There are approximately one million suicides every year, equating to a
suicide every 40 seconds. In the US, it is one every 13 minutes. If you
read my piece on Kurt Cobain and suicide, I wanted to add a little more
to that discussion because I had some additional thoughts about the
culture around suicide. My mind as a teen was captivated by stories of
tragic artists like Cobain. I listened to his music growing up, and
listened to Soundgarden and Linkin Park as a kid--all of which had a
lead singer commit suicide. I'm troubled by it, and was deeply sad to
hear about Chester Bennington. I had no idea that he had six children. I
looked to see how many kids Chris Cornell--he had three children. These
children are young as well, and honestly, it makes me mad when I think
about their families left behind so early.
On the other
hand, knowing some of the personal background of these musicians
provides the context of their suicide. For instance, all had a history
of depression, some level of psychosis due to past trauma, substance and
alcohol abuse. Even the comedian Robin Williams, who committed suicide
three years ago, had a history of depression and substance abuse.
Williams also left behind three children. Of course, don't forget women
who have committed suicide, and left behind young children. In fact,
Sylvia Plath the poet left behind two children--one child that committed
suicide by hanging when he was older. If there is a history of suicide
in the family, there is a higher chance of suicide.
Besides Cobain, all men mentioned committed suicide by hanging. Suicide
by hanging is the most common method and has the highest mortality rate.
Note that every artist mentioned so far is a white male. White males account for 72% of all
suicides, and 90% of suicide related deaths account for both White
females and males. And even though males commit suicide at a higher rate
than females, females attempt suicide at a higher rate than men. According
to Chang, in the United States suicide is higher among White men older
than 80 years although younger people more frequently attempt suicide.
When
you factor in occupation, however, those with the highest rates of
suicide among physicians, male and female commit suicide at the same
rate. Interestingly, the highest rates of females committing suicide is
in South Korea according to Värnik. China is also one country where women have
a higher rate of suicide than men. Strikingly from 1980 and 1995, the
rates of suicide increased by 120% among white youth and 223% among
black youth between the ages of 10-14. Between the ages of 15-19,
suicide increased by 126% for Black youth and 19% for White youth.
I have to admit, I continue to remain captivated by the many stories of
artists, actors, actresses, singers, and the like that died at my age
of 27 referred to by our culture as 'the 27 club.' I do not mean to romanticize these
instances, and I find that the media often sensationalizes the stories
as it is. And I worry that the romanticism of suicide and depression
influenced me growing up. When I recollect back to the narratives of those lost souls, the hopelessly hopeless, I think: this is me too. I remember reading about Elliot Smith's suicide, and asking myself the question that many of us have asked: will I have a breaking point? I
can't tell you of a particular song, band, movie, story, or image, but
in my past when I watched people living aimlessly, I was drawn to those
images. The drugs, the drinking, smoking, dancing like no one is
watching, and living manic and reckless looked like people were just
having fun to me. Treating life like it's a party while being an artist, writing and painting, and going mad in my own house. I could
only imagine myself as those young artists that lived in style, carving
out their own space, rejecting the mainstream, rebelling against the
system.
But what I got out of that, was more of the same feelings of sad
and loneliness that I also saw in the artists I admired, or the
characters I saw in movies. I predicted for myself that I was like these
characters that go mad to the point of ending their lives. I, too, felt
that. I, too, noticed these same characters of this world, were those
who had a breakdown or meltdown, and I felt that too. After hearing
about Chester Bennington and Chris Cornell, that both committed suicide
two months apart, I become aware that suicide has a ripple affect. In
fact, some parents are saying the new Netflix TV drama, 13 Reasons Why,
may be influencing teens to act commit suicide because it is about a girl committing suicide.
An artist
refuses and rejects this routine sort of life like an office space,
which is why I wondered if artists that struggled were more likely to be
driven to suicide. Probably not, considering there are all types of
people that take their own lives because of mental illness, substance
abuse, financial crisis, homelessness, aging veterans with PTSD, etc. As
I have said, physicians have one of the highest rates of suicide among
other professions, but according to Business Insider, This does not include photographers who Although
people making less than $10,000 are 50 percent more likely to
commit suicide than those with incomes above $60,000, the San Francisco
Federal Reserve paper shows that comparing yourself to those around you
might have a larger impact on happiness than personal net worth" which
supports one study that found for “higher earnings of neighbors were
associated with lower level of self-reported happiness.”
Growing up, Vincent van Gogh was my favorite artist, and later when I
found out that he was just another struggling artist that ended it for
himself, I felt that too. Someone wrote that he was "the quintessential
misunderstood genius, the artist 'where discourses on madness and
creativity converge.'" I have reflected on this many times in my life
where if I ever did receive recognition, it would be if I am dead and
gone. These are the common thoughts I had growing up where my idols were
artists that killed themselves because they didn't fit into this ugly
world. I am absolutely not comparing myself to van Gogh or any other
artist because I am simply nothing like them, and I have never had a
real moment in my life to be considered a tortured artist.
As
I said in part I of this essay, I have heard of men that do despicable
acts of violence will kill themselves before ever taking fault or before
ever going to prison so they are not punished. But I am not focused on
these people and I am only to focus on the youth that is troubled by
struggle; and perhaps conversations like this can prevent suicide.
Although I have spent much time asking why it matters so much to prevent
death when it inevitably happens anyway; I still go back to my own way
to coping by asking how my life can be impactful rather than my death. A
couple months back when 45 was elected as the US president, someone
told me that her daughter's friends that were in a same-sex relationship
killed themselves the night after in fear that progress for LGBTQ
people will be reversed and that there will be more backlash for LGBTQ
youth. From here I consider those youth that take their life because
they're bullied. Or the gay youth that fear disapproval from their
family, friends, community. According to many researchers, LGBTQ youth
have the highest rates of suicide attempts in comparison to the general
population, especially in areas where homophobia and social stigma is
blatant. Besides bullying as the contributing factor for suicide or
suicide attempts among LGBTQ youth, there is also high rates of
substance abuse associated with this. It is not so much being LGBTQ that
puts a person at risk of suicide, but the associated factors like
anxiety, social stigma, verbal/physical abuse from bullying, substance
abuse, elevate the risk of suicide. This induces minority stress, which
is especially true for persons of color in the LGBTQ community. LGBTQ
youth that are homeless after coming out are greatly at risk of suicide
as well.
Once again, I am at a loss for final words on
this discussion of a dark topic. I have reflected on suicide at the
intersection of art, substance abuse, and LGBTQ youth. I suppose I
focused on these intersections because I too have felt this waning gloom
over me as an artist who abused drugs and alcohol, that had thoughts of
suicide, and for someone that identifies as a queer woman. I wanted to
convey my own experiences because I can personally dive into my past
thoughts and emotions to relate to others. I believe in several of my
previous posts, in addition to part I on this discussion of suicide, I
have mentioned that the forms of art I create have helped me cope with
this life-long strain of depression. Just because you're an artist
doesn't mean you're tortured; even though our society tells us the more
tortured the artist, the better
the art; and I have heard several times from people that musicians only
write and perform good music when they were sad and penniless.
Although,
some of my greatest thoughts, writings and paintings come from a place
of bliss and happiness. So I realize as someone that is an artist and
someone that has depression, there is a usefulness of turning depression
into art. I turn my pain into art, and I write out my pain. And this is
the best advice I can give because I am at a time and place in my life
where I am still at the young age of 27, and I don't have answers to how
and why we should prevent suicide. When we have a culture that
romanticizes (or at least normalizes) suicide and depression while
simultaneously fetishizing fame and fortune mixed with drugs and
alcohol, what are we asking out of the youth of today? And, who are
going to be the role models of this generation that will be an uplifting
voice in the darkness? What spaces can be created for those looking for
understanding, safety, and security? What can you or I do today to make
just one other person, or yourself, feel that life would be
uninteresting without them?
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