Azərbaycan dili Bahasa Indonesia Bosanski Català Čeština Dansk Deutsch Eesti English Español Français Galego Hrvatski Italiano Latviešu Lietuvių Magyar Malti Mакедонски Nederlands Norsk Polski Português Português BR Românã Slovenčina Srpski Suomi Svenska Tiếng Việt Türkçe Ελληνικά Български Русский Українська Հայերեն ქართული ენა 中文
Subpage under development, new version coming soon!

Subject: »El Desvirtuador

2008-07-01 05:17:42
Hola Volví!!! =P
2008-07-01 05:19:16
y donde quedo el gaucho motilon ?????
2008-07-01 05:21:33
Está acá al lado mio =D
2008-07-01 05:22:17
Entonces bienvenida de nuevo de colega y saludos a Don Motilon....
2008-07-01 05:29:53
que milagro!!
2008-07-01 05:30:17
2008-07-01 06:04:23
2008-07-01 06:18:42
yo los veo es tomando,,
2008-07-01 06:20:11
Rehidratándonos eh!!! [sarcastic]
2008-07-01 06:35:40
jajaja
2008-07-01 11:28:38
Click here to print

* Skip to main navigation
* Skip to main content
* Skip to search

Mail Online
femail

*

Home
*

News
*

Sport
*

TV&Showbiz
*

Femail
*

Health
*

Science&Tech
*

You mag
*

Live mag
*

Coffee Break
*

Pictures
*

Debate




* Femail Home
* Pictures
* Femail Boards

* Horoscopes
* Travel
* Money
* My Stories
* Logout
* Login


Motors | Jobs | Property | Dating | Wine | Feedback | E-editions
Tuesday, July 01 2008 This Morning 24°C Sunny This Afternoon 26°C Sunny 5-Day Forecast
Why no child is safe from the sinister cult of emo
By TOM RAWSTORNE
Last updated at 09:46 16 mayo 2008

* commentsComments (19)
* Add to My Stories Add to My Stories

Hannah was a happy 13-year-old until she became an 'emo' - part of a sinister teenage craze that romanticises death. Three months later she hanged herself. Here, her devastated mother tells other parents: No child is safe

On the night before she died, she came into their room, kissed her father Raymond on the cheek and cheerfully told him: "I love you, Dad."

The following day Hannah's mother Heather went to check on her daughter and found her hanging by a tie from the top rail of her bunk bed.

Scroll down for more...

From Fresh-faced to suicidal: Hannah Bond pre ?emo?, left, and weeks before her death

She screamed for her husband to come, but try as he might it was too late: there was simply nothing that he could do to save Hannah's life.

In the unending bleakness of the weeks that have followed, the couple have fought to make sense of what happened.

Why on earth did their daughter ? a popular, intelligent and attractive girl ? do such a thing?

They could find only one clue: Hannah was what is known as an "emo".

Some describe it as a cult or a sect, but in reality the term ? derived from the word "emotional" ? encapsulates a trend that is becoming hugely popular among Britain's schoolchildren.

A trans-Atlantic import, its followers dress in black, favouring tight jeans, T-shirts, studded belts and sneakers or skater shoes.

Hair is all-important: often dyed black and straightened, it is worn in a long fringe brushed to one side of the face.

Music also plays a critical role.

Emos like guitar-based rock with emotional lyrics.

American bands such as My Chemical Romance, Good Charlotte and Blink 182 are particular favourites.

No doubt many adults would ask: "So what?"

On the surface, it all sounds typically teenage ? angst-ridden, over-dramatic and tribal.

Scroll down for more...

Heartbroken: Ray and Heather Bond said Hannah told them emo was 'just a fashion'

No different, in fact, to the Goth subculture that first emerged in Britain during the early 1980s.

There is, though, growing concern that there is a deeply unhealthy undertone to the emo movement.

Some time before her death, Hannah's parents, who live in Kent, noticed scarring on the inside of her wrists.

When they questioned her about it, honest and open as ever, she told them she'd inflicted the wounds herself and that it was part of an emo "initiation ceremony".

Only after her death would they discover how she had secretly chatted online to emo followers all over the world, talking about death and of the "black parade" ? a place where emos believe they go after they die.

A check of Hannah's home page on social networking site Bebo revealed her pseudonym, Living Disaster, and that she'd decorated it with a picture of an emo girl with bloody wrists.

Another picture showed a child's exercise book scrawled with the words: "Dear Diary, today I give up."

While Hannah's wrist injuries may have been slight, the issue of selfharm among adolescents is causing growing concern in British schools.

Scroll down for more

My Chemical Romance made it to No.1 in the UK chart with Welcome To The Black Parade in October 2006 - the 'black parade' is a place where all emos believe they will go when they die

New figures show that the number of children admitted to hospital due to injuries inflicted on themselves has risen by a third in five years.

In 2002/03 there were 11,891 such admissions; in 2006/07 this had risen to 15,955.

In both periods, there were more than three times as many admissions of girls as of boys.

Crucially, those who self-harm are more likely to go on to attempt suicide. While there is a multitude of reasons for this epidemic (exam-related stress and bullying to name but two), it is hardly surprising that the emergence of a sub-culture that appears to glamorise self-harm and even suicide is being regarded with alarm.

Inevitably, criticisms of emo culture are laughed off by those who consider themselves to be at the heart of it.

It's just a music thing, they say, and anyone who takes it further has something inherently wrong with them.

"If you listen to the lyrics, you will see there is nothing that promotes suicide; and even if there was, no right-minded person would listen to it and think: 'Now I'm going to kill myself,' ' a self-confessed emo wrote last week on a music website following the inquest into Hannah's death.

"I don't think anyone can say that there is a link between emo and suicide ? it's just a myth.

"Emo has become an easy target for ridicule like this; but the bottom line is emotional does not mean suicide."

That is true, of course. But as any parent will tell you, adolescent children can be highly irrational.

They are also easily influenced and may be illequipped to deal with powerful emotions that can be magnified by a sense of "membership" to a sub-group that revels in self-pity.

It is something that Lorraine Harrison is all too aware of. She has three daughters, the youngest of whom is 11-year-old Levi, a girl who classes herself as emo.

Recently, Levi asked her mother: "Just why do people kill themselves?"

"When she asked me that, it made me shudder," says Lorraine, 46, from Alston in Cumbria. "I managed to keep calm and explained to her that people's minds are very disturbed, and often they don't really want to die. But inside I felt sick with worry that Levi is thinking about such things."

From being the sort of girl who dressed in pink and played with Barbie dolls, now Levi will wear only black.

Her favourite T-shirt is patterned with skulls, and she spends hours in her room listening to music by My Chemical Romance.

"Their lyrics seem to be associated with depression and self-harm, and I feel shock when I listen to them," says her mother.

"Levi seems to have gone from being a lively girl who enjoyed having friends around, to someone who has become quite introverted."

When the topic of suicide was raised, Lorraine became so concerned that she telephoned Levi's father, David, from whom she is separated.

"He reminded me that I used to be a rebel, too," she says. "I was a punk rocker for a while, and he reassured me it was probably just a phase that Levi would grow out of.

"But I don't feel it is like the punk rock movement. That was about a zest for living and seeing life from a different angle. We didn't harp on miserably about dying."

Efforts to snap Levi out of her emo torpor have so far met with little success.

Before Christmas, Lorraine bought her daughter a wardrobe of brightly-coloured designer clothes and jeans, but they have barely been worn.

She has banned Levi from dying her hair black, but is worried about clamping down further in case it causes further rebellion.

Levi insists that her mother is worrying unnecessarily.

"I think many of the concerns around emos aren't true," she says.

"To me, emos skateboard a lot, dress in darker colours and listen to alternative rock music.

"It's also true they probably think about feelings more than other people.

"I do get teased for being an emo because some people at school think it's just about suicide and self-harm.

"But I think you would have to be depressed already to self-harm ? and I'm not depressed.

"I like going out dressed in emo clothes because it causes a stir. There aren't many emos where I live, so people look at you.

"It makes you feel individual."

That sense of rebellion and non-conformity is something that 21-year-old Jennina Taylor-Wells can relate to.

Now a student at Oxford Brookes University, she became an emo at 16.

For her, it was also about making a statement.

"I was going through an unhappy period at school," she recalls. "I grew up in the wealthy area of Cheshunt in Hertfordshire, and I was surrounded by spoilt rich kids. I felt that being an emo gave me a defined individuality."

Looking back, she acknowledges that the "cult", as she calls it, was heavily linked to self-harm and depression.

Many of her friends were actually taking prescription antidepressants.

"In hindsight, I can see that being involved with such a cult can be dangerous if you are a vulnerable personality.

"There is a very dark side to being an emo, which is about dressing in black and listening to music with very deep lyrics. That could tip a vulnerable person over the edge."

In recent years, the growing reach of the internet and social networking sites such as MySpace, Facebook and Bebo has meant that the influences to which teenagers are exposed are not controlled by mere geography.

While this can have positive effects, Professor Stephen Briggs, a clinician in the adolescent department of the Tavistock Clinic, says it can also adversely affect the way teenagers develop.

"With mobile phones, the internet and Facebook you can create a virtual world that means you need never be alone," he says. "It means that you don't ever have to be out of sight ? and that doesn't allow an adolescent to experience that sense of being a bit separate, of finding one's self.

"It means you don't have a chance to mature on your own; to know who you are."

Just what directed Hannah Bond's behaviour on that tragic September night last year will never be known.

At the inquest in Maidstone, Kent, Vanessa Everett, head teacher of Mascalls Secondary School where Hannah was a pupil, admitted there had been problems with emos harming themselves.

Everett added she thought it "probable" that Hannah might have been influenced by another emo girl at the same school who had attempted suicide a year earlier.

According to a fellow student, she was a close friend of Hannah's and one of a large number of emo pupils.

"The amount of boys and girls who seem to be into it is incredible," the teenager told the Mail. "I reckon there must be 15 to 20 per cent of pupils who are emos. A boy in my class has recently got into it and he's changed completely.

"He used to be normal but now he harms himself, he's dyed his hair black and he wears dark clothes and a really long black coat.

"He's got loads of plasters up his arms and cuts and marks. I tried to ask him about them but he ignored me."

It also emerged that in the months leading up to her death, Hannah had begun to use the internet more, secretively surfing the web on the family's laptop.

Her mother told the inquest: "About a month before [Hannah's death] I noticed that she was addicted to it [the internet].

"There was a definite change in her desire to be online."

On the night of her death, Hannah had spent the evening at a friend's house ? also an emo and one who had also cut himself, telling his mother: "We're emos, we all do it."

Hannah had wanted to sleep over and was upset at having to leave.

When they got home, Mrs Bond told Hannah to go to bed, adding that they would discuss the matter in the morning.

The teenager turned to her and said: "I feel like killing myself."

Breaking down in tears, Mrs Bond told the inquest: "I think I said: 'Don't be so silly ? we'll talk about it in the morning.'"

An hour later, Mrs Bond went into her daughter's bedroom at the family home in East Peckham, near Maidstone, and found Hannah's lifeless body hanging from the metal railing of the top bunk.

Returning a verdict of suicide, Coroner Roger Sykes said: "She had become an aficionado of the emo fad and she was a user of the internet, which enabled her to contact other emos all over the world, in particular America.

"But she was a very well-liked girl who had many friends and was doing well in school. In her mother's words, she had 'everything to live for'.

"The emo overtones concerning death and associating it with glamour I find very disturbing. It is not glamorous; just simply a tragic loss of such a young life."

The 200 friends and family who attended Hannah's funeral will no doubt echo that.

But not everyone seems to have learned the lesson.

In a tribute book set up at Hannah's school, one pupil left the following message: "I hope you enjoy the black parade."

Naive, misguided or just plain stupid.

But then, that's always been the trouble with some teenagers. And the danger of emo.

Share this article:

* Digg it
* | Del.icio.us
* | Reddit
* | Newsvine
* | Nowpublic
* | Facebook
* | MySpace
* | Fark

commentsAdd your comments View all
Comments (19)

Here's what readers have had to say so far. Why not add your thoughts below?

Wherever did you get this idea about 'emos' thinking there going to go to the black parade? That is a concept for the album, it's not real.

- Me, London, 15/5/2008 08:52

Like overdoses amongst some teenage girls as a way of saying "look, I took lots of Paracetamol because my boyfriend had a row with me - pay me some attention", self harm is just attention-seeking game playing. For most. Unfortunately this silly ploy is often a step too far, particularly with Paracetamol. And cutting yourself is almost never suicidal in these circumstances, just a badge to say "look at me, I feel miserable". But some teenagers don't know how far to take it - remember the girls who killed themselves when Robbie Williams left Take That? Pointless and silly. And very sad.

- Nick, Adelaide, 15/5/2008 08:48

Oh dear god. They're teenagers! Yes, it's tragic that this young girl has lost her life, but attaching blame to a phenomenon that reflects the depression - not causes it, is senseless.

- James, Cambs, 15/5/2008 08:40

**yourComments**

- **name**, **townAndCountry**, **creationDate**
View all
Add your comment

Name: Email: Your email address will not be published Town & Country: Your comments:

You have 1000 characters left.
Make text area bigger
Remember me - this will save you having to type out your name, location and email address when you next leave a comment.
Terms & conditions
Search Advanced Search

My Top 50 Stories
0

Click on the icon below an article to save to your favourite stories file

* Remove
* Check box to remove
* Open
* Close

* Remove
* Check box to remove
* Close

FEMAIL TODAY
'We just clicked': Adrian Chiles on his growing friendship with his One Show co-host He talks of 'brilliant' Christine Bleakley just days after marriage ends Adrian Chiles


You can keep those Bond girls: How Brosnan's wife took the plunge at Mamma Mia! premiere The actor was upstaged on the red carpet Pierce Brosnan


Cheryl Cole's joy as husband Ashley treats her to another birthday surprise The footballer whisked his pop star wife off for a lavish dinner Ashley Cole


Suzanne Shaw uncovered: Dancing On Ice queen strips off her make-up The blonde star went au naturel for a magazine photo shoot Suzanne Shaw


Louise Redknapp shows off her blooming baby bump in the Sardinian sun The WAG's pregnant glow hit full beam on her summer holiday louise redknapp


'I don't want to live any more': Desperate Kerry Katona admits she has considered suicide The troubled star revealed how she plunged into despair katona


She's terrified of germs and never wears same outfit twice. So how DID fashionista LIZ JONES survive Glastonbury? Style guru joins mud-fest liz jones


Wheelchair-bound Liz Taylor stuns in pink to help California celebrate gay marriage legislation The Dame put aside her health problems for a Hollywood party Elizabeth Taylor


Mamma Mia! Scarlet woman Meryl Streep turns the blue carpet red at film premiere She may be nearing 60 but Meryl looked red hot as she greeted fans mama mia


Wasting away: Kate Lawler appears shadow of former self as she hits beach in bikini The marathon-running Big Brother winner looks worryingly thin in Spain kate lawler


Suicide supermodel was 'on top of the world', say baffled friends The Vogue cover girl hid her unhappiness from friends russian cover girl


DON'T MISS
Double oh! Daniel Craig's steamy kiss with new Bond girl Gemma Arterton 007 always gets the girl, as these latest stills from the movie illustrate daniel craig


Guy arrives in New York for crisis talks with Madonna 'as money men are called in' Is the couple's marriage edging close to the divorce courts? guy ritchie


Little Suri Cruise earns her stripes as a Katie Holmes protégée When it comes to fashion in the Cruise household, mother certainly knows best Suri Cruise


Amy Winehouse parties until 4.30am after checking herself out of clinic It looks like the troubled singer has returned to her old ways Amy Winehouse


Oh baby! Jessica Alba shows off post-pregnancy figure Less than a month after giving birth, the stunning actress has shed all her extra weight Jessica Alba


'My marriage hit rock bottom because we couldn't stop bickering,' admits Davina McCall The Big Brother host had counselling to save her marriage davina mccall and matthew robertson


Who's Who? Robert Carlyle tipped to replace Time Lord David Tennant The Full Monty star Robert Carlyle is a hot favourite to take over as the Doctor doctor who


Act your age Sharon! The 50-year-old wears an eye-popping dress for a date with toyboy The Casino star wore a daringly low-cut top but very little make-up sharon stone


Lindsay Lohan strolls hand in hand with her lesbian lover as friends say she's finally happy The actress is making a real go of it with Samantha Ronson lindsay lohan


You're the best! Jennifer Aniston can't keep her hands off John Mayer after gig The actress behaved like a groupie in a cab after the Brixton Academy date aniston


Big Brother ladies man Stuart had a perm to make him look like Man Utd idol Ryan Giggs He may be wowing all the ladies now, but he didn't always look so good. bbstu


Spray that again! Wayne keeps Coleen cool in Vegas Mrs Rooney enjoyed a relieving, if surprising, burst from her new husband wayne and coleen


Is Sienna having a fling with ANOTHER married man? The actress has been seen out with billionaire oil heir (and dad of four) Balthazar Getty sienna


Big Brother Sylvia: 'Dennis is a hero for spitting on Mohammed' Axed housemate Sylvia took the ejected Scotsman's side in the unseemly row dennis/sylvia bb


TODAY'S POLL

She's been called the US Cherie - but what do you make of Michelle Obama?
Love her
Loathe her
vote
Michelle Obama
POLL RESULTS
All Polls
Click to view yesterday's poll results
Femail Headlines
Most Read


* Stripping for the cameras: Suzanne Shaw goes naked with no make-up
* Mama Mia! Scarlet woman Meryl Streep turns the blue carpet red at film premiere
* She's terrified of germs and never wears the same outfit twice. So how DID fashionista LIZ JONES survive Glastonbury?
* Not so clean-cut! How women take the rough but ditch the smooth when it comes to men's stubble
* 'We just clicked': Adrian Chiles on his growing friendship with One Show co-host
* Couple who advertised on buses for an egg donor reveal their new baby girl
* 'Happy 25th!' - Cheryl's smiling again as Ashley makes sure she has a VERY happy birthday
* Wheelchair-bound Liz Taylor stuns in pink to help California celebrate gay marriage legislation
* 'I don't want to live any more': Desperate Kerry Katona admits she has considered suicide
* Want it all, but short on cash? How to fake a designer lifestyle
* Supermodel, 20, who threw herself from her ninth floor New York flat was 'on top of the world', say stunned friends
* When clothes often involve exploitation, our style guru LIZ JONES asks: Can we bag a bargain with a clear conscience?
* Wasting away: Kate Lawler appears shadow of former self as she hits beach in bikini
* Double oh! Daniel Craig's steamy kiss with new Bond girl Gemma Arterton
* MORE HEADLINES



* She's terrified of germs and never wears the same outfit twice. So how DID fashionista LIZ JONES survive Glastonbury?
* Profits double for online fashion boutique ASOS, the site that trades in celebrity style
* So who is the girl who knows how to cope with Andy Murray's famous sulks and is making him human... (well almost)
* How a society beauty was finally murdered by the gay son she tried to 'cure' of homosexuality
* The good, the mad and the ugly... platform heels
* Not so clean-cut! How women take the rough but ditch the smooth when it comes to men's stubble
* Is honey really a good healer?
* When clothes often involve exploitation, our style guru LIZ JONES asks: Can we bag a bargain with a clear conscience?
* Tangerine dream
* Want it all, but short on cash? How to fake a designer lifestyle
* Celebrity style tribes
* My holiday with Princess Anne and how I had a nose job to look like Audrey Hepburn by Valerie Singleton
* MOST READ IN DETAIL





Find this story at www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-566481/Why-child-safe-sinister-cult-emo.html

*

Back to top

* Home
* News
* Sport
* TV&Showbiz
* Femail
* Health
* Science&Tech
* You mag
* Live mag
* Coffee Break
* Pictures
* Debate


i

* LactoFree
* It's Gro Time
* Swiftcover
* DulcoEase



Sitemap | Newsletters | RSS | Text-based site | Top of page

Daily Mail | Mail on Sunday | Travel Mail | This is Network | This is London | This is Money

Metro | Loot | Jobsite | Loopy Love | Find a property | Motors | Prime location | Lasting Tribute
AND
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday, Evening Standard & Metro Media Group

© 2008 Associated Newspapers Ltd

Contact us Terms Privacy policy Advertise with us
2008-07-01 19:35:00
y vos pensás que alguien lo va a leer?
2008-07-01 20:56:51
:s
yo lei el articulo pero no los comentarios
2008-07-01 21:30:49
Yo tmb
copia toda la pagina sin discriminar
2008-07-02 21:14:40
Rescataron a Ingrid Batancur y a otros 14 manes!!!!!!!!!!!!!
(edited)