Mental problems cannot be solved by a psychiatrist.
On March 14, 2024, news broke that a Star Wars actor was hospitalized in a psychiatric hospital.
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Star Wars Anakin actor hospitalized in psychiatric hospital, mother confesses, "I stopped my car in the middle of three lanes"
2024/3/14 (Thu) https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/bc3dfab7b40ea1b8c93dbaca30c706d72202ee09
Jake Lloyd (35) is currently hospitalized in a psychiatric hospital. Jake, known for playing the young Anakin Skywalker in 1999's Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 2008, but now, 25 years after the film's release, his mother Lisa has spoken out about his mental illness.
In March of last year, while Lisa was driving home from McDonald's, Jake suddenly asked to stop the car, Lisa told Scripps News. "He said he wanted to stop the car, and we stopped the car in the middle lane of a three-lane road," she said. "He started yelling and screaming."
Even while talking to the police, Jake was saying things that "I didn't understand," and instead of going to prison, he was ordered to be hospitalized, and a few months later, he entered a psychiatric rehabilitation facility.
He has now been in hospital for 10 months out of an 18-month period, and is "much better" than expected. "He interacts with people in a good way and is a little more sociable than before, which is really nice," Lisa said. "It feels like the old Jake is back. He was very sociable before he developed schizophrenia."
Jake was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 2008 and also suffers from anosognosia, a condition in which a person is not aware of their symptoms. His mental health issues began in high school, when he experienced auditory and visual hallucinations. In 2015, he was arrested after a crash following a police chase, and after serving 10 months in prison, he was hospitalized for treatment.
Although he left Hollywood as a child actor, Jake has no ill feelings towards Star Wars and says he "loves all the new Star Wars movies." Lisa doesn't think the criticism he received for appearing in The Phantom Menace affected her son's mental health, and says that schizophrenia runs in his father's family, saying, "He would have developed it either way."
~~ ... However, Jake's family accepted his treatment at a psychiatric hospital because they were troubled by his mental illness, even though Jake was babbling nonsense during police questioning.
Perhaps the family thought it would be better for their son to be a mental patient than to become a criminal.
It doesn't make sense to say that schizophrenia is a condition that causes hallucinations and delusions without an obvious cause.
Let's change our perspective a bit.
Novelists who write about characters they have never experienced or experienced can be said to have schizophrenia because they "depict a delusional world."
After all, novelists publish works that depict the delusional world of the writer.
In that case, the problem of schizophrenia is not caused by hallucinations or delusions.
They are just giving the name schizophrenia to something that "disrupts social life and social order"
"is not rehabilitable" and making it into a disease.
It is also said that hallucinations and delusions are caused by substances such as stimulants and alcohol, or by stress from being criticized by others, but some people do not experience hallucinations or delusions when they feel "strong stress," so the evidence that they are "psychogenic" is weak.
We humans are usually unable to recognize invisible entities.
However, our brains can recognize "invisible entities."
The same goes for "dreaming."
If it's a good dream, some people may wish they wouldn't wake up.
That's how real dreams are.
There is a belief that even when you are awake, awake, and going about your daily life, you can become aware of delusions and hallucinations due to the stimulation of stress, alcohol, and other drugs.
And people actually have such experiences with drugs and alcohol.
When you use narcotic stimulants such as LSD and cocaine, you become able to recognize "invisible spiritual entities like demons and evil spirits."
In fact, the experience of these perceptions is expressed in music and art, and is called "psychedelic art."
For more information, please click here.
Psychedelic x BOP Art, Keiichi Tanaami's solo exhibition in Shibuya, Tokyo
The invisible is materialized and made visible.
To me, it just looks "demonic".
And mental illness is "seeing and hearing spirits".
It senses information such as "the voice of spirits" that affects the five senses.
If you take psychotropic drugs, you will be connected to evil spirits.
So, people who are hospitalized in psychiatric hospitals are just normal people when they are hospitalized, but after drug therapy, they really start to hear strange voices, have hallucinations, and have delusions.
Psychiatric care makes people sick and makes them chronic while saying they are "treating" them.
For the family, it is convenient because they will take care of them using medical expenses and health insurance until they die.
But for the person involved, there is no greater disaster than this.
In my opinion, psychiatric hospitals are unnecessary after all.
For those who want to know more about "spirits", please see this article.
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