Only You Can Cure Yourself
by Ann Lawson
Norwich, UK
Mental illness has an extremely poor image. It’s been
called the last taboo. Unfortunately those who suffer or
have suffered from being diagnosed with a mental illness tend to
be dragged down by this image. Once you have been diagnosed
or initially admitted to an institution for treatment, it is
almost impossible to escape the stigmatization which
automatically follows. Nor is it only those on the outside
of the caring professions who carry these prejudices.
Blind ignorance is also rife within psychiatry. There is
currently a research article which connects schizophrenia to the
incidence of being cross-eyed or being born in a month with
particularly intemperate weather. It seems we have
progressed little from when entrails were read in Ancient Rome to
anticipate events. The fact is no one has a clue about
what causes schizophrenia, although as with most things these
days a genetic cause is being sought, so far with little
success. The most widely held theory for nearly all kinds
of mental illness is it is due to a chemical imbalance in the
brain.
I find this fascinating since no
patient these days avoids the use of chemicals from first
diagnosis, often till death. So how do psychiatrists'
determine that there is a chemical imbalance when the brains of
mental patients have been bombarded with powerful chemicals from
the beginning? What is even more disturbing about this
theory is that if the drugs themselves have caused this
imbalance, is that not good reason for stopping them?
Psychiatric drugs do not in any way
cure the patient or even make him or her feel better. The
side effects are appalling. They include the onset of
neurological disorders. They include diabetes due to
weight gain and innumerable minor and not so minor
discomforts. It is seldom claimed that the drugs are
therapeutic: They merely mask symptoms - symptoms which
probably were less troubling than the effects of the drugs.
The drugs do this by crudely interfering with the normal chemical
makeup of the brain, making thought processes difficult and
sleep (or unconsciousness that appears to be sleep) hard to
avoid. Did you ever wonder why mental patients are like
zombies? Well, there’s your answer. Psychiatric
drugs are making them feel ill and cause them to see the world
with only half a brain. Drugs are the current historical
sequel to long term institutionalization and chains - and
lobotomy. Basically psychiatry is a violent and intrusive
way of controlling people who do not conform to other people's
expectations - or those who are vulnerable. Remember that
treatment is not voluntary once force is used. Mental
patients do not have meaningful civil rights. In the UK,
often they are not even allowed to vote. In "hospitals,"
"medication" is routinely administered by force if the patient
refuses or is "non-compliant". Mental patients have no
right to privacy even when living in the community:
"Health" workers may go round neighbors asking about the
"patient's" behavior, among other ploys. Medication is
usually administered for a lifetime. There is no way
anyone ever gets ‘better’ on psychiatric drugs. Being
‘mentally ill’ is a social status, not a medical condition.
And the hospitals are merely prisons.
Why has psychiatry not been
abandoned, since it is based on overt ignorance and involves
obvious abuse? Why does the myth of mental illness
persist?
Of course, we all suffer from time
to time - usually depression resulting from life
experience. There are various strategies which can be used
to lift ones spirits and improve one’s health. They
include exercise and diet. However the idea of the
mentally ill as a category of persons distinct from the rest of
the human race continues. I think this happens partly
because of vested interests: The companies that market the
drugs, which are the current treatment, make vast profits
exceeded only by share prices for Internet companies. It
is in the interest of these drug companies and their
shareholders, which include many doctors, that psychiatry widen
its net, constantly bringing more and more people into the sphere
of those who are forced to ingest psychiatric drugs for the rest
of their lives. Their motives and their lack of a sense of
social responsibility are like those of the tobacco
companies.
A drug has recently been developed
which makes people less shy. Suddenly a new illness, a new
diagnosis, was created to make use of this drug: "social
phobia." Now people are being diagnosed with this and -
surprise! surprise! - are prescribed this new drug. The
need to sell this drug and make a profit actually created the
diagnosis! Tobacco companies do not need to force their
customers to smoke since tobacco is highly addictive. Most
people find psychiatric drugs almost intolerable. So drug
advocates create such fear and paranoia concerning mentally ill
people (who are statistically considerably less dangerous to
others than the general population) that a hysterical policy of
containment and pharmacological control of mental patients is
adopted and enforced.
Some researchers search for the
causes of mental illness, particularly schizophrenia, ad
infinitum. Science is no where nearer to understanding it
than when it was first defined. Based on considerable
experience and with great confidence, I argue that the whole
course of this "illness" is created by the way it is
"treated."
It is the confinement, the stigmatization, the ignorance, the
physical and emotional abuse, the drugs, the prejudice of
employers and consequent poverty, and the overbearing attitude of
psychiatrists and others that cause this "illness." For most
people, mental illness has a career path from which there is no
escape. There is a vast industry profiting financially
from the abject misery of mental patients whose problems are
exacerbated by an effort to create hysteria, thereby making them
outcasts. This makes sense of the otherwise cruel and
senseless profession of psychiatry. The mentally ill are
an essential part of what supports a very profitable psychiatric
drug manufacturing industry. And psychiatry maintains the
status quo by drugging into oblivion those who challenge it.
I’m not saying there are not
vulnerable individuals, individuals with problems, and unhappy
people - even people who are not healthy. But I am saying
that conventional western psychiatry does not even attempt to
cure them but simply to contain them and perpetuate them as
"patients." Secondly, western psychiatry often creates problems,
such as in the case of schizophrenia, where there were none
before, by its attitude and it's "treatment." The widening
grip
of psychiatry also has been at the expense of less intrusive,
more friendly and wholesome approaches to helping mentally or
emotionally troubled people. What might be a temporary
problem due to some minor upset or even a mistaken diagnosis,
psychiatry can and usually does convert into a dramatic
condition which requires a lifetime of treatment. This
damages the individual to the core of his being. The
mentally ill are not more dangerous than anyone else despite the
way they are mistreated. Paranoid schizophrenia is a
logical response to psychiatric treatment and not the result of
some unfortunate genetic modification. Any fool should be
able to understand this, but try explaining it to a
psychiatrist! It makes more sense to them what the
temperature was outside when
you were born. Who is mad here - psychiatry's patients or
its defenders?
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