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Re: ECT treatment

Hi Ivana

When you experience auditory hallucinations it is nothing remotely like that at all.  

It is a actually not brought on by the stress of socialising. It tends to happen more when I am alone.

Unfortunately I have suffered from diagnosed auditory hallucinations for some time. My first admission to the MHU was because of this.

Its very hard to explain it to people but running commentary is only one dimension. "Hearing voices" takes on many forms. Sometimes for me it acompanied by disorientaion and loss of clarity, sort of a confused condition.

 

 

Re: ECT treatment

Typo .
Last line should say "I have things to offer".

Re: ECT treatment

Thanks for the insight Kenny66.
That must be difficult to live with.
If the running commentary says something and you disagree/challenge it's position does it reduce this symptom or make no difference?

Re: ECT treatment

that's a very good point.

One of the strategies we are taught to use is not to engage with the "voices", no bargaining and no debate, no reasoning and no fighting. Challenging can sometimes make things much worse.

Of course all is not as easy as it seems. When the "voices" are just out there and take over your consciousness, well there's no chance to do anything because you are then in an unreal world brought on by the psychosis.

 

 

 

 

Re: ECT treatment

thank you
In a minute....Ille also comment on @iIvana.....what I think she is writing.....
My husband diagnosed with chronic paranoid schizophrenia.........my darling man......I was given many many explanations of symptoms but none as good as yours.
another one was..... Live in another world.......

I'm not interested in web unless it's Sane and wrote to Sane when i
First remet him.
It seems to me you have an intelligent grip on your diagnosis...... Can you say.....get an instance where you are getting paranoid and reason yourself out of it????
on 11 paragraph,this is what my poor darling husband was going through when he reached out for help just before I had to leave him
Heartbreaking.

This does nt sound humorous to me at all. It feels scary and mind bending. you must need a lot of brain power and then......to write on Sane forums.....well......your good stuff.

@Ivana.......I'm also writing out of the box too but do you mean someone like........me

who is 'diagnosed as a typical 'normal,' hysteric (normal woman......This is what Freud diagnosed us ) but with a dose and half with PTSD and complicated with brain damage.......

Is basically 'normal,' but has a tendency to fall into psychosis quickly while under stress?

A whole load of terminologies .......

Re: ECT treatment

Hi @kenny66 @PeppiPatty and @ivana

Very interesting and informative and courageous; thanks guy's for posting

Re: ECT treatment

Thanks @Peace.
I dunno, it's all really from @kenny66 and @ivana but I have a smile on my face. Don't you love how responses are .......creative. Finding creativity in illness.....snappy an original....

Re: ECT treatment

I am not sure whether you could reason yourself out of a paranoid delusion or not.

My flatmate is a paranoid schizophrenic and there is no way you could reason him out of anything once he gets it into his head.

The nature of the paranoia is that you believe it no matter what, so its difficult to reason that it isn't.

For example I got it into my head early last year that there was a guy hiding in my garage. I rang the local cops who came down and showed me there was noone.

But I couldn't get it out of my head so I put a bolt on the door to the garage. Now the psych and everyone else could demonstrate to me it couldn't be but it didn't matter, I still believed it no matter what.

Even today I have some inkling that it could have been true. So you agree it couldn't be true to them but inside you think it might be.

The problem with paranoia is that it blurs the line between reality and unreality so you are never really sure if something happened or not. That's one difficulty in getting on with your life in a usual sort of way.

There are grounding techniques which help and my mates usually pull me up if they see me going off, so it can be manageable.

As I have said a lot before medication helps massively with this as does the support of your healthcare team.

 

 

Re: ECT treatment

hi

You are clearing a lot of 'stuff,' up for me. Thank you.

this morning I was remembering when I
Turned up at this lawyers meeting on dealing with people who suffer mental ill health......I was so overwhelmed and raw...
Just sat there in shock at all this intellectualising stuff overwhelmed and Thinking how can I get these doodle brains to change their minds on a certain law of the state affecting people with mental ill health?


After x years.......I realise my only breakthrough was to take care of myself but I was just learning this.




Your living arrangement seems very creative

Re: ECT treatment

Its not only lawyers.

I might be off track but I do know what you mean about people intellectually talking and hypothesising about people with mental health but not really understanding what it is all about.

It reminds me when I went for my job capacity test with centerlink hoping that they would pass me for some work. My assessor had no idea whatsoever about what you could and could not manage with shizoaffective or schizophrenia for that matter.

I got failed because of the outdated misconceptions about that particular MI.

Schizophrenia/schizoaffective gets talked about a lot but much of it is ill informed.

Most governments appoint a minister for mental health these days but I haven't seen anything come out of that initiative.

You know understanding MI is difficult without living it in some way, whether its a health professional or someone with an MI. So getting lawmakers and government policy makers to come up with meaningful and relevant laws is a big ask.  

The reason MH is so ignored by government is because they stigmatise it and a lot of the time don't treat it as a legitimate illness or understand it.

I saw a government minister talking about suicide bombers on Q&A this week, where he described all of them as having a mental illness.

Whilst I was glad MI got a mention it seemed rather negative in that connotation.

Informed people understand that they are created by marginalisation, poverty, exclusion with warped interpretation of religious teaching.

My living arrangement just sort of happened. Mainly because we were both young and had relatively poor life skills, so we are a good support for one another.

I really don't have any family to speak of so the people I meet at my mental health clinic fill that void.

I don't really have any really close friends who don't have a MI but that suits me fine. The other acquaintances I have are very understanding, if somewhat bemused by my antics sometimes.

I couldn't really see myself living with a non MI person, it might be a bit more of a complicated and complex situation than most non MI people could endure I would think.