Quote from: peter w on July 26, 2016, 11:22:38 AMWell unless every landlord has a psychology degree or is a behaviourist then I think other than pulling pints their opinion hardly counts.Come on, you know as well as I do "that I heard it from a bloke down the pub" is gospel and can not be challenged.So a landlord that is in the pub all the time must be, the font of all knowledge.Cheers!
Well unless every landlord has a psychology degree or is a behaviourist then I think other than pulling pints their opinion hardly counts.
Quote from: ChicagoLion on July 26, 2016, 05:50:02 PMQuote from: peter w on July 26, 2016, 11:22:38 AMWell unless every landlord has a psychology degree or is a behaviourist then I think other than pulling pints their opinion hardly counts.Come on, you know as well as I do "that I heard it from a bloke down the pub" is gospel and can not be challenged.So a landlord that is in the pub all the time must be, the font of all knowledge.Cheers!That's so obviously bollocks.I've got a wife and a teenager that both claim they know more than Google.
Hmmm, having known a few people suffering from depression i'm not sure violence to others is part of most people's symptons and they wouldn't be too pleased to think others thought that they would suddenly attack them at the drop of the hat with or without alcohol. Getting a serious illness whether that be depression or cancer etc., is non-discriminatory so it tends to happen to as many assholes as nice people and in SVC's case i'd say the illness only amplified his actions not created them.
Quote from: sickbeggar on July 26, 2016, 08:56:37 AMHmmm, having known a few people suffering from depression i'm not sure violence to others is part of most people's symptons and they wouldn't be too pleased to think others thought that they would suddenly attack them at the drop of the hat with or without alcohol. Getting a serious illness whether that be depression or cancer etc., is non-discriminatory so it tends to happen to as many assholes as nice people and in SVC's case i'd say the illness only amplified his actions not created them.Depends on the level of their depression. As I said it will range from a mild irritability to a full on rage that is nigh on impossible to control. It is the illness that is in control and not the individual.
Quote from: peter w on July 27, 2016, 06:01:34 AMQuote from: sickbeggar on July 26, 2016, 08:56:37 AMHmmm, having known a few people suffering from depression i'm not sure violence to others is part of most people's symptons and they wouldn't be too pleased to think others thought that they would suddenly attack them at the drop of the hat with or without alcohol. Getting a serious illness whether that be depression or cancer etc., is non-discriminatory so it tends to happen to as many assholes as nice people and in SVC's case i'd say the illness only amplified his actions not created them.Depends on the level of their depression. As I said it will range from a mild irritability to a full on rage that is nigh on impossible to control. It is the illness that is in control and not the individual.That is such a simplistic thing to say. Lots of people are monumentally depressed and entirely non violent.Randomly violently attacking people is behaviour which sometimes - sometimes - mentally ill people engage in. Depression is a mental illness. You can't just lazily link the two like you have.
Why does collymore never really mention he played for Leicester ! As they win the league thought he may have said more is it coz of his forest love.
Quote from: footyskillz on July 29, 2016, 12:03:05 AMWhy does collymore never really mention he played for Leicester ! As they win the league thought he may have said more is it coz of his forest love.I heard him on Talksport bring up Leicester on many occasions if MON was ever mentioned during conversation. But with Villa being relegated in the same season as Leicester winning it has probably dampened any chit chat about the glorious 11 games he had there.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on July 28, 2016, 09:22:32 PMQuote from: peter w on July 27, 2016, 06:01:34 AMQuote from: sickbeggar on July 26, 2016, 08:56:37 AMHmmm, having known a few people suffering from depression i'm not sure violence to others is part of most people's symptons and they wouldn't be too pleased to think others thought that they would suddenly attack them at the drop of the hat with or without alcohol. Getting a serious illness whether that be depression or cancer etc., is non-discriminatory so it tends to happen to as many assholes as nice people and in SVC's case i'd say the illness only amplified his actions not created them.Depends on the level of their depression. As I said it will range from a mild irritability to a full on rage that is nigh on impossible to control. It is the illness that is in control and not the individual.That is such a simplistic thing to say. Lots of people are monumentally depressed and entirely non violent.Randomly violently attacking people is behaviour which sometimes - sometimes - mentally ill people engage in. Depression is a mental illness. You can't just lazily link the two like you have. That's missing my point. The sufferer doesn't need to become violent; that impulse may show itself as being mild irritability. The catalyst is the inability to deal with whatever it is that has triggered that part of their condition and the inability to control it. For some it may become a violent outburst for others it won't. Not all sufferers have the same level of depression or symptoms that make up their depression.
Quote from: peter w on July 31, 2016, 12:06:27 AMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on July 28, 2016, 09:22:32 PMQuote from: peter w on July 27, 2016, 06:01:34 AMQuote from: sickbeggar on July 26, 2016, 08:56:37 AMHmmm, having known a few people suffering from depression i'm not sure violence to others is part of most people's symptons and they wouldn't be too pleased to think others thought that they would suddenly attack them at the drop of the hat with or without alcohol. Getting a serious illness whether that be depression or cancer etc., is non-discriminatory so it tends to happen to as many assholes as nice people and in SVC's case i'd say the illness only amplified his actions not created them.Depends on the level of their depression. As I said it will range from a mild irritability to a full on rage that is nigh on impossible to control. It is the illness that is in control and not the individual.That is such a simplistic thing to say. Lots of people are monumentally depressed and entirely non violent.Randomly violently attacking people is behaviour which sometimes - sometimes - mentally ill people engage in. Depression is a mental illness. You can't just lazily link the two like you have. That's missing my point. The sufferer doesn't need to become violent; that impulse may show itself as being mild irritability. The catalyst is the inability to deal with whatever it is that has triggered that part of their condition and the inability to control it. For some it may become a violent outburst for others it won't. Not all sufferers have the same level of depression or symptoms that make up their depression. If you want the stats then people experiencing mental health problems are twice as likely to experience violence against them than the general public - if you look at young men under 25 it id four times more likely. So if you have depression it is you that gets the kicking...