Anonymous wrote:What are the lessons to learn here? 🤔
Try to catch and treat mental illness early
Some people shouldn't own guns
Peer group and partners is huge
What else
Anonymous wrote:Went to HS with a kid in Reston who came from a great family, went to Tech, married his college sweetheart and had a bunch of kids.
Swindled millions from retirees, blew it in Vegas and on fake cans for his wife, got caught and did 7 years in federal penitentiary.
Actually glad to see it. Guy was a D bag of the highest order
Last I heard he was living on a friends couch and working at Home Depot.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Relative went from Fortune 500 top executive to broke.
Anonymous wrote:Me. Comfortable middle class lifestyle with two kids - left husband and had to start over completely. Was in abject poverty (food stamps etc). Got a masters degree, remarried, have a much higher HHI now than I did with my first husband - but Jesus, was it hard.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. And then eventually they made a different lives for themselves. That includes me. I had to quit my job at a critical time in career to look after my firstborn with special needs. Killed my career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe going away for college and leaving stability of home life causes some to go off the rails?
Going away for college coincides with the age of peak mental illness due to brain development. Being away from family and close friends may delay treatment since classmates may not recognize warning signs of new behaviors. On top of that it's VERY difficult to get an appointment, let alone diagnosis for a legal adult. Combine that with "Anosognosia, also called "lack of insight," is a symptom of severe mental illness experienced by some that impairs a person's ability to understand and perceive his or her illness", and you've got a perfect storm.
Drugs and alcohol only exasperate symptoms, and may cause an addiction on top of a severe mental health disorder. Then we blame the addiction for the mental health issues, but often times the mental health issues are what caused the person to abuse drugs and alcohol.
Tragic for our young adults out there.
Add to that my dear brother. He did have schizophrenia but tried so hard to cope and live a healthy lifestyle as a tennis coach and manager at utility company. From the outside, he lived wonderfully by traveling all over the world with friends, he day traded so had sizable funds and seemed happy. He slipped into psychosis suddenly around Thanksgiving and tried to get help. No appointments, the mental hospital let him out because he had a good job, and he was dead right after New Year's. 30. Gone. Way too soon. My heart was absolutely broken as I had also lost my Mom before that. I used to do the what-if's but I realize it would have never been enough. His delusions took over everything and he hardly lived in this world. I do not believe he was "there" when he leapt of a 20-sty building.
Well summarized, pp. Happened to a close relative during of college. A Beautiful Mind and The Center Cannot Hold detail the harrowing experiences of two brilliant Ivy League students who were struck by schizophrenia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe going away for college and leaving stability of home life causes some to go off the rails?
Going away for college coincides with the age of peak mental illness due to brain development. Being away from family and close friends may delay treatment since classmates may not recognize warning signs of new behaviors. On top of that it's VERY difficult to get an appointment, let alone diagnosis for a legal adult. Combine that with "Anosognosia, also called "lack of insight," is a symptom of severe mental illness experienced by some that impairs a person's ability to understand and perceive his or her illness", and you've got a perfect storm.
Drugs and alcohol only exasperate symptoms, and may cause an addiction on top of a severe mental health disorder. Then we blame the addiction for the mental health issues, but often times the mental health issues are what caused the person to abuse drugs and alcohol.
Tragic for our young adults out there.
Add to that my dear brother. He did have schizophrenia but tried so hard to cope and live a healthy lifestyle as a tennis coach and manager at utility company. From the outside, he lived wonderfully by traveling all over the world with friends, he day traded so had sizable funds and seemed happy. He slipped into psychosis suddenly around Thanksgiving and tried to get help. No appointments, the mental hospital let him out because he had a good job, and he was dead right after New Year's. 30. Gone. Way too soon. My heart was absolutely broken as I had also lost my Mom before that. I used to do the what-if's but I realize it would have never been enough. His delusions took over everything and he hardly lived in this world. I do not believe he was "there" when he leapt of a 20-sty building.
Well summarized, pp. Happened to a close relative during of college. A Beautiful Mind and The Center Cannot Hold detail the harrowing experiences of two brilliant Ivy League students who were struck by schizophrenia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, my brother. An academic golden child, valedictorian, near perfect boards, handsome and fit, went Ivy League. I was younger than him, and had teachers who had held onto his projects for years to show them as an example of student work. He managed to graduate but came home full of rage and probably a mental illness, and never left. Lives in squalor in his room at my parents house, now age 44, never had a job, is an alcoholic, obese.
Does he have a diagnosis? Schizophrenia often appears during college years. We’re there any signs of mental health issues when he was in high school?
Bipolar, too. Very sad.
+1 family member who fell apart in HS due to mental illness and treatments were unsuccessful. Really sad. Lots of efforts by family failed to help.