates Awareness, Brings Hope
Stand Against #Suicide elevates awareness, brings hope

- By David KronkeTribune-Star

People’s rally: Those attending Team of Mercy’s Stand Against #Suicide event Tuesday toted signs offering encouragement to 12 Points motorists.

It was an evening for transforming anguish into hope: Team of Mercy’s Stand Against #Suicide event Tuesday night at Grace Community Church in 12 Points sought to elevate awareness of the scourge of #mentalillness and #suicide and offer encouragement to the passing motorists.

“In our world today, people’s #mental and emotional health is so stressed, and we want people to know that they don’t have to be alone, there are better alternatives to #suicide and we can provide that,” said Mike Pringle, pastor of the church. “We’re here wanting to provide help.”

Christina Crist, executive director of Team of Mercy, said, “Our Stand Against #Suicide events are to bring the community together, to talk about a hard topic and bring awareness to #suicide and to spread love. Most of our signs have a loving message to just get drivers’ attentions. Every time that we’ve had our event — this is the fourth one — we usually get one to three calls that somebody in fact actually had a plan and one of our signs caught their attention.”

Most of the signs at the rally included the #suicide hotline’s phone number (800-273-8255) and recommended those in need texting “HELP” to 741741. Some placards read “You Matter,” “You are not alone” and “#Suicide Sucks.”

#Suicide is the 12th leading cause of death in the #UnitedStates, causing 130 deaths every day. In 2020, there were over a million estimated suicide attempts. Team of Mercy reported on its #Facebook page that there have been six suicides in the Wabash Valley this past week.

#Suicide remains difficult for many to address because a persisting #stigma envelopes the very subject, Crist said. “We at Team of Mercy believe that people find it difficult because there is so much that is unknown about #suicide and that’s what makes people scared. When you don’t know about something, you tend to pretend that it doesn’t exist because if we don’t look at it, then it’s not there. But unfortunately, that is helping kill people.”

She added, “We need to make #mentalhealth conversations as normal as anything else.”

Many participating had lost loved ones to #suicide or even struggled with #suicideideation themselves. Pat Moore carried a sign reading “I Miss Him” in honor of her father, who took his life with a gun.

“It’s something you never get over,” she said. “You wonder why and the questions go unanswered, but you have to find peace. My mother was home when it happened and she was getting ready to cook dinner. He had been diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer and he hadn’t been himself because they put him on all kinds of medication. My mother finally came to terms and forgave him for what he did.”

Moore found peace for herself through prayer and talking to family members. “I just think of the good things” about her father, she said. “One thing I can’t get out of my mind is when I drove up there after I got the phone call, the sound of a helicopter. I keep remembering that sound, but he had signed a do-not-resuscitate order so we had to let him go.”

Kristy Kingsbury recently moved to Terre Haute but has already attended several Team of Mercy events. She has lost several friends and family members to #suicide.

“Death is one of those things where you get used to it and you start living every day, but you never get over it,” she said. “You miss them every day.”

In participating in Team of Mercy activities, Kingsbury finds solace. “By doing these events, it really helps,” she said. “Communicating with other people and just understanding that it’s OK not to be OK.”

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com

Mark Baker, who has quickly become a 12 Points mainstay, was there with his wife, Tiffany, and their children. As his 4-year-old daughter rummaged through the available signs, he noted with a chuckle, “This one can’t pick a sign — she’s changed her mind about 15 times already.”

Baker himself is a #suicide survivor, having lost his father in 2018 to a self-inflicted bullet wound.

“It was a shock,” he recalled. “We found out when we were living in Japan, and we had 48 hours of travel time to try to process it. It was the first time I realized that everybody who’s traveling through an airport is not traveling for business or for pleasure, some people are actually experiencing the worst day of their life and that happened to be us at that given time.

“I had 20 hours of flights to sit and reflect on it and what I was going through,” he continued. “Hitting the ground in Terre Haute, I got slapped in the face with it when you see the reality of it.”

He added, “Luckily, we have an organization like Team of Mercy here that has the resources and can help you get through something like that.”

Leah Myers was there representing #MentalHealth America of West Central Indiana, where she serves as director of education. #Mentalillness runs in her family, she said, “So it’s important to me. I want to make sure that anybody who needs help can get it.”

Myers said this event was just another invaluable service Team of Mercy was providing (the organization also offers #grief counseling and biohazard cleanup resources).

“When people are driving by and they see the signs and how much everyone cares, Team of Mercy is helping to save lives with this event,” she said. “I think we need more of this, just standing on a corner holding up a sign saying we care about you — we want you to be here. These events really do make a difference. They really matter.”
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/?p=10178

Saturday, October 29, 2022

#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - Saying These Words Could Help Someone Who Is Contemplating #Suicide
-

Experts say that asking someone directly “Are you thinking of killing yourself?” can be effective at identifying someone at risk for #suicide, offering the opportunity to steer them to professional help

By Julie Mack | special to MLive

When Paulo realized a troubled friend was at risk of #suicide, he knew what to do.

A few years before, Paulo had participated in a #suicideprevention program at Kalamazoo Central #HighSchool. He learned the red flags. He also learned the importance of asking someone if they were having #suicidalthoughts.

“He was freaking out,” said, Paulo, whose last name is being withheld to protect his friend’s privacy. “I was really worried about his well-being.”

Paulo, now 20, called his mother, whose work includes #suicideprevention, to review how he should intervene. “She told me what I already knew from the training, which was just keeping him calm, talking to him, asking him if he was thinking of #suicide,” Paulo said.

Paulo ended up helping his friend go to a hospital and notifying the friend’s #parents.

That #highschool training “helped me stay mentally OK through the whole process and helped me help my friend,” Paulo said in a video for Gryphon Place, a Kalamazoo #suicideprevention program.

More than 15,000 Michiganders died by #suicide over the past decade, include 345 in Kalamazoo County. While rates are highest among middle-age and older men, suicides account for more than 20% of deaths among ages 15 to 24.

Studies indicate 90% of people who die by #suicide have an underlying — and potentially treatable — #mentalhealthcondition.

Regardless of age, experts say that asking someone directly, “Are you thinking of killing yourself?” can be effective at identifying someone at risk for #suicide, offering the opportunity to steer them to professional help.

In fact, “people can kind of give you that invitation to ask if they’re feeling suicidal,” said Susan Davis, a #counselor with Children & Family Services in Kalamazoo. “They want somebody to ask. There’s a big myth out there that if you ask somebody if they’re thinking about #suicide, you’re giving them the idea, and that’s not true. They either already have it and or they don’t and they’ll tell you.”

Maricela Alcala, the Gryphon Place executive director, agreed. Asking the question “shows the person that you’re concerned, that you care, that you want to help,” she said. “And you’re also showing that you’re not afraid to talk about #suicide,” which makes it more comfortable for them to share their thoughts.

People contemplating #suicide often feel isolated and alone, and having a conversation about their despair may lessen those feelings, said Larry Beer, a longtime Kalamazoo clinical #psychologist.

“Lack of connection is one of the reasons why people come to #suicide,” Beer said. “For instance, it’s a high risk after a severe breakup -- somebody really feels that hurt and pain and just can’t imagine being able to reconnect again. So when they feel connection with somebody, it can make less likely they actually act on” #suicidalthoughts.

To be sure, asking someone about suicide is a difficult conversation for people who aren’t trained #therapists.

“It’s hard to get comfortable asking that question about #suicide. I get it,” Davis said. “I don’t have a hard time at work with it. But in my personal life, when I’ve had to ask that question, I’ve tripped over my words. It’s hard to ask.”

But she also said she’s seen the benefits many times. “It’s amazing to see how kind of relieved that a #parent feels when they’ve asked their #child that question, even when they get the ‘yes’ answer,” Davis said. “As least they know what’s going on, and they can reach out and get help.”

But what are the red flags that indicate such a conversation is needed? How do you initiate that talk and what needs to be conveyed? And, perhaps most importantly, what action needs to be taken if the individual acknowledges #suicidalthoughts?

https://mlive.carto.com/u/levinscott/builder/c3897441-c7c0-4c68-98c2-09d0d6501151/embed

The above map shows #suicide deaths by county for 2010-20, based on data from the federal #CentersforDiseaseControl. The map is shaded by the #suicide rate per 100,000 residents. You can click on a county to see the numbers. Can’t see the map? Click here.

Warning signs

The #NationalInstituteofMentalHealth lists a number of warning signs that someone may be at immediate risk of #suicide. Among the red flags:

• Talking about wanting to die or wanting to kill themselves or talking about death often.

• Talking about feeling empty or hopeless or having no reason to live.

• Feeling unbearable emotional or physical pain.

• Talking about being a burden to others.

• Talking about feeling great guilt or shame

• Withdrawing from family and friends.

• Saying goodbye to friends and family and/or putting affairs in order, such as making a will and giving away important possessions.

• Taking risks that could lead to death, such as driving extremely fast.

Other serious warning signs: Extreme mood swings; using #drugs or #alcohol more frequently; looking for ways to kill themselves, such as searching for lethal methods online, stockpiling pills, or buying a gun.

“If someone’s been depressed for awhile and then all of a sudden starts feeling really good, that’s kind of a scary time because maybe they’ve come to the decision they do want to commit #suicide,” Beer said.

In that situation, those around the person may well see the change in mood as a positive sign. “They think, ‘OK, I don’t have to worry anymore,’ " Beer said. “But it can be a sign of concern.”

Specific life events -- the death of a loved one, the breakup of a relationship, the loss of a job, financial problems -- can be so overwhelming for some that they see suicide as the only solution. Likewise, people with serious clinical #depression may see no other resolution.

“Sometimes when people are really depressed, they can’t imagine feeling good ever again,” Beer said. “People want to commit #suicide because they don’t want the pain anymore.”

While #women are more likely to attempt #suicide, #men have a much higher rate of dying because they are more likely to use a gun. White men comprise 69% of Michigan #suicide deaths -- 10,425 of 15,062 deaths in the past decade, a rate four times that of white women and twice that of other #men, as shown by the chart below.

However, adjusted for population size, the group with highest rate of #suicide in Michigan are Native #American #men.

Having the conversation

Asking someone about #suicide is a conversation that should be had in person versus over the phone, experts say. That’s especially true if the #suicide threat seems immediate: You don’t want to risk the individual cutting the conversation short by hanging up.

It’s also important to be direct but empathetic versus judgmental during the talk, experts say, and to stay calm.

“When someone is agitated and very anxious or angry, we’re not really thinking clearly,” Marcela Alcala said. “We’re not really using our cerebral cortex and reality is different at that point. We’ve all had experiences where we were angry -- and then when we’re calm, we realized, wow, that wasn’t quite as big of a deal as it felt like when we were agitated. So first thing is to have someone calm so you can have a rational conversation.”

Tell the person that you want to check in with them and ask how they’re feeling. Ask directly: “Are you having thoughts of #suicide?” or “Are you thinking about killing yourself?” Avoid framing the question in a judgmental way such as: “You’re not thinking of doing anything stupid, are you?”

Listen to their response and let them talk about why they’re thinking of #suicide. Ask if they have a #suicide plan. Once again, don’t be judgmental or argumentative. But tell the person that you and others really don’t want them to die.

Michelle Serlin, who heads Choices for Change, a Kalamazoo counseling agency, said that when she has a client with #suicidalthoughts, she might say, “I really hope you don’t do that because I would be really sad if I never got to see you again. Don’t you care about my feelings?”

“They usually start laughing and it kind of pushes them out of a it a bit,” she said. “Then I’ll say, “Now let’s talk about what’s bothering you.’ ”

If someone acknowledges #suicidalthoughts, the next step is helping them to connect with a #mentalhealthprofessional.

If the #suicide threat seems immediate, that may involve taking the person to an emergency room for a #mentalhealth evaluation or calling 911 if the person refuses to seek medical treatment.

Other options: Calling the individual’s primary #healthcareprovider or calling Gryphon Place or another #suicideprevention agency or hotline. “A person can call us and say, ‘I’m calling for another person’ and hand over the phone,” Alcala said.

Gryphon Place also can be a resource in advance of such a conversation, by coaching the person initiating the talk on what to say and what steps of action might be necessary.

Gryphon Place can definitely help guide someone “through the process of supporting another person with #suicidalthoughts,” Alcala said. The agency serves the Kalamazoo region, and operates a 24-hour hotline at 269-381-HELP.

In fact, Gryphon Place offers several types of #suicideprevention trainings specifically designed to help people identify friends and family members who might be at risk of #suicide and how to talk to them about it.

One of those trainings, The Gatekeepers program, helped Paulo recognize the need to reach out to his troubled friend. That curriculum is designed for middle and high schoolers, and is in place in Kalamazoo, Portage, Mattawan, Gull Lake, Otsego, Mendon, Constantine, White Pigeon and Union City #school districts plus Hackett Catholic Prep.

Another program offered by Gryphon Place, safeTALK, is a similar half-day training for #adults.

Both programs are designed to provide participants with information about #suicide, #depression, and resources available for at-risk individuals; how to identify people who might be at risk of #suicide, and when and how to intervene.

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com

Maricela Alcala, chief executive officer of Gryphon Place, poses for a portrait in Kalamazoo County, Michigan on Monday April 11, 2022. Gryphon Place is agency that provides crisis and counseling services, they also provided a 24/7 helpline.

Not a silver bullet

To be sure, an intervention session with a suicidal loved one may not save their life.

Serlin knows that all too well. Her brother Joel died by #suicide at age 32 in 1998.

Joel was smart and handsome, but he also suffered from severe #mentalillness.

“He was diagnosed with schizoid type 1,” Serlin said. “My brother said to me once, ‘I want you to understand how I feel. So I want you to take your worst, worst, most miserable day. That’s my best day.’ I’ll never forget that comment.”

Serlin said she and other family members had numerous conversations with her brother over the years about his #suicidalthoughts. “I always thought we would catch it if something bad happened,” she said. But then her brother went through a very painful breakup with a longtime girlfriend, and took his own life.

“Sometimes people reach a tipping point,” Maricela Alcala said. So even when friends or family members offer support, #suicide “can still happen and it’s nobody’s fault.”

Another big issue is access to #mentalhealthservices, even when the person is willing to seek help. While hospital emergency departments are required to see people in a #mentalhealthcrisis regardless of ability to pay, finding affordable outpatient therapy can be challenging.

The #pandemic has increased the demand for #counselors -- and decreased the supply, as some #therapists have experienced burnout and left the profession.

“There’s just not enough #mentalhealth #counselors out there,” Beer said.

One option is working through a primary-care provider to find a #therapist. Another option for people who can afford it: Online #therapists available through an app such as Talkspace.

“It gives you access to people who are trained, who can provide the help,” Beer said.

What the research says

Based on anecdotal experience, experts say that asking people directly about #suicidalthoughts can be an effective intervention.

The actual research on the topic is encouraging, but limited.

Studies found asking people about #suicidalthoughts does not increase #suicideideation, according to a 2014 meta-analysis published in Psychological Medicine. That analysis concludes “acknowledging and talking about #suicide may in fact reduce, rather than increase #suicidalideation, and may lead to improvements in #mentalhealth in treatment-seeking populations.”

Likewise, studies that look that at programs such as Gatekeepers and safeTALK found they can raise awareness and reduce #stigma about #depression and #suicide, and reduce the reluctance to intervene when someone is at risk of #suicide, according to a 2015 meta-analysis in Rand Health Quarterly.

Still, that 2015 review of the literature noted that the question of whether such interventions actually reduce #suicide “remains unexamined,” saying there are no studies that have linked such interventions to a lowering of #suicide rates.

Maricela Alcala said part of the problem is that #suicide numbers historically have been unreliable and subject to undercounting, based on the reluctance of some to state that someone died of #suicide. Plus, some suicides -- especially those involving car crashes or drug overdoses -- get recorded as accidental deaths because intent is unclear.

In fact, Alcala said, it’s possible the rise in suicides in the past 15 years actually reflects better reporting vs. a true increase. “With all the educational awareness that communities are doing, people are more likely to call a #suicide death for up what it is and that’s why there are more numbers,” she said. “That’s my personal opinion, that we’re able to count better.”

Still, in a 2021 paper on #suicideprevention research priorities, the federal #CentersforDiseaseControlandPrevention acknowledged that research has yielded lots of information about risk factors for #suicide, but “less is known about protective factors.”

“There is also little known about potential synergies between combinations of various risk and/or protective factors that could amplify risk or protective effects,” the paper said.

But based on his own experience, Paulo has no doubt that intervening with his friend made a difference.

If he hadn’t known to intervene, Paulo said, “I think the situation could have escalated and gotten a lot worse. I might have blown off the situation, and been like, ‘This happens to everybody. He’ll be fine.’ "

Instead, Paulo said, “we got him the help that he needed.”

#Suicideprevention resources:

Gryphon Place operates a 24-hour crisis hotline at 269-381-HELP (4357).

The #NationalSuicidePreventionHotline is available at 1-800-273-8255.

Crisis Text Line is a texting service for emotional crisis support. To speak with a trained listener, text HELLO to 741741. It is free, available 24/7, and confidential.

The #VeteranCrisisHotline is 1-800-273-8255, press 1.
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/2022/10/jamesdonaldson-on-mentalhealth-saying-these-words-could-help-someone-who-is-contemplating-suicide/
#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - Saying These Words Could Help Someone Who Is Contemplating #Suicide
Experts say that asking someone directly “Are you thinking of killing yourself?” can be effective at identifying someone at risk for #suicide, offering the opportunity to steer them to professional help

By Julie Mack | special to MLive

When Paulo realized a troubled friend was at risk of #suicide, he knew what to do.

A few years before, Paulo had participated in a #suicideprevention program at Kalamazoo Central #HighSchool. He learned the red flags. He also learned the importance of asking someone if they were having #suicidalthoughts.

“He was freaking out,” said, Paulo, whose last name is being withheld to protect his friend’s privacy. “I was really worried about his well-being.”

Paulo, now 20, called his mother, whose work includes #suicideprevention, to review how he should intervene. “She told me what I already knew from the training, which was just keeping him calm, talking to him, asking him if he was thinking of #suicide,” Paulo said.

Paulo ended up helping his friend go to a hospital and notifying the friend’s #parents.

That #highschool training “helped me stay mentally OK through the whole process and helped me help my friend,” Paulo said in a video for Gryphon Place, a Kalamazoo #suicideprevention program.

More than 15,000 Michiganders died by #suicide over the past decade, include 345 in Kalamazoo County. While rates are highest among middle-age and older men, suicides account for more than 20% of deaths among ages 15 to 24.

Studies indicate 90% of people who die by #suicide have an underlying — and potentially treatable — #mentalhealthcondition.

Regardless of age, experts say that asking someone directly, “Are you thinking of killing yourself?” can be effective at identifying someone at risk for #suicide, offering the opportunity to steer them to professional help.

In fact, “people can kind of give you that invitation to ask if they’re feeling suicidal,” said Susan Davis, a #counselor with Children & Family Services in Kalamazoo. “They want somebody to ask. There’s a big myth out there that if you ask somebody if they’re thinking about #suicide, you’re giving them the idea, and that’s not true. They either already have it and or they don’t and they’ll tell you.”

Maricela Alcala, the Gryphon Place executive director, agreed. Asking the question “shows the person that you’re concerned, that you care, that you want to help,” she said. “And you’re also showing that you’re not afraid to talk about #suicide,” which makes it more comfortable for them to share their thoughts.

People contemplating #suicide often feel isolated and alone, and having a conversation about their despair may lessen those feelings, said Larry Beer, a longtime Kalamazoo clinical #psychologist.

“Lack of connection is one of the reasons why people come to #suicide,” Beer said. “For instance, it’s a high risk after a severe breakup -- somebody really feels that hurt and pain and just can’t imagine being able to reconnect again. So when they feel connection with somebody, it can make less likely they actually act on” #suicidalthoughts.

To be sure, asking someone about suicide is a difficult conversation for people who aren’t trained #therapists.

“It’s hard to get comfortable asking that question about #suicide. I get it,” Davis said. “I don’t have a hard time at work with it. But in my personal life, when I’ve had to ask that question, I’ve tripped over my words. It’s hard to ask.”

But she also said she’s seen the benefits many times. “It’s amazing to see how kind of relieved that a #parent feels when they’ve asked their #child that question, even when they get the ‘yes’ answer,” Davis said. “As least they know what’s going on, and they can reach out and get help.”

But what are the red flags that indicate such a conversation is needed? How do you initiate that talk and what needs to be conveyed? And, perhaps most importantly, what action needs to be taken if the individual acknowledges #suicidalthoughts?

https://mlive.carto.com/u/levinscott/builder/c3897441-c7c0-4c68-98c2-09d0d6501151/embed

The above map shows #suicide deaths by county for 2010-20, based on data from the federal #CentersforDiseaseControl. The map is shaded by the #suicide rate per 100,000 residents. You can click on a county to see the numbers. Can’t see the map? Click here.

Warning signs

The #NationalInstituteofMentalHealth lists a number of warning signs that someone may be at immediate risk of #suicide. Among the red flags:

• Talking about wanting to die or wanting to kill themselves or talking about death often.

• Talking about feeling empty or hopeless or having no reason to live.

• Feeling unbearable emotional or physical pain.

• Talking about being a burden to others.

• Talking about feeling great guilt or shame

• Withdrawing from family and friends.

• Saying goodbye to friends and family and/or putting affairs in order, such as making a will and giving away important possessions.

• Taking risks that could lead to death, such as driving extremely fast.

Other serious warning signs: Extreme mood swings; using #drugs or #alcohol more frequently; looking for ways to kill themselves, such as searching for lethal methods online, stockpiling pills, or buying a gun.

“If someone’s been depressed for awhile and then all of a sudden starts feeling really good, that’s kind of a scary time because maybe they’ve come to the decision they do want to commit #suicide,” Beer said.

In that situation, those around the person may well see the change in mood as a positive sign. “They think, ‘OK, I don’t have to worry anymore,’ " Beer said. “But it can be a sign of concern.”

Specific life events -- the death of a loved one, the breakup of a relationship, the loss of a job, financial problems -- can be so overwhelming for some that they see suicide as the only solution. Likewise, people with serious clinical #depression may see no other resolution.

“Sometimes when people are really depressed, they can’t imagine feeling good ever again,” Beer said. “People want to commit #suicide because they don’t want the pain anymore.”

While #women are more likely to attempt #suicide, #men have a much higher rate of dying because they are more likely to use a gun. White men comprise 69% of Michigan #suicide deaths -- 10,425 of 15,062 deaths in the past decade, a rate four times that of white women and twice that of other #men, as shown by the chart below.

However, adjusted for population size, the group with highest rate of #suicide in Michigan are Native #American #men.

Having the conversation

Asking someone about #suicide is a conversation that should be had in person versus over the phone, experts say. That’s especially true if the #suicide threat seems immediate: You don’t want to risk the individual cutting the conversation short by hanging up.

It’s also important to be direct but empathetic versus judgmental during the talk, experts say, and to stay calm.

“When someone is agitated and very anxious or angry, we’re not really thinking clearly,” Marcela Alcala said. “We’re not really using our cerebral cortex and reality is different at that point. We’ve all had experiences where we were angry -- and then when we’re calm, we realized, wow, that wasn’t quite as big of a deal as it felt like when we were agitated. So first thing is to have someone calm so you can have a rational conversation.”

Tell the person that you want to check in with them and ask how they’re feeling. Ask directly: “Are you having thoughts of #suicide?” or “Are you thinking about killing yourself?” Avoid framing the question in a judgmental way such as: “You’re not thinking of doing anything stupid, are you?”

Listen to their response and let them talk about why they’re thinking of #suicide. Ask if they have a #suicide plan. Once again, don’t be judgmental or argumentative. But tell the person that you and others really don’t want them to die.

Michelle Serlin, who heads Choices for Change, a Kalamazoo counseling agency, said that when she has a client with #suicidalthoughts, she might say, “I really hope you don’t do that because I would be really sad if I never got to see you again. Don’t you care about my feelings?”

“They usually start laughing and it kind of pushes them out of a it a bit,” she said. “Then I’ll say, “Now let’s talk about what’s bothering you.’ ”

If someone acknowledges #suicidalthoughts, the next step is helping them to connect with a #mentalhealthprofessional.

If the #suicide threat seems immediate, that may involve taking the person to an emergency room for a #mentalhealth evaluation or calling 911 if the person refuses to seek medical treatment.

Other options: Calling the individual’s primary #healthcareprovider or calling Gryphon Place or another #suicideprevention agency or hotline. “A person can call us and say, ‘I’m calling for another person’ and hand over the phone,” Alcala said.

Gryphon Place also can be a resource in advance of such a conversation, by coaching the person initiating the talk on what to say and what steps of action might be necessary.

Gryphon Place can definitely help guide someone “through the process of supporting another person with #suicidalthoughts,” Alcala said. The agency serves the Kalamazoo region, and operates a 24-hour hotline at 269-381-HELP.

In fact, Gryphon Place offers several types of #suicideprevention trainings specifically designed to help people identify friends and family members who might be at risk of #suicide and how to talk to them about it.

One of those trainings, The Gatekeepers program, helped Paulo recognize the need to reach out to his troubled friend. That curriculum is designed for middle and high schoolers, and is in place in Kalamazoo, Portage, Mattawan, Gull Lake, Otsego, Mendon, Constantine, White Pigeon and Union City #school districts plus Hackett Catholic Prep.

Another program offered by Gryphon Place, safeTALK, is a similar half-day training for #adults.

Both programs are designed to provide participants with information about #suicide, #depression, and resources available for at-risk individuals; how to identify people who might be at risk of #suicide, and when and how to intervene.

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com

Maricela Alcala, chief executive officer of Gryphon Place, poses for a portrait in Kalamazoo County, Michigan on Monday April 11, 2022. Gryphon Place is agency that provides crisis and counseling services, they also provided a 24/7 helpline.

Not a silver bullet

To be sure, an intervention session with a suicidal loved one may not save their life.

Serlin knows that all too well. Her brother Joel died by #suicide at age 32 in 1998.

Joel was smart and handsome, but he also suffered from severe #mentalillness.

“He was diagnosed with schizoid type 1,” Serlin said. “My brother said to me once, ‘I want you to understand how I feel. So I want you to take your worst, worst, most miserable day. That’s my best day.’ I’ll never forget that comment.”

Serlin said she and other family members had numerous conversations with her brother over the years about his #suicidalthoughts. “I always thought we would catch it if something bad happened,” she said. But then her brother went through a very painful breakup with a longtime girlfriend, and took his own life.

“Sometimes people reach a tipping point,” Maricela Alcala said. So even when friends or family members offer support, #suicide “can still happen and it’s nobody’s fault.”

Another big issue is access to #mentalhealthservices, even when the person is willing to seek help. While hospital emergency departments are required to see people in a #mentalhealthcrisis regardless of ability to pay, finding affordable outpatient therapy can be challenging.

The #pandemic has increased the demand for #counselors -- and decreased the supply, as some #therapists have experienced burnout and left the profession.

“There’s just not enough #mentalhealth #counselors out there,” Beer said.

One option is working through a primary-care provider to find a #therapist. Another option for people who can afford it: Online #therapists available through an app such as Talkspace.

“It gives you access to people who are trained, who can provide the help,” Beer said.

What the research says

Based on anecdotal experience, experts say that asking people directly about #suicidalthoughts can be an effective intervention.

The actual research on the topic is encouraging, but limited.

Studies found asking people about #suicidalthoughts does not increase #suicideideation, according to a 2014 meta-analysis published in Psychological Medicine. That analysis concludes “acknowledging and talking about #suicide may in fact reduce, rather than increase #suicidalideation, and may lead to improvements in #mentalhealth in treatment-seeking populations.”

Likewise, studies that look that at programs such as Gatekeepers and safeTALK found they can raise awareness and reduce #stigma about #depression and #suicide, and reduce the reluctance to intervene when someone is at risk of #suicide, according to a 2015 meta-analysis in Rand Health Quarterly.

Still, that 2015 review of the literature noted that the question of whether such interventions actually reduce #suicide “remains unexamined,” saying there are no studies that have linked such interventions to a lowering of #suicide rates.

Maricela Alcala said part of the problem is that #suicide numbers historically have been unreliable and subject to undercounting, based on the reluctance of some to state that someone died of #suicide. Plus, some suicides -- especially those involving car crashes or drug overdoses -- get recorded as accidental deaths because intent is unclear.

In fact, Alcala said, it’s possible the rise in suicides in the past 15 years actually reflects better reporting vs. a true increase. “With all the educational awareness that communities are doing, people are more likely to call a #suicide death for up what it is and that’s why there are more numbers,” she said. “That’s my personal opinion, that we’re able to count better.”

Still, in a 2021 paper on #suicideprevention research priorities, the federal #CentersforDiseaseControlandPrevention acknowledged that research has yielded lots of information about risk factors for #suicide, but “less is known about protective factors.”

“There is also little known about potential synergies between combinations of various risk and/or protective factors that could amplify risk or protective effects,” the paper said.

But based on his own experience, Paulo has no doubt that intervening with his friend made a difference.

If he hadn’t known to intervene, Paulo said, “I think the situation could have escalated and gotten a lot worse. I might have blown off the situation, and been like, ‘This happens to everybody. He’ll be fine.’ "

Instead, Paulo said, “we got him the help that he needed.”

#Suicideprevention resources:

Gryphon Place operates a 24-hour crisis hotline at 269-381-HELP (4357).

The #NationalSuicidePreventionHotline is available at 1-800-273-8255.

Crisis Text Line is a texting service for emotional crisis support. To speak with a trained listener, text HELLO to 741741. It is free, available 24/7, and confidential.

The #VeteranCrisisHotline is 1-800-273-8255, press 1.
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/?p=10175

Friday, October 28, 2022

#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - When Are #Kids Ready For #SocialMedia?
And how to monitor #socialmedia use when #kids are starting out

Writer: Caroline Miller

Clinical Experts: Dave Anderson, PhD , Jerry Bubrick, PhD , Max Stossel

What You'll Learn

- Should #kids in #middleschool be on #socialmedia?

- Why should #parents monitor kids' #socialmedia use?

- How can #parents limit what #kids are exposed to through #socialmedia?

- Quick Read

- Full Article

- Pressure on #parents

- Choosing the right time

- Monitoring #kids on #socialmedia

- Rules for #socialmedia access

- Parental controls

- #Kids who are vulnerable

By the time they’re in #middleschool, #kids are often eager to go on #socialmedia apps like #Instagram, #TikTok and #WhatsApp to share things with their friends. But #parents are wary because #socialmedia can be harmful to kids’ #self-esteem. And #kids who post impulsively can create serious problems for themselves.

While some experts and parental groups recommend waiting until #kids are at least in the eighth grade to let them have access to #socialmedia, others note that it really depends on your child’s maturity level. But experts agree that when you do allow access to #socialmedia, it’s important to monitor what #kids are posting on it. They recommend having your child’s password as a condition of allowing them access to the app, and regularly discussing what they’re posting. The goal is to help them learn the do’s and don’ts of posting rather than hoping they’ll figure out what’s appropriate and what’s not.

Fortunately, #TikTok and other popular apps now offer parental controls that can limit how much time #kids can spend, control privacy settings and turn off comments and direct messaging. There are apps that enable #kids to create fun videos without sharing them with a broad audience. There are also tools like Bark that #parents can use to monitor and limit kids’ exposure on not only #socialmedia apps but #YouTube, email, texting, TV and movies. (For details, see the full story below.)

And for #kids who are struggling with #mentalhealthissues like #depression, experts recommend extra caution as #socialmedia algorithms tend to serve #kids content that reflects their mood, and can perpetuate negative feelings.

Since #kids are so quick to pick up on digital technology, it can be a big job for #parents to keep up with them — monitoring what they’re accessing in the way of games, music, videos, photos, and websites. But for many, the biggest challenge is when to let #kids have access to #socialmedia. And how much access?

#Kids crave contact with their friends and peers, and #socialmedia has become an important way for them to interact. For #children who are isolated, it can be a lifeline. But it also has the potential to become addictive, to get them into trouble, and to harm fragile #self-esteem.

Pressure on #parents

#Kids often start pushing for access to #socialmedia in late elementary and early #middleschool, and #parents feel pressured to allow it because they don’t want their #children to feel left out. But delaying #socialmedia immersion helps insure that they will be more mature about what they post, more able to resist its addictive appeal, and less vulnerable to emotional harm.

Max Stossel, the founder and CEO of Social Awakening, a group that promotes healthy use of #socialmedia, has talked to groups of #parents, #students, and educators about the impact of technology on #kids for more than 10 years. Stossel says he always asks #parents to raise their hands if they wish they had given their #kids access to #socialmedia sooner. “I am still waiting for the first #parent to tell me they wish they had given it sooner, he says. “And that’s thousands of #parents. But many, many say they’re glad they waited.”

Stossel notes that #socialmedia algorithms are designed to maximize profits, not to benefit #kids. “Eleven-year-old #kids are just too young to have these super computers pointed at their brains, often preying on their #self-image, or their hormones, to keep their attention.”

Stossel endorses a #parent movement called Wait Until 8th that advocates delaying exposure to #socialmedia until #kids are in eighth grade. “And eighth grade is the minimum, I would say. Research shows that 10 -to 14-year-old #girls are hit hardest by this. I would wait until 15, 16, but that has just seemed less and less realistic for a lot of #parents’ lives and kids’ lives.”

Choosing the right time

The best timing for each #child depends not just on their age but their maturity, and #kids develop at different rates. “I could introduce you to a really mature 13-year-old and a really immature 17-year-old,” notes Jerry Bubrick, PhD, a clinical #psychologist at the #ChildMindInstitute.

When they are ready will depend on things like their ability to read social cues, their impulse control, and their vulnerability to criticism or rejection. If a tween has a particularly hard time disengaging from continuously stimulating things like video games, they might have trouble resisting the rabbit hole of #socialmedia.

Dave Anderson, PhD, a clinical #psychologist at the #ChildMindInstitute, suggests that introducing #socialmedia in middle #school gives #parents the opportunity to supervise their initial exposure as a condition for the privilege of using the app. “If you wait until high #school to give permission, they’re not likely to let you monitor their social life. You will never know what their online world looks like. And you will never be able to kind of navigate that with them.”

Monitoring #kids on #socialmedia

Experts agree that parental oversight is crucial when #kids are starting to use #socialmedia.

“Initial access should come with a lot of talk beforehand and a #parent saying, ‘Here’s what I consider to be acceptable and unacceptable #behavior,’” Dr. Anderson explains. “And also ‘I want to go on #Instagram with you, look at some of your friends’ accounts, and we’ll talk about what is acceptable or unacceptable about what they’re doing with their accounts.’ “

Dr. Bubrick encourages families to go one platform at a time, and monitor what #kids are posting. “So #parents are really kind of helping their #kids learn the do’s and don’ts rather than #parents just hoping they’ll figure it out.”

Parental oversight should also pay attention to the balance in the child’s life, Dr. Bubrick adds. “There’s a dedicated time for #socialmedia. But it’s only part of your day because you also have to be out face-to-face with friends, and you have to be exercising, and you have to do homework. So really teaching our #kids how to have balance with #socialmedia is just as important in my point of view as helping them learn what’s appropriate and inappropriate to post.”

Rules for #socialmedia access

Families vary about what they want #kids to be allowed to do on #socialmedia, but #parents can make it clear to #kids that access is contingent on following rules. Some #parents set rules limiting who their #kids can interact with, some on what kinds of things they can post.

For many, the cardinal rule is not to post anything they wouldn’t say to a person face-to-face, or want #adults in their lives to see.  “Tell #kids they should act as if their #parents are reading almost everything they post,” says Dr. Anderson. “And if that’s not enough of a deterrent to oversharing or acting impulsively, explain that they shouldn’t post anything they wouldn’t be comfortable having their grandparents read.”

Dr Anderson notes that some #parents are drawing the line on posting selfies. “A lot of families are making that decision because selfies invite judgment of just you and how you look, and that can be damaging to kids’ #self-esteem” he explains. “If you post pictures of you and your friends hanging out by the lake, you get comments like, ‘Wish I was there. Oh my gosh, you guys are looking like you’re having so much fun.’ But if you post a selfie in a bikini, you’re asking followers to decide whether or not they like your clothing or your appearance.”

Likewise, he adds, it’s important to have well-defined consequences for not following the rules, for example, “As long as you’re ok with the no-selfie rule, we can keep #Instagram, but if you break it we’ll have to delete the app.”

Dr. Bubrick recommends prompting #kids to think through who they are sharing with as well as what’s appropriate to share. “How are you defining who’s a friend online and what are you willing to share with them.”

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com

Parental controls

Major #socialmedia platforms like #TikTok, #Instagram, and #Snapchat have rolled out a series of parental control settings as an answer to parents’ concerns about their kids’ exposure. Not only has #TikTok launched a new dashboard where users can now monitor and set limits on their screen time, but they’ve also added a Family Pairing setting. Once #parents link their account to their child’s, they can control all privacy settings for their child’s account. #Parents can also restrict the types of videos that can come up on their feed, limit screen time, limit or turn off comments and likes, and turn off direct message (this is automatically disabled for kids ages 13 to 15).

The Family Pairing setting is password protected and even if the #child manages to disable it, #parents will be sent a notification.

While #TikTok’s settings appear to be the most expansive in their restriction abilities, #Instagram and #Snapchat have launched similar settings. #Instagram has also separately given the option of limiting or completely turning off comments and likes.

Alternatively, if #parents aren’t comfortable with their #child having their own account but still want to give them the freedom to express themselves online, they can create a joint account and engage in the content with them. On #TikTok and #Instagram, there are several family accounts in which the #parents create, control, and appear in the videos or photos alongside their #children. Often the comments on these accounts are limited or even shut off to shield #children from unwanted scrutiny. There are also more #kid-friendly apps such as Funimate and Triller that allows users to create and edit fun videos without the immediate option of sharing their content with an outside audience.

Stossel recommends the parental control tool Bark, which monitors a child’s activity on #socialnetworks, as well as #YouTube, email and text messages. It filters for the signs of harmful content, including sexual material, threats of violence, #depression, #suicidalideation, and #bullying. #Parents get email and text alerts if there is something concerning in the child’s online activity. It can also be used to limit screen time and to block individual websites.

Screen Time is another tool that allows you to set time limits on daily screen time, block out periods when screens are not to be used, and includes categories of sites and individual URLS.

#Kids who are vulnerable

For #kids who are struggling with emotional issues, #parents need to be aware that the algorithms in #socialmedia apps can read their mood and reinforce it.

“#Socialmedia is built to feed you content you’re more and more interested in,” says Dr. Anderson. “If you have a #kid who’s depressed, the algorithm will feed them content that aligns with their mood. If you’ve got a #kid who’s anxious, the algorithm will feed them the content that aligns with their dominant emotional state. And if you’ve got a #kid who has #ADHD and is looking to be distracted, the algorithm will feed them distraction.”

While the majority of #kids are not necessarily harmed by what they see on #socialmedia, it’s not always clear to #parents if a #child is depressed or anxious, so Dr. Anderson recommends careful monitoring and use of guardrails. “The reality is that for #kids who are already in a vulnerable #mentalhealth population, consuming #socialmedia alone is a real risk factor. It can really affect them.”

This article was last reviewed or updated on September 30, 2022.

Topic: Screen Time & Technology

Caroline Miller

Caroline Miller is the editorial director of the #ChildMindInstitute. She is a veteran magazine, newspaper and website editor … Read Bio
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/2022/10/jamesdonaldson-on-mentalhealth-when-are-kids-ready-for-socialmedia/
#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - When Are #Kids Ready For #SocialMedia?
And how to monitor #socialmedia use when #kids are starting out

Writer: Caroline Miller

Clinical Experts: Dave Anderson, PhD , Jerry Bubrick, PhD , Max Stossel

What You'll Learn

- Should #kids in #middleschool be on #socialmedia?

- Why should #parents monitor kids' #socialmedia use?

- How can #parents limit what #kids are exposed to through #socialmedia?

- Quick Read

- Full Article

- Pressure on #parents

- Choosing the right time

- Monitoring #kids on #socialmedia

- Rules for #socialmedia access

- Parental controls

- #Kids who are vulnerable

By the time they’re in #middleschool, #kids are often eager to go on #socialmedia apps like #Instagram, #TikTok and #WhatsApp to share things with their friends. But #parents are wary because #socialmedia can be harmful to kids’ #self-esteem. And #kids who post impulsively can create serious problems for themselves.

While some experts and parental groups recommend waiting until #kids are at least in the eighth grade to let them have access to #socialmedia, others note that it really depends on your child’s maturity level. But experts agree that when you do allow access to #socialmedia, it’s important to monitor what #kids are posting on it. They recommend having your child’s password as a condition of allowing them access to the app, and regularly discussing what they’re posting. The goal is to help them learn the do’s and don’ts of posting rather than hoping they’ll figure out what’s appropriate and what’s not.

Fortunately, #TikTok and other popular apps now offer parental controls that can limit how much time #kids can spend, control privacy settings and turn off comments and direct messaging. There are apps that enable #kids to create fun videos without sharing them with a broad audience. There are also tools like Bark that #parents can use to monitor and limit kids’ exposure on not only #socialmedia apps but #YouTube, email, texting, TV and movies. (For details, see the full story below.)

And for #kids who are struggling with #mentalhealthissues like #depression, experts recommend extra caution as #socialmedia algorithms tend to serve #kids content that reflects their mood, and can perpetuate negative feelings.

Since #kids are so quick to pick up on digital technology, it can be a big job for #parents to keep up with them — monitoring what they’re accessing in the way of games, music, videos, photos, and websites. But for many, the biggest challenge is when to let #kids have access to #socialmedia. And how much access?

#Kids crave contact with their friends and peers, and #socialmedia has become an important way for them to interact. For #children who are isolated, it can be a lifeline. But it also has the potential to become addictive, to get them into trouble, and to harm fragile #self-esteem.

Pressure on #parents

#Kids often start pushing for access to #socialmedia in late elementary and early #middleschool, and #parents feel pressured to allow it because they don’t want their #children to feel left out. But delaying #socialmedia immersion helps insure that they will be more mature about what they post, more able to resist its addictive appeal, and less vulnerable to emotional harm.

Max Stossel, the founder and CEO of Social Awakening, a group that promotes healthy use of #socialmedia, has talked to groups of #parents, #students, and educators about the impact of technology on #kids for more than 10 years. Stossel says he always asks #parents to raise their hands if they wish they had given their #kids access to #socialmedia sooner. “I am still waiting for the first #parent to tell me they wish they had given it sooner, he says. “And that’s thousands of #parents. But many, many say they’re glad they waited.”

Stossel notes that #socialmedia algorithms are designed to maximize profits, not to benefit #kids. “Eleven-year-old #kids are just too young to have these super computers pointed at their brains, often preying on their #self-image, or their hormones, to keep their attention.”

Stossel endorses a #parent movement called Wait Until 8th that advocates delaying exposure to #socialmedia until #kids are in eighth grade. “And eighth grade is the minimum, I would say. Research shows that 10 -to 14-year-old #girls are hit hardest by this. I would wait until 15, 16, but that has just seemed less and less realistic for a lot of #parents’ lives and kids’ lives.”

Choosing the right time

The best timing for each #child depends not just on their age but their maturity, and #kids develop at different rates. “I could introduce you to a really mature 13-year-old and a really immature 17-year-old,” notes Jerry Bubrick, PhD, a clinical #psychologist at the #ChildMindInstitute.

When they are ready will depend on things like their ability to read social cues, their impulse control, and their vulnerability to criticism or rejection. If a tween has a particularly hard time disengaging from continuously stimulating things like video games, they might have trouble resisting the rabbit hole of #socialmedia.

Dave Anderson, PhD, a clinical #psychologist at the #ChildMindInstitute, suggests that introducing #socialmedia in middle #school gives #parents the opportunity to supervise their initial exposure as a condition for the privilege of using the app. “If you wait until high #school to give permission, they’re not likely to let you monitor their social life. You will never know what their online world looks like. And you will never be able to kind of navigate that with them.”

Monitoring #kids on #socialmedia

Experts agree that parental oversight is crucial when #kids are starting to use #socialmedia.

“Initial access should come with a lot of talk beforehand and a #parent saying, ‘Here’s what I consider to be acceptable and unacceptable #behavior,’” Dr. Anderson explains. “And also ‘I want to go on #Instagram with you, look at some of your friends’ accounts, and we’ll talk about what is acceptable or unacceptable about what they’re doing with their accounts.’ “

Dr. Bubrick encourages families to go one platform at a time, and monitor what #kids are posting. “So #parents are really kind of helping their #kids learn the do’s and don’ts rather than #parents just hoping they’ll figure it out.”

Parental oversight should also pay attention to the balance in the child’s life, Dr. Bubrick adds. “There’s a dedicated time for #socialmedia. But it’s only part of your day because you also have to be out face-to-face with friends, and you have to be exercising, and you have to do homework. So really teaching our #kids how to have balance with #socialmedia is just as important in my point of view as helping them learn what’s appropriate and inappropriate to post.”

Rules for #socialmedia access

Families vary about what they want #kids to be allowed to do on #socialmedia, but #parents can make it clear to #kids that access is contingent on following rules. Some #parents set rules limiting who their #kids can interact with, some on what kinds of things they can post.

For many, the cardinal rule is not to post anything they wouldn’t say to a person face-to-face, or want #adults in their lives to see.  “Tell #kids they should act as if their #parents are reading almost everything they post,” says Dr. Anderson. “And if that’s not enough of a deterrent to oversharing or acting impulsively, explain that they shouldn’t post anything they wouldn’t be comfortable having their grandparents read.”

Dr Anderson notes that some #parents are drawing the line on posting selfies. “A lot of families are making that decision because selfies invite judgment of just you and how you look, and that can be damaging to kids’ #self-esteem” he explains. “If you post pictures of you and your friends hanging out by the lake, you get comments like, ‘Wish I was there. Oh my gosh, you guys are looking like you’re having so much fun.’ But if you post a selfie in a bikini, you’re asking followers to decide whether or not they like your clothing or your appearance.”

Likewise, he adds, it’s important to have well-defined consequences for not following the rules, for example, “As long as you’re ok with the no-selfie rule, we can keep #Instagram, but if you break it we’ll have to delete the app.”

Dr. Bubrick recommends prompting #kids to think through who they are sharing with as well as what’s appropriate to share. “How are you defining who’s a friend online and what are you willing to share with them.”

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com

Parental controls

Major #socialmedia platforms like #TikTok, #Instagram, and #Snapchat have rolled out a series of parental control settings as an answer to parents’ concerns about their kids’ exposure. Not only has #TikTok launched a new dashboard where users can now monitor and set limits on their screen time, but they’ve also added a Family Pairing setting. Once #parents link their account to their child’s, they can control all privacy settings for their child’s account. #Parents can also restrict the types of videos that can come up on their feed, limit screen time, limit or turn off comments and likes, and turn off direct message (this is automatically disabled for kids ages 13 to 15).

The Family Pairing setting is password protected and even if the #child manages to disable it, #parents will be sent a notification.

While #TikTok’s settings appear to be the most expansive in their restriction abilities, #Instagram and #Snapchat have launched similar settings. #Instagram has also separately given the option of limiting or completely turning off comments and likes.

Alternatively, if #parents aren’t comfortable with their #child having their own account but still want to give them the freedom to express themselves online, they can create a joint account and engage in the content with them. On #TikTok and #Instagram, there are several family accounts in which the #parents create, control, and appear in the videos or photos alongside their #children. Often the comments on these accounts are limited or even shut off to shield #children from unwanted scrutiny. There are also more #kid-friendly apps such as Funimate and Triller that allows users to create and edit fun videos without the immediate option of sharing their content with an outside audience.

Stossel recommends the parental control tool Bark, which monitors a child’s activity on #socialnetworks, as well as #YouTube, email and text messages. It filters for the signs of harmful content, including sexual material, threats of violence, #depression, #suicidalideation, and #bullying. #Parents get email and text alerts if there is something concerning in the child’s online activity. It can also be used to limit screen time and to block individual websites.

Screen Time is another tool that allows you to set time limits on daily screen time, block out periods when screens are not to be used, and includes categories of sites and individual URLS.

#Kids who are vulnerable

For #kids who are struggling with emotional issues, #parents need to be aware that the algorithms in #socialmedia apps can read their mood and reinforce it.

“#Socialmedia is built to feed you content you’re more and more interested in,” says Dr. Anderson. “If you have a #kid who’s depressed, the algorithm will feed them content that aligns with their mood. If you’ve got a #kid who’s anxious, the algorithm will feed them the content that aligns with their dominant emotional state. And if you’ve got a #kid who has #ADHD and is looking to be distracted, the algorithm will feed them distraction.”

While the majority of #kids are not necessarily harmed by what they see on #socialmedia, it’s not always clear to #parents if a #child is depressed or anxious, so Dr. Anderson recommends careful monitoring and use of guardrails. “The reality is that for #kids who are already in a vulnerable #mentalhealth population, consuming #socialmedia alone is a real risk factor. It can really affect them.”

This article was last reviewed or updated on September 30, 2022.

Topic: Screen Time & Technology

Caroline Miller

Caroline Miller is the editorial director of the #ChildMindInstitute. She is a veteran magazine, newspaper and website editor … Read Bio
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/?p=10109

Thursday, October 27, 2022

#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - #Depression Is Not Solution #shorts #youtubeshorts #tonniartandcraft #art #satisfying #sad

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA4ucy0DeNc

#James Donaldson notes:
Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.
Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.
Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in th

https://standingabovethecrowd.com/2022/10/jamesdonaldson-on-mentalhealth-depression-is-not-solution-shorts-youtubeshorts-tonniartandcraft-art-satisfying-sad/

#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - #Depression Is Not Solution #shorts #youtubeshorts #tonniartandcraft #art #satisfying #sad
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA4ucy0DeNc

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/2022/10/jamesdonaldson-on-mentalhealth-depression-is-not-solution-shorts-youtubeshorts-tonniartandcraft-art-satisfying-sad/
#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - #Depression Is Not Solution #shorts #youtubeshorts #tonniartandcraft #art #satisfying #sad
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA4ucy0DeNc

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/?p=10131

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - Why #American #Teens Are So Sad
Four forces are propelling the rising rates of #depression among young people

By Derek Thompson

The #UnitedStates is experiencing an extreme #teenage #mentalhealthcrisis. From 2009 to 2021, the share of #American #highschoolstudents who say they feel “persistent feelings of sadness or #hopelessness” rose from 26 percent to 44 percent, according to a new #CDC study. This is the highest level of #teenage sadness ever recorded.

The government survey of almost 8,000 #highschoolstudents, which was conducted in the first six months of 2021, found a great deal of variation in #mentalhealth among different groups. More than one in four #girls reported that they had seriously contemplated attempting #suicide during the #pandemic, which was twice the rate of #boys. Nearly half of #LGBTQ #teens said they had contemplated #suicide during the #pandemic, compared with 14 percent of their #heterosexual peers. Sadness among white #teens seems to be rising faster than among other groups.

Credit: Derek Thompson, The Atlantic; data from the CDC.

But the big picture is the same across all categories: Almost every measure of #mentalhealth is getting worse, for every #teenage demographic, and it’s happening all across the country. Since 2009, sadness and #hopelessness have increased for every race; for straight #teens and #gay #teens; for #teens who say they’ve never had sex and for those who say they’ve had sex with #males and/or #females; for #students in each year of #highschool; and for #teens in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

So why is this happening?

I want to propose several answers to that question, along with one meta-explanation that ties them together. But before I start with that, I want to squash a few tempting fallacies.

The first fallacy is that we can chalk this all up to #teens behaving badly. In fact, lots of self-reported #teen #behaviors are moving in a positive direction. Since the 1990s, drinking-and-driving is down almost 50 percent. #School fights are down 50 percent. Sex before 13 is down more than 70 percent. #School #bullying is down. And #LGBTQ acceptance is up.

The second fallacy is that #teens have always been moody, and sadness looks like it is rising only because people are more willing to talk about it. Objective measures of #anxiety and #depression—such as #eatingdisorders, #selfharming #behavior, and #teen #suicides—are sharply up over the past decade. “Across the country we have witnessed dramatic increases in Emergency Department visits for all #mentalhealth emergencies including suspected #suicideattempts,” the American Academy of Pediatrics said in October. Today’s #teenagers are more comfortable talking about #mentalhealth, but rising #youth sadness is no illusion.

The third fallacy is that today’s #mentalhealthcrisis was principally caused by the #pandemic and an overreaction to #COVID. “Rising #teenage sadness isn’t a new trend, but rather the acceleration and broadening of a trend that clearly started before the #pandemic,” Laurence Steinberg, a #psychologist at Temple University, told me. But he added: “We shouldn’t ignore the #pandemic, either. The fact that #COVID seems to have made #teen #mentalhealth worse offers clues about what’s really driving the rise in sadness.”

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com

Here are four forces propelling that increase.

1. #Socialmedia use

Five years ago, the #psychologist Jean Twenge wrote an influential and controversial feature in The Atlantic titled “Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?” based on her book iGen. Around 2012, Twenge wrote, she had noticed that teen sadness and #anxiety began to steadily rise in the U.S. and other rich developed countries. She looked for explanations and realized that 2012 was precisely when the share of #Americans who owned a smartphone surpassed 50 percent and mobile #socialmedia use spiked.

In the past few years, scientists have disputed the idea that #socialmedia use itself makes #teenagers miserable. “There’s been absolutely hundreds of studies, almost all showing pretty small effects,” Jeff Hancock, a #behavioral #psychologist at Stanford University who has conducted a meta-analysis of 226 such studies, told The New York Times recently.

But I think Twenge’s strongest point is misunderstood. #Socialmedia isn’t like rat poison, which is toxic to almost everyone. It’s more like #alcohol: a mildly addictive substance that can enhance social situations but can also lead to dependency and #depression among a minority of users.

This is very close to the conclusion reached by none other than #Instagram. The company’s internal research from 2020 found that, while most users had a positive relationship with the app, one-third of #teen #girls said “#Instagram made them feel worse,” even though these #girls “feel unable to stop themselves” from logging on. And if you don’t believe a company owned by #Facebook, believe a big new study from Cambridge University, in which researchers looked at 84,000 people of all ages and found that #socialmedia was strongly associated with worse #mentalhealth during certain sensitive life periods, including for #girls ages 11 to 13.

Why would social media affect teenage mental health in this way? One explanation is that teenagers (and #teenage #girls in particular) are uniquely sensitive to the judgment of friends, #teachers, and the digital crowd. As I’ve written, #socialmedia seems to hijack this keen peer sensitivity and drive obsessive thinking about body image and popularity. The problem isn’t just that #socialmedia fuels #anxiety but also that—as we’ll see—it makes it harder for today’s young people to cope with the pressures of growing up.

2. Sociality is down

Both Steinberg and Twenge #stress that the biggest problem with #socialmedia might be not #socialmedia itself, but rather the activities that it replaces.

“I tell #parents all the time that if #Instagram is merely displacing TV, I’m not concerned about it,” Steinberg told me. But today’s #teens spend more than five hours daily on #socialmedia, and that habit seems to be displacing quite a lot of beneficial activity. The share of #highschoolstudents who got eight or more hours of sleep declined 30 percent from 2007 to 2019. Compared with their counterparts in the 2000s, today’s #teens are less likely to go out with their friends, get their driver’s license, or play #youth #sports.

The #pandemic and the closure of #schools likely exacerbated #teen #loneliness and sadness. A 2020 survey from Harvard’s Graduate #School of Education found that #loneliness spiked in the first year of the #pandemic for everyone, but it rose most significantly for young people. “It’s well established that what protects #teens from #stress is close social relationships,” Steinberg said. “When #kids can’t go to #school to see their friends and peers and mentors, that #socialisolation could lead to sadness and #depression, particularly for those predisposed to feeling sad or depressed.”

This is important to say clearly: Aloneness isn’t the same as #loneliness, and #loneliness isn’t the same as #depression. But more aloneness (including from heavy smartphone use) and more #loneliness (including from #school closures) might have combined to push up sadness among #teenagers who need sociality to protect them from the pressures of a stressful world.

3. The world is stressful—and there is more news about the world’s stressors

Lisa Damour, a clinical #psychologist and author, told me that no single factor can account for the rise of #teenage sadness. But she believes a part of the answer is that the world has become more stressful. Or, at least, teenagers’ perception of the world seems to be causing them more #stress.

“In the last decade #teenagers have become increasingly stressed by concerns about #gunviolence, climate change, and the political environment,” she wrote in an email. “Increased #stress among young people is linked to increasing levels of sadness. #Girls, more than #boys, are socialized to internalize distress, meaning that they tend to collapse in on themselves by becoming depressed or anxious.”

Fears about finances, climate change, and viral #pandemics are smashing into local concerns about social approval and setting oneself up for success. “I think of it as a pile-on effect,” Steinberg said. “We’re coming out of the #pandemic, and then suddenly Russia goes to war. Every day, it feels like there’s something else. It creates a very gloomy narrative about the world.”

This sense of doom doesn’t just come from #teenagers. It comes from us, the news media, and from the #socialmedia channels through which our work is distributed. News sources have never been more abundant, or more accessible. But journalism also has a famous bad-news bias, which flows from an unfortunate but accurate understanding that negativity generally gets more attention. When we plug our brain into a news feed, we are usually choosing to deluge ourselves with negative representations of reality. A well-known 2019 experiment randomly forced people to stop using #Facebook for four weeks before a midterm election. The study found that those who logged off spent more time hanging out with family and friends, consistent with the idea that #socialmedia use displaces pro-social #behaviors. It also found that deactivating #Facebook “reduced factual news knowledge” while “increasing subjective well-being.” We cannot rule out the possibility that teens are sad about the world, not only because the world contains sadness, but also because young people have 24/7 access to sites that are constantly telling them they should be depressed about it.

4. Modern parenting strategies

In the past 40 years, #American #parents—especially those with a college degree—have nearly doubled the amount of time they spend coaching, chauffeuring, tutoring, and otherwise helping their #teenage #children. The economist Valerie Ramey has labeled this the “rug rat race.” High-income #parents in particular are spending much more time preparing their #kids for a competitive college admissions process. When I interviewed Ramey about her work in 2019, she told me that she “couldn’t believe the amount of pressure our friends were putting on their #kids to get ready for college.”

The “rug rat race” is an upper-class phenomenon that can’t explain a generalized increase in #teenage sadness. But it could well explain part of what’s going on. And in the 2020 Atlantic feature “What Happened to American #Childhood?,” Kate Julian described a related phenomenon that affects families a bit more broadly: Anxious #parents, in seeking to insulate their #children from risk and danger, are unintentionally transferring their #anxiety to their #kids.

I want to pull out two points from Julian’s complex essay. First, #children are growing up slower than they used to. Today’s #children are less likely to drive, get a summer job, or be asked to do chores. The problem isn’t that #kids are lazy (homework time has risen), or that scrubbing dishes magically dispels #anxietydisorders. Rather, Julian wrote, these activities “provide #children with two very important things”: tolerating discomfort and having a sense of personal competence.

Second, researchers have noted a broad increase in an “accommodative” parenting style. If a #girl is afraid of dogs, an “accommodation” would be keeping her away from every friend’s house with a dog, or if a #boy won’t eat vegetables, feeding him nothing but turkey loaf for four years (an actual story from the article). These #behaviors come from love. But part of growing up is learning how to release negative emotions in the face of inevitable #stress. If #kids never figure out how to do that, they’re more likely to experience severe #anxiety as #teenagers.

Julian highlighted a new treatment out of Yale University’s #Child Study Center called SPACE, or Supportive Parenting for Anxious #Childhood Emotions. Put simply, SPACE forces #parents to be less accommodating. If the #girl is afraid of dogs, encourage her to play with young puppies. If the #boy hates vegetables, caramelize the hell out of some broccoli. This sort of advice is infinitely easier to type than to put into practice. But folding a bit of exposure therapy into modern parenting and #childhood might help #teenagers grapple with a complex and stressful world.

Other explanations don’t fit neatly into the above categories. Maybe drugs are a big factor: One study found that a sixth of the increase in #teen suicides was associated with parental opioid addiction. Maybe the authors Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt are right that college campuses and internet culture have come to celebrate fragility. Maybe political polarization is fueling #anxiety, not only by creating mutual hatred but also by encouraging people to reject opposing views, which over time reduces their capacity to handle cognitive dissonance in a confusing world.

The truth is I’m not satisfied by any of the above explanations, on their own. But I see no reason to keep them alone. They interact, amplify, and compound. And together they paint a powerful picture.

The world is overwhelming, and an inescapably negative news cycle creates an atmosphere of existential gloom, not just for #teens but also for their moms and dads. The more overwhelming the world feels to #parents, the more they may try to bubble-wrap their #kids with accommodations. Over time, this protective parenting style deprives #children of the emotional resilience they need to handle the world’s stresses. #Childhood becomes more insular: Time spent with friends, driving, dating, and working summer jobs all decline. College pressures skyrocket. Outwardly, #teens are growing up slower; but online, they’re growing up faster. The internet exposes #teenagers not only to supportive friendships but also to #bullying, threats, despairing conversations about #mentalhealth, and a slurry of unsolvable global problems—a carnival of negativity. #Socialmedia places in every teen’s pocket a quantified battle royal for scarce popularity that can displace hours of sleep and makes many #teens, especially #girls, feel worse about their body and life. Amplify these existing trends with a global #pandemic and an unprecedented period of #socialisolation, and suddenly, the remarkable rise of #teenage sadness doesn’t feel all that mysterious, does it?
https://standingabovethecrowd.com/2022/10/jamesdonaldson-on-mentalhealth-why-american-teens-are-so-sad/
#JamesDonaldson On #MentalHealth - Why #American #Teens Are So Sad
Four forces are propelling the rising rates of #depression among young people

By Derek Thompson

The #UnitedStates is experiencing an extreme #teenage #mentalhealthcrisis. From 2009 to 2021, the share of #American #highschoolstudents who say they feel “persistent feelings of sadness or #hopelessness” rose from 26 percent to 44 percent, according to a new #CDC study. This is the highest level of #teenage sadness ever recorded.

The government survey of almost 8,000 #highschoolstudents, which was conducted in the first six months of 2021, found a great deal of variation in #mentalhealth among different groups. More than one in four #girls reported that they had seriously contemplated attempting #suicide during the #pandemic, which was twice the rate of #boys. Nearly half of #LGBTQ #teens said they had contemplated #suicide during the #pandemic, compared with 14 percent of their #heterosexual peers. Sadness among white #teens seems to be rising faster than among other groups.

Credit: Derek Thompson, The Atlantic; data from the CDC.

But the big picture is the same across all categories: Almost every measure of #mentalhealth is getting worse, for every #teenage demographic, and it’s happening all across the country. Since 2009, sadness and #hopelessness have increased for every race; for straight #teens and #gay #teens; for #teens who say they’ve never had sex and for those who say they’ve had sex with #males and/or #females; for #students in each year of #highschool; and for #teens in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

So why is this happening?

I want to propose several answers to that question, along with one meta-explanation that ties them together. But before I start with that, I want to squash a few tempting fallacies.

The first fallacy is that we can chalk this all up to #teens behaving badly. In fact, lots of self-reported #teen #behaviors are moving in a positive direction. Since the 1990s, drinking-and-driving is down almost 50 percent. #School fights are down 50 percent. Sex before 13 is down more than 70 percent. #School #bullying is down. And #LGBTQ acceptance is up.

The second fallacy is that #teens have always been moody, and sadness looks like it is rising only because people are more willing to talk about it. Objective measures of #anxiety and #depression—such as #eatingdisorders, #selfharming #behavior, and #teen #suicides—are sharply up over the past decade. “Across the country we have witnessed dramatic increases in Emergency Department visits for all #mentalhealth emergencies including suspected #suicideattempts,” the American Academy of Pediatrics said in October. Today’s #teenagers are more comfortable talking about #mentalhealth, but rising #youth sadness is no illusion.

The third fallacy is that today’s #mentalhealthcrisis was principally caused by the #pandemic and an overreaction to #COVID. “Rising #teenage sadness isn’t a new trend, but rather the acceleration and broadening of a trend that clearly started before the #pandemic,” Laurence Steinberg, a #psychologist at Temple University, told me. But he added: “We shouldn’t ignore the #pandemic, either. The fact that #COVID seems to have made #teen #mentalhealth worse offers clues about what’s really driving the rise in sadness.”

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleOrder your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife:From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

http://www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com

Here are four forces propelling that increase.

1. #Socialmedia use

Five years ago, the #psychologist Jean Twenge wrote an influential and controversial feature in The Atlantic titled “Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?” based on her book iGen. Around 2012, Twenge wrote, she had noticed that teen sadness and #anxiety began to steadily rise in the U.S. and other rich developed countries. She looked for explanations and realized that 2012 was precisely when the share of #Americans who owned a smartphone surpassed 50 percent and mobile #socialmedia use spiked.

In the past few years, scientists have disputed the idea that #socialmedia use itself makes #teenagers miserable. “There’s been absolutely hundreds of studies, almost all showing pretty small effects,” Jeff Hancock, a #behavioral #psychologist at Stanford University who has conducted a meta-analysis of 226 such studies, told The New York Times recently.

But I think Twenge’s strongest point is misunderstood. #Socialmedia isn’t like rat poison, which is toxic to almost everyone. It’s more like #alcohol: a mildly addictive substance that can enhance social situations but can also lead to dependency and #depression among a minority of users.

This is very close to the conclusion reached by none other than #Instagram. The company’s internal research from 2020 found that, while most users had a positive relationship with the app, one-third of #teen #girls said “#Instagram made them feel worse,” even though these #girls “feel unable to stop themselves” from logging on. And if you don’t believe a company owned by #Facebook, believe a big new study from Cambridge University, in which researchers looked at 84,000 people of all ages and found that #socialmedia was strongly associated with worse #mentalhealth during certain sensitive life periods, including for #girls ages 11 to 13.

Why would social media affect teenage mental health in this way? One explanation is that teenagers (and #teenage #girls in particular) are uniquely sensitive to the judgment of friends, #teachers, and the digital crowd. As I’ve written, #socialmedia seems to hijack this keen peer sensitivity and drive obsessive thinking about body image and popularity. The problem isn’t just that #socialmedia fuels #anxiety but also that—as we’ll see—it makes it harder for today’s young people to cope with the pressures of growing up.

2. Sociality is down

Both Steinberg and Twenge #stress that the biggest problem with #socialmedia might be not #socialmedia itself, but rather the activities that it replaces.

“I tell #parents all the time that if #Instagram is merely displacing TV, I’m not concerned about it,” Steinberg told me. But today’s #teens spend more than five hours daily on #socialmedia, and that habit seems to be displacing quite a lot of beneficial activity. The share of #highschoolstudents who got eight or more hours of sleep declined 30 percent from 2007 to 2019. Compared with their counterparts in the 2000s, today’s #teens are less likely to go out with their friends, get their driver’s license, or play #youth #sports.

The #pandemic and the closure of #schools likely exacerbated #teen #loneliness and sadness. A 2020 survey from Harvard’s Graduate #School of Education found that #loneliness spiked in the first year of the #pandemic for everyone, but it rose most significantly for young people. “It’s well established that what protects #teens from #stress is close social relationships,” Steinberg said. “When #kids can’t go to #school to see their friends and peers and mentors, that #socialisolation could lead to sadness and #depression, particularly for those predisposed to feeling sad or depressed.”

This is important to say clearly: Aloneness isn’t the same as #loneliness, and #loneliness isn’t the same as #depression. But more aloneness (including from heavy smartphone use) and more #loneliness (including from #school closures) might have combined to push up sadness among #teenagers who need sociality to protect them from the pressures of a stressful world.

3. The world is stressful—and there is more news about the world’s stressors

Lisa Damour, a clinical #psychologist and author, told me that no single factor can account for the rise of #teenage sadness. But she believes a part of the answer is that the world has become more stressful. Or, at least, teenagers’ perception of the world seems to be causing them more #stress.

“In the last decade #teenagers have become increasingly stressed by concerns about #gunviolence, climate change, and the political environment,” she wrote in an email. “Increased #stress among young people is linked to increasing levels of sadness. #Girls, more than #boys, are socialized to internalize distress, meaning that they tend to collapse in on themselves by becoming depressed or anxious.”

Fears about finances, climate change, and viral #pandemics are smashing into local concerns about social approval and setting oneself up for success. “I think of it as a pile-on effect,” Steinberg said. “We’re coming out of the #pandemic, and then suddenly Russia goes to war. Every day, it feels like there’s something else. It creates a very gloomy narrative about the world.”

This sense of doom doesn’t just come from #teenagers. It comes from us, the news media, and from the #socialmedia channels through which our work is distributed. News sources have never been more abundant, or more accessible. But journalism also has a famous bad-news bias, which flows from an unfortunate but accurate understanding that negativity generally gets more attention. When we plug our brain into a news feed, we are usually choosing to deluge ourselves with negative representations of reality. A well-known 2019 experiment randomly forced people to stop using #Facebook for four weeks before a midterm election. The study found that those who logged off spent more time hanging out with family and friends, consistent with the idea that #socialmedia use displaces pro-social #behaviors. It also found that deactivating #Facebook “reduced factual news knowledge” while “increasing subjective well-being.” We cannot rule out the possibility that teens are sad about the world, not only because the world contains sadness, but also because young people have 24/7 access to sites that are constantly telling them they should be depressed about it.

4. Modern parenting strategies

In the past 40 years, #American #parents—especially those with a college degree—have nearly doubled the amount of time they spend coaching, chauffeuring, tutoring, and otherwise helping their #teenage #children. The economist Valerie Ramey has labeled this the “rug rat race.” High-income #parents in particular are spending much more time preparing their #kids for a competitive college admissions process. When I interviewed Ramey about her work in 2019, she told me that she “couldn’t believe the amount of pressure our friends were putting on their #kids to get ready for college.”

The “rug rat race” is an upper-class phenomenon that can’t explain a generalized increase in #teenage sadness. But it could well explain part of what’s going on. And in the 2020 Atlantic feature “What Happened to American #Childhood?,” Kate Julian described a related phenomenon that affects families a bit more broadly: Anxious #parents, in seeking to insulate their #children from risk and danger, are unintentionally transferring their #anxiety to their #kids.

I want to pull out two points from Julian’s complex essay. First, #children are growing up slower than they used to. Today’s #children are less likely to drive, get a summer job, or be asked to do chores. The problem isn’t that #kids are lazy (homework time has risen), or that scrubbing dishes magically dispels #anxietydisorders. Rather, Julian wrote, these activities “provide #children with two very important things”: tolerating discomfort and having a sense of personal competence.

Second, researchers have noted a broad increase in an “accommodative” parenting style. If a #girl is afraid of dogs, an “accommodation” would be keeping her away from every friend’s house with a dog, or if a #boy won’t eat vegetables, feeding him nothing but turkey loaf for four years (an actual story from the article). These #behaviors come from love. But part of growing up is learning how to release negative emotions in the face of inevitable #stress. If #kids never figure out how to do that, they’re more likely to experience severe #anxiety as #teenagers.

Julian highlighted a new treatment out of Yale University’s #Child Study Center called SPACE, or Supportive Parenting for Anxious #Childhood Emotions. Put simply, SPACE forces #parents to be less accommodating. If the #girl is afraid of dogs, encourage her to play with young puppies. If the #boy hates vegetables, caramelize the hell out of some broccoli. This sort of advice is infinitely easier to type than to put into practice. But folding a bit of exposure therapy into modern parenting and #childhood might help #teenagers grapple with a complex and stressful world.

Other explanations don’t fit neatly into the above categories. Maybe drugs are a big factor: One study found that a sixth of the increase in #teen suicides was associated with parental opioid addiction. Maybe the authors Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt are right that college campuses and internet culture have come to celebrate fragility. Maybe political polarization is fueling #anxiety, not only by creating mutual hatred but also by encouraging people to reject opposing views, which over time reduces their capacity to handle cognitive dissonance in a confusing world.

The truth is I’m not satisfied by any of the above explanations, on their own. But I see no reason to keep them alone. They interact, amplify, and compound. And together they paint a powerful picture.

The world is overwhelming, and an inescapably negative news cycle creates an atmosphere of existential gloom, not just for #teens but also for their moms and dads. The more overwhelming the world feels to #parents, the more they may try to bubble-wrap their #kids with accommodations. Over time, this protective parenting style deprives #children of the emotional resilience they need to handle the world’s stresses. #Childhood becomes more insular: Time spent with friends, driving, dating, and working summer jobs all decline. College pressures skyrocket. Outwardly, #teens are growing up slower; but online, they’re growing up faster. The internet exposes #teenagers not only to supportive friendships but also to #bullying, threats, despairing conversations about #mentalhealth, and a slurry of unsolvable global problems—a carnival of negativity. #Socialmedia places in every teen’s pocket a quantified battle royal for scarce popularity that can displace hours of sleep and makes many #teens, especially #girls, feel worse about their body and life. Amplify these existing trends with a global #pandemic and an unprecedented period of #socialisolation, and suddenly, the remarkable rise of #teenage sadness doesn’t feel all that mysterious, does it?
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