A neurotic delinquent is someone who displays both neurotic tendencies (such as anxiety, insecurity, or obsessive behaviors) and engages in delinquent behavior, which may involve breaking rules, acting impulsively, or engaging in criminal activities. This term describes an individual who exhibits a combination of emotional distress and deviant 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.
Neurotics are often obsessive, tense or anxious. They may be abnormally sensitive or paranoid. Different forms of neurosis can include hysteria, obsessive-compulsive disorder or anxiety neurosis.
In the analytic theory, neurotic symptoms are formed when a frustration in current life prevents direct achievement of a wish or goal. The recommended therapy is classical psychoanalysis. Anger followed by guilt and anxiety.
Someone who worries excessively is often referred to as an "overthinker" or "chronic worrier." They may have anxiety or an anxiety disorder that causes them to constantly stress about various situations and potential outcomes. Seeking help from a mental health professional can provide strategies to manage and cope with excessive worrying.
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.
In a normal person, "Anxiety" means worry or concern. If these feelings are very strong the brain my release a hormone (adrenalin) to prepare the body to do something (the imagination is a powerful thing!). This can cause momentary aching in the mussels and a churning of the stomach.These sensations are said to be "pangs of anxiety". You actually feel them! If the person has a mental illness similar sensations may be brought on by stress in conditions where the person may have a phobia or just can not cope with life etc. In this case the "Anxiety" feelings may be stronger and the parson may feel that they cannot breath and or are having a heart attack. In this case the reaction to the emotional turmoil and anxiety etc is called a "Panic Attack".
Traumatic or upsetting events, though people with an anxiety disorder may have anxiety attacks for no apparent reason.
anxiety
unfortinatly yes. if your are experiancing unprovoked anxiety everyday, and it is starting to get distressing you may have an anxiety disorder and should speak to your doctor
There is no name.There is no such thing as a "phobia fear" - this is a nonsense phrase: a phobia is a persistent state of anxiety attached to a particular object and/or situation.A fear is not an anxiety. A fear may be rational, or irrational.Law suites may arouse several different thoughts and feelings in a person. These may be experienced as a confusion of thoughts and feelings, eg. as an 'inner turmoil' characterised by persistent inability to focus the mind and/or the emotions. None of these is a phobia.
I recommend talking with your family doctor about how to control your anxiety. That is why you pay him/her and they are more likely going to know what triggers the anxiety, how to control it and certain things that you may do in order to control your anxiety that may not work for everyone else.