I was very disturbed to hear the opinions of a GP this week
who said how common self-harming is these days. Among some young people it is like a badge, proving
that you really are upset. If you haven’t self-harmed, your issues really aren’t
that significant. In other words, if you want to get attention from your
friends for something going on in your life, best that you get find yourself a
knife and start cutting.
I was also disturbed to read more about internet trolling.
It is, of course, devastating to the lives of those on the receiving end and we
all want to help them. However, it is also worrying how it can have a bad effect
on the trolls themselves. Why should they get our sympathy, I hear you ask?
Well the problem is that it is just too easy for anybody to get on the internet
and start making comments.
Isabella Sorley, age 24, is a case in point. According
to the BBC Website, Isabella was convicted of trolling feminist Caroline Criado-Perez,
sending tweets including "go kill yourself" - after a heavy night of
drinking. Isabella has now talked about the incident, warning pupils not to do
the same - she said that she had never done anything like this before and will
never do it again. However, she knows that she will permanently be labelled as a troll. Isabella
may not fit your stereotypical idea of a troll – she has a degree and 13 GCSEs.
There is often, of course, a link between the issues of being
trolled and self-harm, with one sometimes leading to the other. As the mother
of a son aged nine and a daughter aged three, I wonder what I need to be doing now
and in the future to prepare my children to have the self-esteem and emotional
strength to cope with being bullied or trolled and to resist the idea of
self-harming. Also, what will I need to do to make sure that my children do not
make the mistakes of Isabella and become trolls themselves?
I expect that you can guess my challenge to you this week: What
are you doing to help guide the young people in your life through the
difficulties of trolling/being trolled and self-harm?
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