2011年11月04日
The zombies are here.
They're everywhere. I saw three yesterday. They are pretty docile as far as I can tell, but who knows when or if they are going to suddenly turn into vicious killers?
Zombies look almost the same as regular people, but becoming a zombie is a process which can take weeks, months or even years. In the early stages only the eyes give it away, but upon becoming fully-fledged zombies they reveal what they are by their dress sense, their mannerisms, their actions and of course by their eyes.
Ten years ago Amami was virtually free of the "living-dead," but nowadays one cannot travel through town without spotting at least one. Those poor tormented souls trapped in living tissue and trying to function as normal human beings... .
Who are they? You might ask. To that I would respond that they are those individuals who are taking regular psychiatric medication. Being considered to come from a family with a record of a diagnosed mental illness has traditionally meant that it is highly likely to mean you will be allowed only limited contact with people who are from families which haven't.
People taking pharmaceutical concoctions as well as being diagnosed as suffering from a mental problem must surely be considered along the lines one would be avoided if one were to have leprosy? Well, to me that last statement seems fairly logical. However, to the contrary, people appear to be queuing up to get medicated due to having some perceived cognitive or emotional imbalance.
There's a whole family on psychoactive medication just a few houses up from me. Every time I see them it's like watching a slow-motion replay. Everything seems to be a routine for them. The two adult daughters walk the dog at the same time every day, they go shopping at the same time every day. The older adult son leaves home and arrives at the same time and always with the same double toot of the horn on his scooter. Their father rides a bicycle. He rides it with his head facing downwards and I think he can only see what's just in front of his front wheel. - But they are harmless.
There was a neighbourhood dog which seemed to like one of the daughters a few months ago. The dog wasn't in the least bit aggressive, and was walking behind her. I didn't realize at first, but the woman was actually panicking as she seemed to act as if the dog was attacking her. Due to the meds she was on, she wasn't able to move quickly, so she kind-of "ran" towards her house. To my eyes it was like watching someone run in slow-motion because she had widened her stride as one would when running, but she was moving her legs at the same pace as she did when she was walking. And the screams! ... The dog was only wagging its tail and walking so as to keep up with her, but she was trying to scream. The sound which she emitted was around the level of someone talking just above a whisper. To be sure, I felt sorry for her. I wondered what horror it must be inside her head as her redundant neurons must be at play creating a nightmare scenario in her otherwise numbed mind.
Psychoactive pharmaceuticals are the new religion. They are far more dangerous to the user than the Soka Gakkai or some other secretive and suspicious cult. The issue of clinical psychology has only very recently emerged from being considered by other (alleged) doctors as a quack science, with quack doctors running it. However psychoactive pharmaceuticals are an incredible money-spinner, and the drug companies are raking in immense fortunes from the sale, distribution and use of the drugs, and there are quite a few industries which have risen alongside the broadening mental-health clinics.
In Amami there is a place called the Amami Hospital. It is situated in Koshuku. A dozen years ago it seemed pretty empty there, with some long-stay patients, who seemed to comprise of mostly recovering alcoholics. Now that hospital is huge! It's been rebuilt so that now it is at least four times the size it used to be, and it's four storeys high. The curious thing is that the hospital is doing a roaring trade, and I hear on the grapevine they'd like to make it even bigger.
... So how come Amami Hospital has managed to find hundreds or thousands of people who are mentally ill enough to stay in a hospital? Well they found them because the drug industry wants to make more profits. Once they get people started taking psychoactive medication then they're on a slippery slope and the chances are that the person taking the prescribed drugs will be unable to stop using them, so the manufacturers of the psychoactive drugs will have a customer for life.
But it isn't only a case of profits as far as the establishment goes. People taking psychoactive meds require all sorts of assistance and support, so the government is able to create new industries, which will of course pay taxes and undoubtedly also pay bribes.
I have it on very good authority that these charletan drug-pushers are targeting younger and younger people. Of course this makes good business sense - consider getting elementary school kids hooked on methadone or heroin:- those kids ordinarily won't be able to escape, and they'll need to be monitored and controlled until they expire. I feel that psychoactive pharmaceuticals are every bit as dangerous as heroin or methodone insomuch as they wreck the user's mind and body, and that the users are useless to society as well as to themselves.
All the schools here in Amami have personal records of their students. The information isn't supposed to be for public perusal, but the system isn't perfect, so that it can easily become open knowledge if a student is receiving psychoactive medication or is diagnosed with a mental illness. The existence of personal records of students isn't in itself necessarily a bad thing, but what is troubling is that the files of these students are multiplying like the proverbial rabbit.
In most cases a victim of the quack science of clinical psychology will begin his decline through prescribed medication with perhaps a small and virtually innoccuous course of sedatives or sleeping pills. From there the user will inevitably expand his or her prescription with various pills to counter the contraindications of the previously prescribed meds. These pills which are intended to alleviate unwanted symptoms of a previously prescribed drug will earn their own meds to counter the deletarious effects that they inflict. It's a slippery slope ... once you get on the slippery slope it gets more and more difficult to get off it, and at some stage resistance is futile and you go sliding down at full-speed, and only aether is at the end.
There are many people who are obviously taking psychoactive medication, and the numbers are sky-rocketing. When you see these people you can sense there's something not-quite-right about them. Upon closer inspection you'll see it's the eyes! They don't look "at" you, they seem to look "through" you. Then it's the clothes ... People who have been on "meds" for a time seem to dress in drab colours, and the shape of the clothes is unflattering - (they don't seem to care).
After several months on psychoactive medication, the user's face will appear flatter - sort-of like a Down's syndrome sufferer. When the user has reached the stage of his or her appearance becoming clearly retarded then his or hers days of being free to walk the streets are severely numbered. Once the user is no longer able to function as a taxpayer he or she will likely move in to Amami Hospital, where they will end their days in a long-drawn-out state of mental incapacity and confusion.
The sales from psychoactive pharmaceuticals are astronomical, so the salesmen who peddle them are the sharpest out there. The profits from mental health meds are such that if one is approached for the purpose of administering drugs, then the average targeted person is at a disadvantage.
Consider a few of the most bizarre murders we've had here in Japan in the past decade or so. That guy in Tokyo who stabbed shoppers - the boy who had his severed head mounted on the school wall - the bus-jacking - the man who knifed those elementary school kids! How about a case which is closer to home here in Amami? A woman tried to kill her two kids and one managed to survive. What is the common factor in all of these cases? They were all taking prescribed psychoactive pharmaceuticals. They became psychotic due to their mind becoming damaged by the drugs. They could commit such attrocious crimes because their consciences had been disabled. Their perceptions had become dangerously distorted.
Prescribed psychoactive pharmaceuticals often cause the users' characters to become pardoxically opposed to their pre-medicated state. So in other words, a gentle person might become an aggressive person, and an emotionally warm and sensitive person might become cold. There is no doubt in my mind through research and observation that using psychoactive medication which effectively moderates or otherwise affects the function of the brain is effectively destroying that person. After the drugs have had long enough to do their work, the user is to all intents and purposes a different person insomuch as he or she has a different character.
Clinical psychology is a scam. It's a money-making scam which thrives off of destroying lives, and it is supported by people without a functioning human conscience or the (willingly or otherwise) ignorant.
If you are taking psychoactive meds then my sincere advice to you is to empty all the packets of pills and flush them down the lavatory right now and go cold-turkey until you can return to your normal life. If you don't, then the chances are high that you will just virtually disappear.
If you know someone whose eyes are glassy, their face pudgy, and their hands are getting fatter with squarer palms, with nails which appear to be flat or even spoon-shaped, then it might be too late, but better late than never, and the brain has a remarkable capacity for regeneration and repair, so providing there are sufficient redundant neurons floating about there is a significant chance for improvement and recovery.
DRUGS! Just say NO!
Zombies look almost the same as regular people, but becoming a zombie is a process which can take weeks, months or even years. In the early stages only the eyes give it away, but upon becoming fully-fledged zombies they reveal what they are by their dress sense, their mannerisms, their actions and of course by their eyes.
Ten years ago Amami was virtually free of the "living-dead," but nowadays one cannot travel through town without spotting at least one. Those poor tormented souls trapped in living tissue and trying to function as normal human beings... .
Who are they? You might ask. To that I would respond that they are those individuals who are taking regular psychiatric medication. Being considered to come from a family with a record of a diagnosed mental illness has traditionally meant that it is highly likely to mean you will be allowed only limited contact with people who are from families which haven't.
People taking pharmaceutical concoctions as well as being diagnosed as suffering from a mental problem must surely be considered along the lines one would be avoided if one were to have leprosy? Well, to me that last statement seems fairly logical. However, to the contrary, people appear to be queuing up to get medicated due to having some perceived cognitive or emotional imbalance.
There's a whole family on psychoactive medication just a few houses up from me. Every time I see them it's like watching a slow-motion replay. Everything seems to be a routine for them. The two adult daughters walk the dog at the same time every day, they go shopping at the same time every day. The older adult son leaves home and arrives at the same time and always with the same double toot of the horn on his scooter. Their father rides a bicycle. He rides it with his head facing downwards and I think he can only see what's just in front of his front wheel. - But they are harmless.
There was a neighbourhood dog which seemed to like one of the daughters a few months ago. The dog wasn't in the least bit aggressive, and was walking behind her. I didn't realize at first, but the woman was actually panicking as she seemed to act as if the dog was attacking her. Due to the meds she was on, she wasn't able to move quickly, so she kind-of "ran" towards her house. To my eyes it was like watching someone run in slow-motion because she had widened her stride as one would when running, but she was moving her legs at the same pace as she did when she was walking. And the screams! ... The dog was only wagging its tail and walking so as to keep up with her, but she was trying to scream. The sound which she emitted was around the level of someone talking just above a whisper. To be sure, I felt sorry for her. I wondered what horror it must be inside her head as her redundant neurons must be at play creating a nightmare scenario in her otherwise numbed mind.
Psychoactive pharmaceuticals are the new religion. They are far more dangerous to the user than the Soka Gakkai or some other secretive and suspicious cult. The issue of clinical psychology has only very recently emerged from being considered by other (alleged) doctors as a quack science, with quack doctors running it. However psychoactive pharmaceuticals are an incredible money-spinner, and the drug companies are raking in immense fortunes from the sale, distribution and use of the drugs, and there are quite a few industries which have risen alongside the broadening mental-health clinics.
In Amami there is a place called the Amami Hospital. It is situated in Koshuku. A dozen years ago it seemed pretty empty there, with some long-stay patients, who seemed to comprise of mostly recovering alcoholics. Now that hospital is huge! It's been rebuilt so that now it is at least four times the size it used to be, and it's four storeys high. The curious thing is that the hospital is doing a roaring trade, and I hear on the grapevine they'd like to make it even bigger.
... So how come Amami Hospital has managed to find hundreds or thousands of people who are mentally ill enough to stay in a hospital? Well they found them because the drug industry wants to make more profits. Once they get people started taking psychoactive medication then they're on a slippery slope and the chances are that the person taking the prescribed drugs will be unable to stop using them, so the manufacturers of the psychoactive drugs will have a customer for life.
But it isn't only a case of profits as far as the establishment goes. People taking psychoactive meds require all sorts of assistance and support, so the government is able to create new industries, which will of course pay taxes and undoubtedly also pay bribes.
I have it on very good authority that these charletan drug-pushers are targeting younger and younger people. Of course this makes good business sense - consider getting elementary school kids hooked on methadone or heroin:- those kids ordinarily won't be able to escape, and they'll need to be monitored and controlled until they expire. I feel that psychoactive pharmaceuticals are every bit as dangerous as heroin or methodone insomuch as they wreck the user's mind and body, and that the users are useless to society as well as to themselves.
All the schools here in Amami have personal records of their students. The information isn't supposed to be for public perusal, but the system isn't perfect, so that it can easily become open knowledge if a student is receiving psychoactive medication or is diagnosed with a mental illness. The existence of personal records of students isn't in itself necessarily a bad thing, but what is troubling is that the files of these students are multiplying like the proverbial rabbit.
In most cases a victim of the quack science of clinical psychology will begin his decline through prescribed medication with perhaps a small and virtually innoccuous course of sedatives or sleeping pills. From there the user will inevitably expand his or her prescription with various pills to counter the contraindications of the previously prescribed meds. These pills which are intended to alleviate unwanted symptoms of a previously prescribed drug will earn their own meds to counter the deletarious effects that they inflict. It's a slippery slope ... once you get on the slippery slope it gets more and more difficult to get off it, and at some stage resistance is futile and you go sliding down at full-speed, and only aether is at the end.
There are many people who are obviously taking psychoactive medication, and the numbers are sky-rocketing. When you see these people you can sense there's something not-quite-right about them. Upon closer inspection you'll see it's the eyes! They don't look "at" you, they seem to look "through" you. Then it's the clothes ... People who have been on "meds" for a time seem to dress in drab colours, and the shape of the clothes is unflattering - (they don't seem to care).
After several months on psychoactive medication, the user's face will appear flatter - sort-of like a Down's syndrome sufferer. When the user has reached the stage of his or her appearance becoming clearly retarded then his or hers days of being free to walk the streets are severely numbered. Once the user is no longer able to function as a taxpayer he or she will likely move in to Amami Hospital, where they will end their days in a long-drawn-out state of mental incapacity and confusion.
The sales from psychoactive pharmaceuticals are astronomical, so the salesmen who peddle them are the sharpest out there. The profits from mental health meds are such that if one is approached for the purpose of administering drugs, then the average targeted person is at a disadvantage.
Consider a few of the most bizarre murders we've had here in Japan in the past decade or so. That guy in Tokyo who stabbed shoppers - the boy who had his severed head mounted on the school wall - the bus-jacking - the man who knifed those elementary school kids! How about a case which is closer to home here in Amami? A woman tried to kill her two kids and one managed to survive. What is the common factor in all of these cases? They were all taking prescribed psychoactive pharmaceuticals. They became psychotic due to their mind becoming damaged by the drugs. They could commit such attrocious crimes because their consciences had been disabled. Their perceptions had become dangerously distorted.
Prescribed psychoactive pharmaceuticals often cause the users' characters to become pardoxically opposed to their pre-medicated state. So in other words, a gentle person might become an aggressive person, and an emotionally warm and sensitive person might become cold. There is no doubt in my mind through research and observation that using psychoactive medication which effectively moderates or otherwise affects the function of the brain is effectively destroying that person. After the drugs have had long enough to do their work, the user is to all intents and purposes a different person insomuch as he or she has a different character.
Clinical psychology is a scam. It's a money-making scam which thrives off of destroying lives, and it is supported by people without a functioning human conscience or the (willingly or otherwise) ignorant.
If you are taking psychoactive meds then my sincere advice to you is to empty all the packets of pills and flush them down the lavatory right now and go cold-turkey until you can return to your normal life. If you don't, then the chances are high that you will just virtually disappear.
If you know someone whose eyes are glassy, their face pudgy, and their hands are getting fatter with squarer palms, with nails which appear to be flat or even spoon-shaped, then it might be too late, but better late than never, and the brain has a remarkable capacity for regeneration and repair, so providing there are sufficient redundant neurons floating about there is a significant chance for improvement and recovery.
DRUGS! Just say NO!