Should I Get Myself Committed?

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HellHammer
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Re: Should I Get Myself Committed?

Post by HellHammer »

Luke wrote: Talk to your family, not to stranger-dangers.
Hahah, wow. This.

And as someone who also suffers OCD tendencies (my games, films, and albums are organized first in alphabetical, then chronological order) and who has also been committed (it's been several years), I'd say you try and stick it out. Getting over obsessive issues can be difficult, but just remember, it isn't permanent.

"Don't mess with your brain, pal. It ain't worth it."
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Inazuma
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Re: Should I Get Myself Committed?

Post by Inazuma »

Hatta wrote:You know why they still do ECT? Because it works. It's not like it's painful or anything. The brain is an electrochemical device. If it's malfunctioning, it only makes sense to use electricity or chemicals to treat it. Yes, it's a crude tool, but the brain is incredibly complex. It really does make more sense than using words to treat a physical problem.
I can't tell if you are joking or being serious but since the OP asked for serious replies, I'm gonna go with that.

Why don't you try to convince one of the psychiatrists who works at a mental hospital to have their brain shocked? Good luck with that.

Or, why don't you try to find a scientific study that proves how electric shock actually benefits people? I don't mean destroying enough brain cells to make them forget about their troubles. I mean genuinely helping them.
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Hobie-wan
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Re: Should I Get Myself Committed?

Post by Hobie-wan »

HellHammer wrote: And as someone who also suffers OCD tendencies (my games, films, and albums are organized first in alphabetical, then chronological order)
Ah, but do you also always make sure the discs are rotated upright in the case? I do. :lol:
...and who has also been committed (it's been several years)
Ok, you got me there. As long as it did you good.
Hatta
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Re: Should I Get Myself Committed?

Post by Hatta »

Why don't you try to convince one of the psychiatrists who works at a mental hospital to have their brain shocked? Good luck with that.
Try getting an oncologist to undergo chemotherapy he doesn't need. Won't have much luck there either. Doesn't mean chemotherapy doesn't work.
Or, why don't you try to find a scientific study that proves how electric shock actually benefits people?
The brain is extremely complex, and we don't really know how it works. So we don't know exactly how ECT works either. But as they say, the proof of the pudding is in the tasting, and the proof of the treatment is in the results. People with serious depression that doesn't respond to counseling or medication often improve after ECT. That's a fact that's well supported by decades of evidence. Here's a paper I found relatively easily that's free for everyone, there's lots more if you are at a university and know how to use PubMed. Does it cure the root cause of depression? No. Is it without side effects? No. Does it keep severely depressed people from relapsing and possibly committing suicide? Yes. That's what's important.

Now, that doesn't mean we don't have good ideas on how it works. It definitely has something to do with the NMDA type glutamate receptor, which is intimately involved in synaptic plasticity. ECT also definitely affects serotonin receptors, which of course are involved in depression (see SSRIs). But this isn't the place for a neurobiology lecture, and I'm not up on the literature anymore anyway. To the OP, sorry to derail your thread.
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MrPopo
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Re: Should I Get Myself Committed?

Post by MrPopo »

Hatta wrote:But this isn't the place for a neurobiology lecture, and I'm not up on the literature anymore anyway. To the OP, sorry to derail your thread.
Actually, I think this place could use with stuff like this. I know that I for one am quite interested in a good neurobiology lecture.
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HellHammer
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Re: Should I Get Myself Committed?

Post by HellHammer »

Hobie-wan wrote:
HellHammer wrote: And as someone who also suffers OCD tendencies (my games, films, and albums are organized first in alphabetical, then chronological order)
Ah, but do you also always make sure the discs are rotated upright in the case? I do. :lol:
...and who has also been committed (it's been several years)
Ok, you got me there. As long as it did you good.
Dude, you have no idea. The disc right side up and the inserted manual backwards...Ya know, cause apparently if I bend or dent the tip of a single page, the walls of reality might come crashing down around me.
And yeah, it did me great Hobie, just great. Haha.
JWatts
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Re: Should I Get Myself Committed?

Post by JWatts »

you're not insane, maybe a bit more obsessive than some but you do not seem to have a mental problem. All of my games are also alphabetized like most people here.
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Kebo
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Re: Should I Get Myself Committed?

Post by Kebo »

I don't think it's obsessive, and I definitely don't consider black labels going overboard. A collector is different than a game player. Often times the collector is also a game player. If you look at the collection of sports cards, which you really can't do anything with besides display, the scrutiny over minute details on the paper dwarfs most game collector's scrutiny. I for one both love to play games, but also to collect them. Black labels give the feeling of authenticity - it's the original, you hold in your hands something that was there at launch, or could at least give the facade of having been there. We could reproduce an old Babe Rooth card, just like the original, but its value would be nothing. Collectors of cards, comics, cars, coins, newspapers, and so on, are usually all this way. Authenticity is key. Is a museum the same if everything is reproduced? Is an art piece the same if it's just a copy?

But since most of us aren't rich, there has to come a time to prioritize what to spend money on and why. Just try to keep that in mind, would you rather have a certain limited edition copy of a game, or an extra, different game entirely?
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