The Straight Dope

Go Back   Straight Dope Message Board > Main > General Questions

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 01-18-2003, 02:49 PM
even sven even sven is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Nov 1999
Why does schitzophrenia manifest itself in such predictable ways?

We are all pretty familier with tinfoil hats and CIA brain implants. From what I know (correct me if I am wrong) a lot of these beliefs can be attributted to schitzophrenia. I havn't really studied up on schitzophrenia, so please correct my misconceptions.

Why is it so common for the CIA and mind reading beams etc. to be a theme in schitzophrenic delusions? It is almost downright predictable. Is it the influence of others, or do beliefs about the CIA and that sort of thing appear spontaniously? What do schitzophrenics in other cultures (and in the past, when technology wasn't so prominent) get worried about? Does schitzophrenia even exist in "primitive" cultures?

Thanks in advance!
Reply With Quote
Advertisement
  #2  
Old 01-18-2003, 03:04 PM
KneadToKnow KneadToKnow is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Charlotte, NC, USA
Posts: 15,327
Quote:
please correct my misconceptions.
I'll start with the simplest. It's schizophrenia.
__________________
Sometimes you have to roll the hard six.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 01-18-2003, 03:52 PM
CC CC is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2000
Location: not elsewhere
Posts: 2,754
One way to think about your questions might be to consider that when people exhibit these behaviors, we use those behaviors to classify them as schizophrenic. People aren't simply schizophrenic by some nature, and then all seem to exhibit the same symptoms. When people hear voices in machines, we call that a symptom of a condition which we call schizophrenia. In other words, your question is similar to asking what's up with the coincidence of people with colds ALL saying that their eyes itch. Why do people with colds all seem to report the same phenomenon? And why that one, for cripes sake? See what I'm sayin?
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 01-18-2003, 04:05 PM
Moe Moe is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Mar 2000
Well, if you have a natural tendency to be paranoid who would you most likely be paranoid of? Seems to me the CIA and gov't in general are the most likely targets. Even non-paranoid people are often mistrustful of the gov't.

Aliens (i.e. extra-terrestrials) seem to also be a likely area of paranoia for people in general.
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 01-18-2003, 04:09 PM
Regina Regina is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
My completely unprofessional opinion is that what you describe is a result of the symptom of hearing voices and hallucinating. To the schizophrenic, those voices are very real, and naturally, the person wants to put an explanation to the voices. Thus, it must be aliens or the government putting the voices there.

Off the subject (sort of), have you seen the latest research that smoking marijuana early in life can lead to a higher chance of schizophrenia and depression? I wonder if it isn't just that that type of person is likely to self-medicate.
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 01-18-2003, 04:15 PM
barbitu8 barbitu8 is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
Not all schizophrenics are paranoid, only those who suffer from paranoid schizophrenia. By definition, schizophrenia is a psychosis, which means that the afflicted individual has lost contact with reality. The usual symptom I've seen is that God is communicating to the person, sometimes through a radio, sometimes just through his mind. This is a common defense, that God told him to kill. You may want to read this .
__________________
There are 10 kinds of people in this world: those who understand binary numbers and those who don't.
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 01-18-2003, 05:13 PM
Coileán Coileán is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Re: Why does schitzophrenia manifest itself in such predictable ways?

Quote:
Originally posted by even sven
[Numbering mine]
1. Why is it so common for the CIA and mind reading beams etc. to be a theme in schitzophrenic delusions? It is almost downright predictable.
2. Is it the influence of others, or do beliefs about the CIA and that sort of thing appear spontaniously?
3. What do schitzophrenics in other cultures (and in the past, when technology wasn't so prominent) get worried about? Does schitzophrenia even exist in "primitive" cultures?
I've never worked with schizos and my recollection of this diagnosis is a bit hazy but I'll take a stab at this.

1. Someone mentioned that the CIA etc. is an easy target. Though this is sensible enough, it's not the only factor. The CIA paranoids are used as a text book example of symptomology. It's not that this is an obligatory target, but rather, a good example of one. That said, there could be a better that chance occurrence of gov't paranoia but of the top of my head, I can't remember reading about it*.

2. This is a somewhat awkward question couched in a bit of theory. It's my impression that schizo. is widely thought to be biological in origin. Thus, symptoms are manifest from the individual and are not the result of external input. However, there was (and perhaps still is) a good deal of research that points to the dynamic interaction of the individual + environment as the trigger for the onset of illness.

To address your question more directly. Though the indiv.+env. hypothesis (the diathesis-stress model?) accounts for the onset of illness, it does not mean that environmental influence determines the actual symptoms, just that it brings them out. My opinion, FWIW, is that the symptoms arise a as function of the illness. In the context of your question this means no, paranoia does not arise spontaneously. However, the actual target for the paranoia (eg. CIA) originates from the individual and though stereotypes exist, this can vary from patient to patient.

3. As for people who would have been given a diagnosis of schizo. before the advent of gov't. Well, there are other plenty of other targets for paranoia. God's a good one, the devil or other demons were pro'ally pretty popular back then, and in a pinch, I suppose even your neighbour would do (admittedly, the last of these doesn't really have the same sense of grandiosity, but hey, I did say in a pinch). Additionally, I've heard that many of those considered shamans, soothsayers, etc. would earn themselves a diagnosis or two if you were to take the DSM back in time.

*By no means does this discredit the assertion, it simply means I don't rember reading of it.
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 01-18-2003, 06:39 PM
MC Master of Ceremonies MC Master of Ceremonies is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Not all people suffering from schizophrenia are paranoid, infact just yesterday I was talking to someone suffering from catatonic schizophrenia, who told me how he had gone into a catatonic state for some period of time and had also believed he was Jesus. He had no more paranoia than someone not suffering from schizophrenia.

The key thing here is that schizophrenics do not really recognize that they are unwell.

put yourself in the mind of a schizophrenic:

you are hearing voices in your head that are not part of you, what are the possible explanations for this (given that you do not recognize you are unwell)?

Basically the explantions of God, the Devil, Jesus, Aliens, the CIA are all attempts to rationalize a situation that cannot truly be rationalized.
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 01-18-2003, 06:42 PM
bbeaty bbeaty is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Aug 1999
I've seen an old article about "mental ray" complaints from the 1940s. It seems that police departments usually knew of a few loony types who were convinced that their neighbors were trying to control their actions with "mental rays." Maybe they got the idea from pulp science fiction magazines?


Hey, maybe in the distant past it wasn't "the CIA using mind-control technology," instead maybe it was your evil neighbors "using witchcraft" to control your actions, or sending invisible demons to torment you with voices.
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 01-18-2003, 06:43 PM
MC Master of Ceremonies MC Master of Ceremonies is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
I should of added:

Therfore, the examples above of for example are infact the most rational explantions in this situation and this is why so many schizophrenics choose one of them.
Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old 01-18-2003, 06:44 PM
MC Master of Ceremonies MC Master of Ceremonies is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
sorry:

"Therfore, the examples above are infact......."
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 01-18-2003, 07:55 PM
ultrafilter ultrafilter is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: May 2001
Quote:
Originally posted by MC Master of Cermonies
The key thing here is that schizophrenics do not really recognize that they are unwell.
On the contrary, many schizophrenics do know that they are unwell. There are also those who are too far gone to know that they're nuts, but IIRC, they're in the minority (although maybe not by a substantial amount).
Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old 01-18-2003, 08:09 PM
Speaker for the Dead Speaker for the Dead is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Oddly enough, delusions (under which paranoia, belief that one is god, etc.) are considered a "postive" symptom, along with such things as inappropriate emotions and acting silly.
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old 01-18-2003, 08:10 PM
ultrafilter ultrafilter is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: May 2001
Quote:
Originally posted by Speaker for the Dead
Oddly enough, delusions (under which paranoia, belief that one is god, etc.) are considered a "postive" symptom, along with such things as inappropriate emotions and acting silly.
"positive" in this context means that something's there that shouldn't be. Look at the "negative" symptoms--they're all the absence of behaviors that normal people exhibit.
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old 01-18-2003, 10:58 PM
Shabadu Shabadu is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Re: Why does schitzophrenia manifest itself in such predictable ways?

Quote:
Originally posted by even sven
Why is it so common for the CIA and mind reading beams etc. to be a theme in schitzophrenic delusions? It is almost downright predictable. Is it the influence of others, or do beliefs about the CIA and that sort of thing appear spontaniously? What do schitzophrenics in other cultures (and in the past, when technology wasn't so prominent) get worried about? Does schitzophrenia even exist in "primitive" cultures?


I think it is interesting that people associate these things as being an indicator of schizophrenia. I have known and worked with many schizophrenics in my life, both medicated and not, and I have only met one person who would even have delusions that come close to these. I think these are more the stereotypes that have been used in popular culture and media to indicate a schizophrenic, and therefore it has perpetuated a not so common symptom as being more of a norm.

As for other cultures and pre-technology schizophrenia. I worked with a girl at an adult foster care for the mentally ill who was from Kenya. We worked with mostly schizophrenic patients, and she found it interesting that we classified these people as mentally ill. Back home, people would say that these people are demon possessed. There is also a theory that people as far back as Biblical times who were labeled as demon possessed were really suffering from schizophrenia. Delusional behavior will always come from what is known, and so different societies and times would have different types of delusions and it will have many different norms in each culture.
Reply With Quote
  #16  
Old 01-18-2003, 11:35 PM
Ring Ring is offline
Charter Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: South Carolina USA
Posts: 1,337
Quote:
Originally posted by ultrafilter
On the contrary, many schizophrenics do know that they are unwell. There are also those who are too far gone to know that they're nuts, but IIRC, they're in the minority (although maybe not by a substantial amount).
So, in the movie "A Beautiful Mind” it would have been possible for John Nash to see his delusionary friends, but know that they weren’t truly there?

If so, that must be a truly weird and strange experience. How do these poor people stand it? I think I’d shoot myself or something.
Reply With Quote
  #17  
Old 01-19-2003, 12:05 AM
ultrafilter ultrafilter is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: May 2001
Quote:
Originally posted by Ring
So, in the movie "A Beautiful Mind” it would have been possible for John Nash to see his delusionary friends, but know that they weren’t truly there?

If so, that must be a truly weird and strange experience. How do these poor people stand it? I think I’d shoot myself or something.
I don't know that somebody with that level of severity of the disease would be aware that they're nuts.

I guess low-grade schizophrenia would be given other names, like schizotypal personality disorder, or various other ones. But it is very possible to have the symptoms of schizophrenia and be aware that hallucinations and delusions are what they are.

I've experienced every symptom over the course of the last four and a half years, and at no time was I ever under the impression that those experiences were based on the external world. But I'm not anywhere near as far gone as Nash was.
Reply With Quote
  #18  
Old 01-19-2003, 07:16 AM
Wendell Wagner Wendell Wagner is offline
Charter Member
 
Join Date: Jul 1999
Location: Greenbelt, Maryland
Posts: 7,720
The movie _A Beautiful Mind_ is a completely unreliable guide to the life of John Nash. Nash didn't have any visual hallucinations, and he had few auditory ones. Most of his schizophrenia was in his imagining grand conspiracies.
Reply With Quote
  #19  
Old 01-19-2003, 08:26 AM
MC Master of Ceremonies MC Master of Ceremonies is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Quote:
On the contrary, many schizophrenics do know that they are unwell. There are also those who are too far gone to know that they're nuts, but IIRC, they're in the minority (although maybe not by a substantial amount).
It is virtually impossible to reason a Schizophrenic out of there dellusions because they don't recognize them as dellusions and telling them won't dissuade them, just upset them.

In my experince schizophrenics recognize that other people think they are unwell but do not truly recognize this themselves.
Reply With Quote
  #20  
Old 01-19-2003, 09:01 AM
Eats_Crayons Eats_Crayons is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: May 2000
Quote:
Originally posted by Moe
Well, if you have a natural tendency to be paranoid who would you most likely be paranoid of? Seems to me the CIA and gov't in general are the most likely targets. Even non-paranoid people are often mistrustful of the gov't.

Aliens (i.e. extra-terrestrials) seem to also be a likely area of paranoia for people in general.
I saw a documentary that filmed a group therapy session and one member of the paranoid delusional group was claiming that "witches" were inflitrating her brain.

So I agree. WHen you are extremely pranoid, but don't now why, you probably try to fill in the blanks with whatever make sense to you at the time, so CIA, Aliens, Witches, voice of God, etc.
Reply With Quote
  #21  
Old 01-19-2003, 09:06 AM
Sir Doris Sir Doris is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Quote:
Originally posted by MC Master of Cermonies
It is virtually impossible to reason a Schizophrenic out of there dellusions because they don't recognize them as dellusions and telling them won't dissuade them, just upset them.

In my experince schizophrenics recognize that other people think they are unwell but do not truly recognize this themselves.
My only experience is with an old friend of mine. And she does reason herself out of her delusions.

The hallucinations seen very real to her, the voices do not sound as if they are in her head, but she is rational enough to realise that, say, the tv presenter is not really talking directly to her, or the chances of really having a greek chorus commentating on her every action are close to zero.
Reply With Quote
  #22  
Old 01-19-2003, 12:11 PM
ultrafilter ultrafilter is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: May 2001
Quote:
Originally posted by MC Master of Cermonies
It is virtually impossible to reason a Schizophrenic out of there dellusions because they don't recognize them as dellusions and telling them won't dissuade them, just upset them.

In my experince schizophrenics recognize that other people think they are unwell but do not truly recognize this themselves.
Did you see my last post?
Reply With Quote
  #23  
Old 01-19-2003, 12:46 PM
SpoilerVirgin SpoilerVirgin is offline
Charter Member
 
Join Date: May 2000
Location: Obama Country
Posts: 2,353
The book The Professor and the Madman provides an interesting perspective on this question. It tells the story of a man who was hospitalized for schizophrenia at the end of the 19th century. At that time, his delusions centered around small children who were sneaking into his room through the roof and sexually molesting him. Thirty years later, he was still hospitalized, but now his delusions centered around people who flew down in airplanes and took him away to sexually molest him. Clearly the invention of the airplane shifted his perception of his delusions. If he had been hospitalized in the late 1950's, when stories of alien abduction first hit the media, I'm sure his tormentors would have become aliens in spaceships.
Reply With Quote
  #24  
Old 01-19-2003, 01:18 PM
Lamia Lamia is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: May 2000
Re: Why does schitzophrenia manifest itself in such predictable ways?

Quote:
Originally posted by even sven
We are all pretty familier with tinfoil hats and CIA brain implants. From what I know (correct me if I am wrong) a lot of these beliefs can be attributted to schitzophrenia. I havn't really studied up on schitzophrenia, so please correct my misconceptions.
The term "schizophrenia" encompasses several different mental disorders with their own distinct features. Many do not include delusions or hallucinations. A person who believes the CIA has put a mind-control chip in their brain may be schizophrenic (although not for sure, there could be other causes), but it does not follow that all, or even most, schizophrenics suffer from similar delusions.

Quote:

Why is it so common for the CIA and mind reading beams etc. to be a theme in schitzophrenic delusions? It is almost downright predictable. Is it the influence of others, or do beliefs about the CIA and that sort of thing appear spontaniously?
The common themes in the delusions of paranoid schizophrenics are not government conspiracies or science-fiction technology, but rather the beliefs that others are spying on them (or can read their minds) and that others wish to harm them. These general fears seem to be caused by the disease itself, but the way they manifest themselves varies from person to person. Now, if you were convinced that you were under constant surveillance, who would you place the blame on? The CIA seems a likely candidate. Devious relatives or neighbors are also a popular choice, as are aliens. Paranoid schizophrenics may be delusional, but they aren't stupid. They tend to come up with explanations that seem possible, if completely implausible. I remember reading one case study about a man who believed the IRA was videotaping his sexual encounters and selling the videos as porn to fund their activities.

Quote:

What do schitzophrenics in other cultures (and in the past, when technology wasn't so prominent) get worried about?
It's hard to say, since people living in cultures where Western psychiatric practice is unheard of are unlikely to be diagnosed as schizophrenics in the first place. But, as others have said, delusions of a magical or religious nature are probably the most common. These are seen even among paranoid schizophrenics in the US.

Quote:

Does schitzophrenia even exist in "primitive" cultures?
Again, someone in a "primitive" culture is unlikely to be diagnosed as a schizophrenic, but I do not believe there are any known cultural causal factors.
Reply With Quote
  #25  
Old 01-19-2003, 01:53 PM
Ring Ring is offline
Charter Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: South Carolina USA
Posts: 1,337
Ultrafilter please excuse me if this is out of place, but I’d like to ask couple of questions. When you say, “over the course of the last four and a half years”, are you implying that these symptoms just sort of popped up, or was the onset a gradual thing? Do the symptoms seem completely real, and require a conscious mental effort to realize they aren’t real, or is it clear that they’re unreal from the beginning. How hard is this to live with?
Reply With Quote
  #26  
Old 01-19-2003, 03:03 PM
barbitu8 barbitu8 is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
I quote from DSM-IV:
Quote:
The disorders included in this section [Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders] are all characterized by having psychotic symptoms as the defining feature....The term psychotic has historically received a number of different definitions, none of which has achieved universal acceptance. The narrowest definition of psychotic is restricted to delusions or prominent hallucinations, with the hallucinations occurring in the absence of insight into their pathological nature. A slightly less restrictive definition would also include prominent hallucinations that the individual realizes are hallucinatory experiences. Broader still is a definition that also includes other positive symptoms of schizophrenia (i.e., disorganized speech, grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior). Finally, the term has been defined conceptually as a loss of ego boundaries or a gross impairment in reality testing....
[snip] Schizophrenia is a disturbance that lasts for at least 6 months and includes at least 1 month of active-phase symptoms (i.e., two [or more] of the following: delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior, negative symptoms). Definitions for the Schizophrenia subtypes (Paranoid, Disorganized, Catatonic, Undifferentiated, and Residual) are also included in this section. ... [snip]

The median age at onset for the first psychotic episode of Schizophrenia is in the early to mid-20s for men and in the late 20s for women...[snip]

The first-degree biological relatives of individuals with Schizophrenia have a risk for Schizophrenia that is about 10 times greater than that of the general population....Although much evidence suggests the importance of genetic factors in the etiology of Schizophrfenia, the existence of a substantial discordance rate in monozygotic twins also indicates the importance of environmental factors.
Quote:
The essential feature of Schizotypal Personality Disorder is a pervasive pattern of social and interpersonal deficits marked by acute discomfort with, and reduced capacity for, close relationships as well as by cognitive or perceptual distortions and eccentricities of behavior. This pattern begins by early adulthood and is present in a variety of contexts.
__________________
There are 10 kinds of people in this world: those who understand binary numbers and those who don't.
Reply With Quote
  #27  
Old 01-19-2003, 09:39 PM
ultrafilter ultrafilter is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: May 2001
Quote:
Originally posted by Ring
Ultrafilter please excuse me if this is out of place, but I’d like to ask couple of questions. When you say, “over the course of the last four and a half years”, are you implying that these symptoms just sort of popped up, or was the onset a gradual thing? Do the symptoms seem completely real, and require a conscious mental effort to realize they aren’t real, or is it clear that they’re unreal from the beginning. How hard is this to live with?
Hmm...

The symptoms probably built up gradually, but I didn't really notice them until a certain point in time (just after the beginning of winter break of my freshman year of college). At that point, they became kinda hard to ignore.

Fortunately, I don't generally hear voices, and when I do, they tend not to say things that make any sense. That didn't stop them from being terrifying at first, but I got used to them. There was a brief time where they started imitating the voices of the people around me, and saying stuff that I knew better than to respond to. Honestly, if they'd been mimicing normal conversation, I wouldn't have been able to tell the difference.

The last time I really heard them, they were screaming about how lemony-fresh floor cleaner doesn't taste as good as it smells. It was all I could do to keep from laughing.

Even then, I could tell they weren't real. I did *hear* them, but I could tell that they were coming from inside my head. Does that make any sense? It's kinda hard to explain to someone who's never had the experience.

I do have some delusions, and I'm not quite comfortable sharing those on a public messageboard. When they're going, they do require me to put some effort towards disbelieving them. But otherwise, it's patently obvious that they're false, because they're ridiculous. They aren't classically paranoid--nothing about the CIA or or aliens or my neighbors reading my mind or influencing my behavior.

I deal more with the negative symptoms on a day-to-day basis: the flat affect, the depression, and the disorganized thoughts. It makes work hard, and personal relationships can be a bit of a strain. I think that not being terribly emotional probably is worse than anything else. I can function in society, though. It doesn't help that I have ADHD--it's a bad combination.

In all, it's not such a huge problem that I'm going to seek therapy for it, but if my condition were to get worse, I would.

I suppose that going by the DSM-IV criteria, I'm not strictly schizophrenic, but have a related disorder. No matter the name, it's still unpleasant.
Reply With Quote
  #28  
Old 01-19-2003, 10:46 PM
owlofcreamcheese owlofcreamcheese is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: May 2002
I imagin its because they think and do things that even they can see are irrational, and not something they 'should' be thinking or doing. and so the assume someone must be doing it TO them, and who could possibly have such advanced technology? aliens or the government.
Reply With Quote
  #29  
Old 01-20-2003, 01:09 AM
AHunter3 AHunter3 is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: NY (Manhattan) NY USA
Posts: 14,149
If your thinking is largely in step with that of the rest of the world surrounding you*, you do not experience disorientation and the sense of conflict that you would if the rest of the world held to several shared opinions and ways of looking at things that made no sense to you and you could not understand why they didn't see the world as you did.

What you don't realize, if "reality" for you is pretty much the same as "reality" for other people, is how dependent we are on the confirmation of other people's observations. It is reassuring to be able to do the many different variants of "Did you see that?" and get a quick little reality-check from your neighbor. We do it all the time.

I see "we" guardedly. I was diagnosed schizophrenic. I don't see the world as most people do, and have found it frustrating all my life that others don't see the world as I do.

One weird way that this conflict has of manifesting itself is that the voices of people (can be a specific person like your Dad, or, more often, a kind of composite, like an informal archetype rolled out of all the teachers and other authority figures you've ever known who could shame you and berate you and make you feel like you had done something wrong or unforgiveably silly), parroting back the kind of non-reinforcing messages that you do get from your neighbors and whatnot, can start talking to you as if an actual person were right there speaking inside your head. These voices are almost always, exclusively, chewing your butt out, yelling at you, explaining how you are wrong wrong wrong and often also culpably blameworthy for how you've affected other people in the process of being wrong.

owlofcreamcheese is therefore pretty damn close, except that there is a value judgment inherent there which I do not make. (I am a radical schizzy and don't think that the contents of the worldview that constitutes "sanity" is an accurate reflection of reality, except that it does predict the behavior of other people fairly effectively as a result of being shared).

Oh, and the other problem with being conceptuallly isolated like that is that you don't have anyone to say the variations of "Did you see that?" to (because no one is on the same channel as you), so you are deprived of the reality check that you have ceased to be able to rely on. That means that if you (the weirdly thinking person) and your neighbor (a conventionally minded person) each have a peculiar morning on which you reach an invalid conclusion that seems real to you at the time, your neighbor is more likely by far to get grounded on it the first time he or she talks to someone and discovers that they don't draw that same conclusion. You, on the other hand, can much more easily step out into weirdsville. Notice that I'm drawing a distinction between thinking thoughts that are not shared by other people, including thoughts which contradict those which are, but which are essentially valid, and thoughts that are not shared by other people because you've (at least temporarily) lost it and accepted as valid something that ain't, and don't realize it yet.

If you're gonna function as a schizophrenic at large, i.e., as a person whose thought systems are largely incomprehensible to the world and who rejects and/or completely does not understand the thought systems shared by the culture around you, you aren't gonna make it without a hell of a lot of resiliency and a sense of humor about the times that you do cease to make sense, which is going to happen, which is a real arrogance-piercer and in-your-place-putter although it doesn't invalidate the rest of your head's contents when it does.
__________________
Disable Similes in this Post
Reply With Quote
  #30  
Old 01-20-2003, 07:14 PM
Moe Moe is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Mar 2000
Quote:
Originally posted by ultrafilter
It doesn't help that I have ADHD...
Gee ultrafilter, you could be an "If They Made it" (a la Conan O'Brien) of me and my housemate/good friend; I'm ADHD, he's schizoaffective.

and BTW, your experience with the lemony-fresh floor cleaner is just priceless. ROTF!
Reply With Quote
  #31  
Old 01-20-2003, 10:03 PM
elfkin477 elfkin477 is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: NH
Posts: 12,435
Can I hijack this thread a wee bit? I know someone who is not schizophrenic, but is Paranoid (as a medical diagnosis) according to her doctor. Does this- the condition of suffering paranoia unrelated to schizophrenia- have a name? I'd like to learn more about the condition.
Reply With Quote
  #32  
Old 01-21-2003, 12:07 AM
benson benson is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Quote:
Originally posted by elfkin477
Can I hijack this thread a wee bit? I know someone who is not schizophrenic, but is Paranoid (as a medical diagnosis) according to her doctor. Does this- the condition of suffering paranoia unrelated to schizophrenia- have a name? I'd like to learn more about the condition.
Could be Paranoid Personality Disorder. You can read about it here.
Reply With Quote
  #33  
Old 01-21-2003, 05:55 PM
JungleLove JungleLove is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
I'll also join in that people in a severe or advanced episode of
mania or depression can
also have visual and auditory hallucinations
and paranoia.

One way psychiatrists differentiate between the schizophrenia and bipolar disorder or manic-depressive illness
is to ask the patients if they hear voices, smell odd smells, etc.
And I guess people with schizophrenia would also not respond to
medication for bipolar disorder, unless they are schizoaffective (schizophrenic with a mood disorder).

It looks like the spectrum of mental disorder has overlapping conditions.
Reply With Quote
  #34  
Old 01-21-2003, 07:30 PM
Cervaise Cervaise is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Mar 1999
Possibly interesting and informative article here about a virtual-reality simulator designed to superficially impart the experience of schizophrenia to people who don't have it. Supposedly it's so powerfully suggestive that its creators recommend that people who have struggled with the illness not use it, lest it trigger a relapse.
Reply With Quote
  #35  
Old 01-21-2003, 09:06 PM
slipster slipster is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Apr 2001
It is characteristic of schizophrenics that they develop ideosyncratic explanations for their delusions and hallucinations. As several contributors have already suggested, the CIA and
the activities of space aliens are readily available means of rationalizing many feelings and beliefs which are common to schizophrenics.

It is interesting to speculate how many common elements of mythology, both ancient and modern, derive at least in part from hallucinations
commonly brought on by schizophrenia or other, less severe, conditions.

For instance, recently while surfing the net I found various references to "dark men" or "shadow men", who are supposed to be natives of some parallel universe of whom people occasionally catch glimpses.

A few years ago I had a schizophrenic client whom I represented at a disability hearing. One of his problems was that he frequently went into panics as he drifted off to sleep, convinced that faceless dark figures were attacking him.

Many people who are not schizophrenic have likewise experienced "seeing" shadowy figures as they drifted in or out of consciousness, but are generally able to distinguish these as imaginary. Similarly, a quite ordinary and rational-seeming friend of mine relates that he occasionally hears a mysterious voice call out his name as he drifts off to sleep, but he is untroubled by it, recognizing it as a dreamlike experience.

Meanwhile, thousands of UFO enthusiasts insist that space aliens abduct them as they go to sleep. An example of a myth devoloping to rationalize a common delusional experience? Just maybe.

In the same way, otherwise rational people occasionally "see" tiny figures walking in a straight line. And in Ireland people used to spot the "trooping dwarfs" walking single file.

A schizophrenic I knew believed that people exuded a radiation he could see, and which differed in color according to their overall goodness and sincerity. This sounds a lot like a lot of parapsychological talk about "auras".

Lastly, it might be worth noting that much of the early literature about UFOs grew out of letters a man named Richard Shaver wrote to science fiction editor Raymond Palmer. Palmer rewrote the letters about robots in the center of the earth who "spoke" to Palmer through his welding equipment into stories for his pulp science fiction magazine and, when the first flying saucer sightings were making the rounds in the late 40s, Palmer claimed, almost certainly tongue-in-cheek, that Shaver's detrimental robots or "Deros" were responsible for them. Palmer later acknowledged that Shaver was a paranoid schizophrenic who had spent large parts of his life in mental hospitals.
Reply With Quote
  #36  
Old 01-22-2003, 01:45 AM
Triskadecamus Triskadecamus is offline
Charter Member
 
Join Date: Oct 1999
Location: I'm coming back, now.
Posts: 6,699
The schizophrenics I have known had a very wide range of delusional elements. One thought his father had been feeding him LSD secretly for years. Another did have delusions about the CIA, but he thought he was working for the CIA, and the bad people were communists, trying to keep him from reporting his "observations." He kept his observations recorded in notebooks, which he left lying around all over the place. If you looked at one, obviously you were one of the communists.

I was not schizophrenic. I was delusional, though. And I did know that the delusions were not real, at least for some of the time at first, and toward the end of my illness. But they were still quite real to me, in a non intellectual way. I could still feel the things that my mind was creating, even after years of therapy, and recovery. Reality is not nearly so clear cut as you might wish.

Don't tear down the signposts. You might need them if you get lost.

Tris.
---------------------
"We better get back, cause it'll be dark soon, and they mostly come at night, mostly." ~ Newt, Aliens ~
Reply With Quote
  #37  
Old 01-22-2003, 10:53 AM
barbitu8 barbitu8 is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
I've always suspected that the Bible characters who claimed God talked to them were schizophrenic. "They were not," you say. Well, then, perhaps those who now claim that God speaks to them are not also.
Reply With Quote
  #38  
Old 01-27-2003, 10:17 AM
Speaker for the Dead Speaker for the Dead is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Quote:
Originally posted by ultrafilter
"positive" in this context means that something's there that shouldn't be. Look at the "negative" symptoms--they're all the absence of behaviors that normal people exhibit.
I forgot to mention that tidbit of information. Yes, "positive" symptoms are positive mostly because they are far easier to treat than the negative symptoms associated with chronic 'phrenia.
Reply With Quote
  #39  
Old 01-27-2003, 10:27 AM
RickJay RickJay is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
You can even turn schizophrenic delusions into a livelihood. Ladies and gentlemen, may I present Mr. Whitley Streiber.
Reply With Quote
  #40  
Old 01-27-2003, 10:45 AM
mipiace mipiace is offline
Guest
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
A lot of misconception

I think a lot of what I've read are common misconceptions that the general public has about the mentally ill. Mental illness is not like diagnosing dibetes or cancer, it's vague and generally runs along the lines of "patient exhibits five or more of the following symptoms for a two weeks period" so what happens if that patient exhibits four? Does that make them absolutely NOT mentally ill? Or just a little mentally ill? What if they exhibit those symptome for one week and not two? There is no difinitive test for specific diagnosis and many symptoms of different diseases mimic symptoms of others. Bipolar, schizophreniz, schizoaffective, adhd - all share similar traits. To further complicate matters, many time a person with one disorder will have other disorders as well. that is called comorbity.

As far as patients being the same, ask any psychiatrist -THEY AREN't! And that is what makes accurate medication prescription so difficult.

If some people have the same sorts of delusions, it is because schizophrenia is not a BEHAVIORAL disorder. The symptoms are behavioral but it is a NEUROLOGICAL malfunction. Basically everything we do (standup, sit down, breath, eat, scared, mad, think the CIA is watching you) is a chemical reaction in the synopsis of the brain. With someone who is mentally ill, those chemicals are slightly altered causing different reactions. Sometimes it's as simple as getting madder than the situation merits or not getting over being sad as quickly. Sometimes it's that hair raising on the back of the neck feeling that "someone" might be watching you. (who better than the CIA)

As far as hallucinations, seeing and the processing of what you see is also a chemical reaction. Someone very close to me has these hallucinations and they are very real. Real enough that he talks to them and they talk back. Mostly he knows they aren't really there so he hides it from other people but when those chemical s get really off balance, he doesn't know they aren't there and you will not be able to reason with him. That's when things get scary for the caretakers (you don't know what these people are telling him to do)

Someone who is very delusional has their chemical reactions very off balance like how the quality of your pool water gets very off balance sometimes and you simply have to correct that before y ou take a swim.

Keep in mind - they didn't ask for this, they can't help it, and they would love to be able to perceive the world like "normal" people. It is a daunting struggle. Is anyone really "normal" anyway?
Reply With Quote
Advertisement
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:50 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

The Straight Dope / Questions or comments for Cecil Adams to: cecil@chicagoreader.com
Comments regarding this website to: webmaster@straightdope.com
For advertising information, see the Creative Loafing Media, Inc. Online Rate Sheet
"The Straight Dope by Cecil Adams" is a registered trademark of Creative Loafing Media, Inc. Contents of the Straight Dope Message Board and the Straight Dope Web site are copyright 1984-2009 by Creative Loafing Media, Inc. All rights reserved. By posting on this board you grant the Creative Loafing Media, Inc., and its successors and assigns a nonexclusive irrevocable right to re-use your posting in any manner it or they see fit without notice or compensation to you. No material contained in this site may be republished or reposted without express written consent of the Creative Loafing Media, Inc., except that message board users retain the right to republish or repost their own work.

Other Creative Loafing Media, Inc. sites:

Creative Loafing Atlanta | Creative Loafing Charlotte | Chicago Reader | Creative Loafing Sarasota | Creative Loafing Tampa | Washington City Paper