Monday, January 28, 2013

Mental Illness Q and A - Mental Illness Research

Mental Illness Q and A - Mental Illness Research

Waiver
This information is offered for educational purposes only and is not intended to serve as medical advice. The information provided should not be used for diagnosing or treating a health problem or disease. It is not a substitute for professional care. If your child, teen, or you have any health concerns, please consult your health care provider.
Q: What do you have to say about the painful stigma that still exists against people with a mental illness?
A: Every mental illness is essentially a subconsciously controlled and self-orchestrated "selfish reaction." A mentally ill child, teen, or adult is in strong reacting to the selfish and abusive choices of an unloving parent.
The "disease model" that is being marketed is to the public designed to take the spotlight off of abusive parents and enables doctors to prescribe powerful and costly psychiatric medications that numb patients to their reactive negative parent-related memories and feelings. Current medical theories and treatments drain people of their money, while enhancing the bank accounts of medical professionals and the pharmaceutical industry.
Too bad we don't stigmatize our "greed," "selfishness," and "selfish control." Those kinds of stigma would benefit all of us.
Q: From what I have read most of the parents of teenage suicide victims claim that they had no clue that their children were having a problem. Could that actually be true?
A: Of course not. Nor is it true that young people kill themselves or try to kill themselves because they got a poor grade, were jilted by a lover, were taunted by friends, were depressed over losing at a sport, were rejected because of their sexual orientation, or were at the negative effect of drugs. There is always more going on.
There are always deeper reasons that usually relate to parents and how the suicide victim was treated at home. Parent related sexual abuse is probably the main ingredient that provides the "emotional charge" that provides impetus to the drive to end one's life.
Q: Do you think that someday we will no longer view mental illness as a "disease?"
A: I hope so.
I also hope that we quickly come to view all mental illnesses as being the "selfish reactions" that they actually are. Otherwise, the mentally ill will suffer in their denial, reaction, and illusion, with no realistic way to heal from their pain.
Q: Don't the studies that show imbalances of neurotransmitters in the brains of mentally ill individuals, and structural and energetic differences between the brains of people with mental illnesses and normal people, and the studies that link certain genes to particular mental disorders prove that mental illnesses are "biologically caused?
A: Mental illnesses do not have a biological cause. Psychology and a person's negative intentions and choices cause mental illnesses. Medical studies assert that they do but, in fact, they prove no such thing.
Researchers refuse to consider that psychology can and regularly does affect biology. Obvious examples of how that happens occur constantly in everyday life. These example stare researchers the in the face. However, not because they are ignorant, which they are not, but for self-serving reasons they choose to see and interpret facts as they want to see the or are told to see them.
Consider how a person's choices to become fearful or angry will affect the physical body's heart rate, blood pressure, breathing, muscle tension, the flow of brain chemicals, hormones, and blood distribution. These are clear examples of psychology altering conditions in the physical body. When medical researchers look at brain scans and see physical abnormalities, they are looking are "effects" not "causes."
The medical and pharmaceutical establishments have "good" self-serving reasons for putting the cart before the horse.
Q: Do you deny that the drug therapies for severe mental illnesses such as bipolar disorder, clinical depression, even schizophrenia remarkably effective?
A: Yes. Psychiatric drugs are somewhat effective at controlling symptoms, but only for a time for a time, and not for all sufferers.
However, as every mentally ill person knows, more powerful doses or more combinations of drugs are usually needed to keep reactive negative memories and feelings from leaking into conscious awareness. Drugs can control and also produce painful side-effects, but they do not heal.
Over-medicating by mental health experts, especially the drugging of children and the elderly, has gotten way out of hand.
Q: What do you think of electro-shock therapy?
A. I think it is a barbaric practice.
Q: What are your thoughts about the Cognitive Therapies that are so popular?
A. Cognitive Therapies have a major flaw. They assume that "wrong thinking" is the problem. In fact, "wrong choices" are the core problem. Remember, before we think a thought, experience a feeling, take an action, or have a reaction, we subconsciously choose the thought, feeling, action, or reaction. If that were not the case, everyone's inner experience would be totally chaotic.
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