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Posted: 25 Jul 2007, 23:56
by erasmus
i want to be a contractor
work 1/4 of each year and retire at 30 O_O
-_-
Posted: 26 Jul 2007, 13:37
by Tim Blokdijk
Retire at 30 with PTSS.
Posted: 26 Jul 2007, 18:18
by Neddie
If you don't have PTSS, you haven't lived.
Posted: 26 Jul 2007, 20:23
by Zoombie
Isn't it Post Traumatic Stress Disorder? Cause I don't see where that second S comes in.
No, wait, Syndrome. Sorry, yeah.
Posted: 27 Jul 2007, 07:52
by Felix the Cat
Tim Blokdijk wrote:Retire at 30 with PTSS.
I would be glad to retire at 30 with a so-called syndrome created to justify the high per-hour rates of psychiatrists.
Posted: 27 Jul 2007, 13:25
by Tim Blokdijk
Go for it.
Posted: 27 Jul 2007, 17:23
by Neddie
Psychologists, not psychiatrists. Psychologists conduct talk therapy and general counseling, psychiatrists are doctorates of medicine and write prescriptions.
Felix raised a point of note, however; syndromes are as subjective as everything else, and carry more stigma in general than their constituent symptoms.
Posted: 27 Jul 2007, 17:31
by Snipawolf
It's like being afraid of the dark, it's all in your head.
Posted: 27 Jul 2007, 18:35
by Neddie
Whether or no, what can you do?
The thoughts honestly become you.
Posted: 27 Jul 2007, 22:04
by SwiftSpear
Snipawolf wrote:It's like being afraid of the dark, it's all in your head.
PTSS? It may be all in your head, but it's quite serious...
Posted: 27 Jul 2007, 22:35
by Snipawolf
I wasn't saying it wasn't serious, all phobias and mental disorders originate from ones original thoughts...
Posted: 27 Jul 2007, 22:40
by Neddie
Not necessarily. Mental disorders often originate from chemical imbalances or physical trauma which the mind is subjected to for some reason or another, rather than an actualized thought.
Posted: 27 Jul 2007, 23:04
by Tim Blokdijk
Snipawolf wrote:It's like being afraid of the dark, it's all in your head.
You must be talking from you personal experience I guess.
I mean the traumatic effects of war are quite known around the world.
The Afghani and Iraqi war will lead to a new wave of people suffering from PTSS just like all the other wars.
A woman (a translator with the Dutch forces) told (on tv) about her service in Afghanistan and how she would get a gun pointed at her head by a Afghan guard while he checked her ID *each time she would go to work in the morning*.
(she was not suffering from ptss btw)
Made me wonder if I could manage to keep thinking rational if that would be the start of my day for months on end.
And sure the guy is doing his job to keep things safe and it's just a ID check and it's a normal procedure and all the others go trough it to and he is on my side and he should know how to prevent accidental firing and bla. bla. it's just like being afraid of the dark.
Posted: 28 Jul 2007, 00:19
by Zoombie
Soldiers somehow manage to cope with a lot of stress and I'm shocked they don't all come back with PTSS.
Posted: 28 Jul 2007, 00:24
by Snipawolf
I can easily shoot and kill someone and feel no remorse. No pity.
That is me. Apathetic. I don't care.
Some say it's a gift, and others say it's a curse.. I don't care either way..
Posted: 28 Jul 2007, 01:11
by Neddie
That isn't apathy, that is indicative of sociopathy - sadly now lumped into antisocial personality disorder.
Posted: 28 Jul 2007, 01:19
by Snipawolf
Well, I have both then...

Posted: 28 Jul 2007, 01:20
by Peet
Snipawolf wrote:I can easily shoot and kill someone and feel no remorse. No pity.
Pics or it can't happen.
Posted: 28 Jul 2007, 01:24
by Snipawolf
That made me lol outloud...
I can.
Posted: 28 Jul 2007, 08:40
by Felix the Cat
neddiedrow wrote:Felix raised a point of note, however; syndromes are as subjective as everything else, and carry more stigma in general than their constituent symptoms.
My displeasure is with the tendency to label everything as a mental disorder.
If you wake up in the middle of a dark and stormy night in a cold sweat, it is a disorder.
If you wake up in the middle of a hot summer night in a sticky hot sweat, it is a disorder.
If you wake up in the middle of a perfectly normal night in a perfectly normal condition and go back to sleep, it is a disorder.
If you don't trust people, it is a disorder... if you trust people, it is a disorder... if you have a healthy balance between trust and distrust (say it with me) it is a disorder...
If you think the whole disorder thing is getting out of hand... it is a disorder.