Sunday, December 1, 2019
Self Destruction Suicide Essays - Abnormal Psychology, Depression
  Self Destruction Suicide  A Self- Destruction Suicide is the act or an instance of intentionally killing  oneself According to Emile Durkheim, suicide is applied to all cases of death  resulting directly or indirectly from a positive or negative act of the victim  himself, which he knows will produce this result (44). Suicide is a rarely ever  a spur of the moment thing. The Susceptibility to suicide is lowest among those  who have strong community ties. Involvement in church, synagogue or temple may  help the disquieted person feel that he is part of a religious fellowship bound  together by ties of sympathy, love, and mutual concern. House of worship often  substitute for a missing family. "We this reach the conclusion that the  superiority of Protestantism with respect to suicide results from its being a  less strongly integrated church than a catholic church" (Durkheim 159).    Grollamn noe "Augustine (354-430) denounced suicide as a sin, there was no  official church against it (23). Today people continue to commit suicide for a  variety of reasons: Love, insanity and chronic depression. There is usually a  series of events and warning sign before an attempt is made. Suicide is not  spoken much and is a topic that needed to be explored. Statistics on suicide  attempts changes so rapidly, that none can be stated with accuracy. Grollman  write that "Almost everybody at one time or another contemplates suicide.    Self-destruction is one of many choices open to human beings"(5). If one is  alert and observant, there is a chance that the suicide victim can be saved.    Imagine the thought of being dead. Would the world be better off without that  one life? Probably not, but some people may think so. That life will be greatly  issued by someone. It may even cause a person to want to commit suicide in order  to join the friend that died. Imagine how it would feel if pressures of everyday  life increased the greatly. Perhaps a parent, brother or sister was lost. What  if an adolescent person was arrested? How would his family and friends react to  this little misfortune? Say there is a test in math or science class, and when  the test came back the same person had failed it. It would seem to him to be  just another failure in a series of botched attempts to further himself. It  seems that the last month or two has been nothing but hardship. There is no  place to go. So, he feels, there is only one thing that can help, suicide.  "Man prefers to abandon life when it is least difficult (Durkheim 107). The  child may think: "If I where to die now, my parents would feel sorry for  their meanness" (Grollman 6). For days, even weeks, a plan is formulated.    How does he leave the loved ones and his problems behind respectably? Finally he  thinks of a plan, sleeping pills, in hopes that a final slumber will take all  the nightmares of reality away for good. Klerman note that "An act like  this is prepared within the silence of the heart, as is a great work of  art" (55). The pills are taken, after a while sleep sets in. At last, the  final rest that has been so long awaited for. A blurred vision appears and  slowly focuses. A white room appears, the vision gets clearer. He focuses in on  details such as an IV stand with several bags hanging on it. The hospital room  was not the expected place to awake. This attempt was just one more failure in  his life. The next time he will think of a more lethal way to seek eternal  peace. After the attempt. He will go to a hospital where all his actions will be  monitored. In the end, a counselor is usually called in. hopefully its will help  him in the struggle to deal with life's problems, all this done in hopes that  another attempt is made. "12 % of those who attempt suicide will make a  second try and succeed within two years (Grollman 73). To think all of this  could have been prevented if he sought help in the beginning. To further  understand suicide, we must take a look at the different reasons behind the act  itself. Suicide is not a genetic disease, but rather a series of events that are  very depressing or stressful. Dolce implies that "For years people assume  that only mental or emotional problems drove people to commit suicide"  (33). Lester writes, "Zimmerman et al found that depressed inpatients who  had experienced more    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.