B

Bruces

Specialist
May 11, 2020
389
?
 
  • Hugs
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan and Brick In The Wall
so tired or manic

so tired or manic

Arcanist
Jun 12, 2020
462
no.

there's ways to learn to live with it and work around it, but it will never be cured.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Pisceslilith, Dark Spring, marcusuk63 and 10 others
TAW122

TAW122

Emissary of the right to die.
Aug 30, 2018
6,852
I agree with @so tired or manic because I know of someone who I lived with Bipolar disorder and took meds to manage it. It has never gone away for her, but since it's under control, she is able to function in day to day life.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Pisceslilith, WinterFaust, nitroautnz and 3 others
E

esse_est_percipi

Enlightened
Jul 14, 2020
1,747
It depends what illness and what you mean by 'cured'. You can definitely reduce symptoms and recover.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Pisceslilith, ocd is bad, Marctic and 2 others
B

Bruces

Specialist
May 11, 2020
389
Knowing there's no cure kind of seals my fate really
 
  • Hugs
  • Like
Reactions: Rn110bg101, greekyfish10, Belit667 and 5 others
Brick In The Wall

Brick In The Wall

2M Or Not 2B.
Oct 30, 2019
25,158
It depends what illness and what you mean by 'cured'. You can definitely reduce symptoms and recover.
I think this is probably the best answer so far. Sure minor ones can be cured, some of the more serious ones can only be managed.
 
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan, Belit667, Sensei and 2 others
Deleted member 17949

Deleted member 17949

Visionary
May 9, 2020
2,238
They can be managed but not cured from what I've seen. It's certainly possible to increase your quality of life to a point where life seems nice, but there will always be problems stemming from the mental issues and things you have to do to keep them manageable.
 
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: Pisceslilith, deadgirlahsatan, Belit667 and 1 other person
I

Intheo

Student
Jul 1, 2020
119
There's no cure for life other than death.
 
  • Like
  • Love
  • Hugs
Reactions: Pisceslilith, marcusuk63, Cutepoison and 5 others
so tired or manic

so tired or manic

Arcanist
Jun 12, 2020
462
if it's depression caused by something like low vitamin d then you take some pills and you're back to good. depression caused by unbalanced hormones or a crappy thyroid take more work and monitoring, but can get to a good level, but will always have to be monitored. there's also seasonal affective disorder which is usually only worse in winter and they make special lights for it. if it's something like bipolar, chronic depression, schizophrenia and so on it's a matter of finding medication that works, which isn't always possible, but people have found ways that work for them.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Pisceslilith, deadgirlahsatan, Sensei and 1 other person
Deleted member 19654

Deleted member 19654

Working towards recovery.
Jul 9, 2020
1,628
It depends on which mental illness. With depression there's been more research lately on mushrooms and psychedelics. While it's not a cure, it seems to be good at treating it so it gives me a little bit of hope. People who are already microdosing report that it helps them a lot
 
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan, _Minsk, LittleJem and 1 other person
E

esse_est_percipi

Enlightened
Jul 14, 2020
1,747
It depends on which mental illness. With depression there's been more research lately on mushrooms and psychedelics. While it's not a cure, it seems to be good at treating it so it gives me a little bit of hope. People who are already microdosing report that it helps them a lot
Be careful with mushrooms and psychedelics. They can cause bad trips and lead to psychosis if you are in an already bad psychological state.
 
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan, a.n.kirillov, Belit667 and 1 other person
iDieUDie80

iDieUDie80

Arcanist
Jul 6, 2020
403
Speaking to my OCD, no. But exposure therapy is typically successful in treating it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan
E

everydayiloveyou

Arcanist
Jul 5, 2020
490
It depends. Some people respond well to a little CBT or a couple of rounds of SSRIs. Other people only need a change in environment or circumstance.

If you have insight and you're cooperative with your mental health team, I think most people can reasonably expect to reach a point where their mental illness isn't completely debilitating. But if your condition is persistent and severe, it gets less and less likely that you can reach that baseline level of recovery. I think most mental health professionals would agree with that. Even the law agrees, which is why you can claim disability for having mental illness. If professionals widely considered mental illnesses curable, then the world would be working a lot differently than it is now.
 
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan and Sensei
M

Moonomyth

Student
Feb 6, 2020
196
Not yet.
 
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan and Sensei
XYZ

XYZ

I just can’t get these damn wrists to bleed
Jul 22, 2020
800
No. I live with mental illness, always have always will.
 
  • Hugs
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan, Worthless_nobody and Belit667
B

Blackjack999999

Member
Aug 4, 2020
5
As other have said it can't be cured in the truest sense. However therapy and medication can bring it down to the point were you can manage it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan, Belit667 and Sensei
L

Life sucks

Visionary
Apr 18, 2018
2,134
Depending on the illness, however, no matter whats the cure, the effects remain within the body. The damage of severe depression is irreversible and its not a simple chemical issue. Anhedonia on the other hand is about the direct lack of chemicals but the brain reward system is damaged also and it could be manageable but there is no complete cure. The problem isn't simply chemicals, its a big combination of genetics and environmental factors.
 
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan, Worthless_nobody and Belit667
Nymph

Nymph

he/him
Jul 15, 2020
2,565
Personally I don't think so, it can just be managed but that's not going every well for me. I hate my terrible mental health, I wish I could be happy like some other people, just be careless, free and have a positive outlook on life. I feel like I'm an extreme realist and see things for how they truly, which is-terrible and that makes me wanna ctb. That's a way to cure it I guess-death
 
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan, Worthless_nobody and Belit667
Belit667

Belit667

Experienced
Aug 2, 2020
247
I've been tortured with clinical depression and personality disordes for 20 years now. Tried lots of meds, no success.
 
  • Aww..
  • Hugs
Reactions: LittleJem, deadgirlahsatan and Worthless_nobody
W

Worthless_nobody

Enlightened
Feb 14, 2019
1,384
It all depends on the person and their circumstances but in my experience no...none of my mental illnesses can be cured. Meds do nothing but give side effects (I have been sevely depressed for years and anti depressants were completely useless and caused me permeant anhedonia). Therapy is expensive and in effective. If my circumstances could change then the symptoms if my mental issues could be aliviated and I would delay ctb but I know there is cure for my issues.
 
  • Like
Reactions: XYZ and Belit667
M

Mitokondrium

Member
Jun 9, 2020
20
I would say it can be improved. I used to be severely depressed, insomniac and very suicidal. Now, due to some medication / therapy / meditation and the fact that I managed to turn my life around a certain reasonable amount, I feel much better. I still have depression and I am suicidal sometimes, so it can not be cured totally, but I would say my life is much better than it used to be.
 
  • Like
Reactions: deadgirlahsatan, Sensei, Mustkeyknow and 1 other person
D

Deleted member 1465

_
Jul 31, 2018
6,914
If you believe it's an illness, then no, never.
What is illness? Being other than what you want to be? Being different to the consensus? Maybe...
You are who you are, same as all of us. The ultimate, and most difficult wisdom is coming to understand and accept that, without prejudice. Most can't do it.
If you let others define that, then you will always be on the back foot.
I no longer look for cure, nor even a treatment. I try and accept the reality of who I am in a world that has moved on, and figure out how to live with it.
This is hard, maybe impossible. But that is reality. And it's more realistic than expecting endless pharmaceuticals to somehow 'correct' who I am.
Having said that, I'm an alcoholic whose just had a bottle of wine so wtf do I know?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Mr2005, XYZ, deadgirlahsatan and 2 others
L

LittleJem

Visionary
Jul 3, 2019
2,598
Be careful with mushrooms and psychedelics. They can cause bad trips and lead to psychosis if you are in an already bad psychological state.
microdosing is pretty safe best of my knowlege
even with microdosing, it's a long-term treatment, rather than a cure.
I wish I could say yes to this question, but I don't believe so. Mine is much better thanks to LSD, but I still have it. Just at a quieter level. Tired.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Sensei and deadgirlahsatan
Chupacabra 44

Chupacabra 44

If boredom were a CTB method, I would be long gone
Sep 13, 2020
710
For myself personally I perceive remission or cured as basically semantics. I know with certainty from endless research that there are people online who through aggressive dietary strategies have been able to remove themselves from all psychiatric medications.

DM if interested I have knowledge in this field.
 
Amumu

Amumu

Ctb - temporary solution for a permanent problem
Aug 29, 2020
2,623
Yes, of course. Even schizophrenia can disappear for some people.
 
S

Sk1n1M1n

Experienced
Jan 29, 2020
282
No not in the some way as a cold, sio or broken, leg. I think of It as lowing diabetes chronic long term.
 

Similar threads

K
Replies
19
Views
469
Suicide Discussion
kvorumese
K
Butterfly-death
Replies
4
Views
200
Suicide Discussion
whitesumac
W
Deviisdreaming-
Replies
3
Views
252
Offtopic
Jeebo5021
J
qualityOV3Rquantity
Replies
28
Views
1K
Suicide Discussion
wren-briar
W
S
Replies
9
Views
220
Suicide Discussion
Roxas4001
R