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OverviewBritish Psychiatrists take their jobs very seriously indeed. I have always found it to be, and have told psychiatrists treating me, that psychiatry (now just as in the days of Bedlam) is Poppycock. This has only served to want psychiatrists to examine my mind even further. But they can never get to the bottom of it, as each person thinks as an individual. I have always wondered how a Psychiatrist can claim to examine the human mind. As a Roman Cathlolic I have been taught since childhood, by Priests at Mass, that the human mind is part of the soul and spirit of a person that enters the human body at birth and leaves it at death. The brain is just a mass or an organ, it is just a lump of flesh or muscle, that dies and rots away in a grave after a person has been pronounced dead, even though the human brain is the last organ in the body to die. It is not possible to examine or treat the human mind in the author's opinion. Therefore the author did not agree with her treatment nor did she look for it, ask for it, and did not emerge from any psychiatric unit after being analysed, as an elightened person as to her condition of Bipolar disorder. I believe that the more lives a person has lived, the more intelligent they will become upon rebirth. Trying to mould the human mind from childhood (first day of school until the day of death when the coffin beckons), is a dangerous practice, but it is done in order to cause a nation of people to comply with their government's wishes as to how society should be conceived to behave, and society appears to run like we the masses are all cogs in a giant wheel and not individuals. It is often said, that 3 out of 5 people in Britain, suffer with a mental health condition at some time in their life. I wonder when that will be 4 out of 5, or whether one day it will be acknowledged in Britain that we are all mentally ill, but not all at the same time. Whether this ratio could be matched anywhere else in the world is a matter of conjecture. This little booklet has been prepared by a Legal Secretary who found herself sectioned nine times in 21 years, after initially being sectioned for the first time in her life, by her city of London employers, whilst working in the banking department, on globalisation of banking in January 1988, having become a legal secretary in 1979. She is supposed to have gone MAD overnight in her employers office after falling and losing consciousness. It must be remembered that if you are sectioned under the Mental Health Act (no matter what your profession), you will never be able to appear in a court of law to give evidence or sit for Jury Service during your natural lifetime, thereafter or represent yourself in a court of law to give evidence, (possibly because your evidence would not be credible to a Jury). The facts contained in this little booklet are true to the best of the author's knowledge and belief and are based on her experiences as a patient. During the course of these sectionings under the Mental Health Act the writer found them on many occasions to be frightening, and unbelievably intimidating, as she felt that she had lost all her human rights and dignity and credibility in the eyes of the world at large. Monica Buckingham Full Product DetailsAuthor: Monica BuckinghamPublisher: Createspace Imprint: Createspace Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.20cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.059kg ISBN: 9781494767723ISBN 10: 1494767724 Pages: 32 Publication Date: 20 December 2013 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |