So you got a diagnosis, got a treatment, and refused it and were able to accomplish what you wanted.... Which is irrelevant to the fact that there was still a problem in the first place, or a diagnosis in the first place, or a prescribed treatment plan in the first place.... And, clearly, as you just stated, you recognize in hindsight the decision was not smart. Probably because of some sort of consequence either immediate or long term. You missed the point of my example by trivializing.
I could easily have replaced broken leg with, I don't know, necrotizing fasciitis. Which pretty much will stop you from doing what you want to do, as it will eat your face off and kill you :cautious: And as it even says in the front of this website, PTSD can also kill you. I pretty much fail to see the logic in any argument here for how a diagnosis is not helpful. Seriously?
Being told what is wrong and how to fix it is in some way harmful? It is, as you just demonstrated, your choice to do whatever you want to with the knowledge (knowledge which, by the way, even brought the original poster to this very board at all), but having the knowledge itself can do nothing except give you more options.
People talking about how they are "problems waiting to be fixed" and how this is all "wrong and crap and we don't need things outside of ourselves to fix ourselves"........ uh, okay. I spend all day long in my closet talking to my nonexistent crazy dad. If someone is gonna diagnose me with something and then subsequently find a treatment to correspond with that diagnosis to make that stop, I'm all goddamn for it.
It doesn't make me any less of a f*cking person if I have a problem and I need something to help with it. It discredits and frankly disrespects all the people on this website who have sought diagnoses for years, who are being refused treatment, who don't have the resources for treatment, or therapy, who were told stupid shit like they were crazy when they have an unavoidable disorder. People who have been seriously harmed by the traumatic events in their lives. People who are very clearly hurting, and in need of help.
This isn't empowering, it's just denial, and what it's really doing is taking power away from people who have fought for years to get mental health diagnoses even on the f*cking table. If this discussion were about a broken leg, this wouldn't even be a goddamn discussion. But everybody brings in all their baggage when it comes to mental health like it isn't every bit as functional and physical and required as anything else.
I could easily have replaced broken leg with, I don't know, necrotizing fasciitis. Which pretty much will stop you from doing what you want to do, as it will eat your face off and kill you :cautious: And as it even says in the front of this website, PTSD can also kill you. I pretty much fail to see the logic in any argument here for how a diagnosis is not helpful. Seriously?
Being told what is wrong and how to fix it is in some way harmful? It is, as you just demonstrated, your choice to do whatever you want to with the knowledge (knowledge which, by the way, even brought the original poster to this very board at all), but having the knowledge itself can do nothing except give you more options.
People talking about how they are "problems waiting to be fixed" and how this is all "wrong and crap and we don't need things outside of ourselves to fix ourselves"........ uh, okay. I spend all day long in my closet talking to my nonexistent crazy dad. If someone is gonna diagnose me with something and then subsequently find a treatment to correspond with that diagnosis to make that stop, I'm all goddamn for it.
It doesn't make me any less of a f*cking person if I have a problem and I need something to help with it. It discredits and frankly disrespects all the people on this website who have sought diagnoses for years, who are being refused treatment, who don't have the resources for treatment, or therapy, who were told stupid shit like they were crazy when they have an unavoidable disorder. People who have been seriously harmed by the traumatic events in their lives. People who are very clearly hurting, and in need of help.
This isn't empowering, it's just denial, and what it's really doing is taking power away from people who have fought for years to get mental health diagnoses even on the f*cking table. If this discussion were about a broken leg, this wouldn't even be a goddamn discussion. But everybody brings in all their baggage when it comes to mental health like it isn't every bit as functional and physical and required as anything else.