Schizophrenia Definition – Schizophrenia Mirrors The Real World

Many professional care givers are certain today more than ever that schizophrenia reflects and mirror the real world through psychosis and psychotic disorders. More than ever, they are sure that psychotic delusions shows resemblance to the real world and taken out from it.

It is not a secret that a psychotic disorder, draw its materials from the real world. Psychotic delusions meet the outside world through the sufferer’s thoughts. His delusions are made of his life experiences, from his past, his memories and his family relations.

For example, if the relations between the sufferer parents were not stable before his psychotic disorder, then he would see a picture of his parents during his psychosis, he might think that his parents are angry at him, and maybe they went through a divorce even if they didn’t in the real world.

Sometimes during psychosis disorder, people looks to the sufferer very similar and resemble to people they knew in the past. For example, if someone sees a person that looks like someone he knew in the past, he can approach that person with the name of his past acquaintance while being certain that it is the same man.

If a psychotic sufferer browses through a magazine during his psychosis, there is a big chance that pictures in that magazine will remind him of past experiences that are related to them. For example, if a man tried to smoke cannabis in his past, there is a high probability that that person would connect a naïve picture of a flower to that experience during his psychotic disorder.

Today, people understand more and more, that psychosis derive its images from the sufferer’s past experiences and not from things with no connection like people thoughts in the past. Therefore, it is very difficult sometimes to say about some delusions that they are not real and not connected to the real world.

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