Otago Daily Times

Suicide topic of new book from Bering

- ELENA MCPHEE elena.mcphee@odt.co.nz

DUNEDIN science writer Jesse Bering is no stranger to controvers­y — and he hopes a new book on suicide will help people struggling with ‘‘dark experience­s’’ as well as providing a scientific insight into a phenomenon that is overwhelmi­ngly human.

Associate Prof Bering has been the University of Otago Centre for Science Communicat­ion director for the last four years. His new book A Very Human Ending: How Suicide Haunts Our Species looks at the subject of suicide from a number of different perspectiv­es, taking in everything from the cognition of a suicidal person to human behaviour compared to animal behaviour, the personal stories of individual­s, and questions of religion.

Having experience­d his own mental health struggles in the past, suicide was a topic that had ‘‘fascinated’’ him for a long time, ‘‘both personally and intellectu­ally ’’.

The phenomenon appeared to be almost exclusivel­y connected to human psychology and the emotions humans experience­d, including shame and selfblame, and required ‘‘fairly advanced social cognition’’, Prof Bering said.

‘‘People who are suicidal are genuinely in an altered state of consciousn­ess,’’ he said.

Originally from the United States, Prof Bering was known for his provocativ­e previous works such as Perv: The Sexual Deviant in All of Us and The Belief Instinct: The Psychology of Souls, Destiny, and the Meaning of Life.

While the subject matter of his latest book was heavy, Prof Bering said it helped to distance himself from it by dealing with it as an academic study.

It was a take on ‘‘how strange it is, really, as a biological event’’.

Suicidal contagion was a tricky issue, and Prof Bering said it seemed the accolades highprofil­e people received in the media led to suicidal people cor

relating their own death with a ‘‘positive emotional response’’ from others — despite the fact they would not be there to experience it.

It was impossible to read other people’s minds, so one of his reasons for writing the book was also to familiaris­e people at risk of suicide with their own mental state, and encourage them to seek help.

 ?? PHOTO: LEONARDO RAMOS ?? Hard subject . . . Jesse Bering’s book tackles the topic of suicide.
PHOTO: LEONARDO RAMOS Hard subject . . . Jesse Bering’s book tackles the topic of suicide.

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