TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「Nina Langton had a great group of friends, lived in a prosperous Connecticut neighborhood and was close with her parents. Like most 16-year-olds, Nina spent much of her free time on her smartphone. But unlike many of her classmates, she was never "targeted" on social media—her word for the bullying and criticism that took place daily on sites like Snapchat. “Part of what made my depression so difficult was that I didn’t understand why I was feeling so sad,” says Nina, now 17, photographed here by @raniamatar. Later, after her attempted suicide and during her stay at a rehabilitation facility, Nina and her therapist identified body image insecurity as the foundation of her woe. “I was spending a lot of time stalking models on Instagram, and I worried a lot about how I looked,” she says. She’d stay up late in her bedroom, looking at social media on her phone, and poor sleep—coupled with an eating disorder—gradually snowballed until suicide felt like her only option. “I didn’t totally want to be gone,” she says. “I just wanted help and didn’t know how else to get it.” Read the full story about teens, smartphones and mental health on TIME.com. Photograph by Rania Matar (@raniamatar)—@instituteartist for TIME」10月23日 1時02分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 10月23日 01時02分


Nina Langton had a great group of friends, lived in a prosperous Connecticut neighborhood and was close with her parents. Like most 16-year-olds, Nina spent much of her free time on her smartphone. But unlike many of her classmates, she was never "targeted" on social media—her word for the bullying and criticism that took place daily on sites like Snapchat. “Part of what made my depression so difficult was that I didn’t understand why I was feeling so sad,” says Nina, now 17, photographed here by @raniamatar. Later, after her attempted suicide and during her stay at a rehabilitation facility, Nina and her therapist identified body image insecurity as the foundation of her woe. “I was spending a lot of time stalking models on Instagram, and I worried a lot about how I looked,” she says. She’d stay up late in her bedroom, looking at social media on her phone, and poor sleep—coupled with an eating disorder—gradually snowballed until suicide felt like her only option. “I didn’t totally want to be gone,” she says. “I just wanted help and didn’t know how else to get it.” Read the full story about teens, smartphones and mental health on TIME.com. Photograph by Rania Matar (@raniamatar)—@instituteartist for TIME


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