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- From: as65+@andrew.cmu.edu (Amit Hasmukh Shah)
- Newsgroups: soc.college
- Subject: Preventing a bad situation.
- Message-ID: <kfLaAS200WC001=1Rs@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Date: 20 Jan 93 22:47:26 GMT
- Article-I.D.: andrew.kfLaAS200WC001=1Rs
- Organization: Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, PA
- Lines: 49
-
-
-
- I am writing from Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) in Pittsburgh, Pa.
- where we recently had a suicide occur. The week after the suicide, our
- newspaper, The Tartan, published an excellent editorial about how
- important it is to talk to other people when you are having problems.
- Below is a short (I was limeted to 350 words) letter-to-the-editor. I
- think what I say below is very important and I hope people think about
- it.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- I would like to congratulate the Tartan on an excellent editorial last
- week about crises intervention and the availability of counseling
- resources on campus. The editorial stressed a very important point in
- that students should always talk with someone when they have a problem.
- As the editorial said, "Human beings rely on one another for support
- and understanding and there is nothing wrong with asking someone to
- listen." This is absolutely the best advice that one could possibly
- give. There is nothing wrong in going to others for help. The only
- problem is that in a place like CMU, the pressure to compete and be at
- the top is so great, that it is often difficult to go to friends and
- acquaintances for help.
- As friends, we should always be looking out for one another. It is
- very easy for us not to notice that one of our good friends is having
- problems or that he or she is acting differently. It is even easier to
- ignore these changes in our friends. This, however, is something that
- we can never do. In a crises situation, it is unlikely that a person
- will do anything more then hint at the fact that he or she has a
- problem. As friends, we should always be looking out for these small
- hints even when things seem to be going perfect.
- Unfortunately, there are many people here that have no one to talk
- with. There are many people who get up in the morning, go to class,
- come home, go to dinner, and go back home without ever having a person
- to say hi to. It is very surprising how much a simple, "Hello" or a
- warm smile could mean to a person who is depressed and has nobody to
- turn to. There are just so many small things that one can do to
- brighten up somebody else's life.
- It is very difficult to write about a subject as important as this
- while being so limited in space. So in just a sentence what I am trying
- to say is watch out for your friends, be there when they need you and be
- friendly to as many people as you possibly can. Even though you may not
- realize it, you could be doing a world of good to somebody who
- desperately needs it.
-
-
- Amit Shah
- Sophomore, Math/Computer Science
-