Me too Kaylynn!!! That grin is totally uber creepy. He looks as if he is proud of his nutzo killing spree. I am so mad at him that I wish I clould spit on him! moo
wm
I'm sure the voices were saying something very amusing.(seriously)
Me too Kaylynn!!! That grin is totally uber creepy. He looks as if he is proud of his nutzo killing spree. I am so mad at him that I wish I clould spit on him! moo
wm
Not much of a pot smoker, are you, HC?
Or is this some special effect of THC on schizophrenics? 'Cause paranoia among pot smokers is so common as to be a stereotype.
(Sorry if the levity seems disrespectful. HC's excellent and serious post on paranoid schizophrenia can be found in full above at post #462.)
Me too Kaylynn!!! That grin is totally uber creepy. He looks as if he is proud of his nutzo killing spree. I am so mad at him that I wish I clould spit on him! moo
wm
would a hospital shave eyebrows for any medical reason?
would a jail shave eyebrows for um, any sanitary or safety reason?
Giffords Doctors See No Abnormal Brain Swelling
Dr. Lemole said that the path of the bulletwhich went from back left to front left of her headmay have been high enough that it missed key brain centers controlling speech, vision and cognitive function.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100...74030477835712.html?mod=WSJ_hp_LEFTTopStories
Nope, Nova, I got high once, and laughed for hours. Nothing more than that, and it was many years ago, at that. LOL.
I do know that a lot of folks with MI tend to do what they can to 'self-medicate', and more than a few of them use pot (I suppose the ease of access is part of it). I've treated a few who say pot helped them more than the meds we provided, too. And a friend of my best friend who has bi-polar with psychosis uses pot on a regular basis, and is not paranoid.I don't know if THC has a different effect on someone who has significant MI; I don't know of any studies that have been done to go look at it (hm...Master's thesis?) I do know that they percieve the world completely differently than non-MI people, and that the chemistry in their brains is different, and that meds we give can have totally different effects than expected with those who have significant MI {but that might be attributable to med conflicts, too, and it's not an often occurance}. So it's not that far-fetched to think perhaps THC does help dull the voices, or damp down some of the perseveration on topics...and I've heard it does.
I don't know. It's an interesting question, though...
(And thanks for thinking the original post was "excellent." I appreciate that!)
Best-
Herding Cats
Uhmmmm.....until a mentally ill drug user quits their habit, it remains unknown as to whether they would still exhibit symptoms of mental illness while NOT under the influence of said drugs.
I have known way too many people my age left over from the 60's and 70's who still justify their addictions, general apathy, and very low development of potential. They also deny that their drug and alcohol use contribute to 'their problems in life'. Same old dynamic that you see in any addict, its just that many of the aging pot addicts I have known have a bit more formal classroom education and have held 'responsible' jobs long term due to living where there are veeery low expectations.
I don't know that I can agree with this, too. Seems kinda paranoid to me...(I am joking, see? :crazyPersonally, I am of the many who came to believe pot AND lsd was perpetuated on the anti-war revolutionary young people of the day precisely to GENERATE APATHY, and it sure did work.
Well, see, I don't know that I can agree. I know that the bi-polar was evidencing symptoms long before she started using. I know that a lot of the patients I've spoken with tell me they use to prevent the symptoms/self medicate.
Now, I'm not talking about LSD, or doctored pot. I'm talking straight marijuana. While I'll admit some people get kinda strange while on pot, it's not known for being psychedelic, I don't think. In other words, I don't know that it can cause breaks with reality (e.g. psychosis); as far as I know, and I've known some non MI folks who used constantly, it doesn't cause mental illness.
I don't know that I can agree with this, too. Seems kinda paranoid to me...(I am joking, see? :crazy
I think Leary did his thing, and LSD got used. I think there was a huge rebellion on many levels during the 60s, and into the early 70s. I think pot's been around a whole lot longer, and used prolifically, for millenia, andI think MI has been around for millenia, too.
I'm just noting his use of pot, not advocating it or saying it's horrible. I'm noting that self medication occurs a lot more than we're willing to admit, and that most addiction comes from a percieved need to "stop feeling" something or other - medicating oneself sometimes allows that; if the medicine of choice is pot or alcohol or heroin or Doritos, it's still used for the same reason: to stop feeling something.
It is my opinion - opinion, mind you - that in this situation, he probably used pot to "deal with" his disintegrating world. Schizophrenia is a horrible, horrible illness, devastating and scary and unbelievably difficult to deal with, even with medication and help from the MI professionals. If he was as cut off from the world as it seems (what with the info coming out about the parents, the lifestyle, and so on), he had no help, no place to go, no person to grab onto and say "help".
Instead, his mental illness ran unchecked, and developed. His writings, obsessions, compulsions, fixations, and bizarre postings over the internet...his disconnect was complete and total.
Does this excuse him? I don't know if he knew right from wrong. I just don't know. And since the M'Naughton Rule is what is the standard in a courtroom, and it's a very high hurdle indeed, I don't know that even if he's diagnosed that any NGBRI plea will survive a challenge.
I am horribly sad that this has happened. I grieve the lives lost, and the lives changed forever.
This whole thing just sucks.
Best-
Herding Cats