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Nah this never happens in the US. It's 100% perfect here.
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I bet the school itself is the cause for these mental problems, or parents that are addicted to pills and don't actually parent their kids, or just more doctors watching a typical hyper kid and claiming they have problems and push hard drugs on them like that's a great idea. I think the world is as messed up as it is because we've been pushing pills on too many people for decades. That's a good way to screw up society.
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But doesn't everyone have some type of mental "problem" but others can live with it or learn to deal with it
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As long as it isn't forced upon the kids.
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I honestly think the school environment could be one of the problems. Do parents still tend to send their kids away to schools? As much as I fancied myself a teen rebel when I was younger, I really did lean on my parents for emotional support at times. Without having them around I can imagine bad days could easily turn into bad weeks or bad months. I say this because I think you guys may be suffering from "Asian" syndrome, where the parents thrust their child out into society and assume it's the best thing for them. Humans aren't exactly built for that, we are very functional in small packs, AKA families, an army of robotic faculty won't exactly generate happiness.
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Edited by cxkxr: 3/26/2014 1:25:03 PM>Assuming these problems aren't a direct result of their environment. >Advocates treating the problem, but not changing the environment which provokes and likely harvests said problems. >"We're sorry for the institutionalized environment that we require you to be in, but here's a therapist and some pills to compensate for that."
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We have a lot of Brits here.
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Depression these days... I swear kids use this as a -blam!-ing defense mechanism for why they are weird, left out, socially awkward, extremely introverted, feel like they had their heart broken, and so forth. Yes, I said that (I'm sorry for those few who truly do have depression, because you do need the help). I just mean that there are soooooo many cases of depression in kids these days like is it just easier to pass the kid off as being depressed instead of being seeing that the kid is bored and kinda left out or whatever...like the parents would rather diagnose their kid as being depressed than as just being like -blam!- I raised an awkward emo kid that is really weird...but no they go far enough to say all these kids are quote on quote depressed and have a mental disorder instead of dealing with the real issues. I swear its just that these kids aren't built for this shit these days. These days, if a kid somewhat feels hurt, they curl up in a -blam!-ing ball and whine about it.
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Pisses me off how depression is being used as a selling point. The damn word is used too often and actual depression is, I feel, quite rare within schools. More people develop a violent and somewhat jaded mindset in schools than they do depression, at least from what I've seen. That is what needs to be looked at, as well as focusing on those with bully mentalities and cracking down on it rather than dismissing bullying as "Just a one time passing thing" to keep parents from getting offended about their precious children.
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Edited by Nul Arc: 3/25/2014 10:58:09 PMI AM PERFECTLY FINE, MAYBE IT'S EVERYONE WHO IS CRAZY! [spoiler]Nah, but seriously I think the mental health system in most countries needs a complete overhaul.[/spoiler]
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[quote]Loss of appetite or weight loss Waking early Excessive boredom Poor concentration[/quote] I score 3/4, and 2/4 of those describe almost everyone that goes to public school that I've met. Hell, I've got a 2 minute long animated/voiced/musiced video project for Mythology due in 8 hours and 45 minutes, and I've yet to put what I have together to see how long it would be. Poor concentration could be a valid point, but when students simply don't care about the course/work, it loses all credibility. So, please tell me that they have more "Warning Signs" than these. There are poorly handled mental health programs everywhere, but it seems to me like they're over-selling it.
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I have mixed feelings about this. Its good, but every time a councillor talks to me I shrivel entirely inside
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Inb4 WHEN I WAS IN SCHOOL WE DID X AND IT WAS FINE
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[quote]BBC[/quote] -blam!-ing lol
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My thread is extremely relevant to this, didn't see this when I posted it. Maybe if that...person's, issues were addressed as a child, they wouldn't have thought they were and should act like a Doge.
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It costs to much money, plus just about everything can be solved by getting outside and talking a walk.
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Ban mental problems
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Anything can be a sign of poor mental health today and it's -blam!-ing annoying. Just because somebody may tell a lie, that doesn't make them a damn sociopath. Might as well give everybody medication and be done with it. And I'm saying this as a person who has ADD/OCD/ and social anxiety disorders When I was a kid, I didn't get any medications or support for my issues. I was treated like a regular person and was taught/disciplined like one. Now I'm happy I was treated as such because control over my issues is far greater than people who was raised with meds and treated special
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Who's gonna pay for that?
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They should put more money into healthcare and education.
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It would be better to help them than to just stick them with a bunch of anti-psychotic medications and say "okay that's good enough if that doesn't work we'll stick them in a mental institution"
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like srs all my best friends had depression but were fine . we dont need medicine
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I know people with tonnes of mental health problems and they have no one to help them. I've been diagnosed with insanity before and that makes me happy.
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inb4itcoststoomuchmoney inb4theyjustneedtowalkitoff