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Q: What is the difference among neurotic transference and psychotic and borderline transference?
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What is the difference between psychotic or neurotic?

Psychotic disorders involve a loss of touch with reality, leading to hallucinations or delusions. Neurotic disorders involve distressing emotional symptoms like anxiety or depression that do not involve losing touch with reality.


Does Carl Jung possessed both characteristics of neurotic and psychotic?

Such assumptions have been never taken seriously, therefore there is no official diagnosis. However, it is not possible to be both neurotic and psychotic.


What is the difference between depersonilasation and derealisation?

A chief difference is that depersonalization is usually externally focused, and derealization is usually internally focused; or, the first psychotic and the second neurotic.


What is the difference between Psycotic and Neurotic behavior?

Psychotic behavior involves a loss of touch with reality, such as experiencing hallucinations or delusions. Neurotic behavior involves excessive anxiety, distress, or emotional instability. Psychotic behavior is more severe and may require medical intervention, while neurotic behavior is typically less severe and may be managed through therapy or coping strategies.


What was the disorder that Annie Wilkes had in Stephen King's Misery?

She is borderline psychotic (progressing steadily into full-on psychosis as the novel/movie progresses). Even just 1/4 of the way through, the writer character (Paul Sheldon) has already voiced his concern (to the reader, of course) that Annie Wilkes is borderline psychotic:"Because of his researches for Misery, he had rather more than a layman's understanding of neurosis and psychosis, and he knew that although a borderline psychotic might have alternating periods of deep depression and almost aggressive cheerfulness and hilarity, the puffed and infected ego underlay all, positive that all eyes were upon him or her, positive that he or she was starring in a great drama; the outcome was a thing for which untold millions waited with held breath.Such an ego simply forbade certain lines of thought. These lines were predictable because they all stretched in the same direction: from the unstable person to objects, situations, or other persons outside of the subject's field of control (or fantasy: to the neurotic there might be some difference but to the psychotic they were one and the same).Annie Wilkes had wanted Fast Cars destroyed, and so, to her, there had only been the one copy," (Viking Penguin hardcover edition, p50).


What rhymes with exotic?

Aquatic, chaotic, erotic,3 syllables:despotic, hypnotic, narcotic, neurotic, psychotic, quixotic, robotic4 syllables:astronautic, idiotic, patriotic, semiotic, symbiotic5 syllables:antibiotic, unpatrioticfrom: rhymezone.com


What rhymes with neurotic?

1 syllable:butty, gutty, puttee, rutty, smutty2 syllables:cutty, putty, slutty4 syllables:bouncing putty, iron putty


What do you call a person who worries to much?

A person who worries too much is often referred to as an "overthinker" or a "worrier." They may also be described as having anxiety or being neurotic.


When was Neurotic. created?

Neurotic. was created in 1994.


What does neurotic mean?

One of my favourite quotes: "The psychotic believes that 2 + 2 =5. The neurotic knows that 2 + 2 =4, but hates it." It's defined as someone who is obsessive, anxious, and/or depressed but only to a milder extent than someone who is clinically mentally ill. Neurosis does not involve hallucinations or delusions as in psychotic illnesses. The person may act irritably or anxiously, seem wound up and on edge. They tend to be quite sensitive.


When was Neurotic Outsiders created?

Neurotic Outsiders was created in 1995.


What mental conditions is amitriptylline prescribed for?

Amitriptylline is commonly used for depression, with or without symptoms of anxiety, agitation or sleep disturbance. It is also sometimes used for neurotic or psychotic depressive disorder, depression or anxiety associated with disease or alcoholism (but NOT to be taken with alcohol).