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ADVERTISEMENT Many seemingly innocent cartoon characters should count their lucky stars that they live in an animated, fictional universe. Because, if they lived among us, and were judged the way you and I are, they would be in major trouble. These characters have such glaring, and long-enduring, mental disorders, that there’s no way they could [...]
Posted by Shannon Harris on Thursday, June 28, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Comics, Humor, Television · Tagged Abnormal psychology, American Psychological Association, Ariel, Ariel Little Mermaid, avoidant personality disorder, Borderline personality disorder, Bruce Banner, Calvin and Hobbes, Charlie Brown, Clinical psychology, depression, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, disorders, Dora the Explorer, double depression, Dysthymia, Eeyore, Fugue State, Glen Quagmire, Green Hulk, Grey Hulk, Guilt Hulk, Homer Simpson, Intermittent Explosive Disorder, Mental disorder, mental disorders, mental health disorder, Mood disorder, Multiple Personality Disorder, narcissistic personality disorder, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, Pepe LePew, personality disorder, Psychology, psychotic disorders, Schizophrenia, Sexual addiction, Shannon Harris, Spongebob Squarepants, Williams-Beuren Syndrome
Incoming students should be forewarned, upon entering college, that certain degrees are useless. Some degrees just don’t pay, and if they do, it has more to do with the individual than the education received. It seems unfair that everyone can’t be whatever they want to be and get away with it, but such is life. [...]
Posted by Ryan Thomas on Friday, April 27, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Business, Education · Tagged Academic degrees, best degrees, business degree, college degrees, computer science degree, education degree, engineer, Engineer's degree, engineering degree, english degree, food industry, journalist, law degree, Management, MBA, medical degree, political science, Psychology, psychology degree, public relations, restaurant management degree, teaching, useful degrees
Our minds allow us to interpret what we perceive externally, yet there is still so much left unexplained about the mind itself. If it is true we only use a fraction of our total brain capacity, what exactly is left untapped? While a lot is yet to be uncovered, we already have a pretty impressive [...]
Posted by Ryan Thomas on Friday, January 27, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Movies, Science · Tagged Bates Motel, Bruce Banner, Charlie Baileygates, Chuck Palahniuk, disorders, Dissociative Identity Disorder, Fiction, Fight Club, film, Gothika, Granted Jeckyll, Hank Evans, Hide and Seek, Hulk, Hyde, Identity Disorder, Jekyll, Jim Carrey, John Shooter, Johnny Depp, Malcolm Rivers, Martin Scorcese, Movies, multiple personalities, Multiple Personality Disorder, Myself & Irene, Norman Bates (Psycho), personality disorder, Personality psychology, psychiatrist, Psychology, Robert Louis Stevenson, Shirley Ardell Mason, split personality disorder, Stan Lee, Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Sybil, Sybil Dorsett (Sybil), Teddy Daniels, Tyler Durden
Ever since the first American woman said “I deserve a right to vote,” we knew there was trouble coming. And guess what? From the available trends and data, it looks like we are looking at a future where American women as a whole have it better than American men. Even though it’s kind of un-American [...]
Posted by Dustin Koski on Tuesday, November 22, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Science · Tagged academia, adoption, adoption rate, Alzheimer's disease, America, bachelor pads, bachelors, behavior, cow hormones, flu, future, Gender, Gender role, houses, human behavior, job site, men, men vs women, money, Psychology, retirement, sickness, Social psychology, Social Security, the future, the future is female, unemployment, unemployment rate, United Kingdom, United States, United States of America, Wealth, what does the future hold, why the future is female, Women, women vs men, y chromosome dying out
No one wants to get sick. Don’t we all wrap up warm in winter to insulate ourselves from the cold and be extra careful around snot-nosed ill people? Only a few of us, though, ever get really serious about it. For instance, have you ever spent a day picking up everything with a tissue? Or [...]
Posted by Kevin Forde on Friday, October 28, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Animals, Bizarre, Health, Television · Tagged Abigail Breslin, Abnormal psychology, acclaimed writer and critic, adolf hitler, Andy Warhol, charles darwin, disease, Florence Nightingale, fragile writer, Glen Gould, Hans Christian Anderson, hypochondriacs, Hypochondriasis, illness, Jennifer Hudson, Marcel Proust, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, pains, paranoia, Parkinson’s disease, People, Psychology, sickness, St. Thomas’ Hospital in London, the Avant Garde, The Snow Queen, The Ugly Duckling
We have all heard the famous saying ‘strong essences come in small bottles’ or ‘great things come in small packages.’ Well, today I have ten small packages that I want to ‘deliver’ to you: ten exceptional children and teenagers who amazed the world with their extraordinary talent and intelligence. Here are ten little geniuses, ten [...]
Posted by Timeea on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under People · Tagged abstract painter, Ainan Celeste Cawley, Akrit Jaswal, Alexandra Nechita, Bild Deutschland, Bill Clinton, brazil, Celeste Cawley, Christian Children's Fund, composer and conductor, computer scientist, Coventry, Cubism, Desmond Tutu, Elaina Smith, Elise Tan Roberts, Ethan Bortnick, Genius, Gregory Smith, Himachal Pradesh, human behavior, Human Interest, intelligence, Intelligence quotient, Jay Leno, Kenya, Macedonia, Marko Calasan, Marko Casalan, Mensa International, Michel Gorbachev, Pablo Picasso, physician, professional painter, Psychology, Randolph-Macon College, Rwanda, Singaporean School, songwriter, The Daily Telegraph, Wall Street Journal, youngest professional painter
A delusion is a belief that is either mistaken or not substantiated. It is held with a strong feeling and opinion. In psychiatry, delusions occur as the result of mental illness. In most cases, delusional behavior will cause an individual to experience bizarre social interactions. A small percentage of people suffer from psychopathic delusions, which [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Friday, August 12, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, People · Tagged Alexander Berry, Anders Behring Breivik, Carl Tanzler, Church of the SubGenius, Clinical psychology, Collyer brothers, Craig D. Button, Delusion, delusional behavior, disorder, Elena de Hoyos, Garnet Caton, Homer Collyer, Ian Stephen, John Thompson, Langley Collyer, Martin Bryant, Medicine, mental illness, Murder of Tim McLean, Necrophiles, Philip Gale, Psychology, Schizophrenia, Seattle Windshield Pitting Epidemic, shocking behavior, Spree killer, Suh Chung-hwa, Tanzler, Tim McLean, Vince Weiguang Li, windshield pitting epidemic, Woo Bum-kon
Throughout history, mental disorders have been regarded with fear, bias, and ignorance. Though medicine has drastically improved for the mentally ill in the last century, mainstream society still has a relatively uninformed and biased view against individuals with mental disorders. This is particularly harmful because every year up to ¼ of Americans fit the criteria [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Friday, April 29, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Health · Tagged Abnormal psychology, Alexandria V. Resnica, American Psychiatric Association, antisocial disorder, Antisocial Personality Disorder, auditory and visual hallucinations, Bipolar disorder, Bizarre, Clinical psychology, dangerous disorders, Depersonalization, Depersonalization Disorder, disorders, Dissociative disorders, Dissociative Identity Disorder, Factitious disorder, Health, Health_Medical_Pharma, Mania, medical, mental disorders, mild Schizophrenia, Mood disorders, Multiple Personality Disorder, Obsessive-Compulsive, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, One Bipolar Disorder, paranoia, People, phobia, phobias, physically disruptive disorders, Psychiatry, Psychology, psychotherapy, psychotic disorders, Schizoaffective disorder, Schizophrenia, severe Bipolar Disorder, Specific Phobia, Trichotillomania, unmedicated bipolar disorder
Since the first diagnosis of autism in 1943 the number of children in the United States thought to have autism was 1 in 10,000. Now the number of children thought to have autism is 1 in 150 with autism considered more common than pediatric cancer, diabetes and AIDS combined. In the last decade we’ve all [...]
Posted by Natalie Jaro on Wednesday, April 6, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Education, People · Tagged Abnormal psychology, Asperger syndrome, autism, Autism Awareness, autism awareness month, Autism spectrum, Berklee College of Music, Claire Danes, daniel tammet, Dave Brubeck, Disability, Donna Williams, famous people with autism, High-functioning autism, Jason McElwain, John Elder, John Elder Robinson, Lenny Schafer, matt savage, Psychology, Satoshi Tajiri, Savant syndrome, Sociological and cultural aspects of autism, Temple Grandin, Thomas McKean, Tim Page
Do you believe in reincarnation? If you’re like most people, either you reject the idea outright or don’t know enough about it to make an informed decision. What is not generally known to the average westerner, however, is that reincarnation has a good deal of hard evidence to support it, and that this evidence is [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Friday, July 9, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Religion, Science · Tagged Amadeus Mozart, birthmarks, Bizarre, Bridey Murphy, Child Prodigies, Conscious Past Life Memories, Corresponding Birthmarks, Déjà Vu, Helen Wambach, Homosexuality, Hypnosis, Ian Stevenson, Idiomatic Phobias, Jeff Danelek, Life after death, musician, New Age, paranormal, Past Life Regression, phobias, prodigy, Psychology, Reincarnation, Reincarnation research, therapist, Transgender, Xenoglossy