But if your service is providing care for people with brain damage, consider teaching staff to tolerate odd or rude behaviour
Whilst I don't agree with that, it made it very clear that the person I was dealing with was not the person he really was & I had sympathy.
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There are also famous examples of people doing horrifically bad things bc of neurological disorders.
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Yes. I watched a documentary on the number of violent criminals who had frontal lobe damaged - often caused by shaking as a baby.
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Included a kind, well-loved dentist who attacked a child in his chair & then the brain tumour in his frontal lobe was found.
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Holy shit, I'd never seen all these but read the notes in this section: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Whitman#Events_leading_to_the_shooting … Literally made me shiver.
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So desperately sad. If only he'd gone to police.
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He did go to a psychiatrist. And told about his anger. Yet nothing. Smh
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Oh god!
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It's why I feel being critical of your field is so important. He is not a single case.
End of conversation
New conversation -
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Yes. Sympathie can be easier. I struggle with that sometimes. When didn't feel that, I tried to reach for my literature. Rationalise.
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