16
Is there a grey area between neurosis and psychosis?
- anon64931
15
I want to know the difference between religious delusion in psychosis and hysteria?
- anon59540
14
i have recently realised i am neurotic. when i'm at work i cant have a real conversation with certain people without feeling uneasy and paranoid and i think everyone is out to get me. is there a treatment?
- anon48069
13
Trish - Either or Both! Look up the term "Pervasive".
Psychosis: I have suffered three episodes this summer. I am 38 and have suffered from schizophrenia since the fourth grade. I can be "suspicious." I have become psychotic while psychotic - but if you look at that a little closer you will see the condition defines itself. With more evidence I can accept being psychotic *while* psychotic but the evidence has to be shown by someone other then me. The psych floor is usually a good indication! :-)
Neither schizophrenia nor psychosis is hopeless, just stay honest.
- anon45621
12
Whilst I agree in most cases psychotics are not aware of their own illness, this is not the rule for all. Daniel Paul Schreber for example, suffered from psychoses, but was aware of his own illness.
- anon43377
11
I was once told that a neurotic personality is one in which the person is walking a fence always afraid of falling on one side or the other. I think of neurosis as a form of control, in which other person actively engages in doing things a certain way over and over again in order to achieve a certain result. The neurotic seeks to control his environment.-- JGM
- anon39642
10
New to this site, but so needing help to distinguish the following. Partner suddenly 1 day 10 weeks ago left as he declared he was in fear of himself and who his 'whole' being was. Said he could not live with anyone for some unknown period of time. He has reclused and hidden away all this time with a midnight shift job only on weekends. Says he lives in great fear of the rest of him that is hidden away. Says I have only had the loving part of him and he is attempting to discover the rest of him before he can even consider returning.
Is 56 years old, totally isolated, avoiding people, studying obsessively for High Distinctions at Distance Uni, cycling obsessively daily up to 100kms/day, attempts to text me, usually 1 or 2 words, then nothing, then a loving gush, then silent for days...weeks..
This is the most bizarre I have ever seen him as he has been the complete reverse to all these behaviours for the whole time we have been together.
A psychologist today wondered if he is having neurotic episode after not coping with my 2 children at Christmas time and I am totally confused but also wonder can this be 'psychotic'. He is a total stranger to me and believes he does not need help...just to find the 'whole' of him...that also frightens him...he seems to be making no active attempts to do anything except recluse...I so desperately want to at least understand him...ta for any insights.
- Yve
9
Regarding Psychosis--psychosis can be a delusion that is mood congruent. In the coding notes for the DSM IV TR is an example: someone who is depressed can feel extremely guilty or that punishment is deserved in reaction to a traumatic event. The thought pattern is consistent with depression, but extreme to the point that it qualifies as a psychosis.
- anon31270
8
Psychosis: "If I mow my lawn today it will cause North Korea to launch a nuclear warhead into Florida. I must refrain from mowing the lawn. I also must notify the FBI and Homeland Security about North Korea's plans."
Neurosis: "The lawn looks hideous. No matter how many times I mow it, it is just never perfect."
anon25030 is correct. A psychotic person is not aware of reality. A neurotic person is very much aware of reality--just has strange feelings about it.
- anon29493
7
I was a 747 pilot and got a compulsion to carry out an emergency procedure which entailed shutting down all engines in flight.
The CASA rule said that you cant fly with a diagnosis of a psychosis and the two psychiatrists reports on me said that I had a neurotic phobic anxiety reaction and a phobic anxiety state.
Should I have been cleared to fly?
- anon26511
6
Another way of saying it is that a psychotic person thinks 2 and 2 make 5 but a neurotic person knows it's 4 and hates it.
- anon25030
5
hey, my question is, is alcoholism considered neurotic or psychotic ?
- trishbaby
4
what are the best treatment for neurosis symptoms?
- anon11531
3
Surely the neurotic is the worrier, somebody that lets society impose itself upon him, and hence suffers stress, anxiety etc accordingly.
The psychotic, the criminal personality would be the opposite: somebody who imposes himself on society.
The healthy personality would lie somewhere in between.
- happyuk
2
It was my belief that neuroses do affect your day to day functionings. If we look at depression, for example, this disorder can impair social and occupational functioning; the person loses the desire to perform everyday tasks and engage himself/herself in things that he/she once enjoyed (anhedonia). The main difference between neuroses and psychoses, therefore, lies in the fact that a psychosis is generally associated with a loss of contact with reality, while a neurosis is not.
- anon5394