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can the brain get rired , if at a period of your life you had to manage a lot of problems , stress and pressures? for example, if that happens to you at the age of 27/ 28 ...does that mean that ur brain is gonna tired for the rest of your life ?

2007-03-20 11:44:58 · 2 answers · asked by bobby s 1 in Health Mental Health

2 answers

Hi there,

To answer your question (I'm a psychologist) yes, the brain can and does get tired whenever some persons are exposed to chronic levels of stressors in their lives. [This simple means that the stressors have been a feature of their life and continue to be so. Chronic Stressors (things that are stress producing) like arguments, broken relationships, demanding job pressures and other problems can and do fatigue the nervous system over time. There is usually an alarm phase in which close friends/family members may notice changes in your behaviour in particular or you yourself may notice this. This phase is usually followed by and exhausion phase when a part of your nervous system reponsible for producing a normally happy, energized persona becomes overwhelmed and out of balance. The end result of this chronic tiredness if not treated by a psychiatrist (Medical Specialist) or General Practioner or both is a possible and likely descent into neurosis, psychosis or some other chronic fatigue diagnosis. [Neurosis refers to a change in mood, psychosis refers to a change in normal beliefs and perceptions. Chronic fatigue suggest long-term fatigue, which develops easily and regularly]. These activities go on inside the brain, signalling biochemical changes in the neurons inside the brain. The patient may also notice an unsureness involving certain thought processes. In other words he or she may have altered sensory experiences. You may think that you smell things and attribute false interpretations to them, you may think you hear things and attribute false interpretations to them, or you may think you see things like dots which nobody else is able to see.

What I believe is that you need to see a General Practitioner or psychololgist ASAP to assess your situation and who may refer you to a psychiatrist for treatment. If this tiredness has only recently begun i.e in less that 1 year you may not descend into a more debilitating condition. I myself suffered from mental illness for several years and continue to be on medication for the time being which is excellent and enables me to function optimally. I am very pleased with my results over the years, my progress and future prognosis/expectations are excellent. I also like yourself entered an exhastion stage as you have, but took several months to be convinced that I was displaying 'unusual' symptoms and headed for total psychological collapse. I may even have been experiencing symptoms of a nervous breakdown.

Fortunately with God's help (prayer and obedience/faith) in him, medication and talk therapy called cognitive therapy I am now symptom free. If my situation was caught earlier I may have recovered faster, whoose to say. But today I am very happy and thrilled with my progress. I believe that your current situation is less severe than mine when I began treatment so your prognosis is good. Your situation may also differ from mine in some respects particularly your diagnosis, but listen to your doctors and explore your options. Read all you can after you've been properly diagnosed about your situation and how to make the improvements necessary for full recovery in the shortest time necessary, but try to be patient nevertheless. Such conditions can also be covered by health insurance schemes.

If you are not experiencing early symptoms of mental decline you still need to see a psychologist or medical practioner to talk through your life issues and challenges at this time. I hope you do have some family support and supportive friends who can assist you at this time of need.

God's love and God's speed my friend. Best of luck and I am praying for you.

2007-03-20 12:56:24 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I placed on pads ( consistently the yellow ones) they're rather skinny and comfortable and on my mild days ill placed on a pany liner. i do in comparison to tampons because of the fact it merely feels uncomfortable to me. Have Ever heard of the words "ragging" or "on the rag"? nicely, being that there replace into no such factor as undies at that factor(and "bloomers" of the nineteenth Century have been crotchless), women people tied rags around themselves to take in the blood. there replace into no such factor as tampons, being that putting a phallic merchandise into the vagina or touching the vagina may be considered as particularly sexual and subsequently kept away from. for the duration of "that factor", women people additionally stayed interior, and have been considered as "indisposed", meaning that they had no visitors. Yeah it sucked to be sans underclothes, yet think of attempting to pull down underpants and then carry up 2 petticoats and a dress and an undershirt (shift) to pee in a splash pot? have faith me, this is puzzling. I dont be attentive to how they did it lower back then!

2016-10-19 04:59:19 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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