on_one_wheel wrote:North East wrote:on_one_wheel wrote:See, the thing about mental illness. ... it's all in your head.
That's a pretty poor comment....isn't it?
with all due respect I don't think it's poor at all.
ask yourself this, when a doctor diagnoses someone with a mental illness how dose he arrive at his diagnosis? Blody test .... no, x rays ... no, temperature , ear wax, look at your tongue. .... no He asks you how your feeling
Your mental state is simply your feelings ... it's all in your head
My father came up to me and told me he had been diagnosed with major depression and was using anti depressants, I was taken back by his courage to come to me with that but I asked him the same question about his diagnosis and said to him " Dad that's bulls**t. .. something in your life is making you depressed ... you need to sort it out "
Guess what ? He sorted it out , within the week he had filed a divorce with my mother and after all the messy divorce stuff had settled down he was one happy camper, new missus and all not to mention antidepressant free.
that's why I say, Depression. ..
It's all in your head
oh ... I forgot to mention, my mum took it really bad at the time but now she too has partnered up and is the happiest I have ever known her.
Hey Mate,
I appreciate that you have your own way of looking at things, like we all do, and it's great that it worked for your old man. But to be honest I think that you might benefit from taking a step back and re-assessing the situation in the broader sense of the word. This isn't a personal attack, but
Firstly, you're way off to dismiss mental illness as 'feelings'. It's not that at all, that is a symptom of a greater, far more complex system. The brain is a real, physical organ in your body, and like all physical organs - it's subject to malfunction. You can't think your way out of bipolar, PTSD, schizophrenia and a vast amount of other mental illnesses. That's like trying to think your way out of cancer. You've got Buckley's.
You see, the reason that people are reacting to your post is pretty simple. The position you take isn't unique, and it's the social meme of 'it's all in your head' that is the exact flavour of ignorance responsible for the ongoing status quo regarding men and mental illness. The whole reason that there is such a sky high suicide statistic in males is because there are too many viewpoints, such as your own, that promote an unfounded and unscientific approach to a medical condition. It's dangerous, I think that's why people are a bit edgy mate.
From my perspective, it really takes two seconds to see that your black and white thinking is flawed. Stay with me here, and genuinely listen - I'm not f***ing with you, I would love to open your eyes to a different way of looking at this. 'Feelings' are not, as you seem to think, the beginning and the end of the issue. That position dangerously lacks complexity. Here's an example that counters your views:
Hyperthyroidism is basically when some little glands that are working too hard and change the makeup of hormones in your blood. Now, the brain - which is an organ, not just 'feelings' - reacts to the new makeup of the blood and that manifests itself in a dramatic change of 'feelings'. For example, you feel nervousness, anxiety, irritability and high emotions - as well as an increased libido - the feeling of being horny as f***.
So, you see? Chemicals actually do effect the tremendous organ that is the brain, and in doing so, changes your feelings against their will. Not the other way around. Although, you're right in one sense, if you decrease stress, meditate and eat well - you can actually change the chemical make up of your brain. But that only goes so far. For example, you can't meditate your way out of a brain tumour that is effecting your frontal lobe. The frontal lobe is where your personality and abstract thinking is generated. Injuries and tumours in this area create huge personality changes, or big swings of 'feelings'. Again, a symptom - not the over-simplified view that you take.
You should read a book called - The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat by Oliver Sachs. He's an amazingly funny, and incredibly talented author that covers the odd things that happen when a brain is chemically, physically or functionally out of whack. It's one of the best books I've ever read. You should get into it.
While I'd prefer you to just understand the obviousness of the counterpoint of your argument, I understand that some people who are suffering more than you could ever imagine would be genuinely insulted. I'm not, but I'd like to see you try to explain your theory to people who are sick and need help. I'd like to see you explain to a veteran that wakes up screaming in the middle of the night, that the burning flesh he smells and screams he hears in his bedroom are just 'feelings'. Or could you tell a young man that the reason he can't get it up isn't because he's psychologically damaged from being raped as a child, that it's just his 'feelings'? I doubt it, and if you can, I wouldn't blame them for being upset with you.
Did you know that feelings are chemicals? The 5HT2A receptor regulates mood, it's the lock and compounds like serotonin and melatonin are the keys. Too little, or uneven amounts of either of those spell trouble. Serotonin imbalances are a huge cause of depression, not the other way around. Melatonin is the compound known as 'the sleeping hormone' that also fits into the 5HT2A receptor, and if the pineal gland fails to produce enough - you'll have racing thoughts, anxiety and won't get to sleep. If you take a melatonin pill, you'll get sleepy, and if someone tries to keep you awake - you'll get cranky. Chemicals and feelings are one inter-dependent system, you see?
Feelings are a symptom in an infinitely complex and fascinating organ. However, they are not a sole cause.
Funnily enough, your opinion is a symptom - a symptom of an out-of-date collective mentality that is increasing the risks of good men hanging themselves, because they think their 'feelings' are messed up - and it's their fault.
Take some time to think about what I've said.
R