-- card: 183155 from stack: in -- bmap block id: 0 -- flags: 0000 -- background id: 5566 -- name: -- part contents for background part 12 ----- text ----- When the Mental Patient Comes Home -- part contents for background part 15 ----- text ----- Menu -- part contents for background part 14 ----- text ----- HEALTH -- part contents for background part 6 ----- text ----- Excerpt -- part contents for background part 5 ----- text ----- 3 of 3 -- part contents for background part 4 ----- text ----- • Psychiatrists on active duty during the war learned that soldiers who “broke down” in combat should not be kept in recovery areas too long. Those who were returned rapidly to active duty did well. Those hospitalized for long periods tended toward further disintegration of personality and ability to function. • Family and friends often wish to protect recovering patients from the full range of human experience. They seek to insulate patients from sorrow, excitement, fear and even joy. They fear that “too much” weeping, thrill, fright, laughter, might cause the patient to regress. Usually this is done out of love for the recovering patient. Patients experience this form of love differently. They experience it as being controlled. -- part contents for background part 26 ----- text ----- • WHOLE EARTH • HEALTH • WELL-BEING • Mental Therapy -- part contents for background part 27 ----- text ----- 04033714 -- part contents for background part 40 ----- text ----- card id 182790 -- part contents for background part 41 ----- text ----- card id 182547 -- part contents for background part 42 ----- text ----- stack "WHOLE EARTH" stack "HEALTH" card id 32939 card id 64710 -- part contents for background part 37 ----- text ----- card id 64710 -- part contents for background part 38 ----- text ----- card id 63753 -- part contents for background part 39 ----- text ----- card id 68929