thirdeye

Email: jonothon@soulteacher.co.uk

Mental Disorders

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What experience do I have?

If you have read the 'About Me' page, you may already know this answer. I am not a qualified psychiatrist or doctor (I don't have a piece of paper to prove it). However, my qualifications come from self education and being previously a sufferer of Bi-Polar disorder. Yes, I'm cured! Science and doctors did not cure me. These people are far to absorbed inside a square book to understand why we experience such states. They look for science for the answers when really we should be looking inside ourselves (Although Quantum Physics shines the light, which is currently covered by a wall of deciet) The key element of overcoming mental disorder is understanding. My focus is primarily aimed at Bi-Polar disorder, although I will mention Depression, Schizophrenia and OCD as a side note.

Depression

If you feel you are going 'Schiz', the best solution is sleep. Meditation will help you sleep, as will exercise, which will also help control your hormonal imbalances. Remember, even if your 'nut has cracked', you are still a perfectly normal human being, only constantly connected to the dream world. You are no different to a person experiencing a dream, the process is the same. If you can differentiate between the physical and dream world, life will become manageable, without the need for Soul destroying treatments.

OCD

Having lived with a close friend who 'suffers' from OCD, I have first hand insight into this 'disorder'.

Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, or ultra tidyness. This 'disease' has been wrongly branded as disorder. If anything, OCD should be rebranded as OCO (Obsessive Compulsive Order). I see nothing disorderly of this 'illness' at all. 'Sufferers' of OCD are everything but disorderly. Everything has to be placed in a specific area "These items are disorganised, they need to be put back into their place". They are overly tidy, organisaing their posessions categorically. This goes here, this goes there. "Do I need boxes? I think two boxes, with smaller boxes in between".

Yes, they are obsessive (I need to tidy/move things, all the time), and yes, they are compulsive (I need to move this now), but disorder, no, no. They are orderly. This shows that medicine has branded them wrongly, simply because they are not considered within the realms of normality. OCD should be applied to beings who are over destructive or unitdy. People who are perhaps considered chaotic. "These things are overly organised, I need to remove them from their place"

They key for living with OCD, is to find your own space and apply rules to anyone entering into your space. It will make your life much easier. It is important to go with the flow, dont fight it. If your compelled to do something (move something), then do it, it's the law of nature.

For anyone living with an OCD 'sufferer'. Understand that they need their own space and they are compelled to do something, it is not their choice. Respect and appreciate their 'disorder'. At the end of the day, you get to live in a well organised home and it makes the 'sufferers' life, a lot more panic free.

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