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Section
25
Adolescent’s
“Sadness” and Suicide
Reproducible Client Information Sheet
Question 25 found at the
bottom of this page
Test
| Table of Contents
Up until
twenty years ago, the medical profession as a whole did not believe
that children and teenagers got depressed. They were convinced
that childhood and adolescence were carefree times, times free
of major problems. Only older people, they reasoned, could be
depressed. How wrong they were! Study after study now confirms
that depression is common in young people. As many as one in every
five teenagers may be depressed. According to the National Association
for Mental Health, nearly 20 percent of those who receive care
for depression in hospitals and clinics are under the age of eighteen.
And, while many young suicides did not seem depressed, depression
now appears to be the single most common cause of teen suicide.
“Stop
Me, Please”
1. Seventy-five percent of suicide attempters give repeated warnings.
They tell their friends, sometimes even their families, that they
want to die. They are asking for help.
2. Nine out of ten teenagers who attempt suicide do so in the
home, where there is a good chance that someone will stop them.
3. In the few months before taking their own lives, seventy-five
percent of the victims had seen their family doctor. Many of them
were also seeing a psychiatrist.
Changes in Dysthymic Adolescent Motivation
The motivational changes in depressed adolescents may be considered
under four groupings: paralysis of the will, escapist and avoidance
wishes, suicidal wishes, and intensified dependency wishes. The
sequential relationship between cognition and motivation may be
observed under two conditions. First, by knowing an individual’s
cognitions one can predict his or her motivation or lack of motivation.
Second, by changing the cognition one can change the motivation.
The loss
of spontaneous motivation, or paralysis of the will, has been
considered a symptom par excellence of depression in the classical
literature. The loss of motivation may be viewed as the result
of the patient’s hopelessness and pessimism: as long as
he expects a negative outcome from any course of action, he or
she is stripped of any internal stimulation to do anything. Conversely,
when he or she is persuaded that a positive outcome may result
from a particular endeavor, he or she may then experience an internal
stimulus to pursue it.
Avoidance
and escapist wishes are similarly related to expectations of a
negative outcome. A moderately depressed student had a strong
desire to avoid studying. He felt that he would find the material
dull and boring. I pointed out to him that he had always enjoyed
studying this particular material once he became absorbed in it.
When he could see the possibility of some gratification, he experienced
a desire to study. With the change in his expectancy came a consequent
change in his motivation.
The suicidal
wishes may be regarded as an extreme expression of the desire
to escape. The suicidal patient sees his future as filled with
suffering. He cannot visualize any way of improving things. He
does not believe it is possible to get better. Suicide under these
conditions seems to the patient to be a rational solution. It
promises an end to his own suffering and a relief of the supposed
burden on his family. Once suicide appears as a reasonable alternative
to living, the patient feels attracted to it. The more hopeless
and painful his life seems, the stronger his desire to escape
from that life.
The wish
to escape from life via suicide because of suffering and hopelessness
is illustrated in the following quotation from a patient who had
been rejected by her boyfriend. “There’s no sense
in living. There’s nothing here for me. I need love and
I don’t have it anymore. I can’t be happy without
love-- only miserable. It will just be the same misery, day in
and day out. It’s senseless to go on.”
The desire
to escape from the apparent futility of his existence was expressed
by another patient. ‘Life is just to go through another
day. It doesn’t make any sense. There’s nothing here
that can give me any satisfaction. The future isn’t there.
I just don’t want life anymore. I want to get out of here.
It’s stupid just to go on living.”
Another
false premise that underlies the suicidal wishes is the patient’s
belief that everybody would be better off if he were dead. Since
he sees himself as worthless and as a burden, arguments that his
family would be hurt if he died seem hollow. How can they suffer
from losing a burden? One patient envisioned killing herself as
doing her parents a favor. She would not only end her own suffering
but would relieve them of psychological and financial responsibilities.
“I’m just taking money from my parents. They could
use it to better advantage. They wouldn’t have to support
me. My father wouldn’t have to work so hard and they could
travel. I’m unhappy taking their money and they could be
happy with it.”
In a number
of cases, the suicidal wishes were ameliorated by examining the
underlying premises and considering alternative solutions. A patient
became depressed because he had lost his job. He said, “I
want to shoot myself. Nobody thinks I’m capable of doing
anything. I don’t think so either. I’ll never get
another job. I don’t have any friends or dates. I’m
isolated. I’m just completely stuck for all time. If I shot
myself, it could solve all my problems.
The increased
dependency that is so characteristic of many depressions may be
attributed to a number of factors. The patient sees himself in
negative terms-- as being inept, inadequate, and undesirable.
Furthermore, he tends to overestimate the complexity and difficulty
of the normal details of living. In addition, he expects everything
to turn out badly. Under these conditions, many depressed patients
yearn for somebody strong to take care of them and to help them
with their problems. They often tend to magnify the strength of
the person on whom they are dependent. One woman who generally
disparaged her husband when she was not depressed regarded him
as a kind of superman when she was depressed.
As with other motivations, dependency wishes may be attenuated
if the patient can view himself and his problems more objectively.
As his self-esteem improves and he sees ways of coping with his
problems, he feels less driven to seek help from others. The relation
between cognition and motivation has also been demonstrated in
a controlled experimental situation. We found that patients who
(as the result of the experimenter’s manipulation of the
degree of difficulty of an assigned task) viewed their performance
on a task as inferior were less motivated to volunteer for a new
experiment than those who believed their performance was superior.
“Personal
Reflection” Journaling Activity #5
The preceding section was about Adolescent’s “Sadness”
and Suicide. Write three case study examples regarding how you
might use the content of this section of the Manual or the “Positive
Reinforcement” section of the audio tape in your practice.
QUESTION
25:
What are four motivational changes in depressed adolescents?
Test
for this course
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