Daily Read: 03July2013
We know, thanks to a growing body of research on suicide and the
conditions that accompany it, that more and more of us are living
through a time of seamless black: a period of mounting clinical
depression, blossoming thoughts of oblivion and an abiding wish to get
there by the nonscenic route. Every year since 1999, more Americans have
killed themselves than the year before, making suicide the nation’s
greatest untamed cause of death. In much of the world, it’s among the
only major threats to get significantly worse in this century than in
the last.
The result is an accelerating paradox. Over the last
five decades, millions of lives have been remade for the better. Yet
within this brighter tomorrow, we suffer unprecedented despair. In a
time defined by ever more social progress and astounding innovations, we
have never been more burdened by sadness or more consumed by self-harm.
And this may be only the beginning. If Joiner and others are right—and a
landmark collection of studies suggests they are—we’ve reached the end
of one order of human history and are at the beginning of a new order
entirely, one beset by a whole lot of self-inflicted bloodshed, and a
whole lot more to come.
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