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Mental Health

Mental Health > Mental Health

One of the first things to not do when reading up on mental health—yours, his, hers, theirs—is come to a hasty conclusion. This is what first year psych students learn (if the instructor is worth a wit).

I say this not because I am a Ph.D., an M.D., or any other title with a D. in it , necessarily, but because I read it when I was studying the enthralling subject of mental health on my own, and was sure I had every disorder, diagnosis, neurosis, and psychosis I encountered. I also heard in my first year as fledgling psychology major, heard it again through cohorts, classmates, and colleagues who also came to laugh at themselves as they each decided in their solitude that they, too, were surely at least one of the four types of schizophrenic, manic, depressive, or in some way psychotic.

But as funny as we still find this, a quarter of a century later as we remind each other to take our meds, it is actually quite serious to have to contemplate your own mental health. And it is warned that when you are reading up on or studying an illness, the tendency—as humans who crave connection—is to identify with well-written material. The lesson is, however, that with each mental illness one must have a certain (large) number of or all of the symptoms/characteristics of that illness.

For instance, to be considered to have ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, also known as ADD (no emphasis on the implicit Hyperactivity), one must be diagnosed as having most of the 69+ symptoms and must have these said symptoms notably apparent and consistently observed for at least 6 months, consistently. This, according to mental health professionals and experts in print and online at mental health sites.

The same (or similar) goes for a neurosis or psychosis, with a psychosis diagnosis requiring one to have every symptom, affect, or condition listed for that particular psychosis.

And while we can read as much as possible on a subject, studying the FAQ’s, completing questionnaires, and even taking legitimate tests in self-help books, online and by telephone hotlines, we cannot self-diagnose our own mental health based on books; we cannot be diagnosed over the Internet, and cannot be diagnosed over the phone.

When I was a kid, we didn’t have the net, and we didn’t (weren’t blessed with) such recently understood mental problems as SAD (Seasonal Affective Disorder), BPD (Bi-polar Disorder) or OCD (Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder). We had the symptoms, but not the genius of medical and mental health scholars, researchers, and experts to diagnose them. Of course, we had plenty to work with—what with the epilepsy, early Alzheimer’s, and other daily dementias we were sure we had.

Mental Health > Mental Health