Body: | DSM-IV, DSM-5, ICD-10: F60-F69 Disorders of adult personality and behavior
Nothing a good dose of the Bible and weekly church attendance can't fix!
Sinful Adult Behaviour
F60-F69 Disorders of adult personality and behavior
If you are whiny, annoying, arrogant, violent, pessimistic, transgendered, kleptomaniac, gambler, twist your hair with your fingers till your hair falls out, this is your mental disorders page!
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DSM-IV, DSM-5, ICD-10
International Classifications of Diseases
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
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Introduction:
1. Typical of the topic mush of the DSM, we have a "catch all"
category that includes almost every adult sinful behaviour and vice:
a. If you are whiny, annoying, arrogant, violent, pessimistic,
transgendered, kleptomaniac, gambler, twist your hair with your fingers
this is your mental disorders page!
b. These are not diseases but behaviour choices that are "cured"
through a good dose of the Bible and weekly church attendance.
2. Psychiatry is behaviour control. None of these disorders are
diseases. Instead they are all behaviour choices.
Mental Illness Myths: deviant sex practitioner have a mental disease
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Great blunders in the history of psychiatry:
The myth that "deviant sex" is mental illness.
and other Psychiatric Unicorns!
A. deviant sex is a behaviour choice you learn, not a disease or mental
illness:
1. deviant sex practitioners are made, not born. There is no
genetic or chemical difference in the bodies of deviant sex practitioners
over non-deviant sex practitioners.
2. deviant sex is a lifestyle moral choice, not a mental illness.
3. The gay community has an unresolvable contradiction in their
logic. On one hand they want you to believe that deviant sex is genetic,
being determined at conception; on the other they want you to believe it is
not a mental illness.
a. Typical of the gay agenda, they love to dance with everyone,
even when it makes no logical sense.
b. For example, deviant sex practitioner advocates will in one
breath dismiss the bible and Christianity as their enemy because it clearly
condemns deviant sex practitioner sex, but in the other, open the Bible and
attempt to prove that Bible actually promotes deviant sex.
"A former deviant sex practitioner who has carried on an effective ministry for five years among deviant sex practitioners reported, 'I have counseled over three hundred deviant sex practitioners and have yet to find one that enjoyed a warm love relationship with his father.'" (The Unhappy Gays: What Everyone Should Know About deviant sex, pages 71-76)
"Clinical studies (Green 1987; Stoller 1968, 1975a, 1975b, 1979) describe that boys with gender identity disorder often have an overly close relationship with their mother and a distant, ambivalent relationship with their father. Stoller (1968) argued that the boy who is excessively close to his mother, in absence of the father, may have difficulty in separating himself from the female body and feminine behavior." (Textbook of Clinical Psychiatry, Hales, Yudofsky, 2003 AD, p 746)
The DNA Myth:
deviant sex practitioners are made not born
B. What biopsychiatrists, drug companies and governments say about deviant
sex:
1. "Clinical studies (Green 1987; Stoller 1968, 1975a, 1975b,
1979) describe that boys with gender identity disorder often have an overly
close relationship with their mother and a distant, ambivalent relationship
with their father. Stoller (1968) argued that the boy who is excessively
close to his mother, in absence of the father, may have difficulty in
separating himself from the female body and feminine behavior." (Textbook
of Clinical Psychiatry, Hales, Yudofsky, 2003 AD, p 746)
2. "There are no well-established or exhaustive explanations for
the development of gender identity disorder. As noted earlier in this
chapter, gender identity appears to be established and influenced by
psychosocial factors during the first few years of life. However, many
authors have argued that biological factors, if not causative, may
predispose an individual to a gender identity disorder. It is important to
realize, however, that researchers still have been unable to identify a
biological anomaly or variant associated specifically with gender identity
disorder." (Textbook of Clinical Psychiatry, Hales, Yudofsky, 2003 AD, p
746)
3. "Etiology: As with adult gender dysphoria, the etiology of
childhood gender identity disorder is unclear. The theories outlined
earlier in this chapter for adults who have gender identity disorder also
apply to children. Additional factors that have been suggested are parents'
indifference to or encouragement of opposite-sex behavior; regular cross-
dressing as a young boy by a female; lack of male play-mates during a boy's
first years of socialization; excessive maternal protection, with
inhibition of rough-and- tumble play; or absence of or rejection by an
older male early in life (Green 1974). Gender identity disorder in children
has been posited as being the result of child and family pathology (Zucker
and Bradley 1995)." (Textbook of Clinical Psychiatry, Hales, Yudofsky, 2003
AD, p 748)
4. "Physical Appearance: Fridell (1996) concluded that girls with
gender identity disorder often were seen as less attractive than those in a
control group." (Textbook of Clinical Psychiatry, Hales, Yudofsky, 2003 AD,
p 749)
5. "Course: Retrospective studies of transsexuals (Green 1974)
have shown a high incidence of childhood cross-gender behavior. Follow-up
studies of children with gender identity disorder have found a high
incidence of continued manifestations in adulthood, with a higher incidence
of deviant sex practitioner or bisexual behavior and fantasies than those
in a control group (Green 1985)." (Textbook of Clinical Psychiatry, Hales,
Yudofsky, 2003 AD, p 749)
6. "histrionic personality disorder Etiology: Psychoanalytic
theory proposes that histrionic personality disorder originates in the
oedipal phase of development (i.e., 3-5 years of age) when an overly
eroticized relationship with the opposite-sex parent is unduly encouraged
and the child fears that the consequences of this excitement will be the
loss of, or retaliation by, the same-sex parent. This conflict results in
lasting character formations of exaggerated fantasy and exhibitionistic
promise with inhibited factual analysis and diminished actual productivity.
Research suggests that qualities such as emotional expressiveness and
attention seeking may be characteristics of a biogenetically determined
temperament." (Textbook of Clinical Psychiatry, Hales, Yudofsky, 2003 AD, p
819
C. The DSM controversy over deviant sex being a mental disorder:
1. "Because psychiatrists, particularly white male psychiatrists,
are homophobic - the American Psychiatric Association (APA) once labelled
deviant sex as a "mental illness" or "mental disorder" - and have used
forced electroshock on lesbians, trying to coerce them into adopting a
heterosexual life style." (25 good reasons why psychiatry must be
abolished, Don Weitz)
2. ""Hot" Controversies For the most part, the preparation of
DSM-1V was remarkably free of controversy. The adoption of the three-stage
method of empirical review replaced passionate argument with the
deliberative poring over and interpretation of piles of tables and figures.
Literally hundreds of questions were settled with consensus decisions that
may not have pleased everyone but were generally regarded as fair and
consistent with the data. The "hot" controversies presented in this chapter
did not occur among the Task Force and the Work Group members but rather
were played out in a larger arena. For the most part, scientific issues
were settled without much controversy. The controversial issues touched on
value questions that went far beyond the diagnostic system and could not be
answered with empirical data currently available. It is of some interest
that all of the hot controversies surrounding DSM-111, DSM-11I-R, and
DSM-IV have been in some way related to sexual orientation or gender. It
appears that attempts to categorize human behavior related to such
sensitive topics are inherently fraught with the potential to arouse
widespread interest and disagreement. In this chapter, we present our
perspective on the decision-making process about how best to handle two
controversial categories included in DSM-11I-R Appendix A: late luteal
phase dysphoric disorder and self-defeating personality disorder. The fate
of these categories became at least temporarily the focus of extensive
media coverage. It is unfortunate, but perhaps not surprising, that the
issues involved in these controversies were presented in an often distorted
fashion seemingly intended to highlight acrimony rather than to offer a
balanced perspective of the pros and cons. Although we are mindful that our
own views may be biased by our close participation in these discussions, it
may nonetheless be useful to provide an insider's view of the process and
substance of these controversies." (DSM-IV-TR Guidebook, 2004 AD, p 427)
3. "Among the most tenacious nosological disagreements are
incidences when it is suspected that a normal behavior has been mislabeled
as abnormal in the DSM. Recent debates have focused on whether or not
gender identity disorder (Bartlett, Vasey, and Bukowski, 2000), acute
stress disorder (Harvey and Bryant, 2002; Marshall, Spitzer, and Liebowitz,
1999), and social anxiety disorder (Campbell-Sills and Stein, 2005;
Swinson, 2005; Wakefield, Horwitz, and Schmitz, 2005) are examples of
mental illness or normal problems in living. Nonetheless, each of these
disorders remains in the DSM." (The Journal of mind and behavior, Guy A.
Boysen, v28, p 157-173)
4. "Except for a few objectively identifiable brain diseases,
such as Alzheimer's disease, there are neither biological or chemical tests
nor biopsy or necropsy findings for verifying or falsifying DSM diagnoses.
It is noteworthy that in 1952, when the American Psychiatric Association
(APA) published the first edition of its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
of Mental Disorders (DSM), it did not include hysteria in its roster of
mental diseases, even though it was the most common psychiatric
diagnosis-disease until that time. The term's historical and semantic
allusions to women and uteruses were too embarrassing. However, the APA did
not declare hysteria to be a nondisease; instead, it renamed it "conversion
reaction" and "somatization disorder." Similarly, in 1973, when the APA
removed deviant sex from its roster of mental illnesses, it first replaced
it with ego-dystonic deviant sex; when that term, too, became an
embarrassment, it too was abolished. However, psychiatric researchers lost
no time "discovering" a host of new mental maladies, ranging from attention
deficit hyperactivity disorder to caffeinism and pathological gambling."
(Psychiatry: The Science of Lies, Thomas Szasz, 2008 AD, p 2)
D. Case Studies on sinful adult behaviour:
Biopsychiatric Behaviour Label
Case Studies
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)
KFC, Slappy
Lesbian sex: Deception, lying, Super-Christian Syndrome. Secret sin of lesbian sex that bothered conscience and made them depressed
Candy
deviant sex practitioner sex: Deception, lying, fornication. Secret sin of deviant sex practitioner sex that bothered conscience and made them depressed.
Muffin
Conclusion:
This category in the DSM-5 shows psychiatry for what it is: a
behaviour control system.
None of the "disorders" listed in "F60-F69 Disorders of adult
personality and behavior" are diseased but behaviour choices.
Psychiatrists and the DSM are in in saying deviant sex practitioners
have a mental disease.
deviant sex is a learned behaviour choice and is a sin. Sin is sin.
No sin is better or worse than other sins like adultery, fornication,
pre-marital sex or bestiality or pedophilia.
deviant sex practitioners do not a mental disorder, they have a sin
disorder.
Sin is defined by the creator and revealed in the bible alone:
Nothing a good dose of the Bible and weekly church attendance can't fix!
DSM-IV, DSM-5, ICD-10: Sinful Adult Behaviour
F60-F69 Disorders of adult personality and behavior
F60 Specific personality disorders
F60.0 Paranoid personality disorder
F60.1 Schizoid personality disorder
F60.2 Dissocial personality disorder
F60.3 Emotionally unstable personality disorder
F60.4 Histrionic personality disorder
F60.5 Anankastic personality disorder
F60.6 Anxious [avoidant] personality disorder
F60.7 Dependent personality disorder
F60.8 Other specific personality disorders
F60.9 Personality disorder, unspecified
F61 Mixed and other personality disorders
F62 Enduring personality changes, not attributable to brain
damage and disease
F62.0 Enduring personality change after catastrophic experience
F62.1 Enduring personality change after psychiatric illness
F62.8 Other enduring personality changes
F62.9 Enduring personality change, unspecified
F63 Habit and impulse disorders
F63.0 Pathological gambling
F63.1 Pathological fire-setting [pyromania]
F63.2 Pathological stealing [kleptomania]
F63.3 Trichotillomania
F63.8 Other habit and impulse disorders
F63.9 Habit and impulse disorder, unspecified
F64 Gender identity disorders
F64.0 Transsexualism
F64.1 Dual-role transvestism
F64.2 Gender identity disorder of childhood
F64.8 Other gender identity disorders
F64.9 Gender identity disorder, unspecified
F65 Disorders of sexual preference
F65.0 Fetishism
F65.1 Fetishistic transvestism
F65.2 Exhibitionism
F65.3 Voyeurism
F65.4 Pedophilia
F65.5 Sadomasochism
F65.6 Multiple disorders of sexual preference
F65.8 Other disorders of sexual preference
F65.9 Disorder of sexual preference, unspecified
F66 Psychological and behavioral disorders associated with sexual
development and orientation
F66.0 Sexual maturation disorder
F66.1 Egodystonic sexual orientation
F66.2 Sexual relationship disorder
F66.8 Other psychosexual development disorders
F66.9 Psychosexual development disorder, unspecified
F68 Other disorders of adult personality and behavior
F68.0 Elaboration of physical symptoms for psychological reasons
F68.1 Intentional production or feigning of symptoms or disabilities,
either physical or psychological [factitious disorder]
F68.8 Other specified disorders of adult personality and behavior
F69 Unspecified disorder of adult personality and behavior
By Steve Rudd: Contact the author for comments, input or corrections.
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