The Deviant in Mental Health
According to statistics the deviant in mental health is always,
the professionals since these people are striving to submit
their patients to the so-called norms. The so-called norms are
said to be people that conform to a standard set of rules, and
often believe similar in contrast. This means that everyone is
everyone else and few are who they really are.
Mental health is overrated in many instances. For example, if a
counselor believes one way he or she will not falter at the
voices of the patient's belief. If the patient believes that he
or she is physically ill and the counselor see no evidence of
the claim, the professional will often take for advantage that
the patient is ill. However, if the patient goes to the doctor,
tests are run, and then the who is the deviant. The game of cat
and mouse is always played in mental health and mental illness
since everyone wants to be right.
Is it any wonder mental illnesses are increasing and counselors
are sitting in their comfortable chairs trying to figure out
what is going on? Anyone that goes to a mental health
professional is almost certain to receive an instant diagnose.
The intake worker alone will evaluate a patient searching for
evidence that complies with the Insurance coverage. They will
then ship the patient over to a therapist and possibly onto a
psychiatrist.
The chain never ends. Too many times when patients visit a
therapist the professional will take for advantage that he or
she is educated and the patient is a misfit. They often will
talk, but listening is minimal. First, it takes years if not a
lifetime to treat a patient with paranoid schizophrenia, and
most times the patients are covered with Medicaid/Medicare and
neglected throughout the course of treatment. Mental health
experts are in constant battle trying to find answers too many
questions. Today there are experts admitting that listening to
the patient is proving more fruitful. It is time we all look at
the problems going on in the world and start taking it more
serious, rather than disregarding the problems. It is a shame
that too many mentally ill patients are sitting in jail, simply
because someone did not listen and no one did anything toward
finding a resolve. Mental illness as defined is a series of
minds that manufacture behaviors that are reworked copies of a
social existence. According to studies, the behaviors of mental
ill patients often infringe on the so-called normal society. One
of the most common traits in mental illnesses according to
professionals is denial. Here is where we stop. Denial >
Mentally Ill > When a counselor makes a mistake in many cases
they put the blame on the patient or faulty teachings. Few
rarely take responsibility for their wrong. Political > When the
leaders of the world make mistakes they often search the world
for someone else to blame....Religion > When religious leaders
are persecuted or else wrong, many find a way to blame the
victims or candidates involved. When society makes mistakes,
they often find someone else to blame. When the law makes
mistakes in most cases, it's always someone else's fault.
Denial...I think you better taking a deeper look at who is in
denial, since patients sitting across from a professional asking
for help are admitting there is a problem.
There are many areas we can review, but the deviant is not
always sitting across the room looking into the eyes of a
mentally ill person. We can also look closer at the so-called
norms of society and see they have their own set of problems. If
we all conform to a set of beliefs that has proven failure, what
makes the person (s) think they are mentally stable.
If people are sitting down letting everyone around them control
their lives and rarely standing up for their own beliefs...who
says they are mentally stable. Mental illnesses go deeper than
many are aware, since nearly everyone in the world is suffering
some type of abnormal behavior copied from other behaviors.
Someone else influences everyone; therefore, we all lost our
values and morals somewhere along the way.