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Tag Archives: social conformity
Breaking News: The Cause of Schizophrenia Finally Discovered? Noel Hunter
http://psychintegrity.org/breaking-news-the-cause-of-schizophrenia-finally-discovered/ Follow the above link for Noel’s piece. It’s a long, well-written and well researched article, essential reading for anyone in our line of work. The writer too has watched with some dismay, the viral description of the Sekar et al. … Continue reading →
Posted in abuse, anti-psychotics, bullying, child development, childhood abuse, consent, creativity, criminal justice model, cultural questions, Disconnection, emotions, empathy, empowerment, ethics, external locus, generational trauma, genetics, growing up, hearing voices, internal locus of evaluation, kindness & compassion, love, meaning, medical model, neuroscience, non-conforming, objectification, paradigm shift, perception, person centred, political, power and powerlessness, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, relationship, research evidence, sadness & pain, scapegoating, schizophrenia, self, self concept, trauma, values & principles, violence, vulnerability, working with clients
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Tagged 2004 Janssen, abuse of power, acquired experiences, Adverse Childhood Experiences, affordable counselling exeter, Anjnakina, Anjnakina et al, antisocial behaviour, associated stress response, attention, Bentall, Bentall et al, bereavement, biological correlates in schizophrenia, biological origins of schizophrenia, brain differences, brain disease, breakthrough schizophrenia study, bullying and anxiety, bullying and paranoia, c-reactive protein and mental illness, c-reactive protein and schizophrenia, C4 protein and schizophrenia, causal mechanisms for schizophrenia, causal pathways of schizophrenia, causal relationship between childhood adversity and psychosis, child abuse, childhood adversity, childhood adversity and increased CRP levels, childhood sexual abuse, childhood trauma, chronic stress, chronic trauma, conforming behaviour, conformity, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, creativity, Danese, Danese 2007, Danese et al, decade of the brain, decision making, decreased activity in prefrontal cortex, decreased neural connections in prefrontal cortex, decreased synaptic density in mental illness, decreased synaptic density in schizophrenia, delusions, depression, determinants of human behaviour, diagnosis of schizophrenia, difficult life experiences, disease and disorder model, disease model of mental illness, disease processes, disorder model, dose-response relationship in childhood abuse and psychosis, DSM, DSM definitions, DSM diagnostic categories, effect of coercion, effect of coercive treatment, effect of custody, effect of social services intervention, effects of trauma, emotional breakdown, emotional pain, empathy, empowerment, environmental causes of schizophrenia, environmental events, epigenetics, epigenetics and mental illness, epigenetics and schizophrenia, excessive elimination of neural connections, executive functioning, existential meaning, existential meaninglessness, experiential understanding of schizophrenia, extreme distress, extreme states, Feinberg, Feinberg hypothesis, genetic associations with schizophrenia, genetic determinism, genetic disease model of mental illness, genetic link to schizophrenia, genetic studies of schizophrenia, genetic variations, hallucinations, Hearing Voices Network, holistic approach to mental illness, hostility, humane intervention, immune system and schiziphrenia, impulsive behaviour, inequality, inflammation and schizophrenia, institutionalization, ISEPP, isolation, Janssen, Janssen et al, lack of impulse control, lack of love, lack of nurture, low cost counselling exeter, major histocompatibility complex, manifestations of distress, medicalisation of distress, medicalization of distress, mental healthcare, mental illness model, MHC locus, multiple childhood traumas, neurodevelopmental pathways and psychosis, neurological responses to difficult life experiences, Noel Hunter, non conforming behaviour, ODD, Open Dialogue, Oppositional Defiant Disorder, oppression, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, pathologising creativity, pathologising difference, pathologising distress, pathologising non conformity, pathologizing creativity, pathologizing difference, pathologizing distress, pathologizing non conformity, person centred counselling exeter, physiological responses to difficult life experiences, post traumatic stress, post traumatic stress disorder, poverty, prefrontal cortex and schizophrenia, problem-solving, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric abuse of power, psychiatric reductionism, psychiatric traumatisation, psychological trauma, psychosis and autoimmune disorders, psychotic phenomena, psychotic reactions, PTSD, racism, rational thought, Read 2005, Read et al, reduced neural connections, reduced synapses and schizophrenia, reductionism, response to trauma, schizophrenia, schizophrenia as self protection, schizophrenia as self protective mechanism, Schizophrenia Research, Sekar, self protection, social conformity, social isolation, socialization, socially unacceptable behaviours, Soteria, specificity of childhood adversity and psychotic experiences, stress in adolescence, stress in childhood, stress responses, synaptic pruning and schizophrenia, synaptic pruning in prefrontal cortex, trauma and psychosis, trauma in adolescence, trauma in childhood, traumatic experience, traumatic loss, traumatized children, unbalanced immune response and schizophrenia, uncared for, uncooperativeness, variety of human experience, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk, www.psychintegrity.org
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Why Does Mainstream Psychiatry Fear a Balanced Understanding of Psychosis? Ron Unger
http://recoveryfromschizophrenia.org/2015/11/why-does-mainstream-psychiatry-fear-a-balanced-understanding-of-psychosis/#more-1682 Useful, interesting article on the BPS Report, ‘Understanding Psychosis and Schizophrenia’ and the mainstream psychiatric response. Thanks, Ron. Palace Gate Counselling Service, Exeter Counselling in Exeter since 1994
Posted in anti-psychotics, clients' perspective, conditions of worth, consciousness, cultural questions, Disconnection, DSM, ethics, external locus, fear, genetics, healing, hearing voices, loneliness, meaning, metaphor & dream, perception, political, power and powerlessness, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, relationship, resilience, Ron Unger, schizophrenia, self, self concept, trauma, vulnerability
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Tagged Adverse Childhood Experiences, adverse childhood experiences and schizophrenia, adverse experiences, affordable counselling exeter, alienation, assumptions in psychiatry, balance, balanced perception, Big Pharma, BPS report, certainty, changing perspective, child abuse, childhood trauma, complexity, coping mechanisms, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, Debra Lampshire, differences, disease and disorder model, disorders of reality perception, distorted reality, distress, dogma, dogmatism in psychiatry, Eleanor Longden, environmental factors in schizophrenia, external locus, extreme experiences, extreme states of mind and creativity, fear and suspicion, fear of others, fragmentation, genetic causes for schizophrenia, hearing voices, Hearing Voices Network, hope, humanistic, HVN, idée fixe, ideological certainty, ideology, internal locus, interpretation of mental events, interpreting our experience, Joe Pierre, low cost counselling exeter, mainstream psychiatry, making sense of extreme states, manipulation through fear, meaning, mental event, NIMH, normalising psychosis, normalizing psychosis, nuance, othering, otherness, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paranoia, perception and reality, person centred counselling exeter, pharmaceutical industry, protection, protective mechanisms, psychiatric coercion, psychiatric drugs, psychiatric model, psychiatric power, psychiatry and Big Pharma, psychiatry and power, psychosocial factors in schizophrenia, psychotic states, re-storying, reality, reality perception, response to adverse experiences, romanticising psychosis, romanticizing psychosis, Ron Coleman, Ronald Pies, self care, self protection, separation, social conformity, social manipulation, storying, terror, threat response, traumatic memory, trust, Understanding Psychosis and Schizophrenia, us and them, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk, www.recoveryfromschizophrenia.org
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Person-centred Basics – Janet Tolan on Labels
The third in our occasional series of some person-centred fundamentals. ‘There are many ways of describing people who use services such as housing, education and health. Some of these are also used of counselling clients: this client is “manipulative”, that … Continue reading →
Posted in 'evil', abuse, accountability, actualizing tendency, blaming, Carl Rogers, compassion, conditions of worth, congruence, core conditions, cultural questions, Disconnection, diversity, empathy, encounter, ethics, external locus, fear, growth, interconnection & belonging, internal locus of evaluation, Janet Tolan, love, meaning, non-conforming, non-directive counselling, objectification, organismic experiencing, perception, person centred, person centred theory, political, presence, psychiatry, reality, relationship, sadness & pain, shadow, shaming, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, unconditional positive regard, values & principles, working with clients
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Tagged 19 Propositions, abusers, accountability, actualising, actualizing, affordable counselling exeter, attention-seeking, autonomy, awareness, beliefs in therapy, belonging, binary, blame culture, blaming, Carl Rogers, co dependence, coercive culture, compassion, condemnation, conformity, connectedness, connection, core conditions, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellor self awareness, counsellors Exeter, cultural coercion, cultural norms, cultural orthodoxy, cultural values, de-armouring, defensiveness, dependence, dependence in counselling, dependence in therapy, dependent client, dualistic, emotional landscape, empathic engagement, empathy, ethical tasks in therapy, ethics, fear, fear in counsellor, fear in therapist, goal-directed behaviour, gratitude, human needs, I it relationship, I Thou relationship, independent thinkers, independent thought, interconnectedness, interconnection, interdependence, internal frame of reference, internal locus, isolation, Janet Tolan, judgement in counselling, judgement in therapy, judgemental attitudes, labelling people, low cost counselling exeter, manipulative, Martin Buber, meeting needs indirectly, narcissist, narcissistic, neediness, needy client, Nineteen Propositions, non-conforming, objectifying, pain, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, PCA, perceived threat, perceptual field, perpetrators, person centered approach, person centred counselling exeter, person centred work with clients, person-centered, person-centred, person-centred approach, personal growth, personal landscape, personal therapy, personality theory, phenomenal field, projection, punishment, reality, responsibility, self concept, self-structure, shadow, shaming, Skills in Person-centred Counselling, social change, social conformity, social values, sociopath, survivors, therapeutic process, therapeutic relationship, therapist process, therapist self awareness, therapy training, toxic culture, trauma, us and them, victim blaming, victims, working with clients, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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