David Dalton <
dal...@nfld.com> wrote:
>In article <
piib981rdbv2prav4...@4ax.com>,
> Bob Officer <.@.> wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 3 Nov 2012 18:33:26 -0700 (PDT), in misc.health.alternative,
>> SG <
sgma...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> >On Nov 3, 3:48�pm, David Dalton <
dal...@nfld.com> wrote:
>> >> In article <
t34b98d5itc5btrancl4f69ignrjgct...@4ax.com>,
>> >> �Bob Officer <.@.> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> > The best encouragement David can have is to take his medication on
>> >> > schedule, as directed by his doctor. HE has admitted not taking his
>> >> > medication on a consistent basis.
>> >>
>> >> No I have not admitted that.
>>
>> Yes, David, you have! You have even admitted to drinking in excess
>> with your medications in the past.
>
>How do you define excess?
And, consistent?
And, does, "not taking ... on a consistent basis" mean
that you consistently don't follow the prescription,
as in, consistently quit the meds. Like, every other month.
Like, for instance, once a year stop taking them and trip out.
Or that, rather, you just don't take meds sometimes?
Consistently, say, once a week or so, you simply forget.
Could be a subtle inuendo there. Oar, then again,
cud prolly just be me and how m'eye brain works.
> These days I am limiting
>myself to two pints or three bottle of beer at most
>twice a week, which my psychiatrist and kidney specialist
>think is OK. And I last tried coming off olanzapine
>without my psychiatrist's help I think a couple of years
>ago, and since then I have been religiously steady in
>taking my lithium and olanzapine at bedtime.
The lithium probably caps your high
and contributes to your low years to an extent.
A problem with quitting the heavy metal
is that the highs can be out of control,
often involving dire straits and jackets.
>I think you are trying to suppress me by calling me
>mentally ill.
Sounds to me as if he's looking out for you.
Or trying to. He may have a mother-hen deal
playing cards inside his deck.
A titanic effort, know doubt, to moderate
unmoderated groups in order to order
whatever chaos may be present,
ore seen as being.
Exercises in futility are exercise.
None-the-less, Tsewang reminds me
of sitting and forgetting.
>> >> ... why don't you just address what
>> >> I posted?
>>
>> You have more problems than Bipolar Disorder, according to what you
>> have posted in the past, David.
>
>No, I am diagnosed as bipolar. I have had delusions or
>in the extreme, psychosis, at times as well.
It's possible that everyone does, to a degree.
It's probably only natural for brains with brains.
When it affects one's ability to function
in the artificial society in which he or she lives
that's when it gets more technical. Culture dictates
spectrums of acceptability.
> If I also
>had voices and/or visions I would be classed as
>schizoaffective. But my psychiatrist has told me
>he considers me bipolar, not schizoaffective.
Puts me in mind of shamans.
Instead of being seen as the ones to be rehabilitated
they were venerated as being the healers.
Those daze are mostly gone now
in so-called civilized regions of nation-states
of minds that mind all sorts of behavior.
Whatever chi was there has been banished
to realms of placebo unwholenesses.
>> Seek continued health care and start being honest with yourself and
>> your doctor. You've admitted honesty problems in the past.
>>
>> I hope in time you become a contributor to society. Many people do
>> overcome their problems, with a combination of medication and
>> Counseling.
>>
>> >None of us have a right to disrupt your dignity. The best that can
>> >happen in this scenario is to forgive him for his tresspass.
>>
>> The best is if David seek professional counseling and continued
>> treatment for his Mental Illness with a fully qualified Doctor.
>>
>> The best you can do for yourself, is to stop trolling David.
>>
>> I don't see any Trespass.
>>
>> David posts his problems in public and has for a long time. I did
>> advise him a long time ago, he might be better off no telling
>> everyone about his mental illness and other problems.
>>
>> Usenet is not a good place to seek advice or discussion of personal
>> problems.
A sandbox is where kids play
and where spirits may be found to test.
Finding others who are akin to ones'elves
may be a very good thing to have been unbound.
For many, absfg, apt et al is a breath, or qi, prana.
In the, "professional" arenas of psychotherapy
or counseling one may not encounter, "others"
who think and feel similar to how ones'elf mite's dew.
>I suffer from bipolar mood disorder, a mental illness. That
>does not mean I am ill all the time.
One's illness
may be where one's strength
might be perfected.
To think in terms of illness cans be to box
a shadow into a corner. Akin to painting.
To not fit into a stinky mold could be a good thing.
Perfectly healthy. Flipping the script, it is society
that, whenever something or someone doesn't fit,
labels that as being unfit. Paints it as bad.
Points its finger as it racks up points.
> Currently the only
>belief I hold that you might consider a delusion is my
>belief that I am similar to some past major religious
>figures.
Everyone is similar.
Everyone is different.
> But that belief didn't come out of the blue
>but rather by my comparing my mystic cycles and experiences
>to those of the past figures, including Taliesin (Gwion),
>Jesus, and The Turquoise Bee, among others. And that
>belief did not affect my recent post on chi.
Scientific evidence.
It is strange, to me, how energy flows.
From a single cell, organisms grow.
Born with unbridled energy, they switch,
from off to on to off to on and on they twitch.
As little kids, puppies or kittens, they play as if
composed of the light of ten thou sand suns.
They sleep and awaken. How strange.
Many reproduce and then the energy goes.
Passed along, some say, via DNA.
The key is sought,
as if there is only one.
Evidence is everywhere
for those with an eye to sea
waves of all in particulars.