Posted on 05/22/2015 7:23:02 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
This week, San Francisco Magazine published an anthropological incursion by Diana Kapp into the lifestyles of the most privileged teens in the nation in order to ask: Why are the kids of Palo Alto killing themselves?
A cluster of teen suicides at Palo Alto high schools in 2010 was followed this year by another four suicide victims from the wealthy and achievement-blessed Henry M. Gunn High School. Fifty-two of its 1,900 students were treated for suicide ideation this past school year.
By Kapps account, the suicidal cases are only the tip of a very large iceberg of kids who, with every advantage in the world educated, affluent, married parents, a great school system are immiserated by the need to succeed.
You can joke about it, of course, but the voices she points to would break any mothers heart.
Overall well being is not good, our mental health is not good, declared one teen. You can feel stress radiating off people, said another classmate.
Because we live in this extraordinary place that really has some singular qualities, says Ken Dauber, a Google engineer married to a Stanford professor, we think somehow that our kids are also singular and extraordinary, but they are just kids. Dauber and his wife lost a daughter to suicide in her early 20s.
The majority of my closest friends admit to depression and self-harm, the sophomore-class president said.
Carolyn Walworth, the student school-board representative, wrote a public cri de coeur, The Sorrows of Young Palo Altans. Stress began for her in grade school, where being placed in any class without the word advanced labeled you as dumb. But in high school, Students are gasping for air, lacking the time to draw a measly breath in. We are the product of a generation of Palo Altans that so desperately wants us to succeed but does not understand our needs. We are not teenagers, we are lifeless bodies in a system that breeds competition, hatred, and discourages teamwork and genuine learning. We lack sincere passion. We are sick.
I was particularly struck by the concerned adults diagnosis of the problem, the way they described the potential solutions, which mostly meant looking for ways to reduce stress and let teens have more fun. The teens themselves talk about it in the same way.
Stress began for her in grade school, where being placed in any class without the word advanced labeled you as dumb.
Stress in itself is not what causes people misery, anxiety, or depression, and fun is not what keeps people from wanting to kill themselves.
Listening to these voices made me think again of David Brookss astute comment that there are the Résumé Virtues and the Eulogy Virtues. The résumé virtues are what create success in status competitions. The eulogy virtues are what gives meaning to life in the face of the inevitability of that ultimate failure, death.
The problem is not that these teens are pushed to succeed at school; it is that when confronted by their own fear that they may fail to do so, at least at the same level as their peers or their parents, they have not been given a powerful vision of how and why their life would nonetheless be worth living.
The elite Creative Class in America prides itself mostly on its brains, and the amazing things that, with hard work and perseverance, one can contribute to the world through intelligence; all true and good as far as it goes. That is why elite parents try so hard to pass on their class advantages to their children through relentless development of their little human capital, from violin lessons to SAT tutoring. It is the same reason why so many elite stay-at-home mothers I know value their own mothering to the extent it produces daughters who succeed in the world of education and work. My daughters getting into Harvard validates my mothering. We seemed to have turned our very children into résumé virtues. To be a B student is to become a B human being.
None of us would say that out loud to our children, or even to ourselves. But the gods of the résumé virtues are relentless and unforgiving, unless their godlike status is contested, unless there is a world outside of work and achievement, some other definition of being human and worthy of love, some glimpse of the human soul.
Maggie Gallagher is a senior fellow at the American Principles Project. She blogs at MaggieGallagher.com.
All the “In” kids are killing themselves.
Tell kids there’s no God, no truth or meaning. Add money.
They’re running into Solomon’s wall, Ecclesiastes 1:2.
They need the living God.
Because their parents are insufferable?
Bush's Fault!
Is there an active faith practiced in these families?
I am willing to bet this has something to do with the gay/transgender BS they are putting out now.
The pressures to succeed in Silicon Valley is something else.
Not everyone can handle it.
Ecclesiastes is right. They’ve made an idol out of success and themselves and have nothing, and the children are suffering.
Add to that the Deathcult their parents believe in and who wouldn’t commit suicide?
Pray America is waking
/hyperbole mixed with sarcasm
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Legend has it that Alexander the Great wept because he had no worlds left to conquer. The gloom and hostility of today’s generations arise from that same despair. All the transcendent glories have been denied them by the insistence on Humanism, and they’ve found that earthly glories are ephemera. So what is there to strive for? Another yacht? A bigger mcmansion? A faster BMW? It’s anomie writ large across the generational landscape.
Meaningless, empty lives.
Having just gone through the “college application process” with one of mine, it’s for sure the schools aren’t helping.
They shouldn’t teach kids to hate their skin color or their parent’s wealth. It’s liberal ideology that’s killing these kids.
Henry Gunn has a heavily asian student body and their academic ranking is up there. Paly less so but is also a highly ranked school.
I love your response. I’ve been familiar with this work for ten years. Dr. John Patrick has a slightly modified version of it available if you google it.
Only took three posts - thank you!
Seriously, if you are told there is no God, and there is no purpose, and that entropy is the natural order of things (chaos) - you are going to ask at one point, “Why am I doing all of this?”
Also, Palo Alto is a fish tank. What a lot of those folks need to do is move out to the sticks - visit a farm and live and work there for a while, and find out what a meaningful living looks like.
In Palo Alto, success is an app that helps break up marriages (Tinder). It’s an idea and program you steal from your partners (Facebook). It’s a plan for surveilling the entire planet, and replacing human beings with robots (Google). People in that town aren’t curing cancer.
Precious little in that town is going to improve anyone’s lot. Oh, and kids are luggage there. As soon as a kid realizes this, they start asking whether it might make everyone’s life a little easier if they just die.
We’ve had two suicides here in the last three weeks (Western WA). Religion is one of those vacuums in life that refuse to be ignored. If God doesn’t end up in that part of your life, work, booze, drugs, sex, or fill in the blank will go there - and stay there.
MTV... wife was watching some dumb show last night (don’t know the name) full of feminist BS and emasculated boys and there were 3 kids on there that either tried to commit suicide or threatened suicide in the single episode and they were glorified. You glorify it and you’ll see more of it.
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