Okay, i give up. There is no way he was bipolar, had borderline personality syndrome or autism.
He was funked up by superfunkycalifragisexy disorder. The only cure being a bucket full of squirrel meat.
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Have you ever known someone with bi-polar disorder? "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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A couple people actually. Not the severe form but still. Now superfunkycalifragisexy disorder...NOpe, only from a distance.
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rogifan said: Such a cutie patootie! Wouldn't have kicked him off my couch, that's for sure! "Go placidly amid the noise and the haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence......." ~ DESIDERATA ~ Max Ehrmann | |
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I have no idea if the statement is true or false, but somehow I don't think people would be so smug if purplerabbithole had asked if P might have had cancer.
Truly sorry to be so grumpy (I'm usually more like a timid mouse when I post), but ignorance and stigma around psychiatric disorder has contributed to enough pain and death in this world. I have a close family member diagnosed with bipolar disorder and another diagnosed with borderline personality disorder.
Through my work life, I have met many, many people with psychiatric diagnoses.
Professionals in the field can reasonably disagree on diagnoses, the categories aren't perfect, no person is going to be exactly like the picture painted by a text book. It's extremely important to note that not all tendencies rise to the level of disorder. At the same time, that doesn't mean that tendencies cause zero suffering, and understanding tendencies sometimes helps a person.
As for those professionals, there are stinkers (as in all fields), and there are many who are sincere, and many who have helped people.
People with high "level of function" are at high risk of being misdiagnosed, whether that's the judgement call of whether they are "diagnosed in" or "diagnosed out." The severity of suffering can be over or underestimated. On "close to call" cases, professionals can very reasonably disagree.
My bipolar relative is a rocket scientist (literally : ) ), who worked at NASA for 40 years. He has been hospitalized a bunch of times over the years. In one instance, he was in the ICU with docs unsure if he would survive.
The bottom line goal, with any diagnosis or characterization, is to gain insight and open up treatment possibilities that increase quality of life and decrease suffering and death.
In the big picture, stigma creates tragedy in many lives.
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No offence, but there’s a lot of ignorance being slung around here. You’re correct that the majority of sufferers struggle to control the negative sides of bipolar, both in terms of depression and mania, but there seems to be quite a clear statistical correlation between bipolar disorder and creativity, especially in music and language based arts. Just Google bipolar, IQ and creativity. It’s not conclusive by any means and the nature of the link isn’t clear, but even geneticists take the apparent correlation seriously and some go so far as to suggest that there may actually be an evolutionary benefit to certain types of “mental illness” in terms of original thinking. As you suggest, bipolar disorder can be extremely destructive, but I’ve read suggestions that a small but significant number of sufferers are extremely high achievers (way above average), an alarmingly large number attempt suicide at some point and the rest just struggle to maintain the semblance of a normal life. You’re more likely to know people who fall into the latter two camps of course. The fate of a sufferer is nowhere near as inevitable as you suggest though, and there’s also some variation in the severity of mania and depression between individuals (some only ever experience “hypomania”). | |
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Are you a doctor? "Climb in my fur." | |
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No, but I am a long-term “sufferer”. You may question my neutrality as a result, but I think that I have a right to claim some kind of insight. I don’t think that I really conform to any of the characterisations in your post, and the more positive aspects of the condition have definitely contributed to certain successes that I’ve had in the past. Whether they’re worth the rest of it is another matter. I’ve also chosen to deal with it without medication, so it’s not true that individuals are necessarily medically dependent either (I wouldn’t recommend this for everyone though). As I said, no offence intended or felt, I just think that we need to be careful about our generalisations. | |
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We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Thanks. "Climb in my fur." | |
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No, of course Genesia, I agree. I made that clear in a previous post, and I also made it clear that I don’t think that Prince had bi-polar, or that these designations are particularly useful outside of clinical contexts anyway. I was just highlighting the general links between certain character types and a statistical predisposition for these conditions, and why the OP might have made the suggestion in the first place. | |
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That's just cheap, but Touché. | |
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Nice | |
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I don’t mean to be argumentative Genesia, but do you really think that general opinion is equivalent to that of someone who actually experiences the condition? As I’ve said repeatedly throughout this thread, I don’t think that the discussion is worth having in relation to Prince, and I simply wanted to correct some of the misconceptions being aired and give a more measured and sympathetic response to the OP. I have a close friend who works in this very field (a bona fide Doctor), and you really don’t have to interrogate psychiatrists very long before you realise that they have very few fundamental answers. As I said, not a discussion worth having here – I couldn’t care less about Prince’s idiosyncrasies, personality defects, who he was sleeping with or whatever other nonsense detracts from the music. | |
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I remember seeing a prince.org wikipedia and the stuff said about this forum had my eyes extra big. | |
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what did they say? | |
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yup, second to last paragraph is the rock and roll musician/star archetype to a t. Prince had a huge influence on my life when he said "we don't let society tell us how it's supposed to be" for me it was like a voice calling from the wilderness beckoning me to where I really wanted to go. | |
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Also, you have taken issue with someone on prince.org (not saying who) who I know to be a mental health professional. Unless you are a re-user, you are relatively new here, so I will caution that you never know who you're talking to in this place. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Prince never took selfies with anyone. The pop psychologist in me says Prince didn't want to have selfies taken with anyone. The world's problems like climate change can only be solved through strategic long-term thinking, not expediency. In other words all the govts. need sacking!
If you can add value to someone's life then why not. Especially if it colors their days... | |
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I’m at a complete loss Genesia, did you read any of my posts? You seem to have completely missed my point (perhaps I wasn’t sufficiently clear). I repeatedly said that any similarities that some might see between Prince and those with bipolar were superficial at best and might be explained by the higher prevalence of those conditions among certain personality types. That’s all. I made it painfully clear at every point that I didn’t think that Prince had bipolar, and I didn’t project my condition onto anyone – I only mentioned it because of the misconceptions and half-truths that were being put forward. More than that, in my view these psychiatric designations have no real meaning outside of a clinical context anyway, so I’m not in the habit of placing much value in them in any case (I sympathise with Laing and Foucault's thinking on the subject).
“Does anyone know of mania/manic phases and what that entails? lol. People who are bipolar are not creative like Prince, able to tour, keep appointments etc. Their lives are a chaotic mess and ultimately need hospitilizations and rx. For life.”
Now, unless those are the words of a mental health professional, and god help us if they are, I can only assume that you are speaking about yourself (and I wasn’t really taking serious issue with you, just questioning your rather terse comment that seemed to support rdhull’s reductive view). Are you happy to align yourself with the definition of bipolar stated above?
With regard to your “caution”, as I said I’ve learnt not to blindly accept anyone’s authority.
Anyway, I’m not here to bicker with people. You’re correct, I’m relatively new, but I’m quickly learning that it isn’t the place for measured discussion, or a particularly pleasant one half of the time.
[Edited 4/12/17 6:27am] | |
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The Org has always been like this - even when Prince was alive. He seems to have a very opinionated fanbase. Anyway, I haven't contributed to the thread because it's an area I don't claim to understand but I have enjoyed reading it and reading your comments and experiences. But measured discussion rarely happens here, which is a shame. | |
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Tresha68 - you are claiming that a scientific paper is bait? What is the basis of that conclusion? Also, how did you arrive at the conclusion of someone hating another person when you don't know either of those two people. The scientific paper discusses a "Pfeiffer-like syndrome" caused by maternal smoking and alcohol use. So yes, smoking and alcohol can lead to the gene mutation.
Sources: https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/c...definition
https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/gene/FGFR2
Based on the scientific literature, I fail to see where the FGFR2 protein that affects cell development and cell growth, and development of the embryo comes from the father. Kindly provide the scientific proof, if you have it.
Third, Mayte herself admits that she had a birth defect -- a deformity of her legs -- which she said was corrected through the wearing of braces. That is a fact that she disclosed. Why is that fact not being addressed? What was the cause of her birth deformity? What impact did her own medical history have on her two pregnancies? BTW, the second pregnancy was a fertilized egg that failed to develop, so why would any doctor involve P in the decision regarding the D&C. The D&C had to be done to remove the tissue and placenta; otherwise, she would have had a serious infection, septicemia and death at worse, or sterility. This is a standard procedure with miscarriages. “The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing our thinking.” – Albert Einstein | |
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Wlcm2thdwn3 -- I agree with you. At the end of the day, the two loves of his life were God and his guitar! The women and their drama just distracted from his creativity. Most of the women were after fame and fortune, and I am sure P often wondered who actually loved him for himself. “The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing our thinking.” – Albert Einstein | |
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Thank you maplenpg. To be fair to the org, I think it’s probably characteristic of online discussions in general. It’s easy to scan comments and post knee-jerk responses without carefully understanding and considering the nuances of what others are trying to say (I’m guilty of this myself). Also, our vanity often prevents us from acknowledging when wires have become crossed because this signifies fallibility, and so the argument just descends. I thought that I was quite clear, but perhaps I could have expressed myself better. I usually avoid becoming embroiled in these kinds of spats, but since I have first hand experience it was very irritating to hear people claim that bipolar precludes the possibility of creative achievement and success, when the evidence suggests the opposite in a percentage of cases (notwithstanding the fact that the precise nature of the link or the underlying strength of the data remains unclear). As I repeatedly said, I wasn’t implying that any of this applied to Prince, but was speaking more broadly. Anyway, I’ll leave it at that. x https://www.theguardian.c...al-illness https://www.theguardian.c...-genetics
[Edited 4/12/17 13:40pm] | |
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