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Welcome to the Leadership21 blog, an ongoing conversation on mental health, civil rights and social justice. Posting on the blog are twelve young mental health advocates who comprise the L21 commitee, and anything goes--the personal, the political, the cultural, whatever! We hope that you'll check out what's here, and make some comments, and please know that if you're concerned about anonymity, you can comment anonymously. We hope that what you read, and what you contribute, will make you want to return regularly, because to our knowledge, there really isn't anything out there that has the potential to engage people on so many levels about mental health. But we need "outsiders" like you to make it grow into a robust, contagious online blog. So thanks for coming, welcome to the conversation, and please, pass it on--L21

Thursday, August 16, 2007

I just spent the morning at the computer store, frantically trying to figure out why my 6-month old, kinda expensive, laptop stopped working this morning. Who knows. But while there I got to talking with the employees, who asked me what I do. I explained Active Minds, and they asked me if my work has anything to do with the shootings at Virginia Tech. Yes, I said, in that we are addressing mental health issues among college students - but no, in that we don't actually know what the young man at VTech was suffering from, and most importantly, that the vast majority of college students who are on campus living with a mental illness are actually no more likely to be violent than those without, and if they are, the likelihood is greater that they'll be a risk to themselves than anyone else.


After saying that, the first thing out of one of the technician's mouths was "Yeah, this guy was nuts. But it's the roommates' fault. They wouldn't even talk to him, of course he did something stupid." I came back saying that the roommates did what they knew/thought to do, that this incident was no one's fault and is not a typical threat on campus, and that we just need to use it as a learning opportunity to figure out where the pieces didn't fit together. And I absolutely believe that. But it got me thinking about the bigger issue, which is one I feel so passionately about...the role of friends and other peers, especially in young adult mental health.


In hindsight, Mr. Cho's roommates could be looked upon, along with many other people, as potential factors; but in reality, are we ever really taught what to look for in friends and peers, how to interact with them in a way that is supportive, and when far is too far and that we should keep pushing them into professional help? How can we place blame on anyone, when no one is taught the proper way to talk about these issues or how to encourage others into help? Sadly, that blame is often self-inflicted and felt by friends and family members of people who take their own lives. But in our society, we do not grow up being taught the words to use or the actions to take when worried about a peer or loved one. So how is anyone supposed to know?

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