Impossible lovesickness?

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I laughed "I think we have depersonalization disease" Just because she narrowed her eyes "what the hell is that" just because I hugged her " making love impossible darling, let me tell you" To people who experience depersonalization disorder, the world seems unreal, as if it were behind a curtain of fog or smoke, or even two-dimensional. This condition, which is believed to be faced by one in every 100 people, is not an easily diagnosed disease. In depersonalization disorder, also called "depersonalization" and "unrealization", a person becomes alienated from himself, feels that he is looking at his body from afar and loses his sense of reality. This phenomenon is actually a kind of defense mechanism that covers reality during periods of acute anxiety and trauma. It can also manifest itself with drugs such as m*******a. Also; Jump into the content Psychological Counselor Yusuf BAYALAN communication menu What is depersonalization derealization disorder? September 15, 2022 | Yusuf Bayalan We all, in general, live life with a feeling of familiarity, knowingness and reality - you can call it familiarity, if you like - about ourselves and the outside world. These feelings make it easier for us to live a safe, sustainable life. Sometimes, that familiarity breaks down. This distortion, in everyday language, is “Who am I?”, “What is this place?” he can show himself with his questions. The experiences I have mentioned are called dissociation (dissolution) in the psychiatric literature. It is as if our connection with our inner world and/or the outside world has been dissolved. The article you are going to read is about such experiences. At the heart of the article are three terms: depersonalization, derealization and depersonalization-derealization disorder. The first two are symptoms (symptoms) that describe certain experiences, while the third is a type of mental disorder that also includes these symptoms. In the article, I will try to address first the symptoms and then the information about the disorder. Warning: You can use the information here only as a hint. This information cannot be used for diagnosis, diagnosis or treatment purposes in any way; it can only be used for information acquisition purposes. What is depersonalization (self-alienation)? Turkish English English-Turkish dictionaries some of the equivalents of the word “depersonalization” are as follows: depersonalization self-alienation don't lose your personality loss of self depersonalization self-alienation don't misunderstand your own body Among these, we see the most common translations in the psychiatric literature as self-alienation and Decontamination. If you want, let's take a look at some different translations and meanings of the term depersonalization: Depersonalization [depersonalization] is defined as a permanent and repetitive separation of a person from himself or a sense of distance from himself.1 An individual experiencing depersonalization may say that he feels like a robot or perceives himself as if he is watching in a movie theater.1 Self-loss [depersonalization] is the feeling that a person finds his self strangely alien or incomplete, or watches that he behaves in accordance with the external reality, but has no emotional participation.2 Loss of self can be a normal reaction at the time of internal or external acute and extreme danger, while it is an abnormal reaction to be seen in the face of a minor danger.2 Depersonalization (depersonalization) is the loss of a person's essence (or self), the sense of his own reality. A person feels like he has been changed or like a stranger. Such people feel like they are in a dream or as if they are watching themselves from the outside.3 Depersonalization: loss of sense of self, identity, alienation from oneself; schizophrenia, depression, hypochondria, resolvable disorders, temporal lobe epilepsy, etc. a disorder that is observed in diseases such as and is defined by a change in a person's perceptions based on his own self, his body, his relationship with external reality.4 In depersonalization, a person gets a feeling of unreality or alienation from himself (but does not lose his relationship with reality), his perception of his bodily image changes, he thinks that his own movements or speech are not in his control. His own lives, his name, seem foreign to him, he looks at them from afar, as if they were someone else's life. If such feelings suddenly appear and are severe enough to cause serious deterioration in a person's social, individual, professional life, the condition is called depersonalization disorder [today it has become depersonalization-derealization disorder]. Depersonalization is often interpreted as a person's effort to escape from threatening situations [we can call it a defense mechanism].4 In self-alienation [depersonalization], a person sees his own self, face, all or parts of his body, movements, emotions changed, he sees himself as a different, alien being from before. His movements, thoughts, feelings and perceptions are as if they are not his own. Looking in the mirror or thinking “Is that me?" he questions; “I am, I am not; I do not know myself; I cannot perceive myself; I cannot feel that I am myself!" there are definitions like. Sometimes a person describes this feeling as if he himself came out of his own body and was observing himself from the outside. It may be that they perceive it in the form of their hands, feet growing, lengthening.5 A person experiencing depersonalization (self-alienation) can express his experience with the following types of sentences: I don't recognize myself. I consider myself a stranger. I feel like a robot myself. It's like I'm watching myself in a movie theater. I cannot perceive myself; I cannot feel that I am myself. My body (arm, leg, eye, head, etc.) it seems like a stranger to me. My hands, araks, etc. it is changing. It's like I'm out of my body and I'm watching myself from the outside. My name seems foreign to me. I feel like I'm dead. I'm sitting somewhere far away from myself. Depersonalization refers to the dimension of the disorder related to ourselves. What is derealization (alienation from the environment)? The word derealization is met by dictionaries as derealization. The concept is met in the Turkish literature with the following: derealization gercekdisilasim gercekdisilik gercekdisilasma Derealization [derealization] is more often associated with a person's separation from their environment or a feeling of unreality. The patient may indicate that he perceives the outside world as if he were dreaming or as if he were dead, as if it were an environment far from clarity and emotional colorfulness.1 Detachment from reality [derealization] a feeling of alienation from external reality; experiencing the environment as if it were an unreal, unfamiliar, familiar environment that has undergone changes.2 Although perception and reasoning are intact in detachment from reality, a person may feel threatened or frightened by changes that seem to have taken place.2 Unreality / unreality [derealization] is the feeling of being alien to the outside world. A person feels like his usual environment in which he lives and the people in this environment have changed or are strangers. With the withdrawal of emotional investment in the outside world, the sense of meaning and reality of the outside world is lost, the world and people are perceived as alien, meaningless, almost like a two-dimensional picture, a movie scene or a robot.3 In derealization, a person perceives the surrounding things, beliefs, nature as different, alien, overly colored or colorless, artificial, as if they were not real. Sometimes a place that has not been lived in before, an event seems familiar, familiar to a person, it has happened before. A person perceives himself as if he has lived there before, seen that event. This is called the thought I saw (déja vue). Sometimes a person perceives a familiar, familiar place or event as if he has never seen it or experienced it. This is called the ”I've never seen the sane incident" (jamais vue).5 A person who has experienced derealization (alienation from the environment) can express his experience with the following types of sentences: I don't recognize my surroundings/surroundings. I see my surroundings like a foreign place. Everything around me seems artificial to me. For a situation that he experienced for the first time [like being in a place where he was for the first time]: It's like I've experienced this moment before. For a situation that he has experienced before [such as being in a place where he has been before]: It is as if I am experiencing this moment for the first time. Nothing feels real.
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