kyle wrote: ↑Sat Oct 19, 2024 1:43 am
You way is like if I an taught an eating disorder I'm stuck with it for life.
This is true. There are currently no cures for mental illness. Just like once I became an alcoholic, I'm now stuck with it for life.
but with fee will you can start to see how this disorder is controlling you, and you end up hitting rock bottom and have to find a way to start controlling it.
You don't control it. You can never "control" a mental illness. You can treat it, and you can recover from it, and in time, you can put it in remission.
Lets say it's soo bad you end up going to a therapist,
Like with any other disease, let's say you get treatment before it gets that bad. Your prognosis is much better if you do that.
and you start to improve a bit, but they are still digging searching for the reasons why you are doing this. Maybe they figure it out, but then they slide it in, and your initial reaction is to reject it, because it's so unbelievable, that the root of your problem was your mothers fault. so then you walk out on them and end up regressing back into the eating disorders,
Finding the source of a disorder doesn't negate the disorder. You still have to treat it. Finding out that it was your mother's fault only helps you to deal with the trauma that put you there to begin with. Even after you've dealt with all of that trauma, and there can be quite a bit (so much that I don't think you would be able to handle not only the crap I've been through, but the stories from other people that are 10x or 100x worse than anything I've been through), but even after you've dealt with all of that, the disorder is still there. It has to be treated directly.
Here's a video where I go into this process in a general way:
https://youtu.be/iDn52-YjvTA
Here's the video where I explain specifically what addiction is, but the ideas are actually true for eating disorders and a few related illnesses:
https://youtu.be/oFFeHq8AVJ4
until you hit rock bottom again, and find another one, you make no progress with them and find another one. and they all keep pointing out that it was your mom's fault.
Early intervention has been proven to work. The problem with waiting until people hit rock bottom to tell them to get treatment is that for many people, rock bottom means they are dead. The illness killed them. Whether it's a heroin overdose or suicide or drunk car crash or whatever. Rock bottom means death for a lot of people. So let's stop pushing people not to get treatment before that point so they can live.
Finally you find one that gradually takes you into accepting that it's your mom's fault and you really start to heal, and you get to a point were you no longer have an eating disorder.
Nope. Once you have a mental illness, and they *all* have a genetic component, it's for life. The only real exception is light depression. This is the "common cold" of mental illness, where a person can have an actual depressive episode, which, by definition, has to last several weeks to be considered an actual depressive episode, and then it'll clear up after a few weeks and they're fine. It's like covid, where someone can have it, and a week or so later, they're back to normal. But long covid is a thing. Major depressive disorder is a thing. That kind of depression is for life. So is bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder, substance use disorder, etc.
These conditions can be managed with medication, to some extent, and with psychotherapy. The only "free will" involved here is the choice to get treatment, and that's questionable at best as being free. Some people never have that choice for various reasons, which include the condition itself preventing them from seeing treatment as an option.
I just don't think that type of story or outcome would happen if we did not have the ability to have free will and essentially reprogram our brains.
You're giving it away here, in fact. When you say "reprogram our brains", that's literally describing a state of a lack of free will. If we had true free will, we wouldn't have to reprogram our brains in the first place.
And yes, a lot of treatment is specifically about reprogramming our brains. Behavior chains, identifying cognitive distortions, understanding grief, etc. Trauma imprints on the brain, much like branding a head of cattle with your name, and you have to actively work to route your thoughts around the parts of the brain that have been imprinted by the trauma. There's even a special treatment specifically for extreme PTSD that works like this.
You're so close to understanding, kyle. So close.
I'm just simply don't know many LBGT people and I personally still question the reasons why one could feel that way.
First of all, LGBT is more of a political alliance than a group of similar people. Yes, Lesbians and Gays are basically the same, just different genders. But plenty of L's and G's talk trash to B's, which are Bisexual, telling them to pick a side. There's a lot of biphobia within the LGBT world, too. Then there are the T's, which have nothing to do with sexual orientation. Transgender is a huge umbrella word that includes every possible gender identity that's not "cisgender male" or "cisgender female". After Obergefell, transgender people said "Ok, now it's our turn, we've been supporting the LGB part of the coalition, now it's time for us to get rights" and the LGB's all said "No, we're done, we got what we want" and the coalition has nearly fallen apart. Nowadays, transgender people are being left out by a lot of the people they've previously supported. So what are we supposed to do?
Second, the reason you don't understand why people feel this way is because you're not LGBT. Your brain is incapable of understanding why a man might want to have sex with a man, or why someone born with male parts might identify as female. There's nothing wrong with that, it's just what it means to be a cisgender heterosexual. You need to see that that very identity limits your ability to understand LGBT people and could even prevent you from understanding. We don't ask for understanding. We ask for acceptance, safety, and the right to live our lives without interference.
So you need to figure out how to be ok with not understanding, but still accepting LGBTQ+ people as being real, valid people who deserve all the same rights that you enjoy.
A therapist would be able to help you with that.