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Potential Causes and Risk Factors

 •  Traditional Role Expectations of Men.
 Young men are taught to minimize or
 not share emotions as readily or fully
 as women, starting at a young age.
 Men can  internalize and interpret
 this socialization as appearing ‘tough’

 •  “Deaths of Despair”. Drug, alcohol
 and suicide deaths have risen in
 nearly every age group over the last
 decade, but the increase has been
 especially pronounced for young-
 er Americans. Between 2007 and
 2017, drug-related deaths increased
 by 108% among adults ages 18 to
 34, while alcohol-related deaths
 increased by 69% and suicides in-
 creased by 35%, according to the
 report, which drew on Centers for
 Disease Control and Prevention data
 (Time Magazine June 13, 2019)

 •  Men tend to be under diagnosed
 for depression more than women.
 Subsequently, men tend to less likely
 seek mental health care, treatment,
 or therapy than women. In addition,
 men tend to encounter physical pain   Myths About Teen Suicide  The common goal of suicide is cessation of con-
 and illness, loneliness, social isola-                        sciousness: The anguished mind of a suicidal per-
 tion, and hopelessness  Talking about suicide will cause someone to   son interprets the end of consciousness as the only

 •  Bullying. A higher percentage of   commit suicide.         way to end the suffering.
 male than female students report   In reality, most teens want to talk about what is   3.The common stimulus of suicide is psychologi-
 being physically bullied (6% vs. 4%)   troubling them and can be grateful that someone   cal pain: Shneidman calls it “psychache,” by which
 and threatened with harm (5% vs.   has finally decided to talk to them about it  he means “intolerable emotion, unbearable pain,
 3%; (National Center for Educational                          unacceptable anguish.”
 Statistics, 2016).  Students who bully   Teens who threaten suicide are just looking for   The common stressor in suicide is frustrated psy-
 others, are bullied, or witness bul-  attention               chological needs: A suicidal person feels pushed
 lying are more likely to report high   In reality, teens are looking for ways to express   toward self-destruction by psychological needs
 levels of suicide-related behavior   their hurts, pains, rejections, but are also adept at   that are not being met (for example, the need for
 than students who report no involve-  hiding their innermost feelings from adults  achievement, for nurturance or for understanding).
 ment in bullying (Center for Disease
 Control, 2014)                                                5.The common emotion in suicide is hopeless-
 •  Childhood sexual abuse. According to   Prevention Strategies for Professionals  ness-helplessness: A suicidal person feels despon-
                                                               dent, utterly unsalvageable.
 Dube, S.R. et al. (2005), a 2005 study   In his book The Suicidal Mind 1996, Edwin Shneid-
 conducted by the U.S. Centers for   man (a co-founder of the American Association of   \6.The common cognitive state of suicide is ambiv-
 Disease Control, on San Diego Kaiser   Suicidology, www.suicidology.org) outlines what he   alence: Suicidal people, Shneidman says, “wish to
 Permanente HMO members, report-  calls “the 10 psychological commonalities of sui-  die and they simultaneously wish to be rescued.”
 ed that 16% of males were sexually   cide”:                   7.The common perceptual state in suicide is con-
 abused by the age of 18. Also, a                              striction: The mind of a suicidal person is constrict-
 history of suicide attempt was more   1.The common purpose of suicide is to seek a   ed in its ability to perceive options, and, in fact,
 than twice as likely among both men   solution: A suicidal person is seeking a solution to   mistakenly sees only two choices—either continue
 and women who experienced child-  a problem that is “generating intense suffering”   suffering or die.
 hood sexual abuse  within him or her.
 24  |  HELPFUL LIVING MAGAZINE                                                     HELPFUL LIVING MAGAZINE  |  25
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