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Impulsively dying my hair blonde, going to the Pee-wee’s big adventure I’m a loner dottie. a rebel poster Besides,I will do this mall with friends, studying for school, skateboarding, and really just trying to discover myself. I wanted to be a different person in high school than I was in middle school, I wanted to truly reflect who I really was. Mental illness doesn’t discriminate. You don’t have to do something bad to be diagnosed with any mental illness, bad things happen to good people sometimes. Because you are detached from the living present; you cannot tell what is fiction, and what is reality. I could go on and on about how the symptoms of schizophrenia can be so debilitating and severe, but I think it suffice to say that since we are outside the shared reality, it is very, very severe. Keep in mind, though, that each person’s schizophrenia and psychosis is different from another’s experience. And also that psychosis is more of a spectrum. But regardless of how bad you have it, it still is devastating to that person and often times the family. I would classify myself as more high-functioning, but I still go through challenges each and every day. Whether they be paranoia, delusions, hallucinations, or lack of speech, they still interfere with my daily life. And like I said, I got lucky with my prognosis because we caught it so early on. Without my catatonic behavior, I don’t know if we would have caught it in time before something really bad happened.
It can start at any age from very young to very old. It can first appear to be any number of other disorders(depression, conduct disorder, bipolar, etc). It happens in great families where people are treated very well, and every other type of families. Intelligence is no barrier either. It’s a widespread fallacy that people with Schizophrenia are ‘all really smart,’ a common fallacy, but a fallacy nevertheless. Other disabilities are no barrier. I’ve met people who have Schizophrenia who also have profound intellectual disability, blindness, Autism, physical disabilities. There is a tendency for males to have a higher rate (reported as anything from 4 times as many males to 1.5 – 2 times as many males), people with mild Autism appear to be more at risk for schizophrenia and similar disorders.
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