Few things are more self-destructive than a combination of high - TopicsExpress



          

Few things are more self-destructive than a combination of high entitlement and a lazy ethics. March 24, 2014 - The growing trend of taking smartphone selfies is linked to mental health conditions that focus on a persons obsession with looks. According to psychiatrist Dr David Veal: Two out of three of all the patients who come to see me with Body Dysmorphic Disorder since the rise of camera phones have a compulsion to repeatedly take and post selfies on social media sites. Cognitive behavioural therapy is used to help a patient to recognise the reasons for his or her compulsive behaviour and then to learn how to moderate it, he told the Sunday Mirror. 19-year-old Danny Bowmans selfie addiction spiralled out of control, spending ten hours a day taking up to 200 snaps of himself on his iPhone. The teenager is believed to be the UKs first selfie addict and has had therapy to treat his technology addiction as well as OCD and Body Dysmorphic Disorder. Part of his treatment at the Maudsley Hospital in London included taking away his iPhone for intervals of 10 minutes, which increased to 30 minutes and then an hour. It was excruciating to begin with but I knew I had to do it if I wanted to go on living, he told the Sunday Mirror. Public health officials in the UK announced that addiction to social media such as Facebook and Twitter is an illness and more than 100 patients sought treatment every year. Selfies frequently trigger perceptions of self-indulgence or attention-seeking social dependence that raises the damned-if-you-do and damned-if-you-dont spectre of either narcissism or very low self-esteem, said Pamela Rutledge in Psychology Today. The addiction to selfies has also alarmed health professionals in Thailand. To pay close attention to published photos, controlling who sees or who likes or comments them, hoping to reach the greatest number of likes is a symptom that selfies are causing problems, said Panpimol Wipulakorn, of the Thai Mental Health Department. The doctor believed that behaviours could generate brain problems in the future, especially those related to lack of confidence and real self-esteem. The big problem with the rise of digital narcissism is that it puts enormous pressure on people to achieve unfeasible goals, without making them hungrier. Wanting to be a Beyoncé or Jay Z or model is hard enough already, but when you are not prepared to work hard to achieve it, you are better off just lowering your aspirations. Ultimately, online manifestations of narcissism may be little more than a self-presentational strategy to compensate for a low and fragile self-esteem. Yet when these efforts are reinforced and rewarded by others, they perpetuate the distortion of reality and consolidate narcissistic delusions that do not hold when reality comes into play. The word selfie was elected Word of the Year 2013 by the Oxford English Dictionary. It is defined as a photograph that one has taken of oneself, typically with a smartphone or webcam and uploaded to a social media website.
Posted on: Tue, 25 Mar 2014 22:40:07 +0000

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