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The system is designed to discourage anyone with mental issues from seeking treatment. The problems aren't going to go away, they're going to get worse, particularly as Iraq war veterans begin to struggle with the after-effects of their war service and PTSD in particular.
Your post about tracking meds was also interesting -- fodder for yet another rant. :)
I am quite intelligent, as I am writing a dissertation right now. But while psychotic, I have been convinced that other people were sending messages to me telepathically and that they could also read my mind. I have sincerely believed that if I read the correct sequence of passages in the many books I own, I would suddenly be endowed with supernatural powers and would become all-knowing. I once tried to kill myself while psychotic. My friends did not really know how to help me, and I once saw a therapist for several months while cycling between mania and depression. I was not correctly diagnosed at that time. I am lucky that I eventually got the treatment I needed and that my insurance covers my medication, which costs $170 a month.
I just want people to understand that if a person is psychotic, he or she experiences the world his or her mind creates as just as real as anyone else's reality. We need to keep discussing how we can help people get the treatment they need, remove the stigma surrounding mental illness, and make treatment affordable for everyone.
Thanks for your original post, karoli, and best of luck with your ADHD.
Every time I read articles that decry treating mental illness with medication I want to scream, knowing that the right diagnosis and right meds can make the difference between success and failure, even life and death for some.