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Aug 27, 2007 10:34:16 GMT -5
Post by daisy on Aug 27, 2007 10:34:16 GMT -5
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Aug 27, 2007 10:38:45 GMT -5
Post by daisy on Aug 27, 2007 10:38:45 GMT -5
persons with IED have a set of strongly negative beliefs about other people, often resulting from harsh punishments inflicted by the parents. The child grows up believing that others "have it in for him" and that violence is the best way to restore damaged self-esteem. He or she may also have observed one or both parents, older siblings, or other relatives acting out in explosively violent ways. In short, people who develop IED have learned, usually in their family of origin, to believe that certain acts or attitudes on the part of other people "justify" aggressive attacks on them.
many of the men reported that they were helped by rethinking "manliness" in terms of self-control rather than as something to be "proved" by hitting someone else or damaging property. In some people, IED decreases in severity or resolves completely as the person grows older. In others, the disorder appears to be chronic
this sounds like my house mate - except that he has no remorse because he is a no conscience no remorseful narcissists (dang no wonder the gov secretly sterilized him)www.minddisorders.com/Flu-Inv/Intermittent-explosive-disorder.html
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