Understanding schizophrenic people

in #psychology6 years ago (edited)

Introduction


When the majority of us think about crazy people, we are often thinking of individuals with schizophrenia. It is clearly one of the conditions most commonly used when referring to a person with serious mental issues that makes him seem to be out of touch with reality, and makes him behave in a completely abnormal way.

Schizophrenia is one of the most difficult mental disorders we can experience, because the person who is suffering it can sometimes realize what is actually happening and they are aware their brain is malfunctioning but they cannot do anything about it.

The frustration these individuals must feel when going through one of these experiences must be quite intense, and to this day, there is no known cure for this problem.

In this article we are going cover every key aspect of this disorder, in order to fully understand what it is about.

Schizophrenia explained


This condition is defined as:

Schizophrenia is a disabling, chronic, and severe mental illness… Their disorganized behavior can be perceived as incomprehensible or frightening to others. | Source
Schizophrenia is a serious mental illness characterized by incoherent or illogical thoughts, bizarre behavior and speech, and delusions or hallucinations, such as hearing voices. Schizophrenia typically begins in early adulthood. | Source

The proper understanding of this condition has been getting better as time pass, and although the cause of this disorder is still difficult to determine, its clear symptoms have been absolutely well defined. Despite this, having misconceptions about the symptoms is quite common and even though they are similar, schizophrenia is not the same as other related issues such as bipolar disorder and multiple personality disorder. Also, people with schizophrenia are not perpetually incoherent or psychotic, they have episodes and that is when they start to act erratically.

These individuals will experience an intense disruption in cognition and emotion, affecting the most fundamental human qualities such as language, thought, affection, and the sense of oneself, in short, schizophrenia can condition the very perception of reality in the person dealing with it.

Schizophrenia crosses all socioeconomic, cultural, and racial boundaries. The lifetime risk of developing the illness has been estimated at about 8 per 1,000. Schizophrenia is the single largest cause of admissions to mental hospitals and accounts for an even larger proportion of the permanent populations of such institutions. | Source

This disorder is quite complex and it has a great variety of powerful symptoms including psychopathic manifestations, such as hearing internal voices or experiencing other sensations not connected with a real source and assigning an unusual meaning to normal occurrences, as well as constantly adopting false beliefs with no proper justification for it.

Below we can see a video of a person going through a schizophrenic episode, we can notice how this man even though he is having hallucinations, he is also aware of his condition and he realizes that what he is experiencing is the result of his disorder, we can also notice his frustration when using the phone and realizing there is no one calling, and yet he decided to answer it only to find out there was no one on the other side of the call:

Stressful experiences often precede the emergence of schizophrenia. Before any acute symptoms are apparent, people with schizophrenia habitually become bad-tempered, anxious, and unfocused. This can trigger relationship problems, divorce, and unemployment. | Source

People with schizophrenia have delusional ideas which are simply erroneous beliefs firmly held due to distortions or exaggerations of their reasoning and interpretations of what is actually happening. Delusions about being persecuted or constantly being observed by others are the most popular ones, or believing there are secret messages from the TV and pretty much any other source of digital sound or information.

As we can see in the video, they also have strong hallucinations because of their flawed perception regarding their senses. They can see things that aren’t real (in the video he mentioned people staring at him in the bathroom mirror) as well as imagining sounds and believing it is real (this happened with his phone). All of this can easily drain the person’s energy especially if this happens on a constant basis.

Another important aspect is the fact these episodes can make the person adopt a disorganized speech that makes it very difficult to understand what they are talking about, they are overwhelmed by not being able to handle so many hallucinations and eventually they cannot properly formulate their ideas nor coordinate their thoughts.

Something similar can also happen with their behavior, they can lose control of it because of their delusional beliefs causing considerable difficulties when doing daily activities, and they can become very agitated and unpredictable individuals moving excessively without any purpose, which can be a factor that highly contributes to their social isolation. Catatonic behaviors on the other hand, are represented by a considerable decrease in the reaction to the immediate surrounding environment, sometimes even being immobile or maintaining a strange posture and having a lack of awareness regarding what is currently happening.

Developing of schizophrenia


This disorder generally starts to develop during young adulthood, although it can happen at any age. Its developing can be abrupt or gradual, but most people experience some early symptoms, such as increased social isolation, a general loss of interests, unusual behavior, among others which are often the first behaviors that might concern the people close to the individual because it can be a sign something is seriously wrong.

Considerable evidence shows that genetic factors play a central role in schizophrenia; however, adoption studies have highlighted the additional importance of environmental factors. Neurotransmitter and brain abnormalities, which may be linked to environmental factors such as obstetric complications or exposure to influenza during the gestational period, have also been implicated. | Source

Although it is important to notice that how others see and interpret those symptoms can vary from culture to culture, because things like having visions, or hearing celestial voices from a higher being, can be seen as something normal and inspiring in highly religious cultures, in many communities, seeing or being visited by a recently deceased person is not unusual among family members because for them voices can also be interpreted as the voices of their ancestors. Sometimes, the voices are pleasant, and they give the person and his family some necessary advice, but if the voices are aggressive, they are considered as the actions of demons or some other evil being, so showing signs of schizophrenia can sometimes be seen as having a highly religious experience rather that having a mental disorder.

However, people suffering from this problem will eventually start to speak less than before because they will feel exhausted after having their energy drained for constantly dealing with their hallucinations, which will damage the quality of the social interactions they have, even to the point of stopping them from really expressing their emotions and having honest and deep talks, this can cause feelings of emotional emptiness and general dissatisfaction for not being able to properly engage with others. Therefore, ending up being apathetic individuals with no care for their personal looks nor hygiene is a possibility.

Another result of developing this disorder is having changes related to their memory and thinking ability, these people can experience a decrease in their ability to understand, store and use information to make correct decisions. This means it can be much more difficult for them to learn new things and maintain a proper productivity in their professional life, becoming less and less capable as time pass.

The intensity of everything mentioned can vary with time depending on the person, but the truth is once this disorder is developed, most people do not return to their previous state of mental functioning, what they can do is to get better and recover partially but never totally.

People with schizophrenia might experience a break from reality from time to time, but they are not broken. And despite their illness, individuals with schizophrenia can make wonderful contributions to our community. | Source

Conclusion


Schizophrenia is a mental disorder that usually begins with symptoms of hallucinations resulting in a lack of contact with reality, as well as abnormal behaviors that can not be easily justified, and these among many other reasons can cause the individual to gradually isolate himself more and more, eventually reducing his social relationship close to zero, which can facilitate the manifestation of a depressed state.

Sometimes this issue can be seen as the result of a supernatural occurrence, but the fact is this is simply the brain of the individual malfunctioning and completely affecting the way he processes information.

Optimism is important and patients, family members and mental health professionals need to be mindful that many patients have a favorable course of illness, that challenges can often be addressed, and that patients have many personal strengths that can be recognized and supported. | Source

In order to avoid this spiral of mental degeneration, the sooner this issue is recognized the better, because if it remains ignored, with time, it will only get worse and maybe when close people finally decide to act accordingly and look for a solution, the person with the disorder might already be too affected.

As we could see in the video, even while having episodes they can be aware of it, and of their condition, so showing them the proper support and love is also important so they can get better. If they feel abandoned overcoming this complicate issue will be much harder than otherwise.

Have you ever met someone with schizophrenia? If so, how did that encounter went?



References

psychologytoday - schizophrenia

apa.org - schizophrenia

medicalnewstoday

britannica - schizophrenia

lumenlearning - schizophrenia

simplypsychology - schizophrenia

psychologytoday - schizophrenic people

psychiatry.org


Images sources

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A friend knows psychiatry doctor. They have a man, who thinks he is an orange, at the institute. He's afraid humankind wants to eat him. I wonder how such peculiar thing can happen to person.

who thinks he is an orange

wow that poor man has a serious delusion. It must be hard not only dealing with that belief, but for the people around him too. It is interesting to think the variety of delusions people can end up adopting.

Yes. This is why he is in the institute with other seriously ill people.

Nope, I had never met someone with it nor heard about it before today, but it kinda seems terrible being aware of your situation and not being able to help it

it kinda seems terrible being aware of your situation and not being able to help it

It must be frustrating not being able to stop the schizophrenic episode when you know you are having one, here is a simulation about this

 This was an interesting read! I think many people are too quick to dismiss the spiritual/metaphysical connection. The irony, by definition, that makes me "schizophrenic" or someone adhering to "schizophrenic ideals." Which is a wonderful example of establishments pretense of understanding everything and marginalizing things that don't fit a narrative. In physics the ultimate goal is a "theory of everything," but we haven't gotten there yet! LoL..... Generally, an open mind is sign of a healthy mind, not saying in the subjective/infinite regress kind of way, but in the honestly I don't know/curious way!

 I also believe "Schizophrenia" is much more common than 8 in 1000. I believe a lot of people have what would be classified as schizophrenic episodes through out their lives. The symptoms table is not defined well enough and we ourselves have issues with self awareness and associations. Fear of sharing experiences is also a factor.

 It's usually only extreme cases that become the hallmarks, but what makes these cases unique? We don't understand it, is the honest answer... We might be able to measure some of the processes in the brain, but we are foolish to conclude, ahaa, that means this! There is also the "fact" that the whole body is a brain, no system is independent of itself, it's all connected, and in ways, again, that we don't understand! Awareness/Perception,Association/Connection....

 The very things that are foundational to Schizophrenia - interesting. Have you ever asked yourself what if the crazy guy was not crazy?

I agree it's definately a spectrum all our brains are capable of taking us to some point on the 'crazy' side

an open mind is sign of a healthy mind

I completely agree with this, having an open mind is important so we can more easily adopt new ideas.

as schizophrenic episodes through out their lives

It might happen, but how many times do you think something like that can happen to a healthy person in his entire life?

Have you ever asked yourself what if the crazy guy was not crazy?

If the guy is not crazy then why did he see people looking at him in the mirror? Or why did he thought he had someone on the other side of a phone call that never happened? Why would a healthy person experience those things?

My friend recently told me a story that he went through a manic episode that the doctor said was schizophrenic i listen to it and I just thought about it and to me it sounded kinda far out but not so mental. I mean I get this impression that if our society wasn't the way it was we would have less schizophrenic that the pressure of so called normality puts a pressure on people that wow the brain starts doing some far out stuff.like when we are children it's perfectly normal to pick up a telephone and talk to the imaginary persons, have disjointed speech and even hallucinate. Is because we are taught to surpress that inner child that eventually under times of stress it appears (well at least for my friend there father recently died and other traumas may have led to the episode,) I did also question this boundary between mental or normal, again society dictates that but if you saw someone having an episode at an electronic music festival u wouldn't think anything of it. I'm not trying to say that it's not disabling of course it is because, it doesn't work for our society, u need a job, u need to be stable and lucid. But I just don't think modern life have enough outlets for humans to connect with that natural instinct to go outside there body to go into a realm of make believe and fantasy, to let go of everything normal. I think Wikipedia also says men are more likely to have schizophrenia,,,,? Need to check that, anyway thanks for an informative article on a topic not talked about much

Is because we are taught to surpress that inner child that eventually under times of stress it appears

So individuals hearing voices and seeing people looking at them in the mirror is because their inner child is suppressed?

Either way. I do agree there might be more pressure than some people can deal with in today's society. And that can indeed somehow affect the mental and emotional well being of anyone.

well at least for my friend there father recently died and other traumas may have led to the episode

I can imagine having to go through such an intense experience was clearly something that could have caused his episode.

I did also question this boundary between mental or normal

It can be very simple, if a person suddenly sees 5 people looking at him in the mirror, I wouldn't call that very normal, don't you agree?


Thanks for stopping by and for the nice comment @celestialcow :)

Not sure everyone has those extreme hallucinations. Which I think u may have touched upon but I did read this in the middle of the night so I've forgotten. I used to see about 50 or more faces flying around the whole room when I was a small child, was I crazy or abnormal? No one took me to a doctor or check my diet or even questioned me more about it. I'd tell my parents and they just shrugged their shoulders. If I take an acid tab I'd also see multiple faces. Not trying to say these are the same things as what u highlighted here but we do not completely understand the inner workings of the mind. Tribal and ancient and native cultures some would get into trans like States of europhoria God knows how many faces they started seeing then. I'm just pondering if we were allowed more to get into these stated of being would having mental disorders like these be better or worse. I think they would be less apparent. Because we all need that mental escapism that we are not allowed in modern Western world

I think they would be less apparent

I have to agree with you on that.

But regarding kids seeing things, they tend to be constantly imagining new stuff which is actually good for them, that is why they play so much with their toys, it helps them develop their brain.

But once we are adults, constantly seeing faces that aren't there is quite the problem.

that we are not allowed in modern Western world

Not sure if they are not allowed, but clearly they are not promoted, that is a fact indeed.

Hello @dedicatedguy

The frustration these individuals must feel when going through one of these experiences must be quite intense, and to this day, there is no known cure for this problem.

You made mention of the condition having no cure but somewhere in the context you also said showing them love and care may help improve the condition. Can this improvement lead to a permanent cure? If it can, then that's the cure, or am I wrong? In all, this is certainly a very complex metal disorder...mysterious

Regards...

@eurogee of @euronation and @steemstem communities

If it can, then that's the cure

It is not a cure, just an improvement of their condition, but they will keep being schizophrenic people.

What a pity. Damn! My heart goes to them. The world is such a mystery!

A very mysterious and complex mental disorder. There are more territories in the brain that has yet remained unexplored. Great write up :)

Its symptoms can be quite complex indeed mate. Thanks for stopping by!

Wow, you've put in great research into this piece. Kudos!

Although I've never worked with another one suffered from schizophrenia, but I've spoken to some of their loved ones, and from what they described, I can tell it wasn't a pleasant experience at all. Like most diseases and illness, sometimes those around the person will suffer equally, if not worse.

sometimes those around the person will suffer equally

You are right with that one mate, the family of the individual is also affected as well.

Reading this post reminded me of someone I know with this mental disorder. His was caused by drugs I think. It’s such that is just so crazy to witness. And there are even places I have been where I saw people like that, people often mistake them for literally mad people but they are actually aware of the fact that their brain is malfunctioning

And this mental disorder seems similar to an intense tranced state of mind, you know we see it in movies, people with this mental disorder but they’re hell of a genius. I wonder if people like that exist in real life

I wonder if people like that exist in real life

They must exist :), I don't think the popular image of the mad scientist was created out of nothing, I bet there must have been several mad scientists throughout history.

Cheers mate!

That makes sense :)

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