The Solution to the West’s Suicide Epidemic Can Be Found in the Culture of a Himalayan People

The Solution to the West’s Suicide Epidemic Can Be Found in the Culture of a Himalayan People

In recent years, the number of suicides among young people has skyrocketed. In some countries, such as Spain, suicides have already surpassed traffic accidents as the leading cause of death not caused by illness—and among the young, they are the main cause of death in every sense.

In my recent book on suicide, I cite the words of psychologist James Hillman: “The mind sometimes needs to kill, and it will not stop until it succeeds.” I also warn that this death is psychological. In other words, the mind sometimes needs to destroy a situation that causes it anguish in order to continue living a healthy life in the future.

As I also point out in that book, this psychological death—or rather, these psychological deaths—were carried out in traditional societies through rites of passage. Through rituals that mixed fear, violence, and abandonment, people felt they were killing their former self to be reborn into a new one. It is no coincidence that many of these rites took place in dark huts or caves, associating the end of the ritual with a new birth. Today it would be impossible to revive such rites; having lost faith, they would be empty ceremonies.

But there are other ways to kill the self without killing the person—ways to end everything that makes us feel like abandoning life, without actually abandoning it—and the solution comes from the culture of the Naxi minority in China, on the eastern edge of the Himalayas.

For many years, anthropologists have characterized this society by its preservation of traditional culture (including its pictographic Dongba script) and its high rate of suicide among young people, who were said to protest arranged marriages in this way.

However, testimonies I collected during my own fieldwork among this minority suggest that most of these suicides were not suicides at all. They were only staged. In reality, the couple fled to the nearby Jade Dragon Snow Mountain, with its hard-to-reach valleys, and instead of hanging themselves, taking poison, or jumping off a cliff, they went on living together. For several years they endured a harsh life high in the mountains, and after a suitable period—already holding in their arms the child born of their love—they returned home. The joy of seeing them alive again outweighed all social considerations.

They show us that it is possible to kill the “present self” without killing the person, and they offer an example—both to young and old—of the human capacity to find a way out of situations that seem to have none.

To learn more, you can read my book: The Culture of Suicide in China and the Fall of the Imperial Regime.(Spanish language).

About me: I have spent 30 years in China, much of the time traveling and studying this country’s culture. My most popular research focuses on Chinese characters (Chinese Characters: An Easy Learning Method Based on Their Etymology and Evolution), Matriarchy in China (there is a book with this title), and minority cultures (The Naxi of Southwest China). In my travels, I have specialized in Yunnan, Tibet, the Silk Road, and other lesser-known places. Feel free to write to me if you’re planning a trip to China. The agency I collaborate with offers excellent service at an unbeatable price. You’ll find my email below.

jinuo book

Last posts

History of Dunhuang, crossroads of cultures on the Silk Road
History of Dunhuang, crossroads of cultures on the Silk Road

History of Dunhuang, crossroads of cultures on the Silk Road Dunhuang is one of the most fascinating cities on the Silk Road, although it now appears to be asleep, in the sleep that the improvement of communications in recent centuries has brought to the great...

Kyzil Grottoes – Primitive Buddhist art on the Silk Road
Kyzil Grottoes – Primitive Buddhist art on the Silk Road

The Kyzil Grottoes - Primitive Buddhist art on the Silk Road The Kizil Grottoes are located on the cliffs of Minya Dag Mountain facing the Muzhati River, 7 km southeast of Kizil Township, Baicheng County, and about forty-three kilometers west of present-day Kucha,...

All you need to know about the ox in the Chinese horoscope
All you need to know about the ox in the Chinese horoscope

All you need to know about the ox in the Chinese horoscope The ox is a very beloved animal among the Chinese, despite its size, it is tame and peaceful, often in the villages, it is the youngest children who take it to the field to play, it rarely acquires the fierce...

The snake in the Chinese horoscope
The snake in the Chinese horoscope

The snake in the Chinese horoscope The snake is an ambiguous animal in the collective image of the Chinese people. On the one hand, it is considered similar to the dragon. Many Chinese authors recognize that the dragon, nonexistent, is nothing more than the...

The Rabbit in the Chinese horoscope
The Rabbit in the Chinese horoscope

The Rabbit in the Chinese horoscope The rabbit is a tender and adorable animal, which highlights its extraordinary fertility, perhaps that is why in the Chinese horoscope is the animal most closely related to the moon, the female star par excellence. This...

The goat in the Chinese horoscope
The goat in the Chinese horoscope

The Goat in the Chinese horoscope The goat and the sheep are confused in the symbolism of Chinese culture, as both are written with the Yang character 羊, specifying that the sheep gives wool (绵羊) and the goat lives in the mountain (山羊), in general, both have an...