Nothing can compare to the relentlessness drive to oblivion one feels in ones mind when it turns inside-out against itself. Your own worst enemies, your own worst fears are manifested by an omnipotent, malevolent force. The religious Christian will attribute it to demons, or even the big-bad-bully on the block himself, Satan. If I had to describe it in religious terms, I would deem it the anti-God, distinguishable from Satan in that Satan is not nearly as powerful as the Judeo-Islamo-Christian deity. This antithesis of a higher moral being is centered in the self. Because it is within the self, it is within this (I will call it a “force” at this point) forces power that anything short of altering the fundamental laws of physics is feasible. This force is able to inflict what feels like bodily harm on an individual, it is able to communicate thoughts through what at first appears to be a will of its own, and it is convincing enough in its logic to sway a person over to the most outrageous and illogical opinions.
A psychotic individual, possessed (no pun intended) as they are of faulty logic and perceptions, is a victim of their own psyche. Any aspect of their particular psychosis can be attributed to exeperiences they have had, memories they have kept, a worldview which they built up before it was torn down (and replaced) by the illness, and abuse which they have suffered, either drug-related or otherwise. Amazingly enough, in my experience, schizophrenics often share similar psychosis related symptoms. Paranoia, as broad as the term is, seems to be limited to a cultural context. An example of this would be the large number of people in America who believe that either aliens, the government, or both are involved in their life, usually for the worst. Another example would be the prevalence of the notion that the neighbors are talking about them, a suspicion reinforced by the very real hallucinations which accompany this particular delusion. My point in saying all of this is that although the psychotic individual is a product of his or her society’s zeitgeist, they are also influenced by their experiences. Say a person was abused in high school; their hallucinations may take on the role of berating, bully like voices. If a person was sexually abused, tactile hallucinations may abuse the person in ways which, though not real, are as real to the sufferer as any tangible abuse. Thus, experience has its role to play in the schizophrenic experience.



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