The American psychiatrist, and professor of psychiatry, Kay Redfield Jamison, is one of the world's leading authorities of dementia. He has used his research work, teaching, and writing mine books on this subject. The situation with him that he may have had throughout his life as an adult. In his memoir, "An Unquiet Mind," Jamison explains what it really means to be bipolar. He writes about sleepless nights at the end, feeling a long period of happiness, and filling up complete books with his rushing thoughts and great ideas. While in the masculine environment, he felt very confident and did things in a hurry that felt good at the time but had dire consequences, such as going to supermarkets, committing immorality, paying off his credit card debt, and breaking up his bank accounts. The crippling moments of disability that sent him to the point of suicide. At the age of 28, Jamison attempted suicide by taking a drug overdose of Lithium, falling into a coma, but thankfully he came out of it determined to seek medical help and treatment.
Through his research and writing, Dr. Jamison has revived our understanding of bipolar disorder, depression, and the complexity of the mental struggles we now consider as emotional disorders. And you are probably one of the best ambassadors we have ever had with those people who live a successful and healthy life with mental illness. Like the anxiety disorders we talked about last time, emotional disorders are not well understood. They are relieved by depressions of depression as something that can be treated in one day at a spa or by human definitions as depression just because they were sad yesterday and are not there today. As psychologists, our job is to understand what emotional disorders really are, how they manifest themselves, and what they are. And as you can probably guess, this would be a great place to explore. This disorder can take people from terrifying heights to the pitfalls of seemingly complete despair. However! In the middle is what Jamison calls, "The rich life and the myth" - everything is made possible by your emotions. We've been talking a lot about words and ideas that mean something different than what you think they mean, but in this case, the word "Mood" is not. Psychologically, emotions are as good as you think they are: Emotional conditions that are much lower and more difficult to describe than emotions themselves.
You've got good standing and bad situations. Perhaps the most important difference between emotions and feelings is that emotional states are long-term emotional states rather than sensible, transient emotions. And “emotional disorders,” which are characterized by emotional anguish and emotional challenges, are often long-term disorders. These include depressive disorders, symbolized by long-term hopelessness and weakness, and bipolar disorder, the most prominent of which involve fluctuations in depression and mania. Depression Has been the called the "common cold of mental illness". Which is not to say that it is not true, but it is common and widespread and is the main reason people seek mental health care. We all feel frustrated before, apparently, often in response to some loss: a breakup or a lost job or the death of a loved one. And the fact is, you probably feel bad about yourself at times like that. It would be good for the mind and body to slow down, to help digest the losses that are encountered, but overall, the grief is temporary. It is when sadness and grief transcend social norms that are generally accepted, or go deeper into the underlying causes of depression and depression.
DSM-5, our practical guide (if you have serious errors) of mental illness officially diagnoses major depressive disorder when a patient has at least five depressive symptoms for more than two weeks. These symptoms include not only feelings of depression, but also excessive weight loss or loss of appetite or gain, excessive or less sleep, decreased interest in activities, feeling worthless, tired, or tired, difficulty concentrating or making decisions, and recurring thoughts of death or suicide. So while everyone experiences depression, depression is a physical and mental illness. It interferes with your sleep, your appetite, your energy, and your levels of neurotransmitter, all of which interfere with the way your body runs. And in line with our definition of mental disorders, being considered a real disorder by these behaviors needs to create that person or others around them with long-term depression - a feeling that something is really wrong. Just as a person with a severe, common anxiety disorder may not want to leave the house, a depressed person at the clinic often feels hopeless and frustrated that they have a problem living a normal life. And unlike bipolar disorder, depression is often more severe. You may have heard of depression.
It’s outdated by bipolar disorder. This includes those dark pressures of depression, but also negative moments - of manna over extreme conditions. A person with bipolar disorder may relapse between normal and stressful stages and within a day or a week or a month. And a real manic episode does not mean just being enthusiastic or happy, it is a time of great resilience, no rest, but it is often hopeful when your balance and your strengths and ideas may be compromised. Like, in fact, IT'S REALLY USED. Some patients experience unusual mania, but if they do, it can be harmful. Kay Jamison has proved that. At one point during his masculine episode, he bought an entire drugstore for snake bites, convinced of an imminent attack by snakes known only to him. In one, he bought 20 books from Penguin Publishing House because he said, "It would be nice if penguins could build a colony." In other words, bad judgment is commonplace. And it can be very bad. Fully manic episodes often end up in a psychiatric hospital, because the risk of being yourself or others can be severe.
When the height finally ends, dark periods of depression are often followed. When left untreated, suicide or suicide attempts are common, another disorder Jamison himself can attest to. Like many things in psychology, the cause of emotional disorders is usually a combination of biological, genetic, psychological, and environmental factors. We know, for example, that emotional disorders work in families - genes are important. And you may also suffer from bipolar disorder if you have parents or siblings who suffer from them. Studies have similar twins showing that if one twin has a mental disorder, the other seven is seven out of ten likely to recover, whether they are raised together or separated. And while a stressful life may not give you bipolar disorder, it can start a person’s episode or depression in someone who already has the condition. Or you may be experiencing some of the most difficult and tragic times in human history. In other words, a person who loses a loved one can go from grief to depression or slip to bipolar disorder, but that would not be the case at all.
In the case of depressive disorders, for many people, after weeks, months, or even years, their depression may subside, with the hope that when they turn to basic health care. All over the world, women are more likely to be diagnosed with depression more often than men, but many psychologists think that this is because women are more likely to seek treatment. It is also possible that depression in men tends to manifest itself more in anger and rage, than in frustration and hopelessness. This is just one example of the fact that depression is more than just grief and that a lack of purpose and worthlessness can manifest itself in many different ways. When we look at emotional disorders from a neurological perspective, we see that the stressed, human, and central brain exhibits very different brain functions in neural imaging scans. As you might expect, the stress-stricken brain goes down. While the brain in the human condition exhibits many extended functions, making it difficult for that person to relax or concentrate or sleep. The neurotransmitter chemistry of our brains also changes with these different states. For example, norepinephrine, which often increases arousal and concentration, is highly deficient in a depressed brain, but is similar to charts during human episodes.
In fact, drugs that seek to reduce mania partially do so by lowering norepinephrine levels. You may also have heard of how low serotonin levels are associated with depressive conditions. Exercise, such as running or breaking a dance or anything, increases serotonin levels, which is one reason why exercise is often recommended to combat depression. And many drugs designed to treat depression seem to work to increase serotonin or norepinephrine levels. And then there's another way to look at things. The concept of social comprehension explores how our thinking and behavior affect depression. Depressed people often watch bad events using an internal lens or mind set that influences how they are interpreted. And how you describe events to yourself, in a negative or constructive way, can have an effect on how you recover from them - or not. He said he was dropped off in the lunchroom when someone offended you and chicken soup flew all over, sat down on a brownie, and it was just a bad day. A depressed mind may begin to think that humiliation will last forever, that no one will ever let you down live it down, that somehow your fault, and you'll never do anything right.
Such negative thinking, helplessness, remorse, and excessive thinking can feed and dull the joy of the brain, eventually creating a vicious cycle of self-indulgence. The good news is that the cycle can be broken by getting professional help, turning your attention away, doing more fun things, maybe even moving to a different place. However, that opportunity to understand society is part of a much larger puzzle. Positive thinking is important, but it is not always enough to counteract the genetic or neurological factors. Emotional disorders are therefore complex and rarely removed with a single remedy. Instead, they tend to be the things you just live with. And as Dr. Jamison has shown us, you can be healthy. Today we have talked about what emotional problems are, and what they are not. Learn about the symptoms of depression and bipolar disorder, as well as the possible biological, genetic, environmental, and social-cognitive causes of emotional disorders.
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