Sunday, August 2, 2015

What is normal???

What is normal? What is abnormal? Does it go by societal standards or is there a principle definition?



Researched on the web  and the dictionary here are some definitions of "normal".


1. According with, constituting, or not deviating from a norm, rule, or principle 
             2. Usual , typical or expected

3.Conforming to a type, standard, or regular pattern 

4. Normal is also used to describe individual behaviour that conforms to the most common behaviour in society 

5. When people do not conform to the normal standard, they are often labelled as sick, disabled, abnormal, or unusual, 

6. Of a person) free from physical or mental disorders.

Conformity:


https://youtu.be/SnAyr0kWRGE      This is the youtube video about conformity from Dead Poet's Society

Definitions of Abnormal:




Let's break those down shall we? 

1. Exceptional: The state of being unusual 
2. Atypical:  Not representative of a type, group, or class.
3. Exceeding: Go beyond what is set down by a limit
4. Extraordinary: Very unusual or remarkable
5. Odd: Unusual or unexpected; strange; a person who differs from the other members of a group
6. Phenomenal: Excellent
7. Rare: Not occurring or found very often
8. Unique: distinctive, incomparable
9. Unusual: Remarkable or interesting because different

The list of those who have had mental illness which by the above definition is "Abnormal". What achievements, what additions to our lives have these people had? Could we have progressed as a world-culture without these people? No. We would be held back as people in so many ways. These people exemplify the definition of abnormal. They didn't conform to the societal norms. They were considered "Freaks", "Odd". Sometimes they had serious repercussions because of deviating from the norm. Yet they did it anyway.
 

Abraham Lincoln
The revered sixteenth President of the United States suffered from severe and incapacitating depressions that occasionally led to thoughts of suicide, as documented in numerous biographies by Carl Sandburg.

Virginia Woolf
The British novelist who wrote To the Lighthouse and Orlando experienced the mood swings of bipolar disorder characterized by feverish periods of writing and weeks immersed in gloom. Her story is discussed in The Dynamics of Creation by Anthony Storr.

Lionel Aldridge
A defensive end for Vince Lombardi's legendary Green Bay Packers of the 1960's, Aldridge played in two Super Bowls. In the 1970's, he suffered from schizophrenia and was homeless for two and a half years. Until his death in 1998, he gave inspirational talks on his battle against paranoid schizophrenia. His story is the story of numerous newspaper articles.

Eugene O'Neill
The famous playwright, author of Long Day's Journey Into Night and Ah, Wilderness!, suffered from clinical depression, as documented in Eugene O'Neill by Olivia E. Coolidge.

Ludwig van Beethoven
The brilliant composer experienced bipolar disorder, as documented in The Key to Genius: Manic Depression and the Creative Life by D. Jablow Hershman and Julian Lieb.

Gaetano Donizetti
The famous opera singer suffered from bipolar disorder, as documented in Donizetti and the World Opera in Italy, Paris and Vienna in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century by Herbert Weinstock.

Robert Schumann
The "inspired poet of human suffering" experienced bipolar disorder, as discussed in The Dynamics of Creation by Anthony Storr.

Leo Tolstoy
Author of War and Peace, Tolstoy revealed the extent of his own mental illness in the memoir Confession. His experiences is also discussed in The Dynamics of Creation by Anthony Storr and The Inner World of Mental Illness: A Series of First Person Accounts of What It Was Like by Bert Kaplan.

Vaslov Nijinsky
The dancer's battle with schizophrenia is documented in his autobiography, The Diary of Vaslov Nijinksy.

John Keats
The renowned poet's mental illness is documented in The Dynamics of Creation by Anthony Storr and The Broken Brain: The biological Revolution in Psychiatry by Nancy Andreasen, M.D.

Tennessee Williams
The playwright gave a personal account of his struggle with clinical depression in his own Memoirs. His experience is also documented in Five O'Clock Angel: Letters of Tennessee Williams to Maria St. Just, 1948-1982; The Kindness of Strangers: The Life of Tennessee Williams by Donald Spoto, and Tennessee: Cry of the Heart by Dotson.

Vincent Van Gogh
The celebrated artist's bipolar disorder is discussed in The Key to Genius: Manic Depression and the Creative Life by D. Jablow Hershman and Julian Lieb and Dear Theo, The Autobiography of Van Gogh.

Isaac Newton
The scientist's mental illness is discussed in The Dynamics of Creation by Anthony Storr and The Key to Genius: Manic Depression and the Creative Life by D. Jablow Hershman and Julian Lieb.

Ernest Hemingway
The Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist's suicidal depression is examined in the True Gen: An Intimate Portrait of Ernest Hemingway by Those Who Knew Him by Denis Brian.

Sylvia Plath
The poet and novelist ended her lifelong struggle with clinical depresion by taking own life, as reported in A Closer Look at Ariel: A Memory of Sylvia Plath by nancy Hunter-Steiner.

Michelangelo
The mental illness of one of the world's greatest artistic geniuses is discussed in The Dynamics of Creation by Anthony Storr.

Winston Churchill
"Had he been a stable and equable man, he could never have inspired the nation. In 1940, when all the odds were against Britain, a leader of sober judgment might well have concluded that we were finished," wrote Anthony Storr about Churchill's bipolar disorder in Churchill's Black Dog, Kafka's Mice, and Other Phenomena of the Human Mind.

Vivien Leigh
The Gone with the Wind star suffered from mental illness, as documented in Vivien Leigh: A Biography by Ann Edwards.

Jimmy Piersall
The baseball player for the Boston Red Sox who suffered from bipolar disorder detailed his experience in The Truth Hurts.

Patty Duke
The Academy Award-winning actress told of her bipolar disorder in her autobiography and made-for-TV move Call Me Anna and A Brilliant Madness: Living with Manic-Depressive Illness, co-authored by Gloria Hochman.

Charles Dickens
One of the greatest authors in the English language suffered from clinical depression, as documented in The Key to Genius: Manic Depression and the Creative Life by D. Jablow Hershman and Julian Lieb, and Charles Dickens: His Tragedy and Triumph by Edgar Johnson.



And if we study some societies we see that what was considered "normal" in that society would be considered abnormal or even abhorrent today. Since normal is a changeable definition and entirely dependent on the movements of that particular society at one particular time we cannot judge those who do what they do because their hearts tell them to. 

1 comment:

  1. You WROTE this? THIS is an AWESOME article! When I came here, I thought you were referring me to someone else's blog - then I saw the link!

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