Feeling like your hands are big. What does deja vu mean and how does it occur? Mechanism of development of the syndrome

Déjà vu is a memory of the present

(c) Henri Bergson, philosopher

Many of you are probably interested in what is deja vu. According to statistics, 97% of people have experienced this condition. I won’t be mistaken if I say that you are most likely familiar with it too.

And the more you engage in spiritual practices, the brighter and deeper deja vu becomes.

It would seem that this is simply a state lasting a few seconds, occurring in the most ordinary situations and then disappearing without a trace. It does no harm, and does not seem to bring any noticeable benefit.

Why does it excite our minds so much?

What is deja vu - a brain error or a secret message from the soul?

Read the article to the end, and truly... good news!

Translated from French, “déjà vu” means “already seen.” A very accurate name is mental phenomenon This is how it manifests itself.

In a new situation you have a strong feeling that “all this has already happened to you”. It’s as if every sound, every element of the environment is physically familiar to you.

And you even “remember” what will happen in a few seconds. And when “it” happens, there is a feeling that everything goes as it should.

And even, as a rule, the thought “I’ve already seen this” or “I’m having déjà vu” occurs to you.

Write in the comments if you are experiencing déjà vu and what signs usually accompany it

Deja vu may be accompanied change in perception. For example, increased sharpness of colors or sounds. Or, on the contrary, some “vagueness” of reality.

Sometimes it boosts your confidence and mental stability, sometimes it causes short-term confusion.

But one thing can be said for sure - it does not leave you indifferent. People who have experienced déjà vu usually remember these moments well and treat them as something unusual.

The answer to the question “what is deja vu” is devoted to books, articles, Scientific research

Moreover, physiologically, it rarely lasts more than 10 seconds.

Can you imagine what the depth and meaning of a phenomenon must be for it to excite humanity so much?

Multidimensional consciousness is the ability to be “aware” of more than one dimension. And many of you HAVE experience of its manifestation.

Is déjà vu a memory error?

Modern scientific research allows us to track what happens in the human brain during déjà vu.

When this happens you have simultaneously areas of the brain that are responsible for perception sensory signals present(“this is happening now”), and for long-term memory (“I’ve known this for a long time”).

Doctors tracked “dysfunctional electrical impulse» in the middle temporal lobe and hippocampus (areas responsible for memory and recognition). It is he who gives a “false signal” about the exact memory of what is happening.

Since the memory zone is hyperactive at this time and its signal is even slightly ahead of perception, a feeling of “recognizing the future” a few seconds ahead is created.

In general, the conclusions converge to the following: déjà vu is an inexplicable, but rather harmless, memory error.

But still, Why does it arise? Scientists have no answer.

However, there are interesting experimental data on playing déjà vu in laboratory conditions.

Participants were shown certain sounds and drawings, and then, under hypnosis, forced them to do so forget.

When they were shown the same signals again, people activated the above areas of the brain and a feeling of “déjà vu” arose.

It turns out that déjà vu is not a new memory, but a forgotten and reactivated memory?

But when did this happen to us and why did we forget?

Some psychologists put forward the version that déjà vu is a manifestation of the work of the subconscious. For example, it calculated the expected development of some ordinary everyday situation. That is, you “lived it” in some way.

Then deja vu simply turns on when this situation arises, and is just a small glimpse of intuition.

However, this does not explain such complete sensory immersion in the detailed process of “memory.” Although, as we will see later, the assumption is not without meaning.

There is also an opinion that the phenomenon of déjà vu is associated with memories from dreams. It was promoted, for example, by such a “bison” as Sigmund Freud.

According to his version, déjà vu occurs as a memory reaction to what is seen in a dream. The dream, in turn, had a real basis from pieces of your early real past.

An indirect confirmation of this can be the fact that some eyewitnesses of déjà vu describe their sensations as “a simultaneous experience of the present moment and memories of a dream in which they lived this moment.”

The interpretation of dreams from dream books is outdated. Modern spiritual sources provide fresh information about our dreams and their meaning. There are six main types of dreams...

Is deja vu an imprint of past lives?

I cannot ignore another interesting version.

Some experts associate deja vu and past lives, as well as ancestral memory (genetic).

Freud's contemporary Carl Jung described sudden memories of “his parallel life as an 18th-century doctor.” He suddenly “remembered” places and phenomena, for example, boots in an illustration in a book.

Tina Turner in Egypt and Madonna in the imperial palace of China recognized landscapes and objects “from their past.”

Whether these evidences of déjà vu are pure, or whether they simply indicate the existence of past lives, we cannot say. However, this is another piece of the puzzle.

Hypnotherapist and regression therapist Dolores Cannon believes that the soul, before incarnation, draws up a certain plan for its future life. And moments of déjà vu serve as a reminder of the path you have chosen.

What is regression; what problems can be solved with its help; what abilities and talents are revealed during regression sessions.

Deja vu is your spiritual beacon on the way!

Let's summarize. Where have we come to in our reasoning?

Déjà vu is a phenomenon of perception. It occurs as an electrical impulse in the brain - a reaction to a new situation that seems familiar to the smallest detail.

Deja vu has some relation to the subconscious, dreams and past lives, but it is impossible to “grasp” it more accurately.

Déjà vu is a vivid experience unlike any other. It resembles magic, something unusual that happens to you in the most seemingly ordinary conditions.

The last and most important piece is added to us by spiritual sources.

Word to Kryon:

“Mentally place your experience of “now” in a huge spherical space, where everything you have done and all the potentials of the future are glued to inner surface ball.

Now place yourself in the center of the ball and look around. At this point there is no predestination, but there is plenty ways of opportunity.

But because you look at everything (esoterically), you "feel" it, and in fact you have a kind of multidimensional foresight of what might happen depending on the path you choose.

Even if you sit and read these words in normal reality, a part of you always remains in that ball, although you are not aware of it.

So when some potentials do eventually come to fruition, part of you says, “I've been in this situation before! Wow! Deja vu!

In fact you just find out built by you for yourself and previously felt potentials, which are now manifesting in your linear reality."

Lee Carroll (Kryon). Act or wait

So, the puzzle has come together.

Déjà vu is a manifestation of your own multidimensional spiritual plane.

At the same time we remind you,

  • What you are more than you seem;
  • that there is no time, and the future, past and present are merged together;

Sometimes I have an “attack of accelerated perception of time.” (The name was invented by me, don’t focus your attention). This has happened to me as long as I can remember, in childhood, in adolescence etc. This happens spontaneously! Always within 5-10 minutes. Everything just speeds up, people do everything faster, including myself, even the thoughts in my head go faster! Every word I hear sounds very quickly, but at the same time I understand everything. Everything speeds up 2-3 times. It's like I feel like I'm in third person in a faster fourth dimension (I don't know how to describe it). I feel awkward and a little scared, although this happens rarely, it scares me. I feel like I'm about to go crazy.

Hello. The condition you described is most likely alarming - neurotic syndrome(disorder), to put it simply - " anxiety neurosis". It is psychosomatic or, more precisely, psychogenic disorder, in which your body (organism) reacts in this way to psychological difficulties or a stressful situation.
In order for these problems to go away, you need to find the reasons that trigger them and try to eliminate them as soon as possible. And it’s unlikely to do this without the help of an experienced psychotherapist. And a competent and individual psychotherapeutic program will include not only a search for the causes of this condition, but also their elimination through synthesis modern methods psychotherapy in the first place (drug support is extremely rarely required).
To treat such neuroses today they are effectively used as systemic therapy, as well as cognitive-behavioral or existential psychotherapy, etc.
But to do this, you need to contact a specialized specialist, a psychotherapist, and better not for a virtual consultation by correspondence, but as part of a face-to-face clinical consultation or at least in the format of a teleconsultation on Skype.

Sometimes it seems that close person gone crazy.

Or it starts to go away. How to determine that “the roof has gone crazy” and it’s not your imagination?

In this article, you will learn about the 10 main symptoms of mental disorders.

There is a joke among people: “Mentally healthy people no, there are under-examined ones.” It means that individual signs Mental disorders can be found in the behavior of any person, and the main thing is not to fall into a manic search for corresponding symptoms in others.

And the point is not even that a person can become dangerous to society or himself. Some mental disorders arise as a consequence organic damage brain, which requires immediate treatment. Delay can cost a person not only mental health, but also life.

Some symptoms, on the contrary, are sometimes regarded by others as manifestations of bad character, promiscuity or laziness, when in fact they are manifestations of illness.

In particular, depression is not considered by many to be a disease requiring serious treatment. “Pull yourself together! Stop whining! You are a weakling, you should be ashamed! Stop digging into yourself and everything will pass!” - this is how relatives and friends exhort the patient. And he needs specialist help and long-term treatment, otherwise you won’t get out.

Offensive senile dementia or early symptoms Alzheimer's disease can also be mistaken for age-related decline in intelligence or bad character, but in fact it's time to start looking for a caregiver to look after the patient.

How can you determine whether you should worry about a relative, colleague, or friend?

Signs of a mental disorder

This condition can accompany any mental disorder and many of them. somatic diseases. Asthenia is expressed in weakness, low performance, mood swings, hypersensitivity. A person begins to cry easily, becomes instantly irritated and loses self-control. Asthenia is often accompanied by sleep disturbances.

Obsessive states

IN wide range Obsessions include many manifestations: from constant doubts, fears that a person is not able to cope with, to an irresistible desire for cleanliness or performing certain actions.

Under power obsessive-compulsive disorder a person may return home several times to check whether he has turned off the iron, gas, water, or whether he has locked the door. Obsessive fear an accident may force the patient to perform certain rituals, which, according to the sufferer, can ward off trouble. If you notice that your friend or relative washes their hands for hours, has become overly squeamish and is always afraid of getting infected with something, this is also an obsession. The desire not to step on cracks in the asphalt, tile joints, avoidance certain types transport or people wearing clothes of a certain color or type is also an obsessive state.

Mood changes

Melancholy, depression, a desire for self-recrimination, talk about one’s own worthlessness or sinfulness, and about death can also be symptoms of the disease. You should also pay attention to other manifestations of inadequacy:

  • Unnatural frivolity, carelessness.
  • Foolishness, not typical of age and character.
  • A euphoric state, optimism that has no basis.
  • Fussiness, talkativeness, inability to concentrate, chaotic thinking.
  • Heightened self-esteem.
  • Projecting.
  • Increased sexuality, extinction of natural shyness, inability to restrain sexual desires.

You have cause for concern if your loved one begins to complain of unusual sensations in the body. They can be extremely unpleasant or downright annoying. These are sensations of squeezing, burning, moving “something inside”, “rustling in the head”. Sometimes such sensations can be a consequence of very real somatic diseases, but often senestopathies indicate the presence of hypochondriacal syndrome.

Hypochondria

Expressed in manic preoccupation with the condition own health. Examinations and test results may indicate the absence of diseases, but the patient does not believe it and requires more and more examinations and serious treatment. A person talks almost exclusively about his well-being, does not leave clinics and demands to be treated as a patient. Hypochondria often goes hand in hand with depression.

Illusions

There is no need to confuse illusions and hallucinations. Illusions force a person to perceive real objects and phenomena in a distorted form, while with hallucinations a person perceives something that does not really exist.

Examples of illusions:

  • the pattern on the wallpaper seems to be a tangle of snakes or worms;
  • the size of objects is perceived in a distorted form;
  • the patter of raindrops on the windowsill seems like the careful steps of someone scary;
  • the shadows of the trees turn into terrible creatures creeping up with frightening intentions, etc.

If outsiders may not be aware of the presence of illusions, then the susceptibility to hallucinations may manifest itself more noticeably.

Hallucinations can affect all senses, that is, be visual and auditory, tactile and gustatory, olfactory and general, and also be combined in any combination. To the patient, everything he sees, hears and feels seems completely real. He may not believe that those around him do not feel, hear, or see all this. He may perceive their bewilderment as a conspiracy, deception, mockery, and become annoyed that he is not understood.

At auditory hallucinations a person hears various kinds of noise, fragments of words or coherent phrases. “Voices” can give commands or comment on the patient’s every action, laugh at him or discuss his thoughts.

Gustatory and olfactory hallucinations often cause the sensation of an unpleasant property: a disgusting taste or smell.

With tactile hallucinations, the patient thinks that someone is biting, touching, strangling him, that insects are crawling on him, that some creatures are inserting themselves into his body and moving there or eating the body from the inside.

Externally, susceptibility to hallucinations is expressed in conversations with an invisible interlocutor, sudden laughter or constant intense listening to something. The patient may constantly shake something off himself, scream, look around himself with a worried look, or ask others if they see something on his body or in the surrounding space.

Rave

Delusional states often accompany psychosis. Delusion is based on erroneous judgments, and the patient stubbornly maintains his false belief, even if there are obvious contradictions with reality. Delusional ideas acquire super-value, significance that determines all behavior.

Delusional disorders can be expressed in erotic form, or in conviction of one's great mission, in descent from a noble family or aliens. The patient may feel that someone is trying to kill or poison him, rob or kidnap him. Sometimes development delirious state preceded by a feeling of unreality of the surrounding world or one’s own personality.

Hoarding or excessive generosity

Yes, any collector can be under suspicion. Especially in cases where collecting becomes an obsession and subjugates a person’s entire life. This can be expressed in the desire to drag things found in garbage dumps into the house, hoard food without paying attention to expiration dates, or pick up stray animals in quantities that exceed the ability to provide them with normal care and proper maintenance.

The desire to give away all your property and excessive spending can also be regarded as a suspicious symptom. Especially in the case when a person has not previously been distinguished by generosity or altruism.

There are people who are unsociable and unsociable due to their character. This is normal and should not raise suspicions of schizophrenia and other mental disorders. But if a born cheerful person, the life of the party, a family man and good friend suddenly starts to destroy social connections, becomes unsociable, shows coldness towards those who were recently dear to him - this is a reason to worry about his mental health.

A person becomes sloppy, stops taking care of himself, and in society can begin to behave shockingly - commit acts that are considered indecent and unacceptable.

What to do?

Very hard to accept correct solution in the event that there are suspicions of a mental disorder in someone close to you. Perhaps the person is simply going through a difficult period in his life, and that is why his behavior has changed. Things will get better - and everything will return to normal.

But it may turn out that the symptoms you notice are a manifestation of a serious illness that needs to be treated. In particular, oncological diseases brain in most cases lead to one or another mental disorders. Delay in starting treatment can be fatal in this case.

Other diseases also need to be treated in a timely manner, but the patient himself may not notice the changes happening to him, and only those close to him will be able to influence the state of affairs.

However, there is another option: the tendency to see in everyone around potential patients a psychiatric clinic may also turn out to be a mental disorder. Before calling an ambulance psychiatric care for a neighbor or relative, try to analyze your own condition. What if you have to start with yourself? Remember the joke about the under-examined?

“Every joke has some humor in it” ©

Autometamorphopsia is a disorder of the body diagram, i.e., a disturbance in the perception of the size, shape of one’s own body and its individual parts, as well as the position of the body and its parts in space. Includes a number of symptoms that can be combined with each other. Manifestations of total autometamorphopsia are:

    macrosomia- a feeling of increasing size of your entire body. This sensation may be barely noticeable to patients, but in some cases their own body seems gigantic to them, incredibly huge, occupying, for example, the entire space of a large room, but even it does not seem to them to contain the entire body. At the same time, all parts of the body are perceived to be enlarged evenly, their shape also seems to be unchanged. The body, however, is perceived as one’s own, and the experience of its alienation usually does not arise. Patients can say, however, that they feel their body with some previously unusual clarity, unusual, previously unnoticed acuteness and as if it had become closer than usual. Sometimes, however, an enlarged body or a larger part of the body is perceived as “alien”, “foreign” objects;

    microsomia- a feeling of reduction in the size of your body. This sensation can also be barely noticeable to patients, but sometimes the body seems to them vanishingly small, “microscopic” and at the same time removed from the sense of self, sometimes turning into something like a point. Thus, while walking, a patient feels like such a “short person” that she is afraid of hitting her head on the asphalt or drowning in a puddle of water after rain. Sometimes patients feel their own body as if it were not theirs, something foreign to them.

Symptoms of partial autometamorphopsia are much more common:

    macromelia- a feeling of an increase in the size of one hand or both hands. It happens that part of the hand appears enlarged. So, when falling asleep, the patient feels an enlarged hand right hand: “The fist seems so huge that I’m afraid it might crush me with its weight”;

    macropedia- a feeling of increasing size of one leg or both legs (feet, feet);

    micromelia- a feeling of reduction in the size of one arm or both arms (hands, hands);

    micropedia- a feeling of reduction in the size of one leg or both legs (feet, feet);

    macroglossia- feeling of an increase in the size of your tongue;

    microglossia- feeling of a decrease in the size of your tongue;

    macrocephalopsia- feeling of an increase in the size of your head. Some patients compare the feeling of enlargement of the head, disproportionate to the perception of the body, with the head of a hero from A.S. Pushkin’s fairy tale;

    microcephalopsia- a feeling of a decrease in the size of your head, sometimes quite significant.

E. Bleuler describes a patient who for a long time I was afraid to go outside. It seemed to him that his head was very small, the size of a grain of millet. After much convincing, he finally agreed that his head was normal. However, he was still in no hurry to go outside. He explained it this way: “I know now that everything is fine with my head, but the birds don’t understand that.” IN in this case it is clear that the disturbance of perception has transformed into a persistent belief, into delusions of a physical disability.

Similar disturbances may occur in relation to the perception of other parts of the body: lips, nose, fingers, ears, chest, abdomen, upper or lower half torso, genitals, etc.

The perception of the shape of your body and its individual parts may be impaired - autodysmorphopsia. The body (parts of the body) seem disproportionate to patients, elongated, shortened, thickened, thinned, curved. For example, the head seems “square, elongated, flattened, egg-shaped”, the nose - “elongated, pointed, sunken, becoming like a potato”, the chest - “sunken, sunken”, the back - “humpbacked”, the pelvis - “ in the shape of an oval, compressed from the sides,” etc. A patient with suspected rheumatic fever says that as soon as she closes her eyes, she completely loses the normal feeling of her body. It seems to her like something like a puddle of ink that spreads across the chair, drips onto the floor, and then spreads on the floor into a shapeless spot.

At organic disorder Discriminative sensitivity is described by Klein's symptom (1930): the leg on the side of the injury is perceived to be increased in volume, significantly larger than the leg in which sensitivity is preserved.

Finally, sometimes contrasting autometamorphopsia occurs, when sensations of enlargement and reduction of body parts are combined with each other.

The perception of the position of body parts in space is often disrupted - bodily allesthesia. For example, the head seems to be turned with the back of the head forward, the legs - with their toes turned back, the tongue - curled into a tube, the hands - behind the back, the ears - sticking out “like a hare’s”. The patient says that when closed eyes he feels the body with its back forward, and the head turned in the opposite direction. Another sick says that when he closes his eyes, he feels as if his legs are raised up, they cover his neck and are tied around it in a “knot.”

There is also such a disorder as splitting of body perception or, which is the same thing, in terms of self-consciousness, somatopsychic dissociation. With this disorder, individual parts of the body feel disconnected from each other. For example, the head is perceived at some distance from the body, “the lid of the skull rises up and hangs in the air,” the eyes “come out of their sockets and are 10 cm in front of the face.” When walking, it seems to the patient that the lower part of the body lags behind the upper or moves somewhere to the side. The body in general can be perceived as a kind of mechanical conglomerate of its individual parts; it seems as if glued together, crumbling, something like a children's house made of cubes, which can fall apart at any moment. This experience resembles Jaspers's symptom of splitting perception, as if indicating its nature, namely: a symptom of a dissociated self.

Sometimes the disorder concerns the perception of speed, smoothness and amplitude of movements of one’s body and its parts. Thus, steps seem to the patient to be excessively large, “giant,” or, on the contrary, small, “short,” gestures seem sweeping, wide or unusually spare, as if inconspicuous, “mental.” With a slight shake of the head, it “seems like it’s about to fall off,” the arms “scatter to the sides,” the hands don’t just tremble, they seem to be “shaking.” The movements seem fast, rapid or slow, “turtle-like”, although in reality they do not change or are, on the contrary, somewhat slowed or accelerated. Some patients do not seem to be aware of the inadequate sensations of their movements; it seems to them that the acceleration or deceleration of movement is characteristic of some external objects or other people. In other words, we are talking about the alienation of one’s own sensations, about their projection, i.e., about depersonalization. Other patients report that changes in the perception of the speed of their own movements are accompanied by the feeling that the speed of movements of others around them is also changing in the same way. In such cases, depersonalization is also observed, but not in the form of projection, but in the form of transitivism. There are patients who report that they have ceased to feel the smoothness of their movements; the latter seem to them intermittent and jerky.

The perception of the nature of movements may be impaired. Thus, the syndrome is described dynamic disturbances body diagrams (Razdolsky, 1935), when clonic convulsions of the limbs in Bravais-Jackson epilepsy are perceived as circular, helical movements by them. Some patients exhibit a disturbance in the perception of symmetry relationships.

In patients in acute phase organic damage brain, as well as with focal left hemisphere lesions, Hartmann's symptom is sometimes detected when patients lose orientation in the right-left. The symptom resembles a violation of orientation in space with similar problems for patients.

Finally, there are disorders of the localization of sensations in own body. Thus, with tactile allesthesia, the ability to localize tactile stimuli in the limbs is impaired - topanesthesia (allocastesia) or these stimuli are perceived at a symmetrical point on the other half of the body - allochiria (alloesthesia). A similar disorder exists with regard to pain. For example, toothache felt by the patient on the opposite side of the jaw - alloalgia. Also interesting is a frequent disorder known as Minor’s symptom - a violation of the localization of somatic sensations that accompany emotions. Thus, patients sometimes localize fear during an epileptic attack in the leg, arm, tongue or eyes. Some patients with depression place sadness in the hip, side, somewhere between the shoulder blades, and anxiety in the lower abdomen or throat area.

We like it a little crazy people, eccentric and ready for madness. At the same time, we ourselves are terribly afraid of going crazy. True madmen seem to us to be necessarily unbalanced psychos, placed in special institutions, isolated from “normality.” At the same time, we know very well that many brilliant people, artists, scientists and musicians have always been a little out of their depth. We all have our quirks and we all have a little bit of crazy in us. Let's recognize a time bomb together!

1. I'm afraid of going crazy

Daily stresses do not go unnoticed by the body. We are afraid of everything: a kettle forgotten on the stove, an iron not turned off, an urgent report at work, a trip to the dentist, terrorist threats, natural Disasters etc. We get upset over little things and it seems that just a little longer our nerves won’t hold up and something irreversible will happen. Everyday portions of stress, like layers in a pie, fit into our heads, and the state panic fear becomes almost chronic. From people who long time are in such a stressful state, you can often hear “I’m afraid of going crazy.”

This is exactly how neurosis manifests itself, it hides in fears, sometimes deep and understandable only to our subconscious, and manifests itself after a series of stresses. The phenomenon is often temporary and certainly familiar to each of us firsthand. Constant hysterics are replaced by attacks panic attacks, and sometimes psychosomatics comes into play and then it becomes no laughing matter. Endless searches for diseases and trips from doctor to doctor can really drive you crazy.

Fear of visiting a doctor is also no less common - iatrophobia. Watch the video!

2. Love to the point of madness

Love is blind, so madness has to lead it by the hand. And even regardless of age, madness sometimes becomes a guide for a loving heart. Attacks of jealousy, the inability to withstand separation and tearful streams of joy just from looking at a loved one - some will say that this is a manifestation of real feelings, while others will see a painful obsession with the object of love. From such a love disorder all sorts of sad stories happen in the style of “Romeo and Juliet” or “don’t let anyone get you.” On long life Such painful relationships are definitely not doomed. But their creators and perpetrators - the lovers themselves - risk either being cured or completely going off the rails.

3. Unrecognized genius

All brilliant people are partly crazy, but not all crazy people are brilliant people! It happens that a person considers himself not just exceptionally creative, but a real genius. I wrote one banal and frankly mediocre book or picked up paints for the first time, smearing them on the canvas, imagining myself to be the new Cezanne. When the crown has already been put on, but there has not yet been a reason for the coronation, this is an alarming sign! "Star stories" of some unrecognized geniuses make us ignore them creative activity, but to attract attention to yourself in other ways. They make shocking attacks, put on uncomfortable masquerade costumes and firmly believe in their special destiny. It’s good if an understanding of reality still returns to them, and the whisper of madness only adds ideas for creative implementation. But this does not always happen, and some are forced to remain misunderstood. Although, perhaps their time simply has not come. After all, the notorious Giordano Bruno was understood only 300 years after... he was burned.

4. I am bad

Failures at work, personal life is not working out. What's the matter? Psychologists teach us to look for problems within ourselves, so people find them, but not always with the right side. This is how legends with curses and damage are born, and the sufferers themselves label themselves “losers” and “wreaths of celibacy.” Suggestion is a powerful thing. And the sad look and endless conversations about problems (which, by the way, absolutely everyone has!) good people they don’t attract and don’t make life brighter. If at the initial stage the “I am bad” syndrome can still be cured on your own active work over oneself, then in a prolonged form it can be very contagious, provoking a lazy, dull existence and real psychosis.

5. Workaholism and other addictions

We all know very well that drunkenness and drug addiction begin mainly due to internal problems and the inability to cope with them on our own. All this is dangerous and requires serious medical and psychological treatment. “I don’t drink or use drugs, so everything is fine with my head, there’s no addiction,” you think and go to work again on Saturday. You love your job, which means you don’t do anything bad. Meanwhile, psychologists have long equated workaholism with a neuropsychiatric disease. And this dangerous epidemic is now reigning all over the world. Working with your head is also a unique way to escape from problems. Behind such a frantic work rhythm, a workaholic often awaits emotional burnout, decreased sexual activity, insomnia and health problems on fertile nervous soil.

6. Wanderlust

What do children do when they want to protest, when they have problems with their parents or classmates, when it seems to them that they are not understood and the whole world is against them. They're in literally running away from problems. They run away from home. A child's way out of any situation, if suddenly reality begins to press, also works in adults and, if you do not pay attention to it, results in real deviation. . Many often change jobs, some change girlfriends or lovers, and some change entire cities. Once having escaped from psychological trauma, a person can continue to run away from any situation simply impulsively, while losing what is dear to him and parting with what is important to him.

7. Distracted man from Basseynaya street

Not only do all madmen have their eccentricities, strange habits, they are also extremely forgetful and absent-minded. At a minimum, forgetting the birthdays of loved ones and friends is in their spirit. Psychologists, as a result of long and painful experiments, have found that poor memory and inability to learn are very alarming signs. Such disturbances are directly related to the malfunction of the brain and thus send SOS signals.

And yet, each of us sometimes lacks a little bit of madness... But it’s still better when your madness brings pleasure and pleasant surprises to your loved ones, and for this always remain sober and of good memory!

Loading...Loading...