I'm confused. As someone who has 2 close family members with #DissociativeIdentityDisorder previously called #MultiplePersonalityDisorder Where did all of these people with #plural in their bios come from recently? Is this a common perception of other #MentalIllness too? Is it a lifestyle thing? Are people just more comfortable to be seen now?
#OSDD
#DID
#Plurality
#PluralTalk
#pluralgang
#psychology
#psychiatry
#MentalHealth
#psychotherapy
#Therapy
#neurodivergent
#neurodiversity
@Superfreq I have seen that...some people know that they have different personalities in their head, and before (or if) they are even diagnosed with a mental disorder, they do that so that they can deal with it better on their own...At least I think from knowing some folks who see themselves that way. I, too, am neurodivergent, though I have no interest in seeing what the medical establishment would potentially label me, because guaranteed they would. That's my thoughts on it, anyway.
@cambridgeport90
Can't really blame them given the state of mental health support honestly. We shouldn't have to DIY it but sometimes that's the best way anyway.
Thanks for sharing your POV.
@Superfreq No problem at all. Psychiatrists, and to a lesser extent, psychologists, need to start looking at things a bit differently. Just because someone is different, doesn't make them ill.
@cambridgeport90
You're ultimately always going to have to choose some guidelines even if they're arbitrary. I guess the best you can do is try to choose the least harmful ones, based on majority rule, expertise, or both.
@Superfreq The cruelest thing I believe that psych professionals do is keep people in some cases sedated on a constant basis. I believe that rehab, not prison, should be the way going forward for those who were clearly diagnosed as insane during trials. It could always be made up, but I have to believe that the majority of people would want to tell the truth. No one is pure evil, in my opinion.
@cambridgeport90
Assuming rehab is possible with the techniques we have in their lifetime...
The line is between making them as comfortable as possible and making them safe around them selves and others.
Some DR's just give up and use sedation for convenience because they don't care about the patient any more. Some can't guarantee safety otherwise because of lacking resources. Some patients are genuinely so constantly destructive that we can't do anything else for them except kill them.
@cambridgeport90
Not saying it's right, just laying it all out. Either way, it's fucking terrible for the patient and will probably make them far worse than they were before.
@Superfreq It's basically signing up for intentional brain damage when it's long term. A friend of mine was put on Haldol, briefly, and she hopes to never be put on it again. I forget why they did that, though. She didn't like it.
@cambridgeport90
Ideally it's supposed to be temporary for most conditions, but I agree. We generally have a quick fix, get back to work, shake it off culture in most of the west, and at this point it's hard to say how much of the medical system was formed from that, and how much of the culture has been changed because of the medical system.
Either way, under resourcing mental health assistance isn't helping.