Archive for the ‘mental illness’ Category

Medication

Friday, July 24th, 2009

There is no doubt that there are indeed expressions of mental illness that are diagnosable as organic problems that can only be treated with medication. Yet even in some severe cases, there seems to some room for cognitive intervention. I was reading a case study this morning about someone with severe anxiety disorder. It was so severe that the patient removed an IV twice during an attempt to treat her. The interesting comment made by the physician though was that “her sister calmed her down by talking to her and they were able to get the IV in the third time.” Do you see the paradox here?

Behavior or Illness?

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Our behavior is shaped by our experience. Our experience is a continuous series of events that we give meaning to through our perception. Our perception is based on our beliefs which, for the most part, are handed down to us through our family, friends and cultural environment. Our parents or primary caregivers are the biggest source of our beliefs and also a major source of our mental injuries. I postulate that mental injuries occur whenever we are made to feel worth-less than we truly are as people and therefore not lovable. This is important because we will adjust our behavior in all sorts of ways in order to gain the feeling and safety of being lovable.

This distortion of personality can manifest itself in many forms of what is described as mental illness and neurosis. But again, I italicize mental illness because, in absence of some organic brain disorder inherited at birth, many disorders are learned and therefore can be unlearned.