LuckyR wrote: ↑September 18th, 2019, 3:41 pm
You've got it backwards. The emotional and medical police don't knock folks' doors down to administer the needed medication. Folks in real (by their personal definition of the word) trouble seek out assistance, perhaps from medication.
It's been my lucky week for people making up stuff that I supposedly said. I never said that emotional and medical police knock...etc. What we have is a society that has a lot of judgments of emotions. We have advertisements for psychotropics. We have doctors who suggest referrals to psychiatrists when patients mention anxiety or even directly prescribe psychotopics. We have psychiarists who dole out medicines for all sorts of not very serious reactions to stress and modern life as opposed to suggesting other reactions. Who do not tell people the range of side effects. You have pharmaceutical companies do outreach workshops to 'educate' people about their syndromes. WE have teachers, school nurses, school psychologists and social workers diagnosiing children and putting pressure on parents to medicate their children, even though only some of them can diagnose. And certainly refer, often with some serious pressure, the parents to people who can diagnos and have a habit of diagnosing. We have messages in media that people should be medicated. We have norms that judge people who are not up, peppy, feel like other people look in their fg pages and twitter. People are judged for being downers or nervous or negative. We now have grief after death of loved one's, if it goes on too long, being diagnosed. The PR campaingn that peoples emotional problems are caused by chemical imbalances, despite the weak science behind this, has gained tremendous ground and 80 million people in the US are on some kind of psychotropic. And yes, people collude with this, ask for magic bullets, have been trained to view their so called negative emotions and pathology or illness or a disorder when it often is simply a normal reaction to what they are experiencing. Think the unreal expectations being shoved at women via fashion and other advertising, but shirt this to unreal and really detrimental 'images' of what a healthy normal person is.
Yes, there is no medical police forcing medication - though it can get very close to this with children. The PR has done a very effective job. And the great thing about this is now other people will think that your emotions are pathological. So you have the first wave of people who even with some support have trouble with their own pain getting medicated. Then as society views these troubles as pathology, we have more people being judged and judging themselves as in need of medication. Then you have a lot of people who go to professionals, seeking help, and are presented by the 'experts' with a psychotropic answer. And so people already feeling challenged need to be strong enough to say that although this is the expert, the person society and other experts refer me to, I think they are wrong, I think the medication approach is wrong or wrong for me. It is a collective madness. And pure adult victims of this are rare. To some extent they collude with the professionals and pharma. Any solution to this madness would not just be aimed at the professional but must include the public. It would include challenges to the highly profitable paradigm aimed in all directions. And in the end there would need to be cultural shifts to where we all stopped pathologizing emotions.
Am I saying no one should be medicated, No?
I think the amount of medication is absurd, and is especially heinous with children.