The Truth about Mental Health Disorders – Psychology
Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 23-03-2010-05-2008
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Be My Friend – www.myspace.com The Truth about Mental Disorders. Dr. John Breeding, Ph.D. psychologist discusses how mental disorders are created by the American Psychiatric Association and listed in the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical manual of Mental Disorders. Disorders such as bipolar, ADHD, OCD, Anxiety Disorders, etc. are voted into existence by APA committees. The underlying assumption of biological psychiatry is that mental illness is biologically based despite the fact that no solid science has been able to identify biological markers for mental illnesses. Visit Dr. Breedings Website at www.wildestcolts.com This video was produced by Psychetruth http www.myspace.com Copyright ©CAEST 2007. All Rights Reserved. This video maybe displayed in public, copied and redistributed for any strictly non-commercial use in its entire unedited form. Alteration or commercial use is strictly prohibited.


Option ? The entire history of pyshciatry is just full of options isnt it ? NO it’s damn power play , always has been and always will be . Option, what a joke . Psych’s team up with the legal pro’s , who team up with the political . It’s a POWER PLAY and nobody really cares what happens with the actual subject.
The gauntlet ……
Rapists who lure children over the Internet have insidious intentions, intend to violate a statute or series of statutes, and usurp the receiver of any free will. Their activities violate kidnapping laws and obviously the act of rape is a crime. This is in no way analogous to a person’s experience with a drug to which they had an adverse reaction for reasons previously mentioned.
Whether or not a person has a negative experience does not determine if the giver had insidious or benign intentions. Unethical practices are associated with secretive behavior that violates the promulgated definitions of standard practice and conformity. Whether or not you agree with the practice does not justify its ethical or unethical behavior. Since psychiatrists are bound by the same laws as any other doctor as well as the same legal consequences, and because this constitutes
a constraint upon their modus operandi, it is simply impossible for it to be unethical behavior. Scammers guarantee you will reap rewards by following through, their activities are aimed to deceive. Psychiatrists do not confine your options to only one (therapy is always an option, so is walking out), allow the patient to voice any complaints or concerns, and do not make any guarantees, so psychiatrists and spammers are not analogous in any meaningful way.
A doctor should never give a patient anything that would cause them harm. This is like saying scammers are fine doing what they do because its our choice whether we fall for it or not. Or that children who meet people on the internet are raped with justification because it was their mistake. There isn’t enough space in a single youtube comment to tell you everything that they do which is unethical, you can research that on your own. The CCHR has several great publications on the subject.
He didn’t ask for a second opinion, he didn’t ask for an explanation of the diagnosis, he didn’t ask how the drugs worked to treat his problem, and he didn’t bother calling the psychiatrist if and when things had gone wrong. These unscrupulous habits can all contribute to a negative experience with any doctor, not just psychiatrists.
It is entirely relevant because he was not his own advocate. It is not as if we live in some totalitarian state where a psychiatrist will sweep through your house, pin you down, and force you to take drugs. The idea of psychiatry is using all of the methods of any other doctor, in addition to the same training and focusing on behavioral symptoms. Where is the evidence that they are unethical? You cannot be unethical when you are placing an option in a person’s hands.
okay thanks hagelt18. It’s true that physical signs like brain abnormalities arnt visible or rarely there, even though the person can be suffering. Wether it’s measurable in a proper medical way or not, some mental illnesses cause so many problems, for the sufferer and/or the family n friends, and in that sense they are very real. Thanks again
Wow. Hey when you put it that way, your point becomes so much more clear. I’m sorry I didn’t quite understand it until you insulted me some more.
Fuck off, retard. You don’t seem to understand anything.
Why are you even upset? I just said that the drug is addictive. You seem to agree with me.
I’ve been on it for more than 7 years, dip-shit. Cutting someone cold turkey of it would result in lawsuit. Hello? Ever heard of medical negligence?
What he is saying is that the DSM does not contain any diseases which have any measurable evidence. They are all based on observations and conjectures alone. They can, however, be symptoms of real diseases at best. Numerous “mental illnesses” which can be found in the DSM can be symptoms of real diseases like thyroid disease.
That is because Xanax is an addictive drug. Withdrawal from benzodiazepines is not at all uncommon.
Your questions don’t really seem relevant to Santo’s problem. The point of the post is that psychiatrists don’t seem to be good at anything other than prescribing drugs for any problem that comes at them without much thought. Maybe Santo did make the mistake of seeing a psychiatrist in the first place, but s/he is not the one who is to be held responsible for their poor and unethical methods of treatment.
@FoxxySheist My mental health doctor took me off of xanax and I’m more riled up and probably at to the point that if someone gave me a weird look, I’m more than likely to hit and strike someone down.
@SantoEkdahldo You’re right about that. I have about 10 different problems… Like: ADD, ADHD, OCD, anxiety disorder, panic attacks, suicidual thought and attempted suicide, severe depression, anger problems, nerve problems, and insomnia; yet, mental health doctors cannot even help me anymore to the point. I’m like a walking time-bomb.
That isn’t the problem of psychiatry. It is your fault for not being your own advocate and seeing a therapist first. Why didn’t you describe your feelings and your life situation to a psychologist first? If you were adverse to taking medication, why did you take it? Why didn’t you ask for a second opinion on your diagnosis? Why did you continue to see the psychiatrist if it wasn’t in your interest? And you must have the most awful insurance on the planet if one session cost you hundreds.
Think of the underlying law of nature.
Consider its astounding inferences and implications.
The single, underlying law … of nature! Not merely of physics, chemistry, psychology, biology, etc., but of all fields of inquiry known to humankind. The law we can all relate to, identify, understand and apply.
Ask yourself. What is the underlying law of nature?
Delight in the question. Have fun in the process of finding the answer firsthand for yourself.
Google it, as a start.
I was once diagnosed with a mental illness after 5 minutes with a shrink, to the tune of several hundred dollars, and given a very questionable drug. I’ve been bounced around for years with expensive shrinks and bothersome drugs, as if real psychotherapy no longer existed. It profits corporations to drug people, but it only buries real issues, and no one is willing to pay for real treatment anymore–public health no longer matters.
My doctor once told me that recovering from Severe Panic Disorder/Agorophobia was like ‘Clicking your heels and saying I’m back in kansas!”
This will go down as one of the most astonishing things he ever said to me, he’s reluctant to give out any medication to me and to be honest i’m desperate for the medication, anything to fix whats gone wrong. It’s different for everyone and doctors are only people and they dont know everything. You do know yourself though……You gotta help yourself.
i have mental health problem
i have mental health thanks to my ex-wife familt friends the only thing help normal sometime is drivie my 1993 ford mustang v-8 5-speed manual lx convertible black on black with pony rims
Shame on you for oversimplifying a complex issue. My brother was having severe mood swings and tried to kill himself. He was diagnosed with bipolar. Thank god, otherwise he wouldn’t have got the help he needed. We didn’t see the label as an ugly thing. Merely a classification. However, in his case he needed medication. Not to numb him, but to balance him out and help him find peace.
Shame on you for oversimplifying a complex issue. My brother was having severe mood swings and tried to kill himself. He was diagnosed with bipolar. Thank god, otherwise he wouldn’t have got the help he needed. We didn’t see the label as an ugly thing. Merely a classification. However, in his class he needed medication. Not to numb him, but to balance him out and help him find peace.