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Chapter 1 What's Crazy Like Us Book by Ethan Watters"Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche" is a book written by Ethan Watters. In this book, Watters explores the cultural impact of exporting Western ideas about mental illness and treatment to other countries. He argues that the globalization of American psychological concepts and treatment methods has cultural and societal consequences, often disregarding the influence of local beliefs, values, and practices related to mental health. Watters challenges the notion of a universal understanding and experience of mental illness, pointing out the dangers of imposing Western perspectives on mental health in diverse cultural contexts.In "Crazy Like Us," Watters specifically examines the influence of American psychology and psychiatric interventions following natural disasters, such as the 2004 tsunami in Sri Lanka, the 2008 earthquake in China, and the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. He sheds light on how Western concepts of mental health and trauma care can shape and alter local understanding, exacerbating or overlooking certain issues while imposing Western treatment models.The book serves as a critique of the homogenization of mental health treatment practices and a call for cultural sensitivity and awareness in addressing mental health globally. Watters argues that recovering societies should be empowered to preserve their unique cultural approaches to mental health and support systems.Chapter 2 Is Crazy Like Us Book A Good Book"Crazy Like Us" by Ethan Watters is generally well-regarded as a thought-provoking and insightful book. It explores how Western cultural ideas about mental illness have been exported and imposed on other countries, potentially influencing their understanding and treatment of mental health. It challenges some preconceived notions about mental illness and raises important questions about cultural diversity and the globalization of Western norms. Ultimately, whether it is a good book or not depends on your personal interests and perspectives.Chapter 3 Crazy Like Us Book by Ethan Watters Summary"Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche" is a book written by Ethan Watters. It explores the impact of Western cultural narratives and the spread of Western mental health concepts on other cultures around the world.The book argues that Western notions of mental illness and the way they are treated have become increasingly globalized, influencing and sometimes eclipsing native practices and beliefs about mental health. Watters focuses on four case studies, each representing a different region or country and examining how Western psychological theories and treatments have been adopted.The first case study takes place in Japan and explores the rise of eating disorders and self-harm among young Japanese women, which Watters argues can be attributed to the influence of Western media and an increasingly individualistic society. Watters also looks at the medicalization of mental health in Sri Lanka after the 2004 tsunami, demonstrating how Western approaches overshadowed traditional healing practices and created cultural conflict.The next case study takes place in Zanzibar, Tanzania, where Watters examines the introduction of Western models of depression treatment. He argues that this approach ignored the cultural context and spiritual beliefs of the local population, ultimately leading to limited effectiveness. Finally, Watters discusses the exportation of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) to other countries, particularly Cambodia, exploring how Western trauma narratives were not always relevant or helpful for those experiencing different cultural traumas.Throughout the book, Watters challenges...
What are you grateful for? No doubt you will be asked that question once or twice in the coming week, as Thanksgiving is just around the corner. This is an important question to answer when it comes to living a generous life. But there's one other question that's just as important: "What breaks your heart?" We wrap up our series, Crazy Like Us, and explore the power of these two questions to reframe our lives around generosity and make us happier.
From the earliest beginnings of the church through modern days, people have sometimes seen Christians as "crazy." During the first century, though, it wasn't for the reasons you may think. What if we could be more like these early believers? Let's find out what should actually spark culture's curiosity about Christians.
Generosity requires a plan. But how do you make a plan? These two simple gauges will help you decide where and how much to give.
We all worry about money. What if we don’t have enough? What if we lose what we have? This simple shift in perspective can free you from financial worries.
Tis' the season to be grateful! As November begins and a true "Texas Fall" is upon us, it's more than Christmas decorations that begin to surface around us. A sense of gratitude seems more readily accessible in our everyday lives during this season. Join us in the coming weeks as we dive into how gratitude keeps us grounded in our faith and purpose.
We discuss the review of the book Crazy Like Us Also the highlights from the comments of the review Quick single-line spoiler for ep 3 of Loki occurs at 41:52 and lasts for ~20 seconds. Discussed in the show: The … Continue reading →
https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/highlights-from-the-comments-on-crazy Some good discussion of PTSD, culminating in a link to the ACOUP blog, which says: I cannot speak for all pre-modern, ancient or medieval armies. But for the periods where I have read a wide chunk of the primary source material, I'd say there is vanishingly little evidence that people in the ancient Mediterranean or medieval Europe experienced PTSD from combat experience in the way that modern soldiers do. That is often not the impression that you would get from a quick google search (though it does seem to be the general consensus of the range of ancient military historians I know) and that goes back to arguments ex silentio. A quick google search will turn up any number of articles written by folks who are generally not professional historians declaring that PTSD was an observed phenomenon in the deep past, citing the same small handful of debatable examples. But one thing you learn very rapidly as a historian is that if you go into a large evidence-base looking for something, you will find it. […] I think the evidence strongly suggests that ancient combatants did not experience PTSD as we do now. The problem is that the evidence of silence leads us with few tools with which to answer why. One answer might be that it existed and they do not tell us – because it was considered shameful or cowardly, perhaps. Except that they do tell us about other cowardly or shameful things. And the loss and damage of war – death, captivity, refugees, wounds, the lot of it – are prominent motifs in Greek, Roman and European Medieval literature. War is not uniformly white-washed in these texts – not every medieval writer is Bertran. We can't rule out some lacuna in the tradition, but given just how many wails and moans of grief and loss there are in the corpus it seems profoundly unlikely. I think we have to assume that it isn't in the sources because they did not experience it or at least did not recognize the experience of it.
https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/book-review-crazy-like-us We talk a lot about falling biodiversity. Sometimes we apply the same metaphor to the human world, eg “falling linguistic biodiversity" when minority languages get replaced by English or whatever. In Crazy Like Us, Ethan Watters sounds the alarm about falling psychiatric biodiversity. Along with all the usual effects of globalization, everyone is starting to have the same mental illnesses, and to understand them in the same way. This is bad insofar as greater diversity of mental illness could teach us something about the process that generates them, and greater diversity of frameworks and responses could teach us something about how to treat them. He makes his point through four case studies, starting with: I. Anorexia In Hong Kong Until the 1990s, there was almost no anorexia in Hong Kong. There were lots of patriarchal beauty standards, everyone was very obsessed with being thin, but anorexia as a disease was basically unknown. At least this is the claim of Sing Lee, a Hong Kong psychiatrist who studied in the West. He learned about anorexia during his training in Britain, then went back to Hong Kong prepared to treat it. He couldn't find anybody. He tried really hard! He put out feelers, asking if anyone knew anybody who was having some kind of psychiatric problem where they were starving themselves. With apologies for the unintended offensive pun - nobody bit.
For decades, the definitions and treatments of mental illness exported by the United States have become international standards, and the result is a gradual flattening and homogenizing of the landscape of the human psyche around the world. The book points out that each mental illness varies with its culture and beliefs, and that the existence of such differences should not be ignored. The author expresses his concerns about the adoption of standardized criteria for the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness and reveals the ambition of drug companies to promote universal disease categories for profit.
The life and character of Jesus could be described with one word: generosity. He was generous toward people who were nothing like him and who could give him nothing in return. Now we have been called to love others exactly how Jesus has loved us. The most powerful expression of that love is no strings attached generosity. But it is not natural. It is not common. In fact, it is a little crazy. But if we learn how to be generous it has the power to change everything. In this series will launch our annual Generosity Campaign where we Give, Serve, and Love our community with no strings attached. Do not miss it.
The life and character of Jesus could be described with one word: generosity. He was generous toward people who were nothing like him and who could give him nothing in return. Now we have been called to love others exactly how Jesus has loved us. The most powerful expression of that love is no strings attached generosity. But it is not natural. It is not common. In fact, it is a little crazy. But if we learn how to be generous it has the power to change everything. In this series will launch our annual Generosity Campaign where we Give, Serve, and Love our community with no strings attached. Do not miss it.
The life and character of Jesus could be described with one word: generosity. He was generous toward people who were nothing like him and who could give him nothing in return. Now we have been called to love others exactly how Jesus has loved us. The most powerful expression of that love is no strings attached generosity. But it is not natural. It is not common. In fact, it is a little crazy. But if we learn how to be generous it has the power to change everything. In this series will launch our annual Generosity Campaign where we Give, Serve, and Love our community with no strings attached. Do not miss it.
Generosity requires a plan. But how do you make a plan? These two simple gauges will help you decide where and how much to give.
Generosity requires a plan. But how do you make a plan? These two simple gauges will help you decide where and how much to give.
You know how to give. Everyone gives something somewhere. We define our generosity by our random acts of goodness. But generosity is more than that. Generosity is the premeditated, calculated, designated emancipation of personal financial assets.
We all worry about money. What if we don't have enough? What if we lose what we have? This simple shift in perspective can free you from financial worries.
Everyone gives something somewhere. But there’s a difference between random acts of giving and true generosity. The good news is, it’s possible to learn how to be generous.
Everyone gives something somewhere. But there’s a difference between random acts of giving and true generosity. The good news is, it’s possible to learn how to be generous.
Critical psychiatrist joins us to explore the history and development of psychiatric medication, why there is little, if any, evidence to support the idea that psychiatric medication is correcting a “chemical imbalance” or any other underlying cause of mental illness, why the disease-centred model of mental health issues is both misleading and disempowering to service users, and ultimately, why much of the “science” supporting psychiatric medication is based more on ideology than evidence. *** PATREON *** https://patreon.com/myownworstenemy *** BOOKS MENTIONED *** "The Myth of the Chemical Cure" by Joanna Moncrieff https://amzn.to/2MxG5po "A Straight Talking Guide to Psychiatric Drugs" by Joanna Moncrieff https://amzn.to/2nlq6j9 "The Bitterest Pills" by Joanna Moncrieff https://amzn.to/2vwpgob "A Woman in Berlin" by Anonymous https://amzn.to/2Miosgc "Das Kapital (Capital Vol. 1)" by Karl Marx https://amzn.to/2KL9cnv "Manufacturing Depression" by Gary Greenberg https://amzn.to/2MiOTCt "Crazy Like Us" by Ethan Watters https://amzn.to/2MBZLZ6 *** SOCIAL MEDIA *** Facebook: http://facebook.com/myownworstenemyorg Twitter: http://twitter.com/dannydwhittaker *** CREDITS *** Theme Music: Falling Down by Ryan Little http://youtube.com/user/TheR4C2010 Podcast Image: IGypsyWoman https://flic.kr/p/NtCRK3 DISCLAIMER: My Own Worst Enemy is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk and affiliated sites.
We all think we are. Few of us actually are. Everyone can be, and if they were it would change everything. It's not natural. It's not common. It's not intuitive. In fact, it's a little crazy.Support the show (http://www.momentumchurch.org/give)
Last week we started a sermon series called "Crazy Like Us." This series explores the topic of Generosity, started by discussing some myths about Generosity. This week we discussed behaviours and choices around being generous. Join us next week as we wrap up the series with a video sermon from Pastor Andy Stanley of North Point Church.
Last week we started a sermon series called "Crazy Like Us." This series explores the topic of Generosity, started by discussing some myths about Generosity. This week we discussed behaviours and choices around being generous. Join us next week as we wrap up the series with a video sermon from Pastor Andy Stanley of North Point Church.
We all think we are. Few of us actually are. Everyone can be, and if they were it would change everything. It's not natural. It's not common. It's not intuitive. In fact, it's a little crazy.Support the show (http://www.momentumchurch.org/give)
This week we start a sermon series called "Crazy Like Us." This series explores the topic of Generosity, starting by discussing some myths about Generosity. Join us next week as we continue the discussion.
This week we start a sermon series called "Crazy Like Us." This series explores the topic of Generosity, starting by discussing some myths about Generosity. Join us next week as we continue the discussion.
We all think we are. Few of us actually are. Everyone can be, and if they were it would change everything. It's not natural. It's not common. It's not intuitive. In fact, it's a little crazy.Support the show (http://www.momentumchurch.org/give)
We started the "Faith Steps" sermon series by discussing the topic of Baptism. If you'd like to be baptized we welcome you to contact either one of our pastors, or any of the church Elders, who would be happy to help you prepare for the celebration service June 24th. Two weeks ago we continued the series discussing the topic of Community. Last week we discussed the practice of Communion. This week we wrap up the series discussing the topic of prayer. Join us next week as we start a new sermon series titled Crazy Like Us.
We started the "Faith Steps" sermon series by discussing the topic of Baptism. If you'd like to be baptized we welcome you to contact either one of our pastors, or any of the church Elders, who would be happy to help you prepare for the celebration service June 24th. Two weeks ago we continued the series discussing the topic of Community. Last week we discussed the practice of Communion. This week we wrap up the series discussing the topic of prayer. Join us next week as we start a new sermon series titled Crazy Like Us.
We all think we are. Few of us actually are. Everyone can be, and if they were it would change everything. It's not natural. It's not common. It's not intuitive. In fact, it's a little crazy. Support the show (http://www.momentumchurch.org/give)
We all think we are. Few of us actually are. Everyone can be, and if they were it would change everything. It's not natural. It's not common. It's not intuitive. In fact, it's a little crazy.Support the show (http://www.momentumchurch.org/give)
Pastor Matt Keller Next Level Church
Pastor Matt Keller Next Level Church
Pastor Matt, Pastor Sarah, Will and Drew Keller Next Level Church
Pastor Matt, Pastor Sarah, Will and Drew Keller Next Level Church
Pastor Sarah Keller Next Level Church
Pastor Sarah Keller Next Level Church
Pastor Matt Keller Next Level Church
Pastor Matt Keller Next Level Church
In our third and final part of this series Crazy Like Us, we see practical solutions to making generosity a premeditated, calculated and designated part of our lives.
Everyone knows how to do generosity, but few of us know how to be generous. In the first of our Crazy Like Us series, we discuss what comes natural when it comes to our finances, and generosity
Message from Kent Jacobs on Nov 20, 2016
Message from Kent Jacobs on Nov 13, 2016
Message from Jake Rainwater on Nov 6, 2016
Crazy Like Us Support the show (https://www.vineyardcincinnati.com/give)
Crazy Like Us Support the show (https://www.vineyardcincinnati.com/give)
Crazy Like Us Support the show (https://www.vineyardcincinnati.com/give)
New Life Christian Fellowship
New Life Christian Fellowship
New Life Christian Fellowship
Generosity requires a plan. But how do you make a plan? In this message, Forrest Jenan provides simple gauges to help you decide where and how much to give.
We all worry about money. What if we don't have enough? What if we lose what we have? This simple shift in perspective can free you from financial worries.
Everyone gives something somewhere. But there's a difference between random acts of giving and true generosity. The good news is, it's possible to learn how to be generous.