The OFFICIAL SITE to Americas #1 Youth Motivational Speaker!
Teen Suicide Prevention and Intervention Course
Another day and another loss. Teen suicide is becoming an epidemic. I am left speechless today as I hear about another two suicides from this past weekend.
After 30 years of speaking and concentrating my work on teens and families, I feel privileged to share my heart and give people hope in such tough times. I only wish the teens hurting would have reached out to me before deciding that suicide is their answer. Every day, I feel a part of me dies wishing I could have made sense in sharing that suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem in the heart. But, the pain sometimes is so severe that even reaching out for help isn’t even a thought.
I wish I could take the pain away from family, friends, classmates and community members. The tragic loss of a young person dying leaves parents, siblings, classmates, coaches, teachers, and administrators scrambling with so much hurt and thoughts. We are all left wondering “WHY?” and “WHAT?” we could have done to prevent such loss or done something to help.
I’d like to share with you the factors that might lead a child or a young person to suicide in hope that this may prevent further tragedies. I gather this from years of experience and trying to understand.
Online Course for School Communities
Suicide can be complex in so many ways. Relatively rare amongst children, the rate of teen suicides and suicide attempts is growing exponentially amongst teens and young adults. The cry for help amongst our government agencies is growing more and more each day. Suicide is the third-leading cause of death for 15- to 24-year-olds. For every suicide there are at least 25 attempts.
Given access to firearms, the risk of suicide increases dramatically. Nearly 60% of all suicides in this country are committed with a gun. Any gun in your home should be unloaded, locked up, and kept out of reach of children and teens.
The other means of suicide or attempted suicide is overdosing with prescription or non-prescription medicines. Be aware that teens will trade, buy, and steal medication and will carry them in their lockers or their backpacks. I’m supportive of schools frequently bringing in drug-sniffing dogs and searching their schools and teens back packs. Don’t think this is a punishment for a certain “type” of teen, this is a problem with all teens today.