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These articles have been blowing me away. R.E. 'LINKS' in right-hand column.
With now 35 odd years of experience having bipolar, I was 'child onset' and there was no explanation or help for this symptom of what was utter terror of people for me. It was painful to look strangers in the face. I have since overcome a huge part of that reaction, but to this day I still have struggles with putting the act on that people don't freak me out.
I believe that bipolars are actually more evolved humans. If you think about the state of the world over all, is it no wonder that as bipolar kids we sense hostility from 'normal' (socially accepted) people? /with that said, it is often a wrong interpretation to see people's faces as hostile when they do not have that intent/ The sorry state of humanity's stewardship of the earth is hopefully changing for the better and we are evolving as a species, but up to now the human race has been hostile to this planet (and at times each other)!
Isn't it true that depression is a normal reaction to the current state of affairs worldwide? Our brains components are structurally different. Emotion. The heart. Magnification of emotion, among other anomalies, might be a trait of advanced evolution?
1 comment:
Magnification of emotion <--- In both directions, highs & lows, I agree. I think we internalize & personalize things more. For example world violence, starvation, genocide, corruption...those things infuriate me & I can't just let go of them.
I don't know if we're more evolved, but I read somewhere that we feel 150%, while others feel 100%.
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