Chr0nicAnhedonic
So much for stardust...
- Oct 1, 2023
- 84
Mental illness and suicide rates have steadily climbed since 2000, only seeing a small dip in 2020 before skyrocketing back up. It isn't difficult to imagine why: the economy is plummeting, ecological disasters and destruction is now commonplace, fascism and totalitarian regimes are taking hold, and communities have been atomized or outright erased just to name a few. Medical and mental health establishments are not going to be able to keep up, as they've already been swamped having to do more with much less, and the entire mental health system is revealing itself to be a total sham. Even mainstream publications like TIME are calling into question the efficacy of mental health and suicide prevention tactics. With everything going on, we are sure to see a significant uptick in suicide attempts.
My question is this: do you think we'll see a shift in how we talk about suicide as a result of this? People are still trying to brush it aside and only discuss it in terms of prevention, but I'm wondering if we'll see that change as the world becomes more unliveable. SS has had a pretty steady increase in its userbase especially lately, as far as to now garner mainstream attention, and I'm unsure if its ideas will proliferate rather than be shut down entirely.
My question is this: do you think we'll see a shift in how we talk about suicide as a result of this? People are still trying to brush it aside and only discuss it in terms of prevention, but I'm wondering if we'll see that change as the world becomes more unliveable. SS has had a pretty steady increase in its userbase especially lately, as far as to now garner mainstream attention, and I'm unsure if its ideas will proliferate rather than be shut down entirely.