Mental Illness in Underdeveloped Child Separation
TO understand the many emotional breakdowns in our society we
must understand how a person with a mental health has not
separated from his or her inner person at childhood. Many mental
illnesses and other problems in society are complicated simply
because we do not always see the problem, which lies beneath the
mental and physical disabilities.
Our child within will exist throughout our lifetime, and if we
do not recognize this 'inner child' we often suffer emotional
breakdowns. As a result, most professionals struggle to find a
way to treat patients with mental disabilities, yet often fail
to see that the problem is buried deep within the individual's
mind structure.
The child that was ignored, emotionally neglected, possibly
abused physically, or witnessed many bad disturbances, is buried
beneath a shattering mind disorder and until the main problem is
dealt with, the problem will continue to grow. To contact the
inner self one has to have a basic knowledge of his or her
problems. Once a basic knowledge is situated, the person can
move to the next step.
Having a basic understanding of you, disability can bring forth
rewards by helping the patient to accept his or her handicap.
Emotional interruptions often stem from a lifelong childhood
that has been ignored. Once the person comes to his or her
agreement with that child of the past it is often easier to help
the person move forward in recovery. After seeing, what lead to
the mental illness the person can find a way to deal with his or
her symptoms better? Some diagnoses however a stemmed from brain
injuries, chemical and physical imbalances and so forth.
While the underlying problem exist, effective treatment is not
possible until someone deals with the biological aspect of the
problem. For example, Schizophrenia was recently found to be a
disease of the mind because the Twin Holes have a larger side to
the cavity of the brain organ.
Other factors key into the understanding of schizophrenia,
including genetics. Many patients that suffer with schizophrenia
also had a disruptive childhood and often will deny any such
happenings whether it is proved or not. The key then on the
therapeutic level is to get the patient to get in touch with his
childhood and attempt to remove denial. As long as a patient is
in denial it is more complicated to treat him or her. Another
example can be seen with patients that are diagnosed with
posttraumatic stress disorder. Often these patients were
subjected to trauma as a child and the disorder escalated during
a traumatic experience. The solution then is to addressing the
child buried beneath the disorder and moving forward to the
traumatic trigger that put the disorder in severe state of mind.
Once you dig deep into the childhood and help the patient to
become acquainted with the child within then it is possible to
treat the patient more effectively.
The problem with many counselors is that they fail to listen to
the patient. Often a few believe I am the one holding the degree
so I know more than you do. However, this is far from the truth.
If more people listened to the patient mental health would not
be as extreme as it is today.
No one can know more about a condition than the one suffering.
The best solution is to following a set of steps, starting with
listening and hearing what the patient is telling you. If the
patient doe not understand his or her problem then you have to
reach down deep inside the patient's child and ask this person
questions. After you reach the child within then you can learn
more about the patient. This can help you find a strategy that
might work best for the patient.
Remember all people are different and each person should have
his or her own set of strategies. If you found that a
therapeutic strategy works for one person and not another, then
you know that there are differences that need immediate
attention. Taking it one-step and 'one day at a time' is also
useful and this strategy has worked wonders for many regardless
of what they are suffering.