Deaths of Despair
Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2017 10:03 pm
This is a very discouraging but interesting trend in the US - This study shows the middle-aged white people mortality rate is in decline. This is a stark contrast in the US to the rest of the world and other races.
I'm thinking back to my own situation in being unemployed several years ago, for about a year. I have a college degree, it was just bad timing in the economy. I remember playing mental gymnastics as we blew through all our savings; I found some contract work to keep us afloat, and we were lucky enough to get by, but I'm still recovering financially from that situation. I was getting pretty discouraged, being a full tithe payer TBM at the time, trying to do everything right, but either feeling unblessed, unanswered prayers or playing the mental game of it must be a test. My faith or religion did not help me in that situation.
I could not bring myself to ask for assistance from the bishop, I was too proud. I was even pressured by my SP to use the bishop's storehouse to supplement our situation. Glad I never did; even though I walked away from that corp, having paid hundreds of thousands of $$ in tithing with nothing in return and very little in retirement funds. But I guess I helped educate a bunch of upper class white kids for the COB, so at least they won't be at risk for suicide.
The group at greatest risk are those without college degrees who are unable to find meaningful work. This seems to be a failure of our capitalistic and profit driven economy. What would be interesting to me is to know what percentage of the group were active in a religion and see if there were any difference in the statistics there. In other words, does a religious belief give a person a more meaningful and fulfilling life or does it put more pressure on them and more stress of guilt and fear when they have economic challenges.In 2015, when researchers Anne Case and Angus Deaton discovered that death rates had been rising dramatically since 1999 among middle-aged white Americans, they weren't sure why people were dying younger, reversing decades of longer life expectancy.
I'm thinking back to my own situation in being unemployed several years ago, for about a year. I have a college degree, it was just bad timing in the economy. I remember playing mental gymnastics as we blew through all our savings; I found some contract work to keep us afloat, and we were lucky enough to get by, but I'm still recovering financially from that situation. I was getting pretty discouraged, being a full tithe payer TBM at the time, trying to do everything right, but either feeling unblessed, unanswered prayers or playing the mental game of it must be a test. My faith or religion did not help me in that situation.
I could not bring myself to ask for assistance from the bishop, I was too proud. I was even pressured by my SP to use the bishop's storehouse to supplement our situation. Glad I never did; even though I walked away from that corp, having paid hundreds of thousands of $$ in tithing with nothing in return and very little in retirement funds. But I guess I helped educate a bunch of upper class white kids for the COB, so at least they won't be at risk for suicide.