compared2what? wrote:OP ED wrote:i am curious about the "schizophrenia" diagnosis.
here in the united states this phrase can mean at least three distinct states. of these three states, only one of them, the organic, hole-in-the-brain sort of scizophrenia is only currently treatable [success ratio] with hardcore chemistry. the other two are, well, not really schizophrenia and can be treated in a number of ways, most of which i'd suggest are things the Psychiatrists i know would treat somewhat less aggressively, especially in a six yr old.
anyone know where we can look at the kid's PET scans?
[which should be a mandatory requisite for this sort of harsh treatment]
Thank you for having the ability to remind me that there is a true and monstrous problem in the real world that has nothing to do with
the phantom projection of the board's collective narcissistic wounds about which most of the ranting and raving and cursing of the darkness on these subjects is generally directed. With a few assists from the PR specialists who ended up paying the most for the global rights to distribute the basic narrative parameters within which the ranting and raving ought to be channeled, as well as the guard-rails that keep it there.
Thank you for reminding me that I fully anticipated a cheap-shot response of precisely this kind (and from precisely that address, sadly), but that I thought better of replying to it before it had actually arrived. So I am simultaneously disappointed and not-disappointed, if you get my drift.
Having noted a certain amount of what you
choose to call "ranting and raving and cursing" in response to this sorry tale of institutionalised Ritual Abuse, you then move straight on to a strikingly untentative diagnosis of what's behind such
clearly pathological anger: "phantom projection of ... narcissistic wounds". So thank you, once again, for reminding me that words are weapons, and that classical (or is it Kleinian here) psychoanalysis also has some impressively Big Words in its vocabulary, aka its armoury.
The question is whether we have to take those words at face value or admit that they have any particular explanatory or diagnostic power. And we don't. We can in fact choose to say that what you're describing is a near-universal human capacity to
empathise. And that has the advantage (for those at the receiving end) of not sounding nearly as dauntingly pathological as your tendentious polysyllabic diagnosis.
FWIW, and I can only speak for myself, I was never beaten by my parents, nor was I ever incarcerated or fed mind-altering substances against my will. So if I can empathise with that child, and I can, then it's not because I've been through any remotely comparable ordeal. It's because I'm a mammal of the human species. And empathising is a task literally anyone can master, a task very few people can avoid mastering. It's child's play, in fact, unless the children have that inborn capacity beaten or drugged or pathologically diagnosed out of them, perhaps with the assistance of Big Words.
Actually, the thing that struck me as the only really strong indicator of some kind of parental culpability was the part about how they would run around with her thirteen or fourteen hours a day when she was an infant. I've never known any new parents who were so stupid or so freaked out or so clueless or so self-centered, or so some-combination-of-the-forgoing that their inability to distinguish the boundaries between themselves and their newborns led them to spend several years torturing a colicky baby without even knowing it. But I've known a whole grip of them who came close enough that it's a whole lot easier to imagine than I wish it were. Or than should ever even be possible. But you know. It's not like you have to get a license to have a baby.
Hmm, yes, that
might be worth looking into (after we've done the
serious scientific research)... Torturing a baby, whether deliberately or inadvertently, might just possibly have the tendency to produce some decidedly unpleasant symptoms in the torturee, which we might (or might not) then choose to call evidence of "
early-onset schizophrenia".
Placing the child in emotional Double Binds (you don't find this pathological behaviour, or likely to induce pathology) while being frightened of that child's imagination (ditto) might well also -- in my opinion, and not only in mine -- tend to exacerbate the child's suffering and cause her to make others suffer in their turn, including those who made her suffer in the first place.
We could respond to all this by incarcerating the child and drugging her, while pursuing our researches in neurology or microbiology or pharmacology or alchemy. Or theology. Or we might, conceivably at least, choose to respond otherwise, i.e. at least as intelligently as the lower primates, who manage to empathise with their offspring despite having no science at all, nor even any vocabulary.
Just a thought.
But you know, such thoughts are merely evidence of my pathological narcissism. Instead of taking such thoughts seriously as statements of the bleeding obvious (that torturing children fucks them up), we should ignore those naive narcissistic projections and take the path of non-pathological scientific reason. Let's be
judicious:
We need more research. By the time young January's in an adult jail or dead (whichever comes first), we might actually have come up with some nifty new polysyllabic vocabulary to go with our machines that say "bleep". So she won't have suffered in vain. Mature people realise that you can't stop progress; and besides, there are so many jobs at stake.
"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933
"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966
TESTDEMIC ➝ "CASE"DEMIC