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Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
#31
Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
(April 30, 2015 at 7:12 pm)vorlon13 Wrote: Welcome, you'll fit right in.


Tongue

Fit right in your arse huh?

Watch out for Vorlon he's got sugar in his tank. [emoji16]
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#32
RE: Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
KUSA babe you throwing shade?

hahaha
"Adulthood is like looking both ways before you cross the road, and then getting hit by an airplane"  - sarcasm_only

"Ironically like the nativist far-Right, which despises multiculturalism, but benefits from its ideas of difference to scapegoat the other and to promote its own white identity politics; these postmodernists, leftists, feminists and liberals also use multiculturalism, to side with the oppressor, by demanding respect and tolerance for oppression characterised as 'difference', no matter how intolerable."
- Maryam Namazie

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#33
RE: Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
Vorlonholio!

Welcome, British Guy Whose Name I Forget. Hope you fit in as well as I do.
"For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring." - Carl Sagan
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#34
RE: Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
Interesting introduction. Welcome

I had to write a boring essay on major depressive disorder a few weeks ago. For those who don't know, major depression is the most common clinically diagnosed depressive disorder. Once a patient has had it for two years they are re-diagnosed as having persistent depressive disorder. Pharmacotherapy is by far the most cost-effective medical intervention; and treatment from all forms of health care (pharmacotherapy, counselling/psychotherapy, proactive care, etc) is only around 50% effective (see Andrews et al. 2004). One in three patients do not respond positively to any form of treatment. Partly because patients, such as yourself, need another disorder treated first before the depression treatment will work.

The distinction between major depression and persistent depression is fairly arbitrary. The distinction allows healthcare workers to claim that all people who suffer from major depression are suffering a non-chronic form of depression, since 100% of them will eventually be diagnosed as being free from it; unfortunately for people such as yourself you don't get diagnosed as being well, you get diagnosed with persistent depression and the treatment plan then reflects whatever they think is best for the treatment of persistent depression rather than the treatment of major depression.

Anyway good luck, and I hope you work out what is causing your depression and are able to address it effectively.
For Religion & Health see:[/b][/size] Williams & Sternthal. (2007). Spirituality, religion and health: Evidence and research directions. Med. J. Aust., 186(10), S47-S50. -LINK

The WIN/Gallup End of Year Survey 2013 found the US was perceived to be the greatest threat to world peace by a huge margin, with 24% of respondents fearful of the US followed by: 8% for Pakistan, and 6% for China. This was followed by 5% each for: Afghanistan, Iran, Israel, North Korea. -LINK


"That's disgusting. There were clean athletes out there that have had their whole careers ruined by people like Lance Armstrong who just bended thoughts to fit their circumstances. He didn't look up cheating because he wanted to stop, he wanted to justify what he was doing and to keep that continuing on." - Nicole Cooke
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#35
RE: Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
Bah... depression... just... ugh... stop thinking about bad things! So obvious!... Tongue

Welcome aboard!
Do teach our resident theists how a simple chemical imbalance in the brain can lead to certain feelings that seem as real as anything else.
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#36
RE: Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
Hello to you Saxmoof! Welcome

(April 30, 2015 at 7:33 pm)Minimalist Wrote: Why do  those two things seem to go together?

(April 30, 2015 at 7:38 pm)Parkers Tan Wrote: A mentally-ill Briton? What a surprise.

j/k, hiyas. Smile

Seriously! I've not been here long but it seems all us Brits are mentally ill, and vice versa.  Tongue

(May 1, 2015 at 6:47 pm)Saxmoof Wrote:
(May 1, 2015 at 9:55 am)AFTT47 Wrote: Welcome!

Boy am I jealous about meeting 4 religious people your whole life. It should be we American atheists that are depressed. Smile
(May 1, 2015 at 11:26 am)ChadWooters Wrote: I thought depression just went with being British... Sorry, I was thinking of the Irish. My bad. Seriously though welcome. Many of us, including myself , struggle with depression. I'm pretty sure you'll find that you are in good company.

Is there a correlation between atheism and depression? Is it the god-shaped hole in our soul?

Britons don't have a higher rate of depression than Americans, it's probably just a coincidence that we seem to here.

(May 1, 2015 at 7:22 pm)Pyrrho Wrote:
(May 1, 2015 at 6:47 pm)Saxmoof Wrote: Is there a correlation between atheism and depression? Is it the god-shaped hole in our soul?


I don't think there is any correlation, but you would have to look for research on the topic to be sure.  I expect, though, if there were a connection, the religionists would be trumpeting that to discourage people from being atheists, so I am pretty sure there must be no such connection.

They do in fact do that. There have been numerous studies, mostly in the US, finding that atheists have a higher rate of depression than Christians, which I've seen Christians point to many times, however more careful and detailed research is suggesting it's a lot more complicated than that. Without going too much into it on this thread (would make an interesting discussion in its own right though), the higher depression rate of atheists in the US and other very religious countries could very well be caused by minority stress and/or lack of substitutes for the supportive communities that churches can be, rather than the lack of a god belief to give them hope or comfort. There isn't enough evidence to conclude whether the cause of the correlation is anything like what some Christians suggest it is. Also, while American atheists get more often depressed than American theists, the theists who do get depressed, on average get more severely depressed than depressed atheists. Finally, no study I'm aware of has yet examined the effect of denomination and doctrine on depressive or anxiety disorders.

I hope that last one is studied thoroughly one day, because it seems likely to me that fundamentalist and even moderate monotheistic religions are bad for the mental health of at least some people. How can living in fear of hell for yourself and others not cause at least occasional anxiety, whether you'll admit to it or not? Even in monotheistic religions that don't have hell, like Judaism and Mormonism, there is still sexual repression in the moderate and fundamentalist groups, including not being allowed to masturbate or have sex during the horniest period of your life (teenage years), and being forced into a closet and to suppress your own sexual feelings and thoughts if you're gay or transgendered.

At least some people raised with religion, who happen to have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (the real thing, associated with embarrassment, secrecy, distress and impairment, not the bullshit "OCD" label that people clamour to wear as a sign of how neat or clean or other-favourable-trait they are Rolleyes ) develop religious obsessions, such as terror that they haven't prayed the right way and must keep doing it until they get it perfect, terror that they keep having blasphemous thoughts, and often underlying it all an obsessive fear of going to hell or even somehow causing other people to go there. Although these people would have OCD anyway, their religious background is what causes that particular manifestation, and as someone who has worked my way through quite a range of different OCD obsessions since childhood, I can't imagine an obsessive fear that would be worse than one of burning forever. I'm very grateful I've never had that particular "theme", as we call them. There is substantial evidence that obsessions like this are more common in Roman Catholics, Muslims and Orthodox Jews than in other religions common in the Western world, so there is the first piece of real scientific evidence that different religions and denominations of those religions can affect people's mental health in different ways. Yet all the research into depression that I've seen, lumps everyone into simplistic categories like "religious" and "non-religious".

(May 2, 2015 at 3:00 am)Aractus Wrote: I had to write a boring essay on major depressive disorder a few weeks ago. For those who don't know, major depression is the most common clinically diagnosed depressive disorder. Once a patient has had it for two years they are re-diagnosed as having persistent depressive disorder. Pharmacotherapy is by far the most cost-effective medical intervention; and treatment from all forms of health care (pharmacotherapy, counselling/psychotherapy, proactive care, etc) is only around 50% effective (see Andrews et al. 2004). One in three patients do not respond positively to any form of treatment. Partly because patients, such as yourself, need another disorder treated first before the depression treatment will work.

The distinction between major depression and persistent depression is fairly arbitrary. The distinction allows healthcare workers to claim that all people who suffer from major depression are suffering a non-chronic form of depression, since 100% of them will eventually be diagnosed as being free from it; unfortunately for people such as yourself you don't get diagnosed as being well, you get diagnosed with persistent depression and the treatment plan then reflects whatever they think is best for the treatment of persistent depression rather than the treatment of major depression.

That's not quite right. http://www.mentalhealth.com/home/dx/dysthymic.html 
"Faith is a state of openness or trust. To have faith is like when you trust yourself to the water. You don't grab hold of the water when you swim, because if you do you will become stiff and tight in the water, and sink. You have to relax, and the attitude of faith is the very opposite of clinging, and holding on. In other words, a person who is fanatic in matters of religion, and clings to certain ideas about the nature of God and the universe becomes a person who has no faith at all. Instead they are holding tight. But the attitude of faith is to let go, and become open to truth, whatever it might turn out to be."

Alan Watts
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#37
RE: Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
Hi, welcome, I am also at Yorkshire england, I was on meds for mental illness for 7 years and finally off meds altogether. At 26 now got my first ever GF of 1 year 3 weeks and 1 day.

I always loved this place just been all over the place and so busy.

Yeah I not been here in a while.

Peace all and welcome man,

EvF
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#38
RE: Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
Welcome back to the forums EVF, nice to meet you Smile I'm some guy who thinks he has a chainsaw but doesn't.
Feel free to send me a private message.
Please visit my website here! It's got lots of information about atheism/theism and support for new atheists.

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#39
RE: Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
That would make Leatherface much more entertaining. Like air guitar only with a chainsaw.

Texas Chainsaw Mascarade(ing as a dude with one but he's totally mistaken).
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#40
RE: Hello, i'm mentally ill.. and also British
Glad to see you back Evie.
"There remain four irreducible objections to religious faith: that it wholly misrepresents the origins of man and the cosmos, that because of this original error it manages to combine the maximum servility with the maximum of solipsism, that it is both the result and the cause of dangerous sexual repression, and that it is ultimately grounded on wish-thinking." ~Christopher Hitchens, god is not Great

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