Anti psychiatry

A HISTORY OF THE ANTIPSYCHIATRY MOVEMENT, AS EXPLAINED TO AN INTERESTED PSYCHOLOGIST by Philip A. Kumin (2023)

First, let’s talk a little bit about the drug companies’ medical model of behavior and the devastation that does to patients’ lives. Keep in mind that Sigmund Freud had discovered a cure for behavior problems, regardless of whether they were due to alcoholism, drug addiction, or insanity. In this odd sense, the drug companies have never had any business getting involved in behaviorism. The fact that their reason for doing so anyway has had everything to do with gargantuan profits, that is a flimsy excuse for the devastation their products wreck on patients’ lives.

I think it’s universally acknowledged that the two worst sources of stigma against patients are always the news media and the Hollywood movie industries. Unfortunately, it remains to be determined if there has ever been any direct collusion between these three entities in the public discrediting of patients. Certainly that discrediting works to the advantage of pharmaceuticals. It’s very similar to the news media and Hollywood’s agreeing to do the drug companies’ dirty work for them.

The first self-serving myth which the drug companies promoted worldwide was that their pills were critical to the maintenance of patients. If some patients refused to take them willingly, they should be physically restrained and forced to take them. The drug companies sought to promote the belief that it was imperative patients take their meds in order to avoid becoming dangerous.

There was one particular problem with this which the drug companies knew they were going to run into: that the law says it’s illegal for one person to assault/put their hands on another person without that person giving permission, and that is just as much true in mental hospitals as it is any place else. This is where the invaluable discrediting by the news media and Hollywood come in. The drug companies’ thinking was that if with the help of their allies, they could devalue the lives of patients in the public eye, no one would give a damn that patients were being assaulted in institutions in the first place. This explains where the problem of stigma comes from.

The startup of the antipsychiatry movement is looked upon as being the date of publication of the controversial book, The Myth of Mental Illness, in the early or mid 1960’s. This book was written by a now-deceased dissident psychiatrist named Thomas Szasz, and I have an ever-so-vague memory of the publicity surrounding it. The antipsychiatry movement, (the name of which is actually a misnomer,) was started by a conglomeration of dissident mental health professionals and academics. Rather than this being a movement against psychiatry, my guess is that it’s more of a protest against the drug companies’ medical model.

I think it’s helpful to look at the timeframe of developments. The first two psychiatric drugs were discovered in the 1950’s and had been brought to market by the early 1960’s. It was just a couple of years after that that the antipsychiatry movement got underway. In the 1970’s, deinstitutionalization began and some of the patients who were released back into the community and who were politically inclined formed their own faction of antipsychiatry, the psychiatric inmates’ liberation movement.

In all these years, the news media has never been willing to publicize either the antipsychiatry movement or the patients’ contingent of it. They don’t approve of either one. Maybe that’s not such a mystery after all, considering that they’ve been no friend to patients.

Abandonment Issues – Sherrie Campbell PhD

Tuesday Teachings

Abandonment syndrome is real. It results from not being able to count on those closest to us to be there with any predictability, stability or consistency. We are left constantly feeling as if the bottom could fall out at any minute, and no one will be there to lovingly and willingly support us.

It is impossible to develop trust in a family where we live each day having to cope with their unregulated moodiness, selfishness, and manipulation. We cannot feel safe when we never know where we stand. This type of hidden abuse creates abandonment syndrome.

When we suffer from abandonment syndrome, we live life walking delicately on eggshells. We overthink, over-care, and overdo to try and keep relationships. We desperately try not to be too much of something bad and not enough of something good.

To be placed in this type of position is emotional abuse at its finest. We have the right to stop this pattern of abandonment in our lives. We must set our boundaries and then fiercely stand by them.

Exiting Psychiatry

Psychiatry has taken our emotional/spiritual problems and made them biological/brain problems. When you take a person’s emotional suffering and blame it on their lack of cognitive ability due to unproven biological reasons (chemical imbalance), more psychological/mental damage can occur, along with potential physiological damage from the side effects of medication.

The following is a list of things that helped me become professionally “undiagnosed” by a psychiatrist from Bipolar Disorder and off medication.

(Do not EVER stop taking your medication cold turkey or without professional help!!!)

  1. Belief in a higher power
    The Mental Health Benefits of Religion & Spirituality
    https://www.nami.org/Blogs/NAMI-Blog/December-2016/The-Mental-Health-Benefits-of-Religion-Spiritual
  2. Talk with a psychologist
    Psychotherapy
    https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/psychotherapy/about/pac-20384616#:~:text=Psychotherapy%20can%20help%20treat%20most,as%20depression%20or%20bipolar%20disorder.
  3. Exercise
    Is exercise more effective than medication for depression and anxiety?
    https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/is-exercise-more-effective-than-medication-for-depression-and-anxiety

Harnessing Neuroplasticity: How Your Workout Impacts Brain Function
https://www.americansportandfitness.com/blogs/fitness-blog/harnessing-neuroplasticity-how-your-workout-impacts-brain-function

  1. Decrease sugar and processed food consumption
    The impact of sugar consumption on stress driven, emotional and addictive behaviors
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0149763418308613

Sugar Is Wreaking Havoc on Your Hormonal Health
https://observer.com/2018/02/sugar-is-wreaking-havoc-on-your-hormonal-health/

  1. Understanding the link between trauma, flight or flight response, cortisol, & inflamation
    Len Losik Ph.D
    Mental Illness A Creation by the Fight-or-Flight
    Free with Kindle Unlimited

Childhood Trauma, the HPA Axis and Psychiatric Illnesses
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.748372/full

Stress System Malfunction Could Lead to Serious, Life Threatening Disease
https://www.nichd.nih.gov/newsroom/releases/stress

Inflammation in Mental Disorders: Is the Microbiota the Missing Link?
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7475155/

Cortisol as a Biomarker of Mental Disorder Severity
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8584322/

  1. Practice gratitude
    Effects of gratitude intervention on mental health and well‐being among workers: A systematic review
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8582291/
  2. Stop worrying about things out of your control
    How Worrying Affects the Body
    https://www.webmd.com/balance/how-worrying-affects-your-body
  3. Control your anger
    Anger – how it affects people
    https://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/health/healthyliving/anger-how-it-affects-people
  4. Practice forgiveness
    Forgiveness can improve mental and physical health
    https://www.apa.org/monitor/2017/01/ce-corner
  5. Prayer & meditation
    New Study Examines the Effects of Prayer on Mental Health
    https://psychcentral.com/blog/new-study-examines-the-effects-of-prayer-on-mental-health#1

We must stop believing that a diagnosis has to be life long. You have to do your own hard work and research to get to the root cause and solutions. Medication may be necessary for some time and there is nothing wrong with that. What works for one, may not work for all. Always believe there is hope.

Here are a few videos I highly recommend

Medicating Normal
https://youtu.be/E6dvbeGpsO0?si=DlER5N9lZMx-OCVW

The Marketing of Madness – The Truth About Psychotropic Drugs
https://youtu.be/M_61ONB3b1c?si=9mDP6TcjKZ_Be6Yt

Psychiatry & Big Pharma Exposed
https://youtu.be/-Nd40Uy6tbQ?si=Zre3sC2d2Cy1GQKM

These and the books on the group background picture are full of invaluable information.

I hope you will join the group & share if you think this could be helpful for others. 👇
https://www.facebook.com/groups/799542155075625/?ref=share