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A person, who has a psydhological disease, and who shows a disorder of behaviour, suffers from a chemical imbalance. But does a normal person in a state of anger, suffer fom a temporarily chemical imbalance for the duration of anger, especially when anger makes him behave abnormally and in a hostile way?

2007-03-05 01:21:42 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Psychology

4 answers

I read about this patient who had terrible thoughts concerning her mother. She used to think of her mother as lost, starving, dying of a malignant disease, being crushed by falling buildings and so on. For a long time she denied feeling angry at her mother.
When the full extent of her anger was felt, accepted, and expressed, her bad thoughts disappeared. She was certainly not acting out a thought. The thoughts were evidence of angry problems. Hence, I'd answer in the affirmative.

2007-03-05 02:40:16 · answer #1 · answered by ari-pup 7 · 0 0

There can be 2 ways for having behavior problems. The first way is from outside to the inside, when a person doesn't have a normal social life (like a person that was abused as a child or something) and that on a long term can cause chemical imbalance...or the one that has some genetic problem or anything else that does that chemical imbalance. The first one can be easy resolved trough the living of a normal life. The second is different because needs some form of medication or something. The first can provoke the second in extreme situations. The normal person just has an excess of adrenaline or other substance and that is generated normally because the body needs will power to resolve hard things or to fight or just to satisfy needs and it will say that to your conscious. When you can not do anything about it you have to eliminate that excess adrenaline in some way other than the initial purpose. The lack of experiences in different situations can make you a more or less angry person...but with the passing of time and experience accumulated the body will generate less adrenaline. Many people (if not the majority) are addicted to adrenaline and they use this thing in a good way (sport and a lot of movement) or in a bad way (if you have a job that does not generate adrenaline and it is really bad to have excess of it - like office jobs - but in general they will have hobbies to do that).

2007-03-05 01:46:11 · answer #2 · answered by Trufas M 2 · 0 0

Anger is not all bad and when that concept is sold to people who buy it don't you think that would automatically cause one to become hostile? Isn't it suspicious given the fact that getting angry or frustrated over something has proved to make change for the good? History proves self-controlled anger motivates change and is not a brain sickness. A person who is angry for no visible reason is seriously confused...maybe even a result of hearing anger is taboo coming from society or choosing to live in denial and should be taught different just as a parent would say - that is not acceptable period - not wasting time on jibber jabber. But anger surely is not disease unless one allows that manipulative concept to confuse them. Those that see no right from wrong would obviously exhibit more unjustified hostility and obviously bring more stress into their lives and environment. What person, however, should play a false god in making the decision as many do and conclude they are capable of deciding that anger has no positive outcome in the situation?

Anger is normal ...frustration and acting upon it is the whole reason we don't have to light candles unless we have no other alternative. Thank God a person decided to motivate change...and looked for a positive alterative which we all should be thankful for.

A parent has to be become disturbed in order to face the fact their child is doing something wrong and knows a solution (discipline) is part of the job. Good parents know parenting isn't about brownie points and children who came into this world pre-programmed with adult skills. They choose to take responsibility to stay diligent no matter what the resistance is.

Anyone wonder what -side effects from meds- used to control normal human traits instead of modeling and teaching an individual to deal with personal issues is called?

2007-03-05 02:24:00 · answer #3 · answered by GoodQuestion 6 · 0 0

Every strong emotion influences chemical balance in the brain. Or any imbalance in neurotransmitter systems can induce emotional or behavioral changes.

2007-03-05 01:47:49 · answer #4 · answered by zuska m 2 · 0 0

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