How about looking into the percentage of people that use a forum like this to say rude things, or even to promote violent or illegal behaviour? They seem to think the anonymity is empowering.
- 12 November 2009 at 4:20 pm
dinodele2004 said:
WHEN HE HAS CIGARETTES HE SMOKES 40 A DAY,WHEN HE HAS NO MONEY TO BUY THEM IT DOESNT BOTHER HIM AT ALL OR DOES IT,CONNECT WIRES 4 VOLTS TO LEFT SIDE OF HIP,CONNECT TO JPL.SETI COMPUTER AND CHECK FOR RU29 OR 39 RESULT.
- 15 November 2009 at 9:01 pm
george_niles said:
Although I get discouraged about some peoples remarks , I hope their Venting serves some good purpose and helps reason and sanity predominate.
You might think about the various sucess which has been attained through diferent treatment techniques for the same disorder. Relative sucess with chemical/verbal/or sensory deparvation. The odd effects of ElectroShock / Insulinshock treatments or even the old Ice bath
Does the concept of self reprograming seem probable to you
given a willing subject and a unclouded view of reality ?
I guess that a masters thesis should be fairly well limited to a detailed study of some small aspect of Psychotherapy …otherwise they might feel you were trying
to prove too much with too little tangable foundation.
So my suggestions may have been to broad…. See you in group !
- 16 November 2009 at 3:28 am
mournmotherearth said:
Seems to me psychotherapy is going out of fashion as the drug companies become ever more powerful and steer western medicine on the path of pharmaceuticals rather than the much more healing approach of figuring out the basis for unwanted behaviors and then working toward changing them. Perhaps you could explore this theme. I mean, really….all these kids on psyche drugs? That can’t be good….
- 18 November 2009 at 11:18 pm
Jitendra said:
i found this page after lot of search, hope i am not a subject at this moment…
Thom Hartmann
The hunter vs. farmer theory is a hypothesis proposed by Thom Hartmann about the origins of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and adult attention-deficit disorder (AADD), that these conditions may be a result of a …
This article examines the impact of involuntary job loss on mental health as measured by admission to inpatient psychiatric treatment. Specifically, we investigate the impact on admission due to affective disorders, alcohol or drug abuse, and nervous or stress-related disorders. We focus on job loss due only to establishment closures, as this focus reduces the problem of distinguishing between causation and selection. Using linked employee-employer register data, we identify the job losses due to all establishment closures in Sweden in 1987-88. During a subsequent 12-year period we find that job loss significantly increased the risk of overall inpatient psychiatric hospital admission among women but not among men. When the results are broken down into the specific categories of mental disorders, we find that inpatient psychiatric treatment due to affective disorders and alcohol or drug abuse is significantly higher among the displaced women but we find no such effect for nervous or stress-related disorders. Among men, we find no significant impact of job loss on any of the categories of discharge diagnoses.
Content Type Journal Article
DOI 10.2753/IMH0020-7411390202
Authors
Marcus Eliason, Department of Economics, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Steven C. Hayes (1948 ) is Nevada Foundation Professor at the Department of Psychology at the University of Nevada, Reno. He is known for an analysis of human language and cognition (Relational Frame Theory), and its application to various psychological difficulties (his work on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy).
Acceptance and commitment therapy, or ACT (pronounced “act” not “ay see tee”), a branch of cognitive-behavioral therapy, is an empirically based psychological intervention that uses acceptance and mindfulness strategies together with commitment and behavior change strategies to increase psychological flexibility. Originally this approach was referred to as comprehensive distancing.
no sorry
How about looking into the percentage of people that use a forum like this to say rude things, or even to promote violent or illegal behaviour? They seem to think the anonymity is empowering.
WHEN HE HAS CIGARETTES HE SMOKES 40 A DAY,WHEN HE HAS NO MONEY TO BUY THEM IT DOESNT BOTHER HIM AT ALL OR DOES IT,CONNECT WIRES 4 VOLTS TO LEFT SIDE OF HIP,CONNECT TO JPL.SETI COMPUTER AND CHECK FOR RU29 OR 39 RESULT.
Although I get discouraged about some peoples remarks , I hope their Venting serves some good purpose and helps reason and sanity predominate.
You might think about the various sucess which has been attained through diferent treatment techniques for the same disorder. Relative sucess with chemical/verbal/or sensory deparvation. The odd effects of ElectroShock / Insulinshock treatments or even the old Ice bath
Does the concept of self reprograming seem probable to you
given a willing subject and a unclouded view of reality ?
I guess that a masters thesis should be fairly well limited to a detailed study of some small aspect of Psychotherapy …otherwise they might feel you were trying
to prove too much with too little tangable foundation.
So my suggestions may have been to broad…. See you in group !
Seems to me psychotherapy is going out of fashion as the drug companies become ever more powerful and steer western medicine on the path of pharmaceuticals rather than the much more healing approach of figuring out the basis for unwanted behaviors and then working toward changing them. Perhaps you could explore this theme. I mean, really….all these kids on psyche drugs? That can’t be good….
i found this page after lot of search, hope i am not a subject at this moment…
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Concepts »
Hunter vs. farmer theory
Thom Hartmann
The hunter vs. farmer theory is a hypothesis proposed by Thom Hartmann about the origins of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and adult attention-deficit disorder (AADD), that these conditions may be a result of a …
Mental Disorders »
Inpatient Psychiatric Hospitalization Following Involuntary Job Loss
This article examines the impact of involuntary job loss on mental health as measured by admission to inpatient psychiatric treatment. Specifically, we investigate the impact on admission due to affective disorders, alcohol or drug abuse, and nervous or stress-related disorders. We focus on job loss due only to establishment closures, as this focus reduces the problem of distinguishing between causation and selection. Using linked employee-employer register data, we identify the job losses due to all establishment closures in Sweden in 1987-88. During a subsequent 12-year period we find that job loss significantly increased the risk of overall inpatient psychiatric hospital admission among women but not among men. When the results are broken down into the specific categories of mental disorders, we find that inpatient psychiatric treatment due to affective disorders and alcohol or drug abuse is significantly higher among the displaced women but we find no such effect for nervous or stress-related disorders. Among men, we find no significant impact of job loss on any of the categories of discharge diagnoses.
Psychologists »
Steven C. Hayes
Steven C. Hayes (1948 ) is Nevada Foundation Professor at the Department of Psychology at the University of Nevada, Reno. He is known for an analysis of human language and cognition (Relational Frame Theory), and its application to various psychological difficulties (his work on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy).
Psychotherapies »
Acceptance and commitment therapy
Acceptance and commitment therapy, or ACT (pronounced “act” not “ay see tee”), a branch of cognitive-behavioral therapy, is an empirically based psychological intervention that uses acceptance and mindfulness strategies together with commitment and behavior change strategies to increase psychological flexibility. Originally this approach was referred to as comprehensive distancing.
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