10 überraschende Möglichkeiten, den Verstand zu verlieren

Jun 13 2014
Finanzielle Schwierigkeiten. Arbeitstermine. Eine Reise nach Paris. Warte was? Ein Besuch in der Stadt des Lichts reicht aus, um Sie aus dem tiefen Wasser zu schicken?
Wir alle haben manchmal das Gefühl, an einem losen Faden zu hängen. Es ist Teil der conditio humana.

Wir alle waren mehr als einmal mit unserem Latein am Ende. Vielleicht liegt es daran, dass das Baby ununterbrochen weint oder wir uns mit unserem Ehepartner um unbezahlte Rechnungen streiten. Kurz gesagt, wir verlieren unseren Verstand. Wir sind gestresst. Waren wütend. Wir sind traurig und verzweifelt. Tief durchatmen. Niemand ist perfekt.

Natürlich "verliert" niemand wirklich den Verstand. Stattdessen erleben wir emotionalen Stress , ein Konzept, das sich einer sauberen Definition entzieht und Teil des Menschseins ist [Quellen: Bouchez , Phillips ].

Der meiste emotionale Stress ist ein vorübergehendes Ereignis, das oft auf spezifische Stressoren zurückgeführt werden kann . Wenn diese Dinge verschwinden, verschwindet auch unsere Not. Das funktioniert aber nicht immer so. Wenn wir immer noch das Gefühl haben, den Verstand zu verlieren, haben wir möglicherweise eine schwerwiegendere psychische Störung, wie Angst oder Depression [Quellen: Bouchez , Phillips ].

Zu den Kennzeichen emotionaler Belastung gehört, dass Sie ohne ersichtlichen körperlichen Grund weniger oder mehr als gewöhnlich schlafen. Unser Gewicht kann schwanken oder unsere Essgewohnheiten ändern sich. Unsere Wut nicht kontrollieren zu können, ist ein weiteres verräterisches Zeichen dafür, dass wir emotionalen Stress erleben [Quelle: Bouchez ].

Was bringt also jemanden dazu, „durchzudrehen“? Lassen Sie sich von diesen 10 überraschen.

Inhalt
  1. Ein Kind haben
  2. Ein Trauma erleben
  3. Sich verlieben
  4. Zu Besuch in Paris
  5. Zu Besuch in Jerusalem
  6. Demenz
  7. Mit einer attraktiven Frau sprechen
  8. Menopause
  9. Einzelhaft
  10. Überschwang

10: Ein Kind haben

Wochenbettpsychose ist nicht dasselbe wie Wochenbettdepression. Wenn Sie glauben, dass Sie beides haben, suchen Sie professionelle Hilfe.

Es sollte die glücklichste Zeit in Clare Dolmans Leben werden. Sie hatte gerade eine kleine Tochter namens Ettie zur Welt gebracht. Wie Dolman in einem BBC-Artikel schrieb: „Begeisterung verwandelte sich bald in eine Form von Manie.“ Sie konnte nicht aufhören zu reden. Sie hat wenig geschlafen. Sie war reizbar. Sie litt unter Stimmungsschwankungen.

Bald war Dolman außer Kontrolle und auf dem Weg in eine psychiatrische Klinik. Dolman habe den Verstand verloren, sagt sie, weil sie an postpartaler Psychose litt , einer seltenen Krankheit, die nicht mit postpartaler Depression oder Angst zu verwechseln ist .

Postpartale Psychosen treten 1 bis 2 Mal von 1.000 Geburten auf. Warum frischgebackene Mütter an der Krankheit leiden, ist unklar. Genetik, Hormonspiegel und gestörte Schlafmuster können alle schuld sein. Zu den Symptomen gehören Wahnvorstellungen, Halluzinationen, Hyperaktivität, Paranoia und Kommunikationsschwierigkeiten [Quellen: Dolman , Postpartum.net ].

9: Erleben eines Traumas

Ein Bundesermittler untersucht die Überreste von American-Airlines-Flug 1420. Sie können irgendwie sehen, wie das Aussteigen aus diesem zerstörten Flugzeug Ihren Verstand durcheinander bringen könnte.

1999 war Julia Ferganchick an Bord des American-Airlines-Flugs 1420, als dieser in der Nähe von Little Rock, Arkansas , abstürzte . Das Flugzeug prallte mit 296 km/h auf den Boden. Ferganchick überlebte, bahnte sich ihren Weg aus dem Gewirr aus verdrehtem Metall und Flammen, sprang zu Boden und begann anderen zu helfen [Quelle: Wolff Perrine ].

Sie habe zwar überlebt, aber mental „bin ich nicht einmal aus dem Flugzeug gestiegen“, sagte sie in einem Interview mit dem Magazin „Self“ . Ferganchick wurde depressiv. Sie konnte keine Beziehung aufrechterhalten. Sie stritt sich ständig mit Familie und Freunden. Sie nahm eine Handvoll betäubendes Xanax und musste ins Krankenhaus gebracht werden. „Ich wollte nicht sterben“, sagte sie in dem Interview, „ich wollte nur aufhören, innerlich weh zu tun.“

Flugzeugabstürze, Autounfälle , Naturkatastrophen, Krieg, körperliche oder sexuelle Übergriffe und andere Traumata können Menschen das Gefühl geben, den Verstand zu verlieren. Das liegt daran, dass Menschen, die diese Ereignisse oft durchmachen, oft Flashbacks des Ereignisses erleben oder Albträume haben. Die Albträume könnten so alarmierend sein, dass sie bald Schlaflosigkeit entwickeln [Quelle: ASDI ].

8: Verlieben

Ah Liebling, du machst uns wirklich verrückt und sehnst dich nach mehr, mehr, mehr.

What does love have to do with losing your mind? Do you even have to ask? Anthropologist Helen Fisher posed the question when she put 32 people who were madly in love under a functional MRI scanner. Fifteen of those people were madly in love but had been dumped by the object of their affection. The other participants were luckier. Their love had been requited [source: Fisher].

During the test, each person looked at a photo of his or her sweetheart. They also looked at a neutral photo. By comparing the results, Fisher found that the most active part of the brain was the same region that feels the rush and euphoria of cocaine. Romantic love, Fisher concluded, wasn't an emotion as the poets and songwriters would have us believe, but a physical drive that comes from the "craving part of the mind" [source: Fisher].

The anthropologist found that when a person falls in love he or she becomes extremely sexually possessive, which she says, has its roots in evolution. In other words, it's nature's way of preserving the species. Fisher also says that people who fall in love have "an intense craving" to be emotionally (not just sexually) connected to that other person. People who were in love were also obsessed.

"My final question [to each subject] was always the same ... 'would you die for him or her?' And, indeed, these people would say 'Yes!' as if I had asked them to pass the salt," Fisher said in her 2006 TED talk.

7: Visiting Paris

New slogan for Paris? Dashing the dreams of a select few tourists for decades.

They were on vacation in Paris in the summer of 2011. The 20 or so Japanese tourists (not all traveling together) were taking in the sites, marveling at the museums, visiting the shops, snapping photographs. One by one, the tourists began having psychotic episodes brought on by the rudeness of the French. The City of Light had become dark. The tourists suffered from a mind-altering condition called Paris syndrome.

We all think of Paris as a romantic city, the home of famous writers and artists who for centuries have flocked to the Seine. It brims with history, art and culture, the Louvre and the Eiffel Tower. Yet, it is also home to rude taxi drivers, vulgar waiters and filthy, crime-ridden streets. It's a city, in other words. If you don't speak French, the locals may become boorish and uncouth. Paris begins to lose its allure. Sometimes that disconnect between fantasy and reality is too much for visitors.

The syndrome has been well documented. Experts say that Japanese tourists who come from a more polite society are very susceptible. The syndrome manifests itself differently for each person. Some have delusions, others hallucinations. Still others are stricken with dizziness and feelings of persecution as they come to grips with the reality of Paris and not the romantic versions [sources: Fagan, Wyatt].

C'est la vie.

6: Visiting Jerusalem

View of Jerusalem with the Dome of the Rock in the foreground

Unlike Paris syndrome, which is brought on by rudeness, Jerusalem syndrome involves visitors being overcome by the historic, political and religious importance of the holy city.

Christian, Muslim and Jewish pilgrims flock to Jerusalem each year to be closer to their faith. For many, the trip can be overwhelming and, depending on religion or inclination, can include visits to the sacred sites of the Western Wall, the Dome of the Rock or the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, among others.

A few visitors become delusional, thinking they are the Messiah or that their presence will bring about the resurrection of Christ. Others will wear clothing as if they were living in biblical times. On average, about 100 tourists are afflicted with the condition each year, with nearly half needing hospitalization. Interestingly, not all of the affected individuals have a history of mental illness. Sometimes people become so delusional that they become violent, preaching a "true religion" and attacking others because they are perceived to be pagans and barbarians [source: Montross].

5: Dementia

Dementia isn't always irreversible and, in fact, may be treatable, depending on what's causing it.

Pete began to forget where things were. It bothered him. His memory was worsening. One night, while watching television, he saw a program about Alzheimer's disease . Pete soon realized he had the same symptoms as the man on the TV.

"I tried to relax, not to think about what might be happening to me; but it was there, like the sound of distant thunder, lurking on the horizon. I knew something was wrong, had sensed it for some time, and it was beginning to scare me," he wrote in his shared story for the Alzheimer's Association.

Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia occur when people begin to lose the ability to think, to remember and to reason. Sections of the brain key to those activities become riddled with infections or diseases, such as Alzheimer's, which can destroy nerve cells in the brain. Symptoms include changes in mood, personality and behavior. Dementia also can stem from head injuries, serious drug use and several other causes [source: WebMD].

4: Talking to an Attractive Woman

He may be wowing that woman right now, but how would he do on a test that he took right after that conversation? Probably not well.

It is said that Helen of Troy had a face that launched a thousand ships. Now we know why. According to a 2009 study reported in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, heterosexual men lose their minds, or at least get a little fuzzy, when talking to attractive women. And that's a surprise? Each of the 40 heterosexual males in the Dutch study took a standard memory test that involved repeating a series of letters. Each of the men was then asked to talk to either a man or an attractive woman. Afterward, the men took the test again. Researchers found that the men did worse on the test after talking with the woman.

Researchers repeated the test with women subjects and found their test scores to be unaffected. The psychologists behind the study suspect that the need to pass on one's genes is the cause for the disparity. That is, men regard women as potential mates. As a result, the male participant's brain was focused more on trying to impress the attractive woman than the task at hand [source: Edwards].

3: Menopause

Mood swings, forgetfulness, menopause is the gift that just keeps on giving.

"I am 46, and there are days when it feels like I'm completely losing my mind." So begins a 2010 article by Valerie Ulene in the Los Angeles Times. Ulene's memory was bad. She forgot where she placed her car keys and couldn't remember details of conversations. She had trouble sleeping . A pall hung over her very existence. She was experiencing the mind-crushing, mood-altering symptoms of menopause [source: Ulene].

Symptoms of the "change of life" that women experience just before or after they stop menstruating vary individually. Mood swings and forgetfulness are all part of the package. These symptoms can last for a few months to a few years. A study published in 2009 in the journal Neurology found that women around menopausal age have more problems with their memory than younger women [sources: Ulene, WebMD].

2: Solitary Confinement

Harry Wu sits in an exhibit showing the exact dimensions of his solitary confinement cell where he spent 11 days at a labor prison camp. The exhibit was on display at the Laogai Museum on June 20, 2011, in Washington, D.C. Wu founded the U.S. museum, which is dedicated to exhibits about the forced labor prison camps and human rights abuses in China.

Unless you're Paul Newman in the prison movie "Cool Hand Luke," or Tim Robbins in "The Shawshank Redemption," spending considerable time in "the box" or in "the hole" is a one-way ticket to losing your mind. It's called solitary confinement and there are two types. The first is disciplinary segregation, in which inmates spend a week or two away from the general prison population generally for breaking the rules. The second type is administrative segregation. That's where inmates spend months or years locked in their cells 23 to 24 hours a day. Administrative segregation is mostly reserved for the most brutal of prisoners, including gang members.

Psychologists say when prisoners are segregated from one another for long periods they begin to develop anxiety and panic disorders. They also may become paranoid, aggressive, depressed and unable to sleep. Many states no longer place mentally ill people in administrative segregation. Of course, some prisoners are more resilient than others, which can make it difficult for officials to know which inmates suffer from mental illness. Still, the mentally ill are more likely (35 percent) to be locked down in solitary compared to the general population (25 percent) [source: Weir].

1: Exuberance

It kind of explains a lot about those mysterious adolescents who walk amongst us nonexuberant folk.

As any parent can tell you, there's a lot of weirdness that goes on as children make the transition from adolescence to adulthood. Studies now suggest that the adolescent brain undergoes a series of biological and chemical changes as children enter puberty. These changes, not hormones, explain why a usually placid and well-behaved 10-year-old gradually turns into a reckless, moody, jerky teenager . Scientists nicknamed these changes "exuberance."

Exuberance occurs because adolescent brains overproduce neurons, especially in the frontal lobes, the region of the brain where reasoning, impulse control and other activities take place. Scientists say this part of the brain is the last to mature and only fully develops in early adulthood. Scans reveal that the brains of children 10 to 13 undergo a rapid growth spurt, which is quickly followed by a "pruning" of neurons and the organizing of neural pathways. Experts say this is the most turbulent time for brain development since coming out of the womb [sources: PBS, Crawford].

Lots More Information

Author's Note: 10 Surprising Ways to Lose Your Mind

We all lose our minds from time to time. Life, it seems, often rattles out of control. Bills, family, relationships: They can all conspire to drive you crazy. So if you seem to be losing your mind, think about what Buddha said: "We are shaped by our thoughts. We become what we think ..."

Related Stories

  • Dementia
  • Insanity
  • How Your Brain Works
  • Are teenage brains really different from adult brains?
  • Is there a link between mental illness and intelligence?

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