Spontaneous Adventurer Tobias Meyer Captures Astoundingly Beautiful Photos of Secluded Landscapes
Aww I love this!! đđÂ
as a child, i had this really interesting way of dealing with executive dysfunction:
when i needed to do something but did not get the impulse to actually start, i counted to 20.
and at 20, i did the thing.
i started this in order to get me out of bed in the morning, and after a few weeks it was a reliable source of starting impulses. every time i hit 20, i got started.Â
somewhere along the way i stopped doing it, because it was weird and nobody else needed to count in order to do stuff.
it makes me wonder, how many brilliant coping skills do we loose or never develop because we live in a neurotypical world and nobody teaches us these things? because we think theyâre weird, because we donât have words for what weâre doing, because they seem to have no place in this world?
My mom's dad died of this in 1965. :/ I wonder where we are now on research.
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I am deceased
More than 2.6 million servicemen and women have deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan since September 11, 2001. Many veterans return home from their service with symptoms of post-traumatic stress, depression, chronic pain and traumatic brain injury. These symptoms are also common among civilian trauma survivors.
Now researchers from Harvard Medical School and other institutions will embark on a five-year-long project, the Aurora study, to better understand and treat these disorders. The research will utilize the efforts of 19 institutions and more than 40 scientists.
Trauma survivors will be enrolled in the study in the immediate aftermath of trauma and followed longitudinally for one year using sophisticated adaptive sampling methods to perform a comprehensive, state-of-the-art assessment of genomic, neuroimaging, physiologic, neurocognitive, psychophysical, behavioral and self-report markers.
In addition to its unparalleled scope, the study differs from previous studies in that it will assess neuropsychiatric effects of trauma broadly rather than focus on only one or a few diseases.
âWe want to be patient-centered and not diagnosis-centered,â said Samuel McLean, lead principal investigator of the study and an emergency medical physician at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Read moreÂ
Funding: The five-year-long project is funded by the National Institute of Mental Health.
Raise your voice in support of expanding federal funding for life-saving medical research by joining the AAMCâs advocacy community.Â
i still canât believe rey ran around the galaxy wearing ugg boots, somewhere in force heaven⢠padmĂŠ is screaming.
Tschizofw you have to stay in your room all day because if you open a door They⢠will hurt you
(First aired October 13, 2011)
Struggling with mental illness after a traumatic event most likely caused by mental illness. Sexual Assault Survivor.
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