Teen Age Drug Abuse and the Edge of Depression
This is an excerpt of an entry written by a teenager who, from what I can ascertain, has been studying up on teen suicide statistics. He reacts with the following….
“Scary eh? Honestly, I have anger problems, numbing pain through gaming and lastly, thoughts(thoughts only, I didn’t go anywhere dangerous) of suicide.
Behind the strong Shaun you see, hides a weaker form of him. Must be shocking for you to know now. But I guess, when troubles are voiced out, they get less fatal.
I think thats all I can write. Any further would be too personal… too dark… too hard to write.”
(source)
If you read the rest of his entry you witness a young mind grappling with self-awareness, with the act of observing himself (“I have anger problems, numbing pain through gaming..). You also see a young man whose method for dealing with emotional pain could be described as dissociative; something all humans do when they compartmentalize pain and sadness and live some other safer place within themselves.
Shaun sounds like a teen who is vulnerable and stands at a cross roads that teens reach so frequently as they navigate these vital years. It is at this juncture that the at-risk teen can choose to seek out drugs to numb their pain, or continue with a relatively less harmful numbing agent,such as Shaun’s “gaming”. It is here where emotional maturity can save a troubled teen, diverting them towards healthier alternatives.
“Behind the strong Shaun you see…”. So often, in the course of the thousand of demands that parents have on their attention, they fail to see behind the mask that a troubled teen will wear - especially if the teen fears imposing more stress with his own struggles. Teenage drug abuse is inextricably linked with teenage depression. Both can go on under the radar, but neither are invisible.
Relevant Tags:dissociative, emotional maturity, self awareness, teenage depression, teenage drug abuse, teen suicide statistics, troubled teen




Teen Age Drug Abuse