>>> they are triggered by internal factors, i.e. brain chemistry,
I have a problem with this narrative. Yes, the bad feelings might be a direct consequence of some neurotransmitter being released or not released, but why is the neurotransmitter released or not released?
I see what you're aiming at here. When it comes to bipolar disorder, there's usually no disernable trigger, but let's say for the sake of argument that there are always is some trigger which is subtle in nature. Then it means that something very subtle triggers a totally unproportional emotional response which can last for months, lead to much suffering, and be very debilitating. No matter how you put it, it's an illness and it doesn't correlate to the nature of contemporary society. Notice that bipolar disorder has existed for at least two thousands years, possibly since the dawn of man, when society was considerable less stressful, superficial, controlled, and what have you. The same goes for severe depressions. I'm not saying that the nature of contemporary society can't affect, amplify and not seldom induce mental health conditions, because I'm sure it can, but I'm not buying that all mental health coniditions solely are products of the society we live in. Also, notice that gene sequences which increase the risk of developing bipolar disorder, and sometimes also major depressive disorder, can and often are inherited, and society can hardly be blamed for genetic heritage, especially since these mental health conditions have existed for thousands of years.
>>> Again, I'll use myself as an example. When I have a depressive episode, I can literally think that I don't deserve to live because I'm not a good master for my pets. I feed them, I play with them, I pet them and so on, but I think that it's not enough and that I don't deserve to live. I think it will be very difficult to find anyone who thinks that this is not a proportional reaction by any means.
This is an example that I know from personal experience. But then again, I am behaving differntly towards my cat than I would if it could emote like a human being. I scare it off sometimes or yell at it, and afterwards I feel really bad for it. My question would be why are you constantly trying to measure your own sensibilities and reactions by comparing them with the sensibilities and reactions of others? Why don't you construe your feeling of guilt as a positive quality instead?
I
do not compare myself with others when I feel that I'm a bad master to my pets. I empathize with them and wish I could do more for them. The thought that I don't deserve to live because of this is and remains unproportional and thus irrational.
>>> . I fail to see how that can be connected to societal structures.
Simple: you feeling guilty for eating meat would have garnered you nothing but ridicule fourty years ago. Even today people make jokes about you for questioning this cultural practice of eating meat because you can sympathize with animals who are tortured and treated like dirt. Why should the majority of people be the measure of a reaction being appropriate?
This doesn't change the fact that the reaction is unproportional.
>>> do you suffer from depression yourself?
That depends on what you think depression is. I certainly fit the DSM description of (atypical) chronic depression. But I don't see myself as ill. I would probably fit a whole host of PD diagnoses and anxiety diagnoses. Most people would.
The problem is that many of us suffer and get debilitated by our mental health conditions and get help from psychotherapy and medication. (In my case, only medication, just to make that clear.) When it comes to bipolar disorder a plethora of treatments have been tried throughout at least two thousand years, including exercise, gymnastics, fresh air, crafts, arts, hashish, opium, psychoanalysis, relaxing environments, prayers, floggings, exorcism, lobotomy, various drugs and machines, but the only thing which has worked is modern medication. Believe me, I've tried
everything myself. I honestly wish that you could offer a miracle cure.
>>> So, they simply misinterpret how they feel?
Where have I said that? How can you misinterpret how you feel? If I kick you in the nuts, do you have to interpret this feeling first before understanding that it hurts? You feel how you feel how you feel. Now, the reasons for w h y you feel how you feel is the point of discussion, and this is where it becomes a political issue.
Alright, now I know where you're coming from. I thought you were one of those types who claim that there are no mental illnesses. Sorry.
>>> two thousand years of studies of mental health conditions and the research being carried out by thousands of psychologists and neurobiologists in dozens of countries around the world are misguided and/or a conspiracy?
Now I don't remember psychology being two thousand years old. AFAIK, psychology/ psychiatry are relatively young disciplines. Misguided, yes. A conspiracy, no. I'll just give you the example of drapetomania again, which was a psychiatric diagnosis of slaves that suddenly had the strong urge to run away from their farms. Or homosexuality, which was a psychiatric diagnosis until the late 1970s. Or hysteria, which somehow magically dissappeared with the rise of feminism. As a recent example, we have ADHD. Btw, why should the fact that a lot of people have studied something and created knowledge in a particular field of investigation imply that it is somehow legitimate? If this was true, should we take the scholastics serious again, who meticulously tried to logically prove the existance of god for thousands of years? Or what about alchemy?
I am not saying that psychology as a science is useless btw. It's function as an instrument of oppression and it's usefulness for other means aren't mutually exclusive. Psychology is useful in making people addicted to facebook, just to name one example.
If you read what I actually wrote, I've never claimed that psychology as a science is two thousand years old. What I wrote is that mental health conditions have been studied for two thousand years. The symptoms have been observed and documented for two millennia. Society has changed, but the symptoms haven't, something which I think disproves your theory that everything can be explained as products of society. (Unless I've mistunderstood you.)
Drapetomania is a moot point. The idea was ridiculed even back then and never gained support. As for homosexuality, I hope you will accept that I don't want to open that can of worms. Hysteria is definitely a product of it's time, but it doesn't make it less real. Anorexia nervosa was very rare before the 1980s, but is common in our times. However, it has the highest mortality rate of all mental health conditions and can't just simply be dismissed as a fad. Even if it's a product of our time, the suffering is real, and it was real for women suffering from hysteria too. Anoxeria nervosa and hysteria are interesting, because they are arguably mental health conditions that are induced by society as I mentioned above and in line with your thinking. One can argue that the propensity to develop these disorders are separate from society, but I think it's safe to say that individuals most likely never would develop these disorders if it weren't for negative societal pressure and norms. (You see, we agree on some points. ;) )
Pshychology is a questionable science since it, for obvious reasons, is difficult to quantify the human mind. Still, it's all we got. To just dismiss psychology as an instrument of oppression and to not separate psychiatric care from marketing methods is absurd. Do you honestly think that psychiatric care has been concieved by evil minds and that all psychologists and psychiatrists are sadists or unwitting tools? Psychology has
many shortcomings and its fair share of unempathetic and unintelligent people, and psychiatric care systems are definitely dysfunctional in
many countries, but to categorically say that it's all evil is incredibly categorical.
I think a reason that we disagree on this is that we have very different experiences of psychiatric care. I would guess that your experience is very negative. Allow me to share my experience. Without any exaggeration whatsoever, I can say that 4 out of 5 psychiatrists and psychiatric nurses I've met (I've never talked to a psychologist) are among the most compassionate and respectful people I've met in my life. They have never forced me to anything. Once when I was highly suicidal they asked me if I it wouldn't be better if I stayed in the ward over night, I respectfully declined and they accepted that. I've told them about my suicidality and even discussed methods, and although it has made them nervous, they have focused on how to help me avoid suicide and never been judgemental or tried to section me. They accept and respect that I'm sometimes better read up than they are and that I use unconventional methods of self-treatment, including that I frequent a suicide forum. (No, I haven't mentioned that it's this forum, just that it's a "suicide forum".) They discuss my medication with me and if I want to change something, we change it. Now you tell me that they want to oppress me and manipulate me? Can you see why I, based on my experience, find your categorical dismissal absurd?
>>> It seems you have come up with something truly unique no one has thought of before
As much as I would like to claim this—no. You could read Foucault, David Smail, Mark Fisher, Thomas Szasz, R.D. Laing—the mad in america podcast is a good one. Then sentiments like Jiddu Krishnamurtis have always rang true for me (It is no measure of health ... ).
I don't deny for a second that there are many valid ways of approaching the human mind. I have for instance started experimenting with hallucinogens to see if they can help me.
>>> I fail to see what that has to do with the argument I put forth.
You said it is not realism if people like you and you think they don't. Then let me ask you again, how would you know whether a) the feeling you are expressing by saying "people don't like me" is actually expressing what you are sensing as a threat or a problem, i.e. the cause of your distress? As if human relationships could be broken down into such simple concepts like either being "liked" or not being "liked"; b) people actually "like" you and not just pretend to like you because they have ulterior motives, because they want to be polite, etc etc
.
I'll give one more example. One of the most mystified topics in our culture is sexual competition/ the sexual market. You can see this by looking at our language: "true beauty comes from the inside", "personality is more important than looks", "what is on the inside counts", "you have to be polite/ a gentleman" etc etc. Now if you are exceptionally ugly, say a 2/10—members of the opposite sex will treat you with disinterest, because you have no value to them as a potential mate, and you will sense this, because your organism is a reproductive machine, and it reads these signals all the time. But there will be an obvious disconnect between your rational mind, which has been fed illusions and lives in a civilized world, where one doesn't show his disdain openly—and you live within a world of myths and illusions about sexual competition (and not just that, but also about nature, status, wealth, power in general), so there will be enormous cognitive dissonance. People will never admit to you that they find you ugly or that they are repulsed by you, not even a psychologist will. But you will sense that they are in fact acting as if they are repulsed.
Do you understand what I'm trying to explain? I realize I'm doing a bad job of it right now :-/
In this scenario, if you say "I feel that people don't like me"—would you be correct?
I understand you and you're not doing a bad job at all. I admit my example was bad, and you argue well for how difficult it is quantify something like that. Maybe it's somewhat beside the point as we're mainly focusing on regular depressions here, but we can take a look at depressive psychoses. A common theme is feelings of persecution. Although it's also difficult to quanitify, I'd say it's easier to evaluate that, as it should possible to determine if people actually persecute the person in question.
I fear that I might come through as too dismissive here. I believe our opinions aren't that far from each other.
First, I believe that mental health conditions may be affected, amplified and not seldom even induced by society. A typical example of a mental health condition induced by society could be a depression over being unemployed and isolated. I do not believe that all mental health conditions can be explained solely by societal factors, though.
Second, I believe that unconventional thinking often is labeled irrational due to societal norms. The line between healthy pessimism and unhealthy depression can be thin or non-existent. The notion that life is misery is usually dismissed as overly negative, even though it's easy to support it with logical arguments. Political opinions which question the status quo are usually dismissed as unrealistic or utopian. A "mad" artist or scientist may be recognized as a genius later on. I do not believe that people suffering from all health conditions always are some kind of dissidents who simply think differently from the majority, though.