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One flew over the psychonauts nest ?

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The feeling that i get from this kind off people are, that they just are addicted at feeling there self negative. It's like there getting high on it.

Just a thought.
It might be all the attention they recieve by behaving in such a way that is actually the thing they are getting high on.
Attention is a very addicting thing to a lot of people.. :?
 
At bastiaan: I don't think 'they' do it for the attention because a lot manic depressed people tend to stay in their homes.
 
I wasn't talkng about manic depressive people, just about the kind of people mysticwarrior was talking about, always thinking (or pretending to themselves) they experience more negativity then others.
I know someone very close to me that has a tendancy to do this and he makes me unsure of what I suggested above, he's just not the type.
This occurs with him mostly when I myself am in a very positive mindstate.
Perhaps he is then just feeling bad because he can't be that positive at that moment or sth
 
Bastiaan i think there is an element of truth there. i dont believe it is conscious though, more that it is a base primate response, an atavism from our ancestry. we need attention because we are social animals and if the higher forms of interaction are unavailable or dysfunctional we revert to more basic interaction. a sort of psychic grooming for comfort
 
When I was younger I had a lot of negativity in myself. I was angry at myself and the world.
I got older and realised that I was attached to these negative feelings.

Now I knew that I myself was holding on to negative stuff, it was time to turn it around.
I started paying attention to my feelings and emotions, and learned to transform negative thoughts into positive ones.
 
I think quite frankly that "normal", "happy" people are generally apathetic, not asking questions about the world. They party and drink beer. They don't need art or poetry. Etc.

Those who are suffering and unhappy ask questions, desire to bend reality. Hence perhaps the seemingly tilted attraction to psychedelics.
 
i really like this topic. it's interesting.

i've had panic attacks since i was about 15(going on 20 now) and they were at their worst in my whole life about a month or two ago.

my panic attacks were originally manifested through my unconscious fear of losing control under the influence of something(pills especially). up til recently i've been able to realize that i never really had what some would call "panic/anxiety" disorder, but instead i created negative feelings that i chose to escape from but held onto at the same time...

...bottom line, i created my problem. their was no illness to begin with.
 
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