− | A thirteen-year-old girl was [https://wideinfo.org/?s=tragically tragically] found hanged in a park where she used to build dens with her brother after viewing social media sites which �[https://www.travelwitheaseblog.com/?s=%98trivialised%27 �trivialised'] suicide, her mother has claimed.<br>Alyssa Morris was found in Brungerley Park in Clitheroe, Lancashire five days short of her 14th birthday after [https://mondediplo.com/spip.php?page=recherche&recherche=mental%20health mental health] struggles and ‘social anxieties', an inquest heard.<br>According to her mother she had been bullied relentlessly at school, including being beaten up as well as being targeted online.<br>She is now urging parents to beware the potential harms from social media and online bullying, warning that children are ‘consumed by phones and social media'.<br>Life-saving procedures were attempted but Alyssa was pronounced dead later that day, February 12.<br> 13-year-old Alyssa had [https://www.groundreport.com/?s=reportedly reportedly] discussed ending her life in the months before her death<br> Alyssa was described as 'funny, beautiful, very clever' and planned to work with animals<br>Coroner Richard Taylor [https://pub-067ef61ad34c4c1684d973e7e5761e68.r2.dev/planet88.html bokep indonesia] told the hearing that a note from Alyssa 'doesn't give any explanation' for her actions, and recorded a conclusion of [https://www.shewrites.com/search?q=suicide suicide].<br>But afterwards her mother, Kathleen Firth said she was convinced that Alyssa had taken her life because of 'a combination of three things: bullying, social media and Covid'.<br>'They created a perfect storm of circumstances that my little girl just couldn't overcome,' she added.<br>She alleged that bullies beat Alyssa up at a bus stop but that police failed to take a statement, [https://www.buzzfeed.com/search?q=forcing forcing] Ms Firth to turn detective and seek CCTV footage herself.<br>And she hit out at social media platforms, claiming the use of the term 'unalive' instead of 'suicide' had the effect of 'trivialising' death for vulnerable young users.<br>Described as 'funny, beautiful, very clever', Alyssa loved musicals - especially Hamilton - and loved drawing, and she had ambitions to work with animals and the RSPCA.<br>According to her mother, she had no problems at primary school, but struggled after starting secondary school in 2020 - partly due to Covid requirements which saw pupils taught in 'bubbles'.<br>The hearing in Accrington was told that Alyssa began displaying 'social anxieties' and had self-harmed by cutting her arms.<br>Her mother suspected she was autistic, the hearing was told, although it was never formally diagnosed, and Alyssa became 'upset' when she sought medical help.<br>'Alyssa wasn't comfortable discussing issues in front of people,' she told the inquest.<br>'I could see instantly she was withdrawing from the conversation.'<br>She said she had spoken to Alyssa's school about her issues, but had been made to feel 'silly', and believed they had been made worse by Covid.<br>Ms Firth had referred her daughter to a GP but there had been no formal diagnosis of autism.<br>She said Alyssa turned to drawing, using a journal and 'her behaviour seemed more positive'.<br>Alyssa also started at a new school in Blackburn and seemed 'very positive', Ms Firth said.<br>The inquest heard how Alyssa had discussed taking her own life in online chat with two friends and had also looked into a suicide technique.<br>But in the days before her death her mother hadn't noticed 'anything unusual'.<br>'She had seemed so positive over the previous months,' Ms Firth said in her statement to the hearing.<br>'This was such a shock because there was nothing to suggest anything would happen.'<br>She was found in a secluded area of the park where she walked the [https://www.cbsnews.com/search/?q=family%20dog family dog] and had built dens with her brother.<br>In a statement after the hearing, Ms Firth said her daughter's mental health struggles started in Year 7 when 'bullies and Covid restrictions took my daughter's soul away and impacted her mental health'.<br>'False rumours circulated around school with misinterpreted videos,' she said.<br>'Thanks to phones and social media it didn't just consume her school life, but it intruded into her home life too.'<br>Despite moving school, bullying continued there and from previous classmates via social media, she claimed.<br>During one incident, in July 2022, Alyssa had been badly attacked at a bus stop by other children and it was reported to police, according to Ms Firth.<br>But she alleged that despite attending a police station, no-one took a statement from her.<br>By last September the bullying had stopped and Alyssa appeared to be 'thriving' after starting Year 9, she added.<br> Bullying reportedly continued after Alyssa moved schools, from old and new classmates<br> Alyssa's mother attributed her daughter's death to bullying, Covid and social media<br>Ms Firth accused social media platforms of trivialising suicide, saying she believed videos and content that Alyssa saw before she died 'failed to make her understand the severity of her actions'.<br>'Did she really understand the repercussions of what she was doing?' she asked.<br>Ms Firth said she was speaking out to raise awareness of the potential harms from social media and online bullying.<br>The schools Alyssa attended were not given at the hearing, and no-one from [https://www.blogher.com/?s=Lancashire%20Police Lancashire Police] or medical professionals who assessed her gave evidence.<br>The force said it was looking into Alyssa's mother's claims.<br>For confidential support, call the Samaritans on 116123 or visit samaritans.org<br>
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