|
Suicide On Campus
Roberto Rivera
A few weeks ago, the students and faculty of
Michigan State University came together to celebrate the Spartans'
victory in the finals of the NCAA men's basketball championship. This
joyful scene stood in contrast to events three years ago that also
brought people in East Lansing together: shock and sorrow over a series
of suicide among Michigan State students. Within three months, six
Michigan State students had taken their own lives.
Between January 16 and April 15, 1997, the six
students, all of them males, committed suicide. Three of them shot
themselves to death; two died by hanging; and the third threw himself in
front of a train. Apart from their enrollment at Michigan State, and the
circumstances of their deaths, the students appeared to have little in
common.
While the extent of the East Lansing outbreak may
have been unusual, there's nothing unusual about college students taking
their own lives. On the contrary, what happened in East Lansing conforms
to what we know about suicide.
According to the American Federation For the
Prevention of Suicide (AFPS), suicide is the third-leading cause of
death among Americans between the ages of 15 and 24, and it's the
second-leading cause of death - behind only traffic accidents - among
college students. In addition, the suicide rate is higher among 19 to
24-year olds enrolled in college than it is for those who aren't
enrolled. These numbers tell only part of the story. Since 1950, the
suicide rate among college-aged women has more than doubled, while the
rate among college-aged men has tripled.
Even suicide "clusters" -- like those in East
Lansing -- aren't all that uncommon. As Kay Redfield Jamison, a
professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins points out in her book Night
Falls Fast: Understanding Suicide , the past 10 years have seen clusters
in communities as different as South Boston and Fairfax County,
Virginia. Nor is Michigan State the only college campus to witness a
cluster of suicides in recent years.
But all the talk of numbers and patterns still
leaves us with the question: "Why do people, especially the young, take
their own lives?" The most common factor is mental illness - in
particular, "mood disorders" such as clinical depression and
manic-depressive illness, also known as bi-polar disorder.
Clinical depression is a medical condition "which
paralyzes all the otherwise vital forces that make us human ..." leaving
us with a life that is "bloodless" and "painless." Manic-depressive
illness adds the element of mania, which leaves people feeling exultant,
grandiloquent, expansive and irritable. Contrary to what you may have
heard, the holidays are not the peak time for suicide. Late spring and
early summer are.
As Jamieson notes, the presence of mood disorders
not only makes it more likely that a person will attempt suicide, but
also will incline them towards more "serious" efforts in that direction
- that is, efforts that exhibit more forethought and planning.
The impact of mood disorders, whose average onset
is between 18 and 25 years of age, is heightened by a staple of college
life: drinking. Anyway you slice it, alcohol and mental illness is a
bad, often lethal, combination. Many people with depression drink, or
use drugs, to relieve their symptoms. But, as Jamieson puts it, alcohol
and drugs "more often worsen [the pain]" they're intended to alleviate.
They "undermine the individual?s willingness to seek out and receive
good clinical care" and "sabotage the effectiveness of prescribed
treatment." They reduce inhibitions and increase risk-taking, thus
reinforcing whatever tendencies toward self-destruction we may possess.
Although medical and personal factors get the
lion's share of attention, cultural factors are not faultless. Nihilism
- which Thomas Hibbs of Boston College defines as "spiritual
impoverishment" and "shrunken aspirations" - has come to characterize
much of American culture over the past 50 years. To put it plainly,
today's Americans, in particular the young, have more difficulty in
identifying something that provides purpose and meaning to their lives.
Additionally, the institutions that traditionally
transmitted "meaning," such as church and family, have less influence on
us than they did fifty years ago. Our popular culture, whose influence
has increased as church and family have seen their influence wane, is,
as Hibbs writes in his book, Shows About Nothing, steeped in nihilism.
This pop culture nihilism, as depicted in
television and movies, can spiritually impoverish us in two principle
ways. The first is exemplified by movies such as The Exorcist, Silence
of the Lambs, or, more recently American Psycho, which is based on the
controversial Bret Easton Ellis novel. In these films, evil is real,
personified by what Hibbs calls the "demonic anti-hero." What's missing
is any sense of a countervailing force for good. We are left feeling, as
Hibbs puts it, that "... ultimate justice is elusive, [and] we are
tempted to see the underlying force as malevolent and punitive ..."
Or, life can appear to be totally trivial and
superficial. Much of our popular, or more precisely, mass, culture is so
busy striking an ironic pose, it leaves viewers with the impression that
engaging our passions and believing deeply in something is in bad taste.
So we're left with two conclusions: Horror teaches us that "life's a
[expletive deleted] and then you die," and our lighter fare agrees with
Macbeth that life "is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
signifying nothing."
For those already in the grip of depression, such a
message cruelly tells them that there really is no hope - nothing to
live for. It tells them that this is the way life really is. What's
more, it loosens their ties to the very people who could save them:
their family and the church. It makes others less confident in
countering the culture and less persuasive.
Making matters worse is that, unlike Hamlet, whose
fear of God and knowledge that his life wasn't his own - "conscience
doth make cowards of us all" - stayed his hand, we have no such belief.
On the contrary, we've embraced a personal autonomy that makes every
individual the arbiter of life and death. We believe that our person is
ours to do with as we please. States such as Oregon have even created a
"right" to have a physician assist you in the act of killing yourself.
When you tell people that life isn't worth living
and, what's more, it's not sacred, is it a surprise when increasing
numbers of them choose to end their life? The surprise would be if they
didn't.
* * * * *
I have manic-depressive illness. I've been up close
and personal with the kind of depression that feels like someone sucked
all of the oxygen out of the room. I know all about the infelicitous
brain chemistry than can make it almost impossible to get out of bed. I
also know about the flip side: the exhilaration that makes you scarily
productive and creative. I know what it's like to not want to sleep
because you want to record your "genius" for posterity. I'm here because
of medicine.
But I also know that medicine isn't a substitute
for faith. Medicine can only treat our symptoms. This can keep us alive,
but it can't give us a reason for living. We have to want to get well,
and as any shrink will tell you, half the battle in treating people with
mood disorders is getting people to take their medicine - especially
since some of the drugs used have side affects, at least initially.
Without faith, we're stuck with what the New
Testament calls "bios." That's physical life scarcely indistinguishable
from plants and animals. We eat, we breathe and we sleep. Faith,
specifically faith in Jesus Christ, is necessary to experience "Zoe,"
life that's filled with joy and purpose. No medication can provide you
with "Zoe." And the fact that you have a mood disorder doesn't preclude
you from experiencing it.
The English poet Lord Byron once told a friend that
while he had thought of killing himself on many occasions, he was kept
from doing so by thought of how happy it would have made his
mother-in-law. Mother-in-law jokes aside, Byron was on to something that
our culture seems to have forgotten: our moods, and the biology behind
them don't have to have the final word. The best suicide prevention
strategy starts with giving people a reason to choose life.
http://www.boundless.org/2000/features/a0000271.html


Back To The TopSMHAI Home |
About Suicide |
About Mental Health |
Suicide Prevention |
Suicide Survivors
Suicide Attempters |
Self-Injury - Cutters |
Crisis |
Donate |
SMHAI Library |
Online Support & Resources
Speakers & Presentations |
Memorials, Remebrances & Celebrations Of Life |
Healing Music
Suggested Reading - Survivors |
Suggested Reading - Attempters & Self-Injurers |
Mental Health Pros.
Upcoming Events |
Dr. Roerich's Welcome |
Ann Gay's Welcome |
Legal & About SMHAI
Privacy Policy |
Copyright Notice |
Awards Honoring SMHAI |
SMHAI Awards Program |
Contact
© SMHAI 2004 - 2006 All Rights Reserved. No copying or redistribution without expressed written permission of SMHAI.
Logo Design by Allen R. Jacobson. Site launched July 01, 2004.
|