satanscharmer
Posts: 376
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quote:
ORIGINAL: vincentML quote:
ORIGINAL: satanscharmer So incredibly sad. He's an angry, violent person that happens to be bipolar. That's how I view it. I don't see him as insane, or temporarily insane. I hate when this defense is used. It is a defense that has been overly abused. If he had been diagnosed as schizophrenic, then I'd have a different take. IDK, s.c. I have been nasty to people when off my meds. A lot of impatience. Blind rage does not seem to be totally unlikely a symptom of the illness. Then, there may be a close genetic association between the BP spectrum and the Schizophrenia spectrum, I have read. But have you ever become dangerously violent? It is estimated that 5.7 million people in the U.S. alone are bipolar. That would mean 5.7 million people (not including all other illnesses/diseases/disorders) that have an increased risk of committing murder. I don't buy it. Everything I've ever read on bipolar suggests that becoming dangerously violent is not a trait solely related to bipolar, but when coupled with alcohol, drugs, or emotional stress it may increase the risk. Then again, those things may increase the risk in people who are not bipolar. For the record, I was diagnosed as having Bipolar II (highs are what others consider normal and lows are really, really low). I don't take meds. Aside from all the different concoctions of medications making me depressed when I wasn't, it wasn't why I saw him and I didn't agree with the assessment at all (I still gave it a try because he was, after all, the "expert"). I had three kids. The first one was colicky - no, colicky doesn't even begin to describe the amount and degree of crying. It wasn't just two hours a day. It was stressful, to say the least. I was depressed, stressed out, sleep deprived, and at times angry. A couple of times, I had to lay her down and walk outside for a few minutes to take a deep breath. If the doctor was right, that would mean I was at high risk of being extremely dangerous. Three kids, they're all still alive and never was there a moment where I would have harmed them in any way. Never crossed my mind. I know people are different and my example may not be the best one, but this is where I'm coming from. I don't think it's the bipolar. These people are different. If you strip away the bipolar, I believe you're still left with someone capable of murder. Bipolar does not make a murderer.
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