Here are the 3 worst mental health disorders

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47 Comments

  1. 1 and 2 are called strongholds and if you don’t start to get to the root of the nature of reality, I’m not sure how you could help them 🙁

  2. I wonder and though it may be unlikely, have you ever dealt with anyone who has ASPD/sociopathy or Psychopathy?

    And what was you're experience with the patient like? I am also aware that actually knowing that a patient might have one of these disorders is really difficult, however they've been mental health disorders I've always been curious about.

  3. I unfortunately lost my younger brother to a drug overdose (fentanyl/methamphetamine)4 years ago (4 days before Christmas ). He struggled on and off with drug addiction the majority of his adult life and ended up dying at the age of 53.

  4. I have worked as a support worker with service users who have anorexia or schizophrenia. Hard for the families as well as them.
    I worked in an office and a colleague had anorexia. Her mother was really finding this hard to deal with, unsurprisingly.

  5. I've read multiple accounts from young adults describing the feelings around losing their grasp on reality and it is terrifying and heartbreaking. Right up there with dementia for "things I never want to experience, ever".

  6. How do I get out of a generational ED, by this I mean I’m trying to have a better relationship with food but everytime I leave my room my parent just makes it really hard, my sibling also has symptoms of an eating disorder cause of how my parent sees food, I’m trying to get out of that cycle but I don’t know how

  7. Why don't you psychiatrists speak up about Gender Dysphoria being a mental illness!?! If "delusional thinking" is your base for the list schizophrenia. Then, being a Democrat needs to be classified as a mental illness. Men can not get pregnant…

  8. My oldest son is a drug addict and has put me through heck. He has stolen so much from like family heirlooms that can never be replaced. He has broken every door in my house. He has had the feds watching my house . I finally had to make him leave which was one of the hardest things I have ever had to do because he didn't have a job because he stole from his boss and got fired he didn't have a car and he was on the streets I was afraid he was going to die. He is now in jail and I ly time will tell if he will turn his life around. To live someone so much but have to turn your back is horrible I cried everyday for months

  9. Honestly, before you put in drug addiction, you should have hit bipolar disorder and schizoaffective disorder, both those get a lot of the hallucinations and delusions that schizophrenics get plus mania and depression, and mania actually makes you more likely to commit suicide than depression. Drug addiction does not hold a candle, and I'm somebody who's had anorexia, drug addiction and bipolar disorder with psychotic features, which has also been diagnosed as schizoaffective disorder by some doctors. I'm positive that drug addiction is the least severe thing that I have, including anxiety, ADHD, cptsd, panic disorder, hyperventilation disorder, anorexia, autism. Addiction is literally the least serious thing, it has been the easiest to get over. People who are whining about addiction usually have nothing else wrong with them other than maybe some simple depression and a little anxiety.

  10. I would've thought something like bipolar would be #1 considering they're often not only a danger to themselves but others too, compared to anorexia which for sure is bad but does damage only to the person with it (and emotional damage to people who know them).

  11. It’s just such a weird take from a psychiatrist, comparing which mental illness is the “worst”. Maybe they are the worst in the sense they are the hardest to treat but for patients it can sound like their suffering isn’t bad enough.

  12. Our daughter struggled with anorexia, recovered after 4-5 years of hard work. Then turned to “medical marijuana” at 18 (against our wishes) to fight the anxiety she felt, became addicted- YES-ADDICTED- to weed and experienced cannabis induced psychosis as a result of her overuse of cannabis. She is now THC free, and tapering off all psychiatric meds, except for BusPar to manage anxiety, but has a long road ahead of her. Her brain is constantly in fight or flight mode. The marijuana made EVERYTHING worse.

  13. Addiction and eating disorders are worse than bipolar disorder and personality disorders (including psychopathy)?…🤔

    This is the reason critically thinking for yourself is so important.

  14. I work in mental health. You cannot generalise like this. Severity of the issue is the biggest factor. I know people with sensitivity to psychosis who function quite well and someone with persistent depression who o quality of life.

  15. I am 68 years old and fought anorexia for 45 years. it has been hell. and now I am detoxing off all antidepressants.I am in my 4th month. It has not been easy as you know. I have lost faith in doctors and my psychiatrist of 10 years was just a drug dealer. She asked the same 5 questions every month and could not even remember what my answers were so sometimes asked the same question 2 times or more. I got my script and left. She was not available to discuss the meds. I got fed up and wanted to quit my meds so did it alone. I am feeling again probably for the first time in over 30 years…which is how long I have been medicated with assorted antidepressants. Being a senior I want my final years to belong to me not a drug induced numbness. It has been a tough battle. This is my third time detoxing and I am not going back. Thank you for your channel. I wish I could afford you but the way things are it looks like I am in this alone.

  16. Schizoaffective and CPTSD is a bitch to deal with. Add in an autism diagnosis and some days feeling like playing tag with cars on the interstate doesnt seem so bad.
    The meds initially helped when I was committed and diagnosed at 12. Now at 30 nothing works anymore so Ive just said screw it and gotten off everything. It’s been a year now, I was in an outpatient program for 5 months to help manage symptoms when they inpatient’d me against my will. Retraumatized the hell out of me and used my trauma against me, ran after they released me and haven’t sought ‘help’ after.
    I also don’t wanna hear anything about the keto diet to help with schizophrenia symptoms because it doesn’t work- I did keto for a year (for weight loss though) and it didn’t do anything for my symptoms ngl. It was both normal keto and extreme, both just made me lose a bunch of weight (honestly I recommend it for weight loss due to how affective it is but only for a small period of time due to strain on the liver, but that’s it)

  17. Paranoid schizophrenia with addiction, strong narcissistic traits and cptsd is another world entirely.
    Just when you think you finally understand the person/patient and their problem (assuming there's only one or two), something else crops up!

  18. SCHIZOPHRENIC STEP DAUGHTER.. DEPRESSED SON BECAUSE OF BIRTH DEFECTS.. 1 WITH AUTISM.. TO TOP IT OFF I HAVE NARCISSISTIC PARENTS.. I LIVE IN SOLITUDE NOW..MY SILENCE IS GETTING THEM TO RE-THINK LIFE CHOICES.. WITHOUT ME AS A SAFETY NET.. 🥰

  19. My best school friend from youth developed anorexia, later she added a lot of alcohol and then she went into serious borderline condition, she went from high school, studied, then had a formation in the therapeutic field and later could not work at all. After I headed nothing from her for about 15 years, she called me twice, sharing her problems and then on the third call, she proposed to come for a week, during a time, where I worked 6d/w for a yoga seminar center and I told her; it would be a bit difficult as I lived there in community and had almost no free, neither alone time, so I said she can decide but I think it could be a bit difficult for her if I cannot really look for her. Then I did not hear from her for 3-4 months and then her mother called me, saying she killed herself. That was so shocking and I feel so sorry, she was a friendly shining and very gifted soul. So yes, those struggles are very hard for the person involved and concerned. I regret that I could not help her.

  20. "It's really hard to deal with someone who has delusional thinking" – this is how it feels for patients to deal with 99% of psychiatrists. Your colleagues are among the most deranged people on the planet.

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