Hi all,
This is something I question a lot and I'd like to understand people's feedback.
What I imagine we have in common in this forum is "adverse experience" of multiple varieties. I think most people recognise such experiences leave their mark on people. However - do you consider these effects as "illness" per se? (Don't get me wrong, I totally understand that the impacts on people can be so severe they can be truly debilitating) But to what extent do you translate the impacts of these experiences as an "illness" or "disease"?
By way of context, in the course of an involuntary hospitalisation a few years ago, I had the (dis)pleasure of Doctors dogmatically insisting that the reason I was depressed and wanted to die, was due to a "chemical imbalance in my brain"; a physiological illness...which to me translated as being nothing to do with my past.
E.g. I appreciate that PTSD is a diagnosis in the DSM - however, DSM diagnoses are descriptions of symptoms as opposed to a specific underlying pathology.
What do you guys think? (I'll add a closing note, that I hope this question isn't upsetting, that's not my intention - but personally I found being given a "biological" explanation for my circumstances very distressing)
This is something I question a lot and I'd like to understand people's feedback.
What I imagine we have in common in this forum is "adverse experience" of multiple varieties. I think most people recognise such experiences leave their mark on people. However - do you consider these effects as "illness" per se? (Don't get me wrong, I totally understand that the impacts on people can be so severe they can be truly debilitating) But to what extent do you translate the impacts of these experiences as an "illness" or "disease"?
By way of context, in the course of an involuntary hospitalisation a few years ago, I had the (dis)pleasure of Doctors dogmatically insisting that the reason I was depressed and wanted to die, was due to a "chemical imbalance in my brain"; a physiological illness...which to me translated as being nothing to do with my past.
E.g. I appreciate that PTSD is a diagnosis in the DSM - however, DSM diagnoses are descriptions of symptoms as opposed to a specific underlying pathology.
What do you guys think? (I'll add a closing note, that I hope this question isn't upsetting, that's not my intention - but personally I found being given a "biological" explanation for my circumstances very distressing)