dave_a_mbs
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central california
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A better interpretation of "schizophrenic" is "fragmentary mind", with the sense of a lot of islands of function, but little connectivity. This might reflect some of the neurological divisions of the brain's operation that have failed to integrate.
The model I use is based on the attitudes of the subpersonalities that emerge, whatever their origin might actually be. My impression is that the present day personality has gaps, holes, vacancies etc in certain areas. These seem to be filled by "not-self" fragments that state their intention as forcing the actor to live a good life, or otherwise, to self-destruct. They tend to be very limited in function, not well shaped personalities, as if they were called up from lifetimes long past when things were much more brutal.
Most schizophrenics have normally developed logical capability, but they seem to lack emotional stability. There is no way to "reason with them" or to "talk them out of it". The logic is generally clear that they are unhappy and need assistance, but everything is frightening, and that fear overrides the logic. The result is a generalized panic state that is called up by almost anything. Catatonics, as an example, appear to be so terrified that they are in "possum mode", their bodies frozen into immobility and abandoned to whatever degree is possible. When someone intrudes the usual response is a superhuman strength attack.
The closest I can suggest as an example is to imagine going through life while dreaming, unable to tell what is real, what is projected, and unable to organize thoughts, but being acutely fearful of existential destruction by unknown factors. Clusters of inappropriate random "clang associations" occur simply because they have some common factor, giving a world without boundaries or definitions. Just degrees of chaos. Being caught in a waking nightmare while in a delirium that prevents thought is a good analogy. The most competent can handle a shoping cart filled with tin cans etc, as well as a host of imaginary tormentors, and the rest simply can't cope.
There are two basic modalities of menta deviency. What we usualy think of is hysterical function, which amounts to brooding over something to excess, and then projecting a distorted world because the distortions feel better. We all do this to some extent - false pride is an example. And when the false pride is shown to be false, we go through a "breakdown", which means that we have to abandon our distortions and accept unpleasant reality. The same mechanism is used in meditation, but in that case we turn it so that the regeneration leads deeper into meditation, greater inner silence, and better definition and awareness of reality.
Bipolar types seem to be on the fringes of the same kind of delusional thought as schiz at times, but are grounded in a reality that is often hysterically depressed, or at the other extreme, might be manic, and feeling like God - and ready to "fix the world" even if it means killing off a lot of people. (The resemblance to certain politicians in the modern world is obvious. - We need a mental health screen for Presidential candidates. One example - overcoming a substance addiction is a good sign of potentially good character, but it is not a sign of resolution of the underlying mental factors causing the addiction. Bush's actions in office would have been pretty easily predictable if anyone had thought of matters in this maner.)
dave
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