*sigh*
I've also studied psychology in university. Not enough to qualify for a minor, but more than just a casual look. I have friends who are psychologists. Friends who see psychologists. An aunt who is a psychologist. And I've read books and articles which are better sources of info than wiki.
Then you would know that schizophrenia, and other extremely obvious psychological disorders, are one of the
very first things they teach you about in psych. In fact, I think it
was the first.
And not only that, but the majority of people know what schizophrenia is, even if they have no interest in either medicine or psychology at all...
I know what seratonin is and how it works on the nervous system.
Well goodie. I'm glad we've established that...
1. Serotonin reuptake inhibitors don't bring your seratonin levels up to normal so much as they regulate levels in the body, thus breaking any patterns of highs and lows. They have a different effect on anxiety, on bipolar disorder, and on clinical depression.
2. Addictions are not only common, but in the case of Paxil they are extremely common. Paxil stays in the body for a much shorter period than Prozak, thus explaining why it's so addictive. A person who has studied the effects of Paxil will tell you that Paxil is more addictive than heroin, and the addiction can be life long with withdrawl symptoms that last for years and possibly even life.
I find that hard to believe. You're just splicing together two facts into one: Yes, addiction is common, and yes, severe addiction is possible, but NO, severe addiction is NOT common.
Not only was that explicitly stated, but I know many people who have come off it with little bother - including my mother, who's taken it for over 3 years, and came off it in 2 weeks.
No, it's you who didn't understand my meaning when I said "rational". I introduced the term to this conversation, so it's YOU who misunderstood the meaning of the word in its particular context. By rational, I meant resulting from reason. Not from a reason, but from reason itself - that process of the mind that tells you things like "Perhaps I should research my facts before I speak of things I know very little about".
Oh, my mistake, I thought your comment had something to do with the initial topic. I was talking about everything occuring in your mind having a traceable source, be it physical or emotional. Nothing to do with 'reason' or rationality.
Edited to add: Drug therapy does nothing to address the social causes of depression.
I never said it did. In fact, I never suggested drug therapy for anything BUT a lack of serotonin, for which drugs are currently the only solution.
The entire POINT of psychology is to address the social causes of things like depression. If I had that much faith in drugs, I'd become a chemist - I'm just saying, there are some things that psychotherapy can't fix: chemical things.
Don't take this the wrong way, but I suggest you think about what is being said, rather than trying to out-do me in the one thing I'm actually knowledgable in
