If you'd like to know more about my experiences just ask. Feel free to write about your own experiences with mood disorders, identity disorder, or just unusual experiences that you have had. — Josh Alfred
And I wonder how these that you describe above differ from dreams?I suffer from audio and visual hallucinations. — Josh Alfred
Question: do your afflictions interfere with every level of life, or are there some levels, activities, aspects of being, that seem immune? If it's like water to a fish, I suppose that's my answer....I have struggled... — Wallows
I wonder how hallucinations differ from dreams
Yes, and sometimes delusions. For example I will think (delusionally?) that radio broad casts have messages for me, and I can hear them. I don't know if its interferences or just my mind making up stuff while I listen. This doesn't happen often, though. — Josh Alfred
My other paranoia I equate to social anxiety. I get very nervous when having to do things outside my home and comfort zones. I also trouble talking on the phone, because I think I won't know what to say -- its apprehensive. — Josh Alfred
Are schizophrenic delusions categorically different from neurotic beliefs? — sime
For example, is psychotic paranoia qualitatively different from social-anxiety paranoia? — sime
Is the introspective rationalization of those states similar or different? — sime
Well, delusions are rather not beliefs; but, convictions that are justified and maintained through erroneous reasoning like cognitive distortions. — Wallows
But aren't depression and anxiety treated as beliefs produced by cognitive distortions in CBT? — sime
Couldn't the falling success rate of talk therapy for treating neurosis possibly be an indication that the placebo effect and behavioural conditioning are the main causal agents responsible for talk therapy's success in treating neurosis, as opposed to talk therapy working due to reasoned argument? — sime
In many cases, the depressive's beliefs about himself and the world are probably more rational than his therapist's in the sense of being evidence based. Perhaps CBT works mostly as a rhetorical device whose success has more in common with religious propaganda than with rational and honest epistemology of the self. — sime
In my own case I frequently have bouts of depression in which I will give lengthy evidence based justifications for my negative life expectations, yet my expectations often change instantly positive the moment the sun comes out... This seems to suggest that negative rationalisation is an epiphenomenal symptom of depression rather than a cause of it. — sime
And knowing all of this doesn't help me avoid negative beliefs during a future depressive episode... — sime
So while there are clearly phenomenological and neurological differences between psychosis and neurosis, I am tempted to think that they should be pushed closer together. — sime
I actually take the same meds as you, olanzapine and sertaline. — Josh Alfred
The medication has been working wonders for me. I haven't visited a hospital in two years now! — Josh Alfred
The first thing you have to realize about me is that I don’t agree that I am delusional (at least not all the time). — Noah Te Stroete
"Do you have bad negative symptoms, like anhedonia, apathy, and such? How have you dealt with those issues?
But there was one stark difference, as Stanford News points out: "While many of the African and Indian subjects registered predominantly positive experiences with their voices, not one American did. Rather, the U.S. subjects were more likely to report experiences as violent and hateful—and evidence of a sick condition." — The Atlantic: When Hearing Voices is a Good Thing by Olga Khazan
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