
GentleJerk
Carrot juice pimp.
- Dec 14, 2021
- 1,372
Suicide hotlines are ritually touted as an important tactic in the prevention of suicide. "A problem shared is a problem halved" is a typical sort of cookie-cutter quote often repeated. Also, drugs and therapy are blindly believed to be some sort of magical scientific solution.
Annoyingly, the world can easily ignore fundamental societal flaws and injustices that directly lead to many suicides, and the multitude of important needs of individuals can continue to be overlooked, based on the simple fact that there are hotlines for those people to call for help... Or therapy and drugs.
Want to kill yourself? Help is available. Call this number. Talk to someone. There's your solution. Problem solved, hopefully. Maybe some meds and therapy too. No need for any drastic changes. Everything is just fine.
People who are not suicidal often experience some level of depression, loneliness, or meaninglessness at some point in their lives, and might easily find relief simply by talking to someone- then armed with this experience, they believe that all of the severe, complex, and multi-factorial things that affect those who become suicidal can be remedied in the same way. Or that depression which leads to some suicides can usually be fixed with medication, like some sort of bacterial infection that can be wiped out with an antibiotic.
While suicide hotlines, therapy and medications should exist for whatever level of benefit they may provide, they are nowhere near as efficacious and helpful as people are led to believe. I think their benefit and success is greatly over-exaggerated, and their failure under-recognized. If these things are honestly expected to serve as the primary global solution to preventing suicides, that is quite frankly a joke and like putting a band-aid on a bullet wound.
Annoyingly, the world can easily ignore fundamental societal flaws and injustices that directly lead to many suicides, and the multitude of important needs of individuals can continue to be overlooked, based on the simple fact that there are hotlines for those people to call for help... Or therapy and drugs.
Want to kill yourself? Help is available. Call this number. Talk to someone. There's your solution. Problem solved, hopefully. Maybe some meds and therapy too. No need for any drastic changes. Everything is just fine.
People who are not suicidal often experience some level of depression, loneliness, or meaninglessness at some point in their lives, and might easily find relief simply by talking to someone- then armed with this experience, they believe that all of the severe, complex, and multi-factorial things that affect those who become suicidal can be remedied in the same way. Or that depression which leads to some suicides can usually be fixed with medication, like some sort of bacterial infection that can be wiped out with an antibiotic.
While suicide hotlines, therapy and medications should exist for whatever level of benefit they may provide, they are nowhere near as efficacious and helpful as people are led to believe. I think their benefit and success is greatly over-exaggerated, and their failure under-recognized. If these things are honestly expected to serve as the primary global solution to preventing suicides, that is quite frankly a joke and like putting a band-aid on a bullet wound.
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