We drifted apart over the years, which meant it came as a bigger shock when he was found in a flat dead at age 23, after swallowing a mix of alcohol and methadone.
Daniel was a disruption to the classroom environment. He was always in trouble and - as far as I knew - had no-one working with him to identify or work with his root causes. To me through, …show more content…
At least I believe we neither spend enough or research enough to develop treatment for those who struggle. Classrooms are simply not geared for it, and the health service doesn’t really step into the gap. Self mediating is all too often the only option available.
I truly believe that Church is supposed to define and lead culture - that we should be setting the trends, making the calls and leading the charges. Can we, as youth workers and as church develop programs that specifically work with young people during the early signs of Mental Health issues? Can we cultivate a culture in our programs that leaves room to observe, identify and even treat young people who are going through these issues?
Daniel was my mate, but there was at the time no language to discuss these issues, or develop awareness that this could be happening to someone I know. The language is more available today, but I’m not sure if we’re any closer to implementing real, culture-saturating …show more content…
Daniel’s mum said, “I hate to think another young life could be wasted as tragically as Daniel’s has been.” Can we be the answer to her prayers?
Please, talk to your young people regularly and clearly about mental health. Talk to your team about how to organically identify and respond to these needs. Finally, lets keep talking to God - crying out to him for healing and restoration; for the redemption of a culture that lifts up the broken and downtrodden, and helps all people live a life to the full as Jesus taught us (John