Suicidal cases as a result of depression seem to be making the news frequently, and require a considerable level of attention, as a number of lives keep crossing the cold valley of death. Unlike poverty, that most times leaves the stomach crying and begging for food, depression is a battle of the mind, where anything and everything is either light or dark.
What seems to be the bigger problem now is how those who should give hope, reassure and stand as a formidable pillar have now transformed into one of the elements that have continued to see persons lose identity to begin to question their own existence. Maybe, this is just the right time to call a spade what it is!
The news of one Miss Aisha Abdulganiyu committing suicide is what we woke up to the other morning. Devastating as it is, it’s rather heart-rending the girl didn’t get kind pats that would have gone a long way in reassuring her it all would be fine. Maybe, she did get, maybe, they just weren’t those she needed the most. Of course, what then is to be concluded when she said she only got pats of pain from her mother? Insinuating the latter only made life a hell for her. Isn’t this tragic?
We come across tweets and posts of people beginning to get confused of their own identity by asking questions of why their parents should be the reason life becomes an unbearable burden. But, it just passes as ordinary tweets or posts that get likes and shares, without noticing how people proceed with clouded minds that only ensure taking their own precious lives.
In a tweet after reading the sad news, I asked if it’s high time we started talking about the roles of parents in the happiness and well-being of their own children.
Isn’t it a popular Yoruba adage that we don’t send away a child who has not done well for the tiger to feast? But it’s that in some cases, the child is not sent away but held back to even deal with more, because if that’s not the case, a young man’s endless pursuit to secure a job would not be met with harsh remarks from his parents. It’s not a general issue, though; you may be lucky, but there are some people out there who are the green grasses of the marital pressure of their elephant parents, and it’s so bad it gets to these people and brings them into a whole new consciousness.
The pain someone who didn’t graduate with their colleagues would go through could warrant therapies; wouldn’t it be too much to have the same person exposed to more pressure? To now think of the concerned person’s parents aiding the adversities of that time, depressing you say?
This is one reality that has continued to hide under the veil of morality, where parents base judgments of all sort on their experiences, without considering the happenings of this time, worst still, not entertaining explanations when necessary.
There are a number of elements working in support of depression in our society today. But if the roles some parents play in helping their children get confused are factored, which leads to questions of why am I here can be looked into, it would mean a step ahead.
Sheriffdeen Tijani
Lagos
sheriffdeentijani13@gmail.com
END
Be the first to comment