Friday, August 28, 2009

Your Mental Health and the Interpretation of Your Dreams


Your dreams are an important part of your life, even though you consider them as simple disorganized images that have no meaning. You cannot evaluate their importance because you are too ignorant.

However, have in mind that your dreams help you preserve your mental health. They are a channel that links you with a wise mind, the unconscious mind, which is saintly and perfect.

Carl Jung had discovered its wisdom, but he was afraid of many things, since the image he had was too obscure and this is why he stopped his research into the unknown region of the human psyche.

He recognized that the unconscious mind is a good counselor for the human being, but he declared that one has to decide what to do based on his own conscience.

Even if you don't want to care about your dreams everyday, you must have the basic knowledge about how to fight off craziness, since it is a danger that is constantly threatening you and everyone else.

You have to be a balanced parent, so that you can give a balanced education to your kids.

Your kids need dream interpretation as soon as possible too, because they have to solve many problems that were caused by previous generations, not to mention saving our polluted planet. They have to be strong in order to face so much and yet, find their happiness.

Depression can easily become a neurosis and things can suddenly be out of control when you try to understand what is happening to you, your life, your kids and their lives.

This is why your care for craziness prevention now is the wisest decision you could make, feeling grateful because you have this possibility, which our ancestors didn't have.

This is why human history is characterized by terror, violence, immorality, misery and despair.

We have to put an end to the human drama and help our teens build a new world where everyone will live happily and everyone will be calm, sensitive, sensible and wise.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Mental Health Issues Can Often Be Supported And Helped By The Education System


The educational system can sometimes be the best source of help and support for persons who suffer from mental illness. Many sufferers do not know what resources are available to them. They have often been given incorrect information while growing up. Because education continues to advance and change, it is important that people stay informed.

Individuals who have a mental illnesses should see a therapist. If they are educated, their chances of finding hope and selecting a therapist who is qualified increase. Mental health professionals continue to look for answers in order to treat their patients better. Just because a diagnosis has been made does not mean it is the correct diagnosis.

Diagnoses may conflict, although each relates to either a chemical or biological or psychological condition of the mind. In order to get help, individuals with mental illnesses must understand what they are facing, rather than simply trust others to tell them what is wrong. If these individuals look for information about mental health, they may even find their own answers and be able to inform the professionals that are helping them so they can develop better treatments.

The Virginia Bar Association stated that over 250,000 practicing lawyers are now over 55 years old and that number will be over 750,000 in the next ten years. Everyone knows that as humans age they must deal with brain recall issues. A little less than ten percent of people over 65 experience Alzheimer's Disease. We must make sure that lawyers are not demented.

Thus, the Online Think Tank has suggested bi-annual testing of all lawyers over age 50 to make sure they are competent and this can be done in conjunction with "on-going education" and passing a 3/4 bar test every two years. Their IQs can be tested too, along with their recall.

As our laws become more complicated due to all the case law, regulators, politicians and lawyers it is prudent of us to make sure they can keep up with all they created. The Virginia Bar Association puts out a little newsletter called; "The Complete Lawyer" each month. They have addressed this pressing issue of:

* Alzheimer's
* Senility
* Dementia

And although they did not address the issue of integrity in the article, it is indeed worth reading. Some might say that kicking a lawyer out of the bar for being old is unfortunate, but if they are not giving good legal advice, how can the public tolerate that. The Online Think Tank recommends that we add more oversight into the law profession and make it as least as hard to participate in as the rules and regulations they create for all of us in our professions. That is just common sense.