Hobo Jungle

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The Dirt
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby The Dirt » Wed Sep 01, 2010 11:22 am

“Re: those personality disorders that you mentioned (pure anti-social disorder, and reactive attachment)... I think those types of labels are pure bullshit.”

I will absolutely and irrevocably stand by what I said. (And there is a HUGE body of literature, from thousands of clinicians and researchers way smarter than you and me, who will back me up on this. “Google’ it and start reading, and choose, if you wish, a irrefutably reliable source such as that from the Mayo Clinic, or the National Institute of Mental Health).

I’ll agree with you that yes, there are no absolutes, that no two people look or think alike, and that everyone has something that another person does not have, and that everyone has the potential to change, and we shouldn’t rank people because who’s to know what anyone’s true purpose in Life really is. No argument there. But, the addition of a character-disorder label is not the end of the story or of the world. It doesn’t allow a clinician to ‘dismiss’ or categorize a patient, but rather is an entirely useful and necessary adjunct in coming to understand how a person got into the mess they’re in, how to help them in an inpatient setting, and how to understand the best and most useful options for them in follow-up outpatient care.

For example, someone comes in for treatment for a recurrent depression, but they also have been recognized to have an Avoidant Personality trait. Sure, they can be helped to feel less depressed, but if they aren’t given the opportunity to recognize one of the major things that is driving that depression to occur over and over, would we truly be doing for them the best that we can? The answer is ‘no’, Rick. We owe it to them to give them their best chance at seeing the ‘big picture’.

I can see how the ‘dropping’ of a label on someone could be an affront. Matter of fact, considering your vehemence at my original post, if I was to make a conjecture, it might possibly lead me to wonder if you, or someone you know, has been stung by having such a label applied to them. If that were the case, I also might guess that the clinician applied/presented it in clumsy fashion. Properly done, it can be a useful insight that will help a person, who is suffering, to understand the full picture of WHY they are suffering, and that is an entirely proper goal. We have a very wise, educated, and experienced psychologist who has mastered this approach of helping people to get a grasp of their personality quirks, stressing how they are rooted in biology and personal history and are NOT the fault of the patient, and they have been universally appreciative. It has never once blown up in her face.

Here’s another example, between two guys facing marital separation, the first reasonably well-adjusted, the second a Narcissistic personality.

The first, a man without character disorder, would be sad, lonely, anxious, discouraged, frightened for his future, but who would be able to talk about his distress, be able to look with some objectivity about how the relationship spiraled downward, would be chagrined at his wife’s distress, would be interested in repairing the damage with his spouse, and would be able to engage in self-examination in therapy.

The second, a Narcissist, would have a different meltdown, and can anyone tell me that they haven’t read about, or personally witnessed, this behavioral trait in action?

At best, the narcissist just doesn't give a shit. The wife is nuts, the proof in that she let him get away. Her loss, not mine.

Or, he's pissed, but he's smart enough not to 'lose' it, but she's going to pay. He screws her at every turn- she can't have any belongings/furniture, he starts frivolous lawsuits that cost the wife in attorney fees she can't afford, he refuses the quick divorce and drags it out so that she can't have any access to a settlement, he starts dating immediately to 'rub it in' about how 'attractive' he is, he uses the kids to goad her, refusing to deliver them in shared-custody, or refusing to help with their expenses, stuff like that.

One degree worse yet, he loses self-control, and pulls the 'grand dramatic gesture', (and this is what gets them to the inpatient unit),- he'll slice his wrists (but not deep enough to put his life at risk, of course), or he'll drive his car into a tree (but keep his seatbelt on), drive off into the woods with a firearm after calling his wife and telling her it's all her fault and leaving suicide notes, but gets talked out of it by other family ("OK, since you begged me...."), or slightly more dramatic, will get the wife on the phone and then discharge a gun (at the ceiling. He likes himself too much to actually damage himself).

One more degree worse in mental disorganization, he is the hostage taker, or who has to have the 'suicide-by-cop', because he doesn't have the heart to do it to himself, and puts no thought to the danger he causes or what emotional trauma the cops have to endure.

And worst, of course, the narcissistic-antisocial combo, the murder spree. They'll murder their kids and leave the wife alive (as the ultimate way to punish), or they'll kill their entire family, (if I can't have you, nobody will).

Anyone can see, based on the differential personality diagnosis, that the treatment of each respective individual has to differ, as does the outpatient care. But there is a wide list of character disorders that cause all types of personal and social disruption, and any clinician worth his salt will have them firmly in his grasp if he is going to pretend to be able to understand or help his client.

And one more thing, I’ll agree with you to the extent that SOME personality-disordered people can change, particularly those such as the Avoidant and Dependent types. In therapy, or even in close self-examination, these folks can recognize themselves and work to change their thinking and their behaviors. But I defy you to convince me or any clinician that those who are schizoid or schizotypal, eg, or those who are narcissistic or antisocial, will ever be able to examine or change themselves or their dysfunctions in any significant way.

I speak from at least a reasonable perch. In November, I will have reached 25 years as a nurse on an acute-care inpatient psychiatric unit. Over those 25 years, I have seen, applied, and used the wisdom of those researchers who describe personality disorders as ‘enduring patterns of dysfunctional behavior, inflexible and pervasive across many situations’. We have a percentage of the local population who have been in and out, in and out, over those full 25 years, consistently unable to manage their stressful situations: new partners but same relationship outcomes, new jobs/homes/friends, but the same interpersonal chaos, it goes on and on. Do I get fatalistic? No. I give them my best effort, each and every time. But do I have diminishing expectations? Yes, because I believe I have a clear picture of some of the root causes of these situations based in their dysfunctional personality styles which, if not addressed, examined, and changed, will find them back on our inpatient unit again, sooner or later.

And you surprise me back, with your history of work in the correctional field, that you have no understanding or conception of an antisocial personality. Prisons are rife with them. Ted Bundy was a pure antisocial, and he was as real as death itself. Some 35, (and perhaps dozens more) young ladies paid the ultimate price for his “label”, and he’s just a single example of that genre. You can absolutely believe, as a father of a pre-adolescent daughter, that discussion has already begun of dysfunctional attitudes and behaviors that are presented on TV and in movies, not to cause alarm or paranoia, or that I have any misconception that she won't fall prey to some young man's manipulations, but rather to have her begin to exercise some critical thinking, that it not come as something that she has never seen when she begins dating, and that she may be least likely to have some douchebag take advantage, or worse, put her in danger.

Anyone who does not accept the premise of this disorder strikes me as goofily naïve. And I stand by my advice to Bikermike. I applied no labels to anyone. But I did make mention of potential pitfalls, and they are real possibilities. Bikermike is free to offer any help he would like, but as a husband, he has first responsibility to his wife and family not to jeopardize their welfare or safety. After that, making efforts to help that young lady, or the ten people he’s going to see on the NEXT block, are completely reasonable. Hell, there's a wide world of noble causes, and people in need. The question is how to choose whom to help, and as I said, how to know that the help one offers, is the help that is needed.

Lastly, I am fully aware, the internet being what it is, and psychiatry being as prey to fraud as any other branch of medicine, that you may have bought into some quack therapy and are going to tell me that your ear-candling and your phrenologist have turned your life around, or that you are likely to dredge up something off the internet to refute what I'm saying, and I will not go down that road. You've said your piece, I've said mine. You believe what you believe, as do I, so this is all I'll have to say about this subject, because I doubt you'll be able to let this drop, (and that is a prediction).

I am accomplished at what I do, I believe what I believe, I work with consummate professionals, and we do a world of good to many hundreds of tragically suffering individuals every year. But I will not let you call our diagnostic process "bullshit" without making reply.

The Dirt
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby The Dirt » Wed Sep 01, 2010 11:26 am

Tramp, I was hoping you'd weigh-in.
Wasn't it you that told me the difference between a hobo, a tramp, and a bum?

Since Tramp has left me hanging, I looked on the internet, and found this amusing quote:

"One famous quip had it that the hobo works and wanders, the tramp drinks and wanders, and the bum just drinks."

:wink: :D

http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chic ... 783in.html

shushupe

Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby shushupe » Wed Sep 01, 2010 1:15 pm

Dirt,

I have extensive personal experience with the mental health profession, and I have educated myself with the most up to date information(when I was keenly interested in learning about my issues). I also have a natural interest/curiosity re: human behavior, that gave me the incentive to look into this subject.

I am not exaggerating when I say... I've had involvement with the so-called best in the field. The bottom line here is that... this field/branch of medicine is still in an extremely primitive stage of development, and understanding...

Speaking from personal experience... I have had numerous conflicting diagnosis, and labels applied to me. Even when I told you guys I have OCD... that statement is misleading, because there are other major components that are just as strong or stronger than my OCD type traits. Mental health issues are extremely complex, and I had the so-called "best" candidly admit that we(the medical profession) just don't know or understand... exactly what it is that I have, and what causes it. Currently, the best is a biased guess/theory. I have yet to see a diagnosis that is completely objective.

I will not go into a deeper explanation as to why I hold the views that I do re: this subject... I have legal reasons, plus this is one of those subjects that could be debated into eternity... such as religion and politics etc...

BTW, here is an clear example of how these so-called experts(that you appear to have absolute faith in) can change their tune over time... homosexual behavior was at one time considered to be a mental disorder, and was treated as such...

Oh ya, if you feel that there are superior well educated minds out there, that have a greater ability to interpret the issues we are discussing here... then by all means blindly follow these elite beings. I, on the other hand, think for myself; and I trust my intelligence, and my innate instincts to do what is best for my situation... no voodoo or earwax for me, either.

BTW, re: the young girl bikermike wrote about - the reality is that, to truly help this girl... major resources, and time would be required... and there are millions in the same boat. This type of problem has been around forever, and I don't foresee it being vanquished anytime soon... every part of our world deals with this reality.

Dirt, if your experts are so adept at dealing with these issues, then... why is this problem still present, and growing... What you think is the solution/remedy/help... is just an erroneous band-aide, at best... labels, as does religion etc., gives some people something, sort of tangible, to grasp onto... that soothes uncertainty, and fear... but they don't change a thing. That young girl and millions like her... will still have to face their harsh realities... regardless of the labels applied.

I, too, stand by my statements that I previously posted here re: applying simplistic labels to complex, and difficult issues.

Dirt, the tone of your last post is very defensive... why?

Rick

kerr

Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby kerr » Wed Sep 01, 2010 1:42 pm

I ought to leave this one alone but no, I have to add a bit more. I thought that I'd made it pretty clear that its not a life that is to be recommended or romanticized.

However what irks me is the automatic assumption that homeless persons are criminals, I also thought I'd made it clear that the way our system is designed, its almost impossible for a homeless person not to be put into a position where they will be criminalised.

Then Rick tossed in the usual 'drug users' assumptions and that is also unfair because it seems to me that those who care about our society should be asking themselves WHY do people feel it necessary to self medicate? Also how come that if you go for psychiatric evaluation, the most likely outcome will be prescribed medication? Is it going to cure the problem? No, it is not but it might act like a chemical restraint though it cannot fix many of the underlying problems.

By the way, folks, I appreciate the cautionary words but I'm not that stupid! I couldn't help feeling the way I did but I certainly wouldn't have been rash enough to try and intervene. After all, if one is really moved by their plight then probably the best thing to do is to get involved by giving to or working with agencies that have the expertise and knowledge to do the best they can.

The bottom line, in my opinion, is that our society is failing to face the real issues, solutions to which may well be impossible to solve certainly in the short term, the best that one can hope for is to minimise the problem but I don't see that happening, I only see a widening gulf with more and more people inexorably heading for the chasm.

As a teacher I saw too many examples of children being set on the path of self destruction by their grossly incompetent 'parenting' and I used to say that their results - the childrens - would be a lot better if their so-called parents were forced to come to class too. Friends and family members of mine strike me as being marginal as parents, not that I did such a great job myself which is something that one usually learns with the benefit of hindsight.

Once you start down the road of analysing everything, its like that old saying "When you're up to ears in mud and surrounded by starving alligators, it is difficult to remember that your original objective was to drain the swamp".

I think the only useful conclusion to be drawn from this is that there is a problem and its our problem and we need to start addressing it. Pointing fingers and applying labels does no good at all nor is it any use to hope the problem can be swept under the carpet of jurisprudence which never should have become the trash can for those whom society has failed, though Lord knows that started centuries ago.

The thing of it is that this is a very good example of a 'no fault' issue, rather than waste time bandying words about who should have done such and such, we need to reach consensus that there IS a problem, that its everyones responsibility to deal with it effectively and that the reason for doing so is that everyone will benefit from it. In a functional democracy that would be sufficient in itself to set the wheels in motion.

Believe me I'm sorely tempted to name a few culprits myself and it's taking a great deal of restraint for me not to. I do feel that its a positive step in the right direction that we can even have this discussion without it devolving into a shouting match. Its going to take a lot more before any kind of initiative arises therefrom but there's still hope.

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webenda
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby webenda » Wed Sep 01, 2010 3:59 pm

Hobos,

I find all of your inputs on this subject very interesting and well written. We all have our point of view--determined by our personal experiences.

One of my favorite reads is R. D. Laing (Scottish psychiatrist, 1927--1989.) Most enlightening was Knots, about how we create our own problems and The Politics of the Family, about how our parents make us crazy.

Laing's father and grandfather had "brutal physical scenes in the parlor," while his mother was wont to burn the family's trash inside the apartment so as to conceal its contents from the neighbors and regularly destroyed her son's toys. Even in old age, she was "sticking pins into an effigy of her son, called a 'Ronald doll,' the express intention of inducing a heart attack." Laing was "not a wanted child." --Daniel Burston

Thus Laing, who had chest pains when his mother stuck pins into his effigy and eventually died of a heart attack, wrote this about human existence:

"From the moment of birth, when the stone-age baby confronts the twentieth-century mother, the baby is subjected to these forces of violence, called love, as its mother and father have been, and their parents and their parents before them. These forces are mainly concerned with destroying most of its potentialities. This enterprise is on the whole successful." --R. D. Laing

My own view, confirmed by Laing in his writings, is that all humans are insane (except for Mitch.)
----Wayne----

Back when I was growing up, if you didn't start someth'n, there wouldn't be noth'n.
--Merle Haggard

shushupe

Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby shushupe » Wed Sep 01, 2010 5:06 pm

bikermike,

I understood the nature/meaning of your original post, on this thread. I also knew that, you were experienced enough not to compromise any aspect of your life... To me, your post was a sort of thinking out loud re: a young person that you felt empathy and concern for...

I never felt you tried to glamorize anything, and I was of the opinion that, the experiences you shared, here, were from a different time... i.e. I didn't think you were equating your experiences with how it would be to be on the streets, now.

Re: me bringing up the drug factor... that's reality my man... also if you reread my post... I never supplied any explanation/reason(s) why people end up on the fringes of society... as you know, that is a hugely expansive topic, that could never be adequately covered here.

Mike, my job, in corrections, was the end of the line(so to speak) for these people... death being the absolute end.

Re: the drug issue - lets put it this way... a street person not involved with drugs, would be the exception here... at least, that has been my experience. BTW, the area where one of the correctional facilities, that I worked at, bordered on one of worst neighborhoods in my country...

I have tried to be clear with my input here... the marginalized street people/homeless have many many serious issues that need to be addressed. No politically correct slogan or dogma, no contemporary/trendy psychology(with the fancy bullshit labels) etc... is going to change a thing. Having enough necessities, especially food; proper parenting, schooling; safe environments; proper medical care; decent housing; employment; opportunity - real hope for a decent future; an effective justice system etc... real tangible things(not words) are desperately needed to turn around this massive social problem.

Mike, I totally agree with what you have written... about medicating the problem away... that approach disgusts me.

Rick

kerr

Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby kerr » Wed Sep 01, 2010 6:15 pm

Thankyou Rick

No I'm not wide eyed and innocent anymore, unfortunately! You correctly divined my intent. Like yourself I got put through the wringer by the medical establishment and medicated with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer for all the wrong reasons because in the UK at the time until you reached the age of majority and if you were living with your parents you were pretty much at the mercy of whoever they listened to and nobody was going to want to hear my side of things.

That, in fact, is what made me leave home and how come I ended up on the road for that period of time. My late mother God bless her was a foolish and self absorbed person who wasn't able to cope with me and didn't want to since it got in the way of her having holidays abroad with my father whose business kept him away from home for weeks at a time.

Fortunately for me, my grandparents - my mothers parents who were under no illusions about her, Nan's favourite comment was "Who does she think she is? Little madam!" - pretty much buffered me from the worst of it and my siblings got the benefit of mum having learnt from me!

Frankly teachers and law enforcement personnel have a lot in common in terms of their experiences of what really goes on behind the scenes.

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rogruth
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby rogruth » Wed Sep 01, 2010 7:45 pm

I asked earlier when and why homeless persons were thought to be criminals by most people.Maybe I wasn't clear or there is no answer.I still would like to know.
roger

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MurphOnMillerAve
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby MurphOnMillerAve » Wed Sep 01, 2010 7:57 pm

webenda wrote:Hobos...My own view, confirmed by Laing in his writings, is that all humans are insane ...

From what norm? :?

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Tramp
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby Tramp » Wed Sep 01, 2010 8:04 pm

Most of us like to do what feels good. Some understand that we can only do that some of the time. Some want to do it all the time. Problems!

Pete, sorry I missed your question, but I thought your answer was damn good.

Rick, seems like you're trying to convince yourself of something though I'm not sure what since you write mainly in generalities.
That a life will be spent gaining inches,
When this distance is read in miles.

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sarge
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby sarge » Wed Sep 01, 2010 8:41 pm

rogruth wrote:I asked earlier when and why homeless persons were thought to be criminals by most people.Maybe I wasn't clear or there is no answer.I still would like to know.


Short answer in three parts, and probably quite debatable...

1) There are anti-social elements, by choice or necessity, nested within the group. We tend to judge a group by the worst behaviour of some of the more visible members. Unfair, perhaps, but true.

2) These people represent shadowy reflections of ourselves but for the grace of God. We're frightened of how very close we all come to those circumstances.

3) Further, because no society has found a pat answer to the problem.

shushupe

Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby shushupe » Wed Sep 01, 2010 8:43 pm

Mike,

Society frequently sweeps away it's problems/inconveniences by whatever means necessary... or just plain ignores it.

Tramp, you seem to feel that you have a lock on... homelessness and being on the streets. From what I can see, by what you have written,so far... it(your experience) is not much on substance... at the most, maybe a young guy(you) playing hobo... sort of, that run off and join the circus kind of fantasy, but done in the hobo theme.

I'm not trying to convince anyone of anything... I'm just sharing some of my experiences, and knowledge.

Sorry man, but Dirt's posts on this thread(especially his last tomb) is, in my opinion, erroneous/wishful thinking... basically bullshit. I like Dirt, and I thought he was more insightful in this area...but, what I have read, by him, on this thread... shows me, the man(Dirt) doesn't know what he is talking about... Basically, he sounds like he has been reading one to many books, and that, he's accepting them as absolute universal truths... which they most certainly are not.

Playing pirates or Peter Pan... or hobo's must be fun... but you're just playing... I bet the real homeless/persons living on the street would tell you otherwise.


Rick

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Rufus T. Firefly
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby Rufus T. Firefly » Wed Sep 01, 2010 9:08 pm

Tramp wrote:Rick, seems like you're trying to convince yourself of something though I'm not sure what since you write mainly in generalities.


And absolutes; and as we all know, there are are absolutely no absolutes; I once made a mistake, but I was wrong..........

However, rick's experience(s) and conclusions may be entirely skewed by the population that he has had available to him from which to extract and formulate opinions. Basically, a sampling error....yet within the limitations of that sampling his conclusions may then be valid.

If you look about you will find entire homeless families found there due to circumstances beyond their control, economic issues, financial issues, and various medical issues (not just mental health), that crippled entire family units putting them out on the streets and into shelters across the country It's overly simplistic to assign a single element of society as cause and effect for homelessness.
As the literacy rate declines, you’ll ask yourself why the quality of life continues to deteriorate in ways large and small, and in almost every instance the answer will be: because people stopped reading.

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webenda
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby webenda » Wed Sep 01, 2010 9:10 pm

From what norm?

Mitch is my norm for purposes of
this discussion. All the rest of us
are nuts. Now Mitch seems to go
nuts over some automobile prob-
lems, but he recovers time and
time again. The rest of us...
24/7 hopeless.
----Wayne----

Back when I was growing up, if you didn't start someth'n, there wouldn't be noth'n.
--Merle Haggard

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MartyE
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Re: Hobo Jungle

Postby MartyE » Wed Sep 01, 2010 9:38 pm

Technology is wonderful. Here I am over 400+ miles from home and I just finished video chatting with my daughter. I bought them and me a web cam so we can stay better in touch. With the impending divorce and me not living with them this was an awesome way of staying in touch.

Beers are on me tonight! I'm feeling fine.
"There is no limit to what a man can do or where he can go if he doesn’t mind who gets the credit."
MartyE.com and KodiakJunction.com Home to Kodiak Junction U.S.A.


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