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Queer Children Are Dying... But Many More Are Living

Posted: 01/20/2012 7:18 pm

Most of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning (LGBTQ) youth we saw on the news in 2011 were dead.

Last fall, media outlets around the country reported on the death of Rutgers University student Tyler Clementi. After that, it seemed like everywhere we looked, another teenager was making headlines for ending his or her life. Just this week, we lost another, 19-year-old filmmaker and activist Eric James Borges. The New York Times reported on five known suicides by LGBTQ youth in September 2011 alone. The number of these stories far outpaces any other representation of these youth in broader circulation.

This focus on the contemporary scourge of teen suicides belies a troubling truth: it is far easier to talk about the tragedy of LGBTQ youth suicide than it is to find ways to comprehend and address the complexity of their lives and identities.

By most accounts, it is tremendously difficult to be a gender-nonconforming or queer young person today. A 2010 study piloted by the Family Acceptance Project at San Francisco State University concluded that the persistent bullying and harassment experienced by students perceived by their peers to be LGBTQ (many of who may not even identify with those labels) led directly to lower levels of life satisfaction and higher rates of depression in young adulthood. A 2009 article in the journal Pediatrics reported that lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) young adults who experienced high levels of rejection from family members were 8.4 times more likely to attempt suicide. They were also more likely to experience depression and to attempt to self-medicate with alcohol and illegal drugs. And rejection isn't only verbal and physical abuse; it even includes hearing family members make disparaging comments about other LGBT people, being asked to remain silent about their identities, or being blamed for the bullying and harassment they receive from peers. In short, all the things adults say or do not say affect how these kids feel about themselves and what they believe their chances are for living a happy life.

Where are the stories of the youth who face these damaging threats on a daily basis and the culpability of adults in their suffering?

LGBTQ youth also face pernicious structural and institutional forms of violence. Yale sociologists Katherine Himmelstein and Hannah Bruckner use surveys from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health to demonstrate that nonheterosexual youth are no more likely than heterosexual youth to engage in violent behavior. They are, however, far more likely to be detained and arrested by police, more likely to be convicted of crimes, and are, each year, expelled from school in greater numbers. Individual-level prejudice translates into systematic deprivations of liberty and a persistent sense that there are few adults in whom they can trust. Where are the stories of these injustices? Where is our collective outrage at the systems that perpetuate them?

These stories make neglect by school administrators, parents, and peers seem like universal reactions to sexual and gender difference in youth. They aren't. The Family Acceptance Project research also shows that youth with supportive family members do better in school, feel more content with their lives, make better decisions, and have healthier bodies and minds. Support means more than merely "tolerating" difference. Parents must show affection and love, even if their child's identity makes them uncomfortable. They must intervene and prevent other adults and children from victimizing their child. And they must provide their child with connections to other LGBTQ youth and adults. They must actively foster positive, healthy, and accessible queer role models. Wouldn't it be great if the media did the same?

Don't get me wrong: LGBTQ teen suicide is a very serious problem. The Suicide Prevention Resource Center estimates that between 30 and 40 percent of LGB youth attempt suicide -- roughly 4 times the rate of their heterosexual peers. There's no question, given these statistics, that the struggles and recent deaths of so many youth deserve our attention, discussion, and deep grief. We need to hear these stories and acknowledge these losses. However the media's singular focus on them, to the exclusion of any positive coverage of LGBTQ youth, creates a deadly echo chamber. The repetitive tale about the inevitability of our collective failure to address the pain felt by many LGBTQ youth may translate into high readership rates, but it doesn't translate into inspiration for the kids who are still here.

More than 50 research studies show that persistent and prominent news coverage of suicides can lead to an increase in the likelihood that other vulnerable individuals might attempt it themselves.

Given the unrelenting discrimination they face, LGBTQ youth may be particularly vulnerable to this phenomenon, called suicide contagion, or so says Christopher Gandin Le, a former staff member of the National Suicide Prevention Hotline who founded a company that promotes mental health through online social networks. "These youth need the media to create messages of resilience, not messages of desperation," he says. The frequency and ardor with which we report on LGBTQ suicide has begun to make it seem as if these deaths are unavoidable, even normative responses to homophobia in our culture.

They aren't. In the face of tremendous overt hostility and covert neglect, still, most LGBTQ teenagers do not wish to end their lives. The Trevor Project, a national crisis and suicide prevention hotline for LGBTQ youth, has fielded over 200,000 calls since its inception in 2008, calls from youth reaching out for affirmation and support. They survived. Some of them even thrived. Where are their stories?

In August, 14-year-old Jonah Mowry posted a video on YouTube describing on a series of written notecards the daily harassment he faces as a gay youth. With tears rolling down his face, he tells us that suicide was an option for him many times. In the end, he takes a deep breath and displays his final cards. He says, "I'm not going anywhere, because I'm STRONGER than that... and... I have a million reasons to be here."

As it turns out, Mowry has 7.6 million reasons to be here -- that's how many people have viewed his video in the handful of months it has been online. Since then, he has appeared on television with his family. Some of the bullies who initially targeted him have apologized. He says a weight has been lifted off his shoulders. "I'm more confident, and I feel stronger every day."

To put this in perspective, the 2,000 videos submitted to Dan Savage's It Gets Better campaign have received, collectively, about 10 million views from around the world. Knowing that a positive life as an adult awaits them does precious little for the youth who remain trapped in the immediacy of their need. They need stories of teenagers just like them who are safe and happy now.

They need images of peers like Johnny Robinson, a 17-year-old, gay homecoming king from Limerick, Pa., who made his own video for Jonah, to reassure him that there are others just like him who survived experiences of bullying, who thrived. In it, he smiles into the camera and holds up his own set of note cards, which read, "Being different... is what helps you stand out. It's what makes you you. Love who you are... because we believe in you."

He tells Jonah, "You have already changed the world."

 

Follow Tey Meadow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/dr_tey

 
 
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11:42 PM on 01/23/2012
Hey (CONTPT2)
I worry about any message that could suggest one’s thoughts are wrong.Like embracing gender ambiguity and evolution, I think it's important we strive to become more tolerant of the variances, some uncomfortable, of mood and fluctuating outlooks on life-our own or the other's.

Long before the gay suicide outbreak when I heard about suicide, I do remember a profound feeling of relatedness. And when relatedness/connection is missing, even the darkest doses were reassuring. Plus, for a person on the trans end of the spectrum, I remember thinking, I don't need another reason to second guess myself.

I doubt we’ll replace tragedy as so many peoples motivation to become more aware of a given issue with something that comes earlier. But silencing the roar of suicide is silencing, which I have a hard time with.

I think this struggle is evidence enough that its going to take more than a celebrity saying it will get better in 10-20 years or a Yale phd saying you'd be better off with parents who love you/your kid is less likely to kill himself if you do/dont do xyz- acutely and long-term. I'd bet more people dont have access to IGB or Yale research than do; so embracing as many routes to coping with suffering as there are gender expressions, and accessibility of "treatment" seem to be big factors in really improving queer life and MI.

Thanks for creating a space for consideration.
11:42 PM on 01/23/2012
Hey (PT 1)

While I can't imagine an argument against all youth, minority groups or otherwise, needing more positive role models in media, this article (in addition to highlighting the super scary and real contagion effect of suicide and the reality of serious shortcomings of advocacy such as “It Gets Better”) points to a couple of concerns.

Suicide and mental-illness characterize a stigmatized experience and one I’ve personally found much harder to identify with openly re: shame/embarrassment than, and within, the LGBTQ community.

And while sensationalism of tragedy isn’t new, I agree its more dangerous for typically mis- and/or under-represented groups.

I don't think ruminating helps depression, but do I think ruminating and/or the contagion effect is ever going to be a/the primary/leading/enduring cause of suicide, gay or otherwise? No. I think we might be better served at fighting the causes you highlight as opposed to a symptom its manifestation in the media.

I think just as queer kids need more than acceptance, more than acknowledgement, but affirmation-kids that feel so badly and want to die need to know that, they can feel bad, they can want to die, even talk about wanting to die, without a. having to die or b. scaring/alienating those around them because of who they are or how they think.

I want so much for youth to feel that depression and/or suicidal thinking isn’t weak or dramatic. (CONT -> PT2)
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08:31 AM on 01/22/2012
Call me weird, but I think the suicides should get national attention.
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02:53 PM on 01/24/2012
Why because it backs up Darwin's survival of the fittest?
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10:47 PM on 01/24/2012
Huh? A) you know absolutely nothing about evolution B) what does that have to do with my comment?
01:28 AM on 01/22/2012
We as the LBTQ community also are to blame because we have yet to reach out to these kids to show them that it does get better and to let them know if they need some one who has been there and done that is here to listen and offer a helping hand. We need to step up and take care of our own. We as LGBTQ have to stand up and sometimes make our own families just because things are not right with our own family. We need to be there for them with our own anbeonse that we have, because we are the only ones that truely understand where they are in their lives. So every one that has read this comment find a young LGBTQ person and try to intervein before us older generation are the only ones left to fight for our injust and for the right for us to have true happiness with whom we choose to be with.
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Janice Harper
07:13 PM on 01/21/2012
Thank you for an important article. Suicide is always tragic, yet the cry of a "suicide epidemic" among bullied youth merits scrutiny. Statistics from the Center for Disease Control show that suicides among youth from ages 15-24 have remained relatively unchanged over the last decade (3,901 in 1999, and 4,371 in 2009; factoring in the increase in population among that demographic, and it may actually be declining). What has increased is the percentage of deaths from suffocation, which includes hanging -- from 24.8% of all suicides in that age group, to 38.6%). This increase may be related to a decline in deaths from firearms, yet I find it strking how often bullied teens die from suicide by hanging. The World Health Organization cautions against giving too many details, or too much focus, on suicides for the very real threat of "copycat" suicides. Perhaps we should look closely at whether there might be new ways of looking at the tragedy of suicide, and offering more examples, as you provide here, of teens who look suicide in the eye and choose to live.
06:56 PM on 01/21/2012
Good point!!! This reminds me of a moment when I drove down my town's main street and there was a 'domestic violence free zone!' banner across it, and I thought it was so depressing...because the implication is that the baseline everywhere else is child and spouse abuse. I've been in schools with 'no bullying!!!' banners, and it makes me wonder if anyone is helping kids to practice alternative behaviors, modeling positive ways of interacting. Even though some of my children's friends are probably gay, maybe they are, many many of their adult role models are gay, I can't think of one kid who is firmly, happily out in our community! That's crazy. This is thought provoking, and I will be more aware of ways that I and other adults can better make space for our kids to be happily, normally, boringly gay.
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omensofaries
03:31 PM on 01/21/2012
To every gay person, particularly the younger gays, don't let anyone tell you that there is something wrong with you and comments of being damned. You are not a 2nd class citizen, you are equal to anyone in society and that means you are equal with everyone else in the eyes of God. I know the pain younger folks go through, but dont give up, don't surrender to their lies, fight back and continue to fight back. Be strong. It may not seem like it now, but time is on your side, you will prevail..
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vonhinger
02:30 PM on 01/21/2012
being gay or being bullyed is just the new buzz words of today. These problems are really nothing new and dont warrent the extreme media hype thats out there today.
01:38 AM on 01/22/2012
I bet to differ with you this has become a sever issue in our sociaty and it should be put across every bullitin board,newspaper, even first commercial we see this should rate right there with the "Amber Alert"because the loss of a child should not be happening in todays times and needs to stop being swept under the rug like it never happens in my town. The worst part is the christian people are as much to blame as us LBTQ are because they teach being gay is a sin and in the old tesimant they put you to death and us for not saying enough of this reterac this will stop now. Then this will stop but first we need to join together and stand up and out for these children.
08:46 AM on 01/22/2012
They be "nothing new," but these behaviors are increasing dramatically as is the rate of suicide in today's youth. And THAT absolutely warrants the media attention in order to bring light to this epidemic invading our society. Bullying needs to end. It's been attributed to countless suicides, suicides that possibly could have been avoided had these children not been relentlessly bullied for whatever reason. Are you suggesting that we should just brush all of this off our shoulders and under the rug??
01:47 PM on 01/21/2012
Great article. We need for out youth that are happy and successful being shown as a model for those that are in difficult environments. In fact, those youths are being told by the adults around them that there is something wrong with them. The ability to see and hear from their peers can be a significant force to counterbalance much of the negatively they live through.
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10:50 AM on 01/21/2012
Must they use the word "queer"? Sure it's only a word but this word sounds cruel and they are writing about children. (and, no it is not okay for adults either) If your child were called this word would you have a problem with it? I am a hetersexual female and that is my take on one of the big issues with this article. How about letting folks be people and stop the "queer" verbage? This word adds to discrimination for people. I could not get pass the title so read to your heart's content.
01:32 PM on 01/21/2012
Please see my response to mater below. -Tey
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Christopher Erwin Hogan
10:44 AM on 01/21/2012
godhasspokentome,

If you ask God's forgiveness for your soul-killing condemnation of His creation, then YOU might still go to heaven and be saved from ridicule.
08:44 AM on 01/21/2012
If these children ask Gods forgiveness for their deviant sexual behaviour then they might still go to heaven and they will be saved in death.
06:57 PM on 01/21/2012
God may never forgive you for having the hubris to pass judgment in his name. Look out.
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08:34 AM on 01/22/2012
Hearing voices is a medical condition that should be treated.
08:22 AM on 01/21/2012
Thanks for the great article and addressing some of the problems that seem to get overlooked in this whole discussion. While bullying is a big problem that exacerbates the situations these young people find themselves in, it is hardly all there is to the problem. It is much deeper than that.
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mater
mater
06:07 AM on 01/21/2012
I think it's very sensationalistic of you to appropriate the term "Queer" for your article. I would like it if another blogger were using the "N word" in their article either. if it is supposed to give you, as part of that group some kind of insider ownership of certain inflammatory code words to enhance your personal status, as those are the very words the bullies, unaccepting parents, members of the military and others use to defame people who already have enough to deal with in their orientation and identity. This article meant to raise compassionate awareness, I guess, starts out by being labeling the people already labeled and suffering consequences.
01:33 PM on 01/21/2012
Hi everyone. This is Tey Meadow. 
Thanks to mater and Debanne for sharing your concerns. I certainly meant no disrespect to folks who dislike the term "queer." We may not come to an agreement about whether that word has a place in this sort of commentary, but let me just say this: I come from a context in which "queer" has been reclaimed as a powerful and more importantly POSITIVE way to label people and identities that resist the expectation that everyone is heterosexual. Or that all men are masculine and all women are feminine. We don't necessarily know how any of these kids identify themselves. For those who are no longer here, we may never know. But when I think of my "queer" community, it includes all the brave people who disrupt or challenge those expectations- whether they do so deliberately or whether it is other people who label them that way. So, it is with that idea- that I am speaking as part of a group of people who identify as queer and who believe that it is a deeply valuable and wonderful way to be- that I use the word. I certainly mean no disrespect or ill feeling towards anyone at whom that word has been lobbed as a form of abuse.
04:40 PM on 01/21/2012
Do you think we can do the same thing with the f-word? After all, someone has to start it.
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JCleveland
You think therefore you think you are
04:07 AM on 01/21/2012
It's a fine line between exposing the problem so that society can change, and the echo chamber of which you speak. I honestly don't have a good metric for determining which should be the focus. It seems, unfortunately, that the trend will not end until we have full equality and protection for all people.
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mater
mater
06:09 AM on 01/21/2012
I would NOT have liked it if someone had used the "N word" in their blog AS A LABEL IDENTIFICATION OF A GROUP FOR DISCUSSION EITHER.