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Perfect Moments

  • Writer: Cailan
    Cailan
  • Feb 26, 2018
  • 1 min read

Brian's tone kind of threw me off, it was so casual. When you're talking about suicide, it's typically the time your tone would be serious. I realize that with his 4 years of volunteering at the suicide hotline, his view and tone may be diluted. But with the side comments and level of normalcy in his voice on this particular subject was weird to listen to. If you weren't paying attention to the words you could've thought he was talking about anything.


I don't agree with that policy but I understand it's implementation. We know people who don't want help but may call the suicide hotline are already in trouble, and confused. Making people ask for help is making the subject of suicide be compared to simple subjects like asking your mom if you can stay out a little later to watch a movie with a friend. We don't know what is going through another person's head no matter the signs the exhibit...


This podcast compares to our research paper form, in that the speaker sets it up in a similar way. He begins with a introduction and history, how he is involved in the community, and proposes questions which he answers with his own research from sources like his own first hand encounters and others.

 
 
 

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