does trauma cause mental illness?

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024

Комментарии • 4

  • @NeseretBemient
    @NeseretBemient  3 часа назад

    For additional FREE Resources Visit: www.mentalhealthreset.org

  • @shawnleong3605
    @shawnleong3605 2 часа назад +2

    yes, without a doubt. I was badly bullied and ostracised before developing "OCD," on top of being subjected to the stressful education system and authoritative governance of my country. Also, personally, I tend to avoid the term "mental illness" because it plays into the hands of the system and the pathologized narrative of mental health (hence the quotation marks of the above). Those diagnostic terms carry a lot of damage and stigma, and doctors have the audacity to say that getting diagnosed means the stigma would lessen.
    I would urge everyone who struggles mentally and emotionally to take the wheel themselves instead of giving that power to the western doctors - many of them are like wolves waiting to trick and devour their next prey, and they have a lot of powerful backing to push their agenda. Trauma is never brought up when diagnosing people. It is truly a dystopian world in the making.

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient  2 часа назад +1

      I'm sorry to hear what you went through. I'm also glad you're awake and aware. Trauma is one of those things that's swept under the rug, just like in a dysfunctional families. But now you're in a bigger dysfunctional community that also does the same thing. It becomes the surrogate family but for patients it's going from the frying pan into the fire. Add the drugs and you throw a bit of fuel to an already raging fire. No wonder many people don't come out of that debacle alive. It's an absolute recipe for disaster.

    • @shawnleong3605
      @shawnleong3605 7 минут назад

      @@NeseretBemient i am glad you have awoken to the horrors of psychiatry too. I don't blame my family who agreed to let these monsters drug me, they were deceived too. Now my dad has cancer and I have to deal with the grief while also dealing with iatrogenic harm and trauma, and my psychiatrist, fully aware of my circumstances, still insists on distorting narratives of me and refuses to help me taper my drug. He painted himself as the victim rather than the abuser. I have to rely on my own strength (and my faith) to pull through this.
      I have chosen to forgive the psychiatry solely on the basis of what my faith instructs me, and also because I can't hold on to anger and hatred any longer. But these people who still insist on perpetuating the harm will have to ultimately answer for their own actions and ideologies. By that time it may be too late for them.