Today we have ‘sane’ as our prompt word for Linda’s Just Jot it January Prompt. The more I think about this word, the trickier it becomes to write something about it.
Being sane is, of course, having a healthy rational mind, and being able to make sound decisions. Therefore, being insane is having an unhealthy mind, and being irrational at times? Hmmm, it seems it is not as simple as that.
Most of us at some point have joked about insanity, referring to ourselves or others as being mad, crazy, nutty, mental, gaga, off their rocker, or a lunatic, and think nothing of it. It is not really something we take seriously, in fact, we very often laugh about it.
We all make irrational decisions at times, or become overwhelmed with emotion and feel unable to deal with everyday ‘life.’ This normally doesn’t last too long and we can continue on with our lives with no ill effects. sometimes, though, it does last for a long time and it becomes difficult to function. Luckily, we are able to visit the GP and get the help we need, whether it be medicinal or counselling and therapy, or perhaps a combination of both.
Thankfully, over time, treatment for mental health problems have progressed, so that sufferers are no longer carted off to an asylum, as was the case not too long ago. Anyone from a ‘promiscuous’ woman (funny but I have never heard of a promiscuous man being considered insane) to a person who has learning difficulties, to menopausal women (we don’t half get a raw deal), have in the past, been incarcerated in institutions for the insane, never to get out again.
I, for one, am grateful that we live in an era where mental illness does not necessarily equate to insanity and having to be locked up!
Yes, I try to stop myself from being too flippant about the ‘crazy’ word… but thankfully, they don’t lock us up anymore!
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Ha HA! I am surprised there was anyone left who was not locked away actually, given their criteria!
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Great jot for the day! It’s true we do use the words to describe insanity far too often, and it’s connotations thankfully mean different things to the years where mental asylums were the’best place’ for anyone not ‘normal’ to be.
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Thanks Ritu. I think we are all guilty of making fun of being insane, but in a light-hearted way.
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Yup, that’s the truth sis 😊
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It’s right, women are called more often prmiscuous than men. But I think it has to do that woman are much more intuitive and have access to a different level of perceiving things. That is something medicine (which was ruled by men in first place) could not understand that and diagnosed it as insanity when women got overwhelmed by it. Thank God it is different today.
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Yes, you are right, Erika. Thank God indeed! 🙂
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Have a lovely Sunday, Judy! 😊
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Thank you, and you too 🙂
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😘😘
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Yes mental health treatment has moved on but it is still the poor sister in the NHS …there are still so many people left out in the community having to cope with a visit from the psychiatric nurse. Yet as you say things are much improved. Great post.
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Thanks Willow. Oh yes, there is still a lot more we need to do to help people with mental health problems, but we are heading in the right direction 🙂
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Yes thankfully that is true! 🙂
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Thank goodness attitudes have evolved over time. Great post, Judy! 🙂
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Thanks Tonya. Yes indeed, I am pretty sure I would be locked up otherwise! 🙂
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You wouldn’t be the only one. I’d be there right along with you! 😉
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Well that’s nice to know 🙂
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Well said
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Thanks Eric 🙂
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I definately agree with you. While we have evolved in the mental health field, we still suffer from the lack of progress or I should say late progress. I have clients in a program for adults with developmental and intellectual disabilities. And you know what, I think some are just a victim of time. I have clients that have no language. As they are learning, we’re not seeing signs of a disability we’re just seeing a person that has no means of communication. As they are learing to express themselves we are seeing a person with sharp intellect. They just suffered from growing up in a time where services and care wasn’t rendered.
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How very sad that some of your clients have been stilted developmentally just because of being born at the wrong time. How wonderful that they now have programmes like yours where they can literally find their voice and can communicate with others, however they choose to do so. 🙂
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Yes, amen and Thank God!!
Although I have been in mental wards several times now, and they’re not horrible like The Snakepit.
Just a hospital room, with the hallway locked. And you have to turn back in your plastic fork.
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They still sound a little scary, but at least they are not permanent!
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So thankful!!
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Much truth in your presentation. It is an issue which makes laws regarding licensing gun owners so tricky. So someone who committed themselves for some mental health care ten years ago cannot legally carry a gun and someone who has avoided any treatment in spite of needing it can be licensed. I’d trust the one who got treatment ten years ago. This is such a critical political issue now.
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I agree with you on that. Guns frighten me at the best of times, and it is frightening to know that some people are licensed to have one, who are mentally unstable.
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Me too or I’d be doing most of my blog posts from behind lock and key.
xxx Hugs Galore xxx
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Ha HA! We could be cellmates! Huge hugs xxxx
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Maybe it would be worth it then.
xxx Hugs Galore xxx
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xxxxx
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Great Jot Judy, and amen to your last sentence! 🙂
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Thanks Debby, glad you liked it. 🙂
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Judy E Martin
Hello, and thanks for stopping by. I am Judy, in my (very) early fifties and decided that life definitely gets more interesting as it goes on! I am a wife and a mum and have just finished University as a Registered Nurse, after having worked as an Associate Practitioner in the NHS. I am also a poet and the author of my debut book, 'Rhymes of the Times.' I love to laugh, and I love rhyming words too, so I joined the two together, and my book was born. I am currently working on another book in the series also. I am a prolific blogger and enjoy writing funny stories, anecdotes, and anything really that takes my fancy.
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