View Full Version : Paranoia ...
letric
12-01-2011, 10:39 AM
Security cameras are everywhere, but is paranoia a modern phenomenon?
Terrorists, child abductors, muggers, delinquent teenagers, malicious
colleagues, who would not be worried?
letric
12-02-2011, 04:23 AM
Fear is a feeling of being intimated or being made
to feel insecure about a situation, emotion or object.
Conquer your fears and start living.
letric
12-20-2011, 07:16 AM
True paranoia is, fortunately, rare; it has bad prognosis and is not amenable to any known treatment. However, despite its rarity, it is for a variety of reasons of considerable interest
and importance. Nowadays anyone who claimed to be the Messiah, and asserted that he
who is not for me is against me would be at risk of being referred to a psychiatrist and diagnosed a paranoiac. However, it must be mentioned that ther word paranoid has slipped
into general use to refer to enhanced suspiciousness , often with the implication that suspiciousness is evidence of unusual sensitivity and perceptiveness.
Freud, S, (1911) Psycho- analytical notes on an autobiographical account of paranoia.
In Complete Psychological Works, vol. xii
A person so affected believes that he is right, that he is justified in his beliefs, and that anyone who opposes his point of view is behaving maliciously or at least non-understanding towards him.
letric
01-15-2012, 08:15 AM
Because thought implies judgement, and because we are all paranoid enough to take
judgement to be negative, it is constitutionally suspect in the bedroom. Hence the
sighing that drowns the sounds of lovers thoughts, sighing that confirmss:
I am too passionate to be thinking. I kiss, and therefore I do not think - such is the
official myth under which lovemaking takes place, the bedroom a unique space in
which partner tacitly agree not to remind one another of the awe-inspiring wonder
of their nudity.
Essays in Love - Adam Botton
letric
01-15-2012, 08:29 AM
Because thought implies judgement, and because we are all paranoid enough to take
judgement to be negative, it is constitutionally suspect in the bedroom. Hence the
sighing that drowns the sounds of lovers thoughts, sighing that confirmss:
I am too passionate to be thinking. I kiss, and therefore I do not think - such is the
official myth under which lovemaking takes place, the bedroom a unique space in
which partner tacitly agree not to remind one another of the awe-inspiring wonder
of their nudity.
Essays in Love - Adam De Botton
We fall in love with people because, from the outside, the look so physically whole
and emotionally altogether.
letric
01-15-2012, 08:35 AM
With paranoid personality there is a pattern of mistrust and suspiciousness
so that other people's motives are interpreted as malevolent, resulting in
hostility, quarrels, limitation s, and even violence or destructive behaviour
on occasions.
letric
02-16-2012, 10:34 AM
There is a time and place for stamping feet and uncontrollable sadness. However, while propriety
matters, it is also important to remain true to our emotions: how we feel shouldn't always be dictated
by what others consider to be appropriate.
letric
02-27-2012, 09:43 AM
How quickly we forget the power cuts, kidnappings, terrorism, fuel and food shortages and Cold War
paranoia that were the reality of the 70s. Whether it was Nixon's demented behaviour in the White
House, Harold Wilson's insistence that they were out to get him, China ruled by two untouchable
hypochondriac borderline-psychotics, the inglorious end of the Vietnam conflict, the lit mof horrors is
almost endless. In our own current Great Crash, barely a week passes without some allusion being
made to that distant decade.
STRANGE DAYS INDEED: The Golden Age of Paranoia
FRANCIS WHEEN (http://www.bibliophilebooks.com/STRANGE-DAYS-INDEED-The-Golden-Age-of-Paranoia)
letric
02-27-2012, 09:53 AM
Between two landmarks occasions two years apart, a rich slice of British history unfolds. The first, Armistice Day
1918, brings cheering crowds into the streets. But the euphoria soon vaporises to reveal the carnage the war
has left in its wake, debilitated veterans, mental illness, countless dead. Slowly but surely, new life emerges.
Women win the vote, skirt hems leap from ankle to knee and aristocrats and servants alike forget their troubles
at packed dance hall. A lovely cast of characters from the Prince of Walesa to T.E. Lawrence bring these two years
to life.
Poser
03-02-2012, 08:06 PM
How quickly we forget the power cuts, kidnappings, terrorism, fuel and food shortages and Cold War
paranoia that were the reality of the 70s. Whether it was Nixon's demented behaviour in the White
House, Harold Wilson's insistence that they were out to get him, China ruled by two untouchable
hypochondriac borderline-psychotics, the inglorious end of the Vietnam conflict, the lit mof horrors is
almost endless. In our own current Great Crash, barely a week passes without some allusion being
made to that distant decade.
Please edit your post to reflect where it originated ..
noughties sidekick Sam Tyler in the TV series Life on Mars, evokes fond memories of Raleigh Choppers, Abba, disco and hot summers. How quickly we forget, says Francis Wheen, the power cuts, kidnappings, terrorism, fuel and food shortages and Cold War paranoia that were the reality of the decade. In the early '70s the young Wheen pronounced he was "dropping out" to join the alternative society, only to be told by a world-weary hippie, through a dense foliage of beard, "Drop back in, man. It's too late. It's over." And so it was - the next week Edward Heath announced rolling blackouts and the three day week. Whether it was Nixon's demented behaviour in the White House, Harold Wilson's insistence that "they" were out to get him, China ruled by two untouchable hypochondriac borderline-psychotics, the trial of Rupert Bear, David Bowie's cocaine-fuelled pro-fascist rants which led to Rock Against Racism zealots finding Nazis hiding in every available nook and cranny, the inglorious end of the Vietnam conflict or Pol Pot's Cambodia, the list of horrors is almost endless and it is with no small sense of amazement that Wheen notes that in our own current Great Crash, barely a week passes without some allusion being made to that distant decade. By turns hilarious and jaw-droppingly revealing, this is hugely enjoyable reading from one of the best of today's author/journalist/columnists in 344pp.
http://www.bibliophilebooks.com/STRANGE-DAYS-INDEED-The-Golden-Age-of-Paranoia
.
shield_2006
03-03-2012, 05:09 PM
lol---stalker
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