Sunday, August 21, 2011

The Factors Behind The Madness



What can drive someone to madness? Of course, the madness is something that is commonly understood (or misunderstood), and usually carry a sort of shame in the popular consciousness. If you believe in modern psychology and psychiatry, there are literally thousands of forms of madness, that person could end up going to develop later in life. Some of them, such as depression, are temporary, while others, like social anxiety, the person who requires more work to get through. However, it seems to be a commonality of what really takes most of the forms of madness that people are going through. That brings the question goes: Is there a common underlying trigger that endangers the stability of human resources for mental health?

Things like stress and anxiety are often cited as the most common (and many uncommon), mental health problems are triggered by the second. Constant exposure to stress can push anyone over at the end of their "breaking point" with a form of madness later influenced by external factors. This is often a long and difficult process, because many people have some resistance to these things, which means you can at least survive a stressful period, with common sense intact. In addition, the process may not actually cause madness, where the majority of the population, as demonstrated by this theory. Prolonged stress can affect a person's behavior and outlook, but it is also known that many other factors can increase or decrease this. In some cases, stress and anxiety can only be up to the opposite effect, depending on the personal opinions of the person.

Emotions are also said to play a key role in driving or pushing people to madness, where the emotions are so closely related to mental health. The emotional state of the person can often reflect the person's mental state of relative stability, but can also be the impact fractured sanity. There is no doubt that feelings can interfere with and influence human thought processes, and let them do things they normally would not do. It 'also noteworthy that the highly emotional situations, and the heavy emotional trauma can permanently affect a person's mind, which often lead to a condition that requires treatment at the end wins. However, it is an assertion that emotions are only increasing the effects of stress and pressure, and the author himself.

Trauma is also frequently cited as having dramatic consequences for the direction of a person, especially if it occurs during the formative years. The extreme mental and emotional consequences of trauma victims have to endure can often force some past breaking point, have permanent effects on their mental health. However, it should be noted that trauma tends to be somewhat of a combination of stress and emotional factors, usually mixed with extreme circumstances. The vulnerability of the psyche of the person plays a greater role here than in other potential causes of madness, which explains why the trauma experienced later in life does not have the same effect as similar events encountered during their childhood.

Finally, the madness is something that, as mental health, must be defined on an individual basis. What is reasonable for a person in a given society can not be considered as such by another person in the same community. Insanity is a matter of consistency in this case, the hypothesis that some psychological texts.


0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Design by Wordpress Theme | Bloggerized by Free Blogger Templates