Massage Adagio

Tragic & Heartbreaking: Vancouver Teen Kills Herself

Bartdude

New member
Jul 5, 2006
1,251
5
0
Calgary
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...ia-makes-bullying-inescapable/article4611068/

Amanda Todd tragedy highlights how social media makes bullying inescapable

WENCY LEUNG AND DAKSHANA BASCARAMURTY
The Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Oct. 12 2012, 10:01 PM EDT
Last updated Sunday, Oct. 14 2012, 1:43 PM EDT

When the girls in Jenna Bowers-Bryanton’s class pretended to vomit when she walked into the room, or when an older student slapped her on the first day back to school, Jenna’s mom, Pam Murchison, pulled her out of school.

What Ms. Murchison didn’t anticipate was that the abuse would persist even at home. Jenna received nasty messages via SMS and on forums such as Formspring, where her tormentors posted anonymous vitriol about her looks, personality and singing ability. (Jenna had her own YouTube channel.) In January, 2011, when she was 15, Jenna died by suicide in Truro, N.S.

Bullying is far different today than it was even a decade ago. The entwining of social media in adolescents’ social lives has created a whole new environment for abuse. It is bullying that is almost impossible to contain, even when teens change schools or cities, and online anonymity helps shield bullies’ identities.

The persistent bullying that Amanda Todd, 15, suffered before she died by apparent suicide on Wednesday has raised alarms about how bullying can push teens into despair. Shannon Freud, a counsellor at the Kids Help Phone – which receives about 5,000 calls and e-mails a week from youth across the country – says girls who reach out to her service often say that bullying has contributed to depression, self-esteem issues, self-harming, eating disorders and feelings of suicide.

According to a study this year in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, suicide is the second leading cause of death among young people, ages 10 to 19; suicide rates among females have been on the rise over the past 30 years, while those among young males are decreasing. The latest data from Statistics Canada show 69 females between the ages of 10 and 19 died by suicide in 2009, and for every completed suicide, it is estimated there are as many as 20 attempts.

Ms. Freud explains that teen girls tend to be bullied in a different way. While the bullying of males typically involves physical aggression, girls tend to be the target of social and verbal harassment, including exclusion or having others talk – or in many cases now, text – about them behind their backs.

Telling cyber-bullying victims to simply shut off their computer or stop checking their Facebook accounts is far easier said than done, since social media is such an integral part of how teens now interact and communicate, Ms. Freud says. Some may even be reluctant to delete tormentors from their lists of online friends because keeping those online contacts boosts their sense of status. “And status is such a huge thing for kids and youth,” she said.

“Kids only let you see what they want you to see,” Ms. Murchison said. Sometimes, after Jenna received a mean text message, she’d pick fights with her mother. But Ms. Murchison never knew the full extent of her daughter’s online abuse.

“You can’t get away from cyber-bullies unless you take everything away from [your kids] and you can’t do that,” she said.

On nearly every front, Ms. Murchison followed the guidelines most schools and mental-health providers suggest: Jenna, who was diagnosed with depression when she was in Grade 8, regularly saw her doctor and a child psychologist. She was on medication and had supportive family and friends to help her cope with her mental illness.

Jenna’s depression may have made her feel the effects of the bullying more acutely, her mother says, but when teens die by suicide, it is difficult to dissect what exactly led to it.

“Not every young person who attempts or dies by suicide was bullied. We know that’s a high rate, that it’s a contributing factor for sure,” said Joanne Lowe, the co-chair of the Community Suicide Prevention Network of Ottawa, a group that formed after the 2010 suicide of Daron Richardson, the 14-year-old daughter of an assistant coach of the Ottawa Senators. “Trying to understand all those contributing factors, not making assumptions about what those factors are and getting somebody to talk about them is really important.”

Her network prepared a brochure to be distributed to schools that includes warning signs to watch for, including low energy, declining school performance and preoccupation with appearance. More important than what to look for is what to do. While some fear that discussing suicide may trigger a suicide attempt, she says that is a popular myth.

“Ask them if they are thinking of suicide,” she said. “Don’t be afraid of being clumsy.”

Although high-school bullies may lose interest after graduation, the effects can be long-lasting. Lindsey Belaire, 23, of Edmonton, says the social isolation, taunts and online badgering from her high-school years still haunt her; after graduating five years ago, she continues to suffer from anxiety and depression.

“I don’t think anyone ever moves on from it,” Ms. Belaire said. “It stays with you. …You’re left with a feeling of constantly looking over your shoulder, constantly wondering if people are out to get you.”

Ms. Belaire’s advice for teenaged girls now suffering what she went through: “Talk to somebody. Talk to a principal. Talk to a counsellor. If you don’t get help, keep going. … Call the police. File harassment charges. Do whatever you have to do to make it stop. I wish I did.”
 

violetblake

New member
Jul 24, 2011
541
0
0
Downtown Vancouver
Here's a really great article entitled:

"Why isn't anyone talking about the misogyny involved in Amanda Todd's life and death?"

With the death of 15-year-old Amanda Todd, BC schools have some reckoning on their hands. Will they take the opportunity to look at the systemic causes of Todd’s experience of harassment and violence, or let the lessons that can be learned from this tragedy get lost in a swamp of ambiguities?

While articles rolled in on mainstream news websites, conversation erupted on Facebook and in personal correspondence over email with women who are engaged in anti-violence and anti-oppression work across the country. In the spirit of our immediate reactions, I am quoting their comments in full.

“I wasn't sure if I should read the [Toronto Sun] article, but I started and I'm disgusted by the framing, at least in what I've read so far. I didn't like how the first part hints that the moral of the story is ‘girls, don't flash your breasts on a webcam,’ like it was her fault,” says Zoe Mallet, a human rights advocate and scholar in Ottawa.

“It made me want to take a topless photo and post it online with a statement of protest. Of course, I won't do this because I know most people wouldn't understand or get it, but the urge was there.”

Jarrah Hodge, member of the City of Vancouver’s Women’s Advisory Committee and founder of feminist blog Gender Focus says, “I found it odd how there seemed to be no specific attempt to address the gender aspects including the factors that led to ‘the mistakes’ she made and the way she was manipulated and slut-shamed. At one point yesterday after they took the video down from YouTube, it was still up at some other sites like ebaumsworld,[...]and it was horrible to see how a lot of folks who didn't know she'd committed suicide were on about how ‘emo’ the video was and how it was ‘whining’ from someone who ‘doesn't know how to give a good BJ.’”

Feminist scholar and writer, and former BC high school teacher Fazeela Jiwa posted: “Why isn't anyone talking about the sexism and misogyny involved in Amanda Todd's life and death? 'Bullying' is important, yes, but it is a vague term that glosses over the structural reasons for why it happens, like race/gender/class/ability. If we don't start talking about the specifics of power structures in high schools, every ‘bullying’ campaign will be a waste of time.”

Jiwa specified that the language of bullying “means little to students, and less to teachers. I can tell you that from both perspectives. The bullies laugh and text during every presentation against bullying, and then those who are bullied get bullied more. THIS case is one of many episodes of sexist coercion by men; what is also interesting is that the women in her life turned against her too even though they deal with the same pressures of capitulating to [...] internalized patriarchy. It makes me so mad how much money the public education system spends on campaigns [...] without actually talking about anything. The most effective presentation I have seen is one by a group called LOVE because it is real, artistic, and cool, and they actually talk about racism, poverty, and sexism. [Bullying] is not childish; not a thing that happens solely to teenagers; those same learned behaviours are the ones that circulate in the workplace, in clubs, on the street, and any other adult-inhabited place.”

She adds, “The video is heart-wrenching. And, no one is talking about the misogyny that young men inflicted on her—only ‘bullying’. her story is clearly gendered.”

I asked Jarrah Hodge, who writes and educates on gender representations in media, politics and pop-culture, to summarize what she saw as the factors leading to Todd’s so called “mistakes.” Her response:

“There was no discussion of the pressure girls like Amanda experience to measure their worth through their sexual desirability. From her story it sounds like this man had the hallmarks of a predator—he tried to use her photos to blackmail her and yet she's the one who got blamed. This comes from the idea that it's up to girls and women to protect their purity at the same time as all their role models in the media say that you need to ‘get a man’ to be a complete person, that you need to be sexually attractive to be liked, appreciated, and valued. She said the guy she showed off to was telling her how beautiful she was. Given our culture that can be really tempting for a girl.”

Ah yes, context. In a context in which women are told in manifold ways that everything about them is wrong— their emotions, their bodies, their fat, their lack of fat, their developing, their aging—when someone comes along and tells you that you are perfect and beautiful, that’s some powerful stuff.

This man’s intention, when he threatened Todd with exposure of the coercive images, was to make Todd feel like a whore. The weapon that this man was able to rely on was the judgment of our society. Under our unequal social and economic conditions, the stakes are higher when a woman falls out of favour with her community. For a girl or woman, falling out of favour with her community can mean a sentence to a nightmarish cycle of distress.

If we diffuse the judgment, and look at the behaviour of the attacker, we can weaken the attack. We need less focus on “the mistake” and more on the sexism in our society that this man wielded—successfully—to rid the planet of another young woman.

I believe that if we don’t connect the dots between what happened to Amanda Todd and systemic sexism, Amanda Todd will have died in vain. We can learn something from this and we can improve our attitudes and behaviours. Let’s honour Amanda Todd by doing just that.

Imagine a different reaction, after all the factors have led to this moment: the girl shows her chest. Man threatens to post the pictures. Man posts the pictures.

Instead...

We rally around her, publicly decry the man’s behaviour as coercive, criminal. We come together in the public domain to talk about sexism and how it is wielded to remove a woman’s power, convince her that there is nowhere that is safe for her, and shun her in the eyes of the communities on which she depends.

We can do this next time. A different ending is possible.
http://www.vancouverobserver.com/bl...misogyny-involved-amanda-todds-life-and-death

This is also another really great article:

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/jarrah-hodge/amanda-todd-bullying-gender-slut-shaming_b_1964337.html
 

CJ Tylers

Retired Sr. Member
Jan 3, 2003
1,643
1
0
46
North Vancouver
A pretty girl gets bullied & commits suicide... and social media and other media outlets go wild.

Not so pretty people take their own lives every day, yet there is no fanfare for them.. even if they have been bullied to death as well.

In all this media hype, I cant help but think that people have forgotten that a young girl is dead... she's been forgotten, while her death is being exploited. *sigh*

It's very likely that she was dealing with tried and true psychopaths.
 

Miss*Bijou

Sexy Troublemaker
Nov 9, 2006
3,132
44
48
Montréal
Thanks for posting that article Violet.



It really does blow my mind that there are STILL people bullying her on Facebook and re-posting her topless photos despite the fact she's taken her own life.

There are definitely a few sociopathic sickos involved in the situation who need to be punished.

It's very likely that she was dealing with tried and true psychopaths.

I think they're actually probably totally "normal" kids and not psychopaths - and that is actually far scarier IMO.


"Groupthink" turns people into uncritical followers - even adults, so teenagers, for who fitting in and what others think of them matters more than just about anything.

The internet makes people even worse. You can go to any message board (even this one!) or comments section on any website and there's always one or many people who are bullies and/or abusive to others. I usually assume it has to be a teenager, surely no adult would ever behave this way in real life but the truth is that it is most likely adults too.

And the vast majority of them would never behave that way when face to face and they know it wouldn't be tolerated but they feel like they can get away with it online, no one knows who they are so none of their actions online can ever affect their reputation or have any consequences on their real life.

I find it really disturbing too.
 

CJ Tylers

Retired Sr. Member
Jan 3, 2003
1,643
1
0
46
North Vancouver
They stalked her across multiple school...they're holding parties to celebrate her death. There is NOTHING normal about them.
 

Ben Ludwig

Banned
Aug 27, 2012
58
0
0
The internet and cell phones have completely changed the dynamics of being bullyed, only the uninformed would think otherwise. In this situation she was a victim of both. She tried running she just couldn't get away.
You hit the nail on the head. JC is notorious for making uninformed statements. Internet and cell phones are such a HUGE part of kids lives these days. It's one thing to be bullied at school and return home safe and have a break from it all. But the way teens socialize these days with Facebook and texting, there is almost no escape from bullies.
 

sevenofnine

Active member
Nov 21, 2008
2,015
9
38
how you deal with stress being bullied or real life changing stress varies a lot
it depends on your genetics your home situation whether your alone or have some one to look up to etc etc,
we shouldn't judge,
the only thing we should judge is our own behaviour
its an easy thing to say i was bullied and look at me i turned out.

i could compare my situation and it was hell and look say i turned out ok, but well not everyone here thinks i turned out ok
funny
but my situation was unique and so was hers, you can't compare.
and there is so much that genetics plays and like i said if you have any one or if your alone.
like i said the only thing to judge is our own behaviour
if we can't help some one fine were not always in a postion to help some one, but did we ad to thier misery

that is the only question we should ask our self
 

jesuschrist

New member
Aug 26, 2007
1,036
1
0
You hit the nail on the head. JC is notorious for making uninformed statements. Internet and cell phones are such a HUGE part of kids lives these days. It's one thing to be bullied at school and return home safe and have a break from it all. But the way teens socialize these days with Facebook and texting, there is almost no escape from bullies.
I have little empathy for anyone who lives their life centered around Facebook and texting. This social media phenomenon is completely out of control and many teenagers are completely out of control. Observe other parts of the world, it is not like it is here in North America where unlimited social time to gossip and bullshit each other is the mainstay of life of a child. Children's lives should be oriented towards becoming productive educated and pro-social adults, just as it should have always been regardless of XBox, Facebook, Blackberries and all that garbage that has controlled their lives. It is the fault of the parents for having made them so weak, and the fault of the educators for having led the way to weakening them.
 

Miss*Bijou

Sexy Troublemaker
Nov 9, 2006
3,132
44
48
Montréal
They stalked her across multiple school...they're holding parties to celebrate her death. There is NOTHING normal about them.

That's not what I meant. Obviously I don't think there's anything normal about their behavior but if tre was anything about them tha had made them appeared to everyone as not "normal" and as brunch psychopathic monsters, obviously something would have been done about it a long time ago. So obviously, to everyone else these kids appear "normal" and no different than normal teenagers.

Maybe one of these kids might be a sociopath but the rest of them are not and are most likely seen as typical, "normal" kids - while the behavior itself may not be normal, it's probably can't be attributed to a psychiatric condition, which makes it more disturbing.

They don't have horns growing on their heads or vampire fangs making it obvious to everyone that something is wrong with them. Most of those kids are probably typical "normal" teenagers in every other aspect and no one around them probably would have ever suspected them capable of doing what they have. That's not saying what they did is normal.
 

luvsdaty

Well-known member
Sad,sad sad :-( Pack mentality,internet toughness? I grew as one of the only 1st nations kids in a white town, getting picked on was all part of the daily routine.Once one starts, they all join in. All i could do was stand up for myself & hang out with the kids that didn't care that i was 'different' Too this day when i go back home, if i see one of the kids that hated me i can still see it in there eyes. I just laugh & know that they don't really matter in the grand scheme of things.
Kids are really cruel & stupid, they just don't have the life experience to deal with that sort of nonsence, especially when you 'want to belong' in your peer group.
I feel for that kid, i really do.
 

Ben Ludwig

Banned
Aug 27, 2012
58
0
0
I have little empathy for anyone who lives their life centered around Facebook and texting. This social media phenomenon is completely out of control and many teenagers are completely out of control. Observe other parts of the world, it is not like it is here in North America where unlimited social time to gossip and bullshit each other is the mainstay of life of a child. Children's lives should be oriented towards becoming productive educated and pro-social adults, just as it should have always been regardless of XBox, Facebook, Blackberries and all that garbage that has controlled their lives. It is the fault of the parents for having made them so weak, and the fault of the educators for having led the way to weakening them.
Like it or not, this is how kids/teens are these days. We can either say it's wrong and try to get them to change (won't happen), or we can do our best to help them as they currently exist.

I don't agree that it's the parents fault at all. Think how many grown adults are hooked on Facebook and texting. Can you imagine how it is for a kid, especially when their friends and socializing mean everything to them.
 

jesuschrist

New member
Aug 26, 2007
1,036
1
0
Like it or not, this is how kids/teens are these days.... especially when their friends and socializing mean everything to them.
Socializing means everything to kids who have nothing else that means anything to them going on in their lives. I say give kids meaning in their lives and the influence of Facebook, texting, promiscuity, video games, alcohol, etc., won't have such a strong hold on them. We could start with the education system, where kids should be orienting their lives as youth: make education meaningful. Today, education is meaningless because it's been dumbed down so that the slowest learners are not left behind - leaving the vast majority bored and uneducated to the level they can achieve. It is also made meaningless when no matter what your score is, you're told you're smart - taking away the meaning of achievement and the value proposition of hard work and discipline.
 

tokugawa

Member
Sep 8, 2005
487
3
18

Interview with a troll: Facebook user explains why he posts photos that mock Amanda Todd

Why would someone post photos making light of the death of Amanda Todd?


Vancouver Sun October 15, 2012

After news broke of Amanda Todd's death, hundreds of thousands of Facebook users took to the site to mourn the loss of the bullied teen. Soon after, Internet “trolls” began posting tasteless photos that made light of Todd's death and brought scorn from people around the world. One troll--a person who spends his or her time flooding the Internet with deliberately inflammatory comments and photo--agreed to talk to The Sun about why he was spreading an image of a girl hanging herself with the caption “Todding” beside it.

Haunter, the Facebook user’s screen name based on a Pokemon character, posted the photos to draw attention to his Facebook group, where he also antagonized users by inviting them to meet him at two phoney Metro Vancouver addresses.

He founded a Facebook group and now shares posting duties with three other administrators who continue to post images like a raccoon with the caption “committing suicide is re-Todd-ed.”

In the interview, which was conducted via Facebook and has been edited for content and length, he says he is a college student “in the computer field.”


What do you get out of it?


Well, I expected to get a few comments about how evil I was and how I'm a horrible person, which is expected. But what I actually did get out of it surpassed my wildest expectations. I got almost 20,000 views on [Facebook] insights up from about 400. I got about 40 new page likes. The sheer popularity of my page skyrocketed. Keep in mind, I am still nothing in comparison to the Facebook pages like "[Controversial Humor] Cell" and "Satan", but it was still very unexpected. My page became leagues more popular then it previously was.

And honestly, I got a lot of enjoyment. I enjoy screwing around with people who think they're tough because they threaten physical violence to people who post pictures on Facebook. I don't think that the photo I posted is nice and I think it's very morbid, but I was well within the Facebook Terms and Conditions and my legal rights to post it.


What do you think of people's reactions to your Todd posts?


What I thought of the posts were how hypocritical everyone was. Of course the biggest source of amusement was the terrible grammar everyone has when threatening me, but that's to be expected.
But as for the posts, they really aren't all too atypical for things like this. People think that an appropriate response to an insensitive post like this one is to threaten violence and death and then to call me a coward for not showing my face. To them, I say that they are no better than the people who did what they did to amanda todd, which is exactly what they say to me.

The people posting hate on my page think they have every reason to give me death threats which I have gotten plenty of in the last two days, but they fail to see that this is precisely the line of thinking that made Amanda Todd commit suicide.
So what do I think of the community's reaction to my Todd posts? Well, the ones who publicly responded pretty much were all ignorant fools who can think of no other ways but violence and hateful speech to deal with their problems. But many Facebook users, many of which were mothers, messaged me in a private forum and begged me RESPECTFULLY AND WITHOUT CALLING ME NAMES to take it off. I responded to them with respect and class, telling them my reasons and offering to take it off within a week. Anybody who messaged me with hate and disrespect I treated like the immature toddlers they were.

The main idea is this: when someone or something bothers you, don't try to snuff it out. Try to understand why what is happening is going on and realize that the most powerful weapon you have at your disposal is a respectful tone and a calm demeanor.

Have you been bullied or beaten up?


I have been bullied myself, yes, in middle school. Beaten up? Ehh...I was having an issue with my friend in high school of junior year and we got in a skirmish, but never beaten up by a bully. My friend and I worked things out though. And yeah, he won the fight hahaha.

As for the age thing, I don't feel as comfortable talking about that. There are a lot of people that are intent on "finding out who I am so they can teach me a lesson" and after posting two fake addresses to Dennys Restaurants in Vancouver, they want to know more than ever. I can tell you I am in college, but other than that, I'm sorry. I am the oldest admin of my page, though.

As for the way I arrived at my view of violence, it's been all my time on the internet. I'm very much like any other internet troll out there. They want to screw with people, but not to wound. Really, if you talk to us and really use reason and not try to exert how much power you have and give empty threats, we're usually pretty reasonable.

I used to frequent 4chan's infamous /b/ board a lot and I learned a lot form there. I learned about how f***ed up people can act, sure, but I also learned that on the internet, the people don't care who you are or where you come from, they care about how you act and how you present yourself. So yeah, you can act like a heartless troll, but if you act unrealistically and make outrageous claims about how you'll hunt someone down, you just get made fun of for how idiotic you sound.
The bottom line is that on the internet, we're all equal when given a mask of anonymity. To be taken seriously, present yourself as an educated person at least. You can have the worst ethical and moral code in the world, but as long as you act civil, I will take what you have into consideration. Violence takes the civility out of everything, and where's the fun in that?


You say people are posting hate on your page, but aren’t your Todd photos a form of hate?


Well, yes the Todd photos are tasteless, but they are not hate. They are tasteless and insensitive, but they don't say she's evil or bad. They just make fun of suicide in general.
But I understand where you're going with that. Honestly, both a lot of my fans and I have a morbid sense of humor, and it's fun to watch people with less outlandish senses of humor fuss over a picture. It's the same thing where you say to one of your buddies, "Dude! Smell this milk." when it's gone stale. You want to see their reaction. I didn't do it to spread hate, I did it to get a rise out of people. I guess the difference is the intention. If I hated Amanda and bullied her through her life, then yes, it would be a form of hate. But this is just morbid and tasteless humor.


How much time a day do you spend trolling?


As for the part about spending so much time spreading negative things on the internet and the better uses of my time, I say that I sort of enjoy it. It's fun getting reactions out of people and also showing how hypocritical some people are. And while I have never spent this amount of time on one subject like this, I did it because it honestly is fun. And I think that while you can look at the world with one set of eyes which goes a little like, "There are things to laugh at and things to be serious about," for right now in my life, I choose to have the outlook of "laugh at everything, no matter what it is, because laughing is how i want to spend my life and to the serious parts, just laugh harder."

To your other question about trolling, I don't allocate time to troll. I do it whenever I see someone being ignorant or I see the possibility for ignorance. It's not that I go looking for things to get people mad at, it's that when I see an opportunity, I take it. Like I said, this is the first time I've ever had a response like this, so I've been making fun of a lot of people on this page who threaten violence or call me names.

So I guess an answer to your question would be whenever I see an opportunity, which can come daily or weekly or hourly. It really depends.

Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/technol...+Amanda+Todd/7389495/story.html#ixzz29OJFOjQ6
This is truly heartless....
 

FunSugarDaddy

New member
Aug 15, 2008
1,110
5
0
This is truly heartless....
I'd like him fully exposed and see how good this looks on his resume.

I'm not internet savy enough to know whether or not there's a site that outs trolls, but there should be.

Keyboard losers like him really need to be exposed for the scum that they are.
 
Last edited:

Bartdude

New member
Jul 5, 2006
1,251
5
0
Calgary
I have little empathy for anyone who lives their life centered around Facebook and texting. This social media phenomenon is completely out of control and many teenagers are completely out of control. Observe other parts of the world, it is not like it is here in North America where unlimited social time to gossip and bullshit each other is the mainstay of life of a child. Children's lives should be oriented towards becoming productive educated and pro-social adults, just as it should have always been regardless of XBox, Facebook, Blackberries and all that garbage that has controlled their lives. It is the fault of the parents for having made them so weak, and the fault of the educators for having led the way to weakening them.
Um - how do you figure that?
 

blazejowski

Panty Connoisseur
Dec 20, 2004
3,959
196
63

Sonny

Senior Member
Sep 12, 2004
3,731
220
63
Hope the kids involved get what's coming to them...
Kids are big idiotic and cruel part of it, for sure....

but it was all set up by a blackmailing pedo, alleged to be a 32 y.o. NewWest resident, maybe currently facing a sexual interference charge involving a person under the age of 16.
 

FunSugarDaddy

New member
Aug 15, 2008
1,110
5
0
When I lived in Toronto some 20 years ago, there was a form of bullying that made quite a few headlines back then, it was referred to as "Swarming". 10 to 20 youths would randomly attack strangers for no apparent reason. Sometimes it would be to rip off an article of clothing. Sometimes not.

What's happened to this girl reminds me of that. Just a senseless attack where the guilty feel empowered through numbers or anonymity. If everyone is doing it, then it must be all right. If nobody can trace it back to you, all the better.

It takes an enormous amount of character to survive a swarm. You have no idea who's attacking you or even why. This girl must have felt totally isolated and powerless. I've know grown men who killed themselves for far less than what this girl went through and I don't remember anyone saying at the time, that they were cowards or attention whores.
If you think about it, it requires a similar mentality as the rioters, only difference is they are all directing their attack at one person, rather than a city.
 

FunSugarDaddy

New member
Aug 15, 2008
1,110
5
0
Rejection and humiliation by a peer group is one of the worst kinds of “brain torture” a teenage girl can experience, according to an American neurobiologist and expert on the female brain.

Reward centres in the teenage brain are stimulated by social interaction and approval, said Dr. Louann Brizendine, a clinician at the University of California, San Francisco and author of the best-selling book The Female Brain. This is because the teenage years are when young adults typically venture out to form their own social circles beyond the family and search for potential mates, she said.

“That social circuitry is really intensely activated, especially in teen girl brains,” she said.

“If you have social isolation or you are being rejected or you’re being bullied, that whole area of your brain ... goes dark, and it can throw some people into a suicidal depression.

“The bullying in the teen group is almost like the worst sort of brain torture that you can imagine.”

Teens may not have the support they need to cope with such trauma because they’re trying to individuate from their parents and may act out in hurtful ways to push them away, Brizendine explained.

“Teenage girls have a way of making their parents really mad at them,” she said, explaining that this is partly because the teen perceives the parent as the enemy of that developmental push within their own brains.

The teen’s perception of self, their social life and even their future plans become centred around the peer group, she said.

“All of a sudden, the peer group is everything, and if there’s bullying and the peer group seems to turn on the teen, they feel isolated,” she said. “They truly feel their life is over.”

Add humiliation to the mix, which often happens when embarrassing photos are viewed, shared and commented on by anyone through social media, and the “brain pain” becomes exponentially worse, Brizendine said.

“The stress hormone cortisol just skyrockets in that kind of situation where you’re feeling social disapproval, humiliation and pain, and we know that ... stress hormones staying up for too long can cause acute depression.”

This creates a dilemma for parents who want to be there for their teen, but may be rebuffed whenever they try to reach out, Brizendine said.

Parents need to keep in mind that individuation is a normal process that may be painful at times, but that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t keep tabs on their teen, she said.

“They should not just go away and not pay attention. They should find creative ways to snoop,” she said.

Parents who notice that their teen has become isolated or depressed and won’t talk to them about it should try to convince them to see a family doctor or a counsellor, she said.

“Society still holds parents responsible for teenagers, but teenagers don’t reach out in their moments of social isolation.”

tcarman@vancouversun.com


Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/health/...e+teen+girls/7388944/story.html#ixzz29UTwSoTr
 
Vancouver Escorts