Cheze2 wrote:The thing I am learning about NAMI is that it isn't necessarily there for people who are diagnosed with a psychiatric disability, it's really there more for the family members. Family members have a much different take on a person's rights vs the individuals themselves.
Families are just tools of the psych's and the mental health field as a whole. When they lock someone up against there will, that persons family wants that person out, they feed the psych's need to feel powerful and in control by asking him to release there loved-one, telling them that they will make sure that the person gets the care they need at home. It's not like jail where you get a sentence and you serve it out. It is even worse IMO because you have someone standing over you daily judging you and teasing your family with the possibility that you may be released today.
Most families have no idea that the mental health field will label people and take there rights away and make it harder for them to exist in mainstream society, feed them harmful meds, etc. Then when they start reading up on the meds they get concerned about withdrawals and such when they should have been concerned when this stuff was being prescribed. They should have questioned was dealing with the mental health field a need before things got out of hand.
Family members are worthless to the survivors of this stuff unless they have actually been through the mental health system themselves. Thus, being there for the family members is a worthless endeavor that is akin to being there for the mental health field.