Some of these on Twitter funny asfI’m dead.
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Actually mood swings are often a symptom of mental illnessMood swings is not a mental illness though. It’s a spoiled brat.
Sure, people do this everyday, but are those normal behaviors that would make them hirable in the future? Nope…Reading comprehension..
I did not say pro athletes do it all the time I said everyday people quit their jobs and say **** you to everyone working that day.. and I gave the only example of a pro athlete I recall (Vontae Davis) who quit mid game.
YessirBRO!! FOH! U serious??! My guy, I was told to read that book as well. Blew my f’ing mind, bro!
And what a tremendous example you have set for all.I am. Wuzzup NYSOM? Good to hear from.
And by the way. I used to want to go to school to get a meal. But I made a decision as a young teenager to do better than what I lived as a child. My kids never saw a day like I did but they were taught to work for what you want.
Being an A-hole= mental health? We have reached the bottom!I don't laugh at people suffering from mental health its actually sad.
They have a game next week too..always smart to walk over hundreds to pick up penniesThe craziest part is there's tons of people defending him trying to say the bucs benched him to avoid paying incentives in his contract. Nevermind that he got himself suspended for 3 games for his fake vaccine card or has a history of crazy behavior.
He’s been an idiot for a long time. Don’t really see how this is surprising.
According to Ghey Jayzer the reverse insanely happened. Arians was trying to put AB IN the game and AB (for whatever reason) refused. Arians tried to send him in again and AB refused. Arians then told him to leave the sideline and the outburst ensued.The craziest part is there's tons of people defending him trying to say the bucs benched him to avoid paying incentives in his contract. Nevermind that he got himself suspended for 3 games for his fake vaccine card or has a history of crazy behavior.
Have a brilliant Psychiatrist colleague I was downrange with and one day at lunch he concisely described the dilemma of mental illness.
It's a tale of two views.
On the one hand, mental illness (vice physical trauma to emotional centers) is never an excuse for poor behavior, but it is always an explanation of it.
For those trapped behind the dark veil, they simply struggle beyond their resiliency to see the world as it really is. For them, the sight picture is always obscured, always colored black and gray.
The brutal truth is unless the patient wants and achieves real change, at best the mental illness is just managed to varying degrees (from really good to really bad) and the root cause process(es) are never healed.