Body: | The case of "shampoo"
(Bi-polar disorder; Factitious disorder: Faking mental illness) F68.1
Casebook of Biblical Psychiatry © Version 7 (CBP-7)
Based upon
Real Mental Illnesses
Real Cases
Real People
Real Causes
Real Solutions
Casebook of Biblical Psychiatry© brings the principles of Biblical
Psychiatry to life based upon real-world cases and familiarizes Christians
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discussions by experienced Christians for Biblical approaches to treatment.
This meticulously detailed volume of dynamic real-life case studies is
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The case of
"Shampoo"
(Bi-polar disorder; Factitious disorder: Faking mental illness: F68.1)
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The case of "Shampoo"
Biopsychiatric labels DSM-5
Bi-polar disorder; Factitious disorder: Faking mental illness F68.1
Checklist Behaviours DSM-7
Deception, lying, selfishness, narcissism, a documented history of fabricating sickness to gain a personal benefit.
Insights MMPI-7
Quick Pick EDS-7.1
Sources of personal trauma: incest with her brother.
Self-disablement EDS-7.2
Chemical imbalance EDS-7.3
Yes. She ingested psychiatrist prescribed drugs for years. This indicates she likely has brain damage and Tardive Dyskinesia
Benefits EDS-7.4
Fun, entertainment, relief from boredom and monotony: EDS-7.4.2
Attention seeking, Pride, Praise, Honour, Fame: EDS-7.4.3
Sympathy: EDS-7.4.5
Control over others: EDS-7.4.6
Revenge: EDS-7.4.8
Monetary EDS-7.5
-
Annoyance Scale EDS-7.6
Medium
Diagnostic Laws EDS-7.7
Law of Narcissistic Behaviour Choice (NBC) EDS-7.7.1.NBC
Law of Derivative Personal Benefit (DPB) EDS-7.7.2.DPB
Law of Narcissistic Selective Dysfunction (NSD) EDS-7.7.3.NSD
Law of Domino Problem Transference (DPT) EDS-7.7.4.DPT
Law of Annoyance Toleration Threshold (ATT) EDS-7.7.5.ATT
Law of Psychopathic Modal Catalyst (PMC) EDS-7.7.8.PMC
Law of Manipulative Rhetorical Malingering (MRM) EDS-7.7.9.MRM
Determine the Problem
Self-centered, psychopathic, manipulative
Ask a Child
I should teach her to hold her breath until she turns blue to get what she wants. It's a whole lot easier and brings quicker results! EDS-7.7.12.PMO
5 years later EDS-7.7.LPT
The case of "Shampoo"
Although Mary attended church most of her life on a regular basis, Mary was
from a very dysfunctional family that included sexual relations with her
brother and a father who was harsh, unfair and impossible to please.
At age 15 she did not want to go to school, so she told her parents that
her tummy was real sore. Having read from the family encyclopedia where the
appendix was located, she pointed to the correct place where her appendix
was. She was booked for surgery and when they opened her up, they
discovered there was nothing wrong. When she woke up from the surgery, she
inserted little steel pins into the incision. She later said it was neat
that she could do this and she could not feel it. 8 years later when she
got pregnant, she told her husband she was worried the pins would kill the
baby. The family did not believe her, but were surprised that x-rays
confirmed the story. Surgery removed the pins. In an unfortunate twist, the
child was stillborn.
When she was 17 years old, she began to experienced mood swings and was
diagnosed with Bi-polar disorder. She was also put on anti-depressants. She
was described as a teenager as one of the most selfish people the
psychiatric nurse had ever seen. She had a strong need to get her way
combined with the desire to feel needed.
Throughout her life, Mary had a pattern of using her mood swings as a way
to gain power and control over others... or just to get her way. She would
start getting hyper and excited and start yelling a bit, and the whole
family would start catering to her so that her mental condition did not
result in another stay in the mental hospital.
At retirement age, her husband was lost his job because of a car accident
had was placed on permanent disability. Mary had been working full time
throughout the 40 year marriage and the extra money was desperately needed.
However, when she saw that her husband got to "stay at home and do what he
wanted all day" and Mary had to work, she told her husband she wanted to
quit. Her husband told her she couldn't quit right then because they needed
the extra money.
Mary attempted to commit suicide by taking some pills and alcohol. She was
discovered on the kitchen floor with a small dash in her wrist that drew a
bit of blood. The drawer of knives were spilled all over the floor and the
drawer was still open. There was a small amount of blood smeared over her
body and the floor. The bleeding had stopped by the time she was
discovered.
She was rushed to the mental ward again and remained there for observation
for a week.
Her husband, who had a pattern of giving in to her wants, told her he
thought it was best for her if she quit her job. She shampooed her hair in
the hospital room, put nail polish and make-up on, changed her clothing and
discharged herself about 4 hours later.
A few weeks after returning home, she told her son that she had faked the
whole thing, only to force her husband into letting her quit. This, of
course, created a firestorm inside the family. The son told his mother that
he was concerned about leaving the kids with her to watch. This was
something she really like to do and she really enjoyed being a "Granny".
However her actions caused a permanent change in her relationship with her
grandchildren.
Discussion:
Most people immediately focus on the sexual abuse she suffered at a young
age at the hands of her brother. In fact, her brother may have been the
victim of her sexual advances making her the offender. The details are
sketchy as the story is told. However, even if she was the victim of incest
from her brother, this does not justify her long pattern of manipulative,
self-seeking behaviour. Perhaps she learned this behaviour from her
dysfunctional family, but that does not make it acceptable so that others
tolerate it and turn a blind eye.
While the inserting of pins into her body could be interpreted as
self-hatred, this is not likely the reason she engaged in this
self-destructive behaviour. She has already successfully learned how to
fake appendicitis to skip school, much like the case of "Hooky" where Carl
Jung, psychiatrist and founder of analytical psychology, learns for
himself, what neurosis is. Now that she was in the hospital, she continued
the charade by giving herself a future "get out of school" excuse by
claiming she had pins in her stomach. Of course this time, unlike the
appendicitis incident, doctors would indeed find something wrong with her.
Benefits from behaviour: This illustrates the Law of Narcissistic Behaviour
Choice (NBC) EDS-7.7.1.NBC
Fun, entertainment, relief from boredom and monotony: EDS-7.4.2.
Clearly Mary was amusing herself when she acted out her little manipulative
plots.
Attention seeking, Pride, Praise, Honour, Fame: EDS-7.4.3. Mary was
making herself the centre of attention for her own selfish purposes.
Sympathy: EDS-7.4.5. With a psychiatric history, her family did not
know when her behaviours were part of her "chemical imbalance" or part of
her calculating manipulations. They tended to give sympathy, just to be on
the safe side even though they suspected they were being manipulated.
Control over others: EDS-7.4.6. Control was a huge factor that
catalyzed many of her behaviours. So crass was her jealously that her
husband would retire and she had to continue working, that she openly
fabricated the need to spend a week in the mental ward of the hospital.
Revenge: EDS-7.4.8. When Mary did not get what she wanted, she would
make them feel guilty through her psychotic behaviour.
Diagnostic laws that are seen illustrated in the case of "Shampoo":
In a textbook classic example, Mary was prepared to spend an entire
week in a mental hospital until her husband agreed she could quit her job
and join him in retirement. Many people would never believe a person would
do such a thing, and in fact reject it as even being possible. But here is
an actual case of someone wanting to live in an asylum. Mary had calculated
the cost of being confined for one week in the asylum, as a bargain, if she
never had to work again and could be free every day thereafter to do what
she wanted. This illustrates the Law of Derivative Personal Benefit (DPB)
EDS-7.7.2.DPB
Mary found it easy to disable herself in things she did not want to
do, but be fully functional in those things she liked doing. This
illustrates the Law of Narcissistic Selective Dysfunction (NSD)
EDS-7.7.3.NSD
Mary would go to any extreme to get her selfish way even it is upset
the entire family at great financial cost and time. This illustrates the
Law of Domino Problem Transference (DPT) EDS-7.7.4.DPT
Apparently this family had such a high threshold of annoyance, that
Mary would make the demand herself to be taken to the mental hospital. They
had a higher tolerance level than she was willing to breech. It was so much
work for her to annoy them to trigger committal, that she just took the
easy route and put herself in the mental hospital. This illustrates the Law
of Annoyance Toleration Threshold (ATT) EDS-7.7.5.ATT
Mary ignored requests to change her annoying behaviours, but instead
she sought behaviour changes in how her family catered to her every whim,
regardless of the harm she caused them. This illustrates the Law of
Psychopathic Modal Catalyst (PMC) EDS-7.7.8.PMC
Mary found herself unable to get what she wanted from others with
normal modes of communication, so she manufacture odd behaviors and
conditions to get what she wanted. Mary could not directly ask to be the
dictator queen of the household, so she let her psychotic behaviour do the
asking for her and it worked! This illustrates the Law of Manipulative
Rhetorical Malingering (MRM) EDS-7.7.9.MRM
7. A child who observed Mary would say, "I should teach her to
hold her breath until she turns blue to get what she wants. It's a whole
lot easier and brings quicker results given the urgency of the matter!"
This illustrates the Law of Pediatric Multifarious Obfuscation (PMO)
EDS-7.7.12.PMO
It is clear that Mary, like Carl Jung, learned that she could manipulate
and control people with her fakery. However in the end, her pattern of
self-seeking, narcissistic, psychopathic and psychotic behaviour caused her
to lose the privilege "unsupervised" time with with her own grandchildren.
Just like Carl Jung realized his faking had a very real negative
consequence, so too Mary lost something she really wanted: her
grandchildren.
Note: Although these are based upon real case stories, the names and
details have been changed to hide the identities of the people. This
practice follows the standards of medical case history publication.
By Steve Rudd: Contact the author for comments, input or corrections.
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