joeylittle
Sponsor
No, because he's connected to the field of psychology.I think something like George Haidt coming on ptsd board and saying there needs to be affirmative action in psychology to bring in ostracized conservatives might sound like trolling, but it wouldn't be.
This isn't a general-discussion forum, it's a psych forum focused on PTSD, and it has some discussions that are unrelated to PTSD because, as you said, sometimes it's just nice to think about other things. I only needed to know if you had a connection to PTSD, and you do. I did not mean to imply that I think conservatives are automatically trolls. They are not; and there a quite a few on this board.
Things like this:
This is fine, as your opinion. My opinion is that "seems like he might be gay" is veiled homophobia, and I'm going to call that when I see it.The David hogg kid is super skinny and seems like he might be gay
And this is uninformed. Gay kids are not ‘cool’. They are not protected from harassment any more than any minority or marginalized group is protected. Which is to say: the rights have been in place for a while, but american society is still in the early years of understanding how to apply those protections.Like it's great that suddenly gay kids who to me seem a bit odd are now cool and have their own social groups and they are protected from harassment and things about them maybe even make them media darlings
I think you’re looking to blame the peers for not reaching out, and that makes no sense, given how high the odds are of every single teenager in that age group being heavily occupied with their own mental instability.
The teenage brain is, literally, unstable. It's a neurological mess. Growth, development, lots of stuff going on in there, hormones...you name it. I think it's the rare teenager who can rescue another teenager. The best they can do is try and vent their confusion safely.
Peer groups - like a gay/lesbian alliance - are a way of creating that space to express, vent, problem-solve...all the things peer support does. And they function like social clubs as well.
Really not unlike peer support for adults dealing with mental illness. We know that suicidal thinking is something many people with PTSD struggle with. We know that they are statistically rather likely to kill themselves. And because of that - even though we all have PTSD - we keep a little separation between the posts about suicidal thinking by having a sub-forum for it. Not every member is capable of reaching out to give that kind of support at any given time. So how could any group of teenagers, who are struggling with their own neurological challenges (for developmental reasons) - whether they are the popular kids or the outsiders - how could any of them be held responsible for doing crisis intervention on a peer?
It's not reasonable.
I am certain that many, many people failed the Parkland shooter. But I wouldn't include his peers on that list. It would be a rare, unique teen individual who was capable of that.
Fixating on the students who are expressing their thoughts and feelings as if they are really the ones to blame...or as if they should shut up and sit down because they did nothing...and especially because they are gay/maybe gay/skinny/have shaved heads...to me, that's all just noise and nonsense.