1/ Years ago I read a book about hysterical & catatonic nervous breakdowns. It said family & closest friends were often the last to know when people had reached a psychotic state beyond just neurotic behavior.
14
18
4
251
2/ Why? Because the tip into psychosis represents a continuation of someone’s “normal” neurotic behavioral patterns so the closest people don’t recognize when something has gone too far. That’s where America is today. We’ve reached a tipping point but act like we still have time.

Dec 14, 2020 · 10:25 AM UTC

15
16
2
284
Replying to @marwilliamson
Would examples of this neurotic psychosis include: calling half the country Nazi,s, ignoring violence from the left for months, turning a blind eye to all of the allegations of Biden corruption, standing idle while millions are censored by big tech?
Replying to @marwilliamson
Too many American people have become desensitized to a lack of humanitarian concern from our leaders...while other countries look on in horror and disbelief. Sadly-we are no longer seen as the beacon on the hill.
1
5
Replying to @marwilliamson
Our new leader is pretending nothing is wrong(or unaware) and living in the 90s. Most Dems are going along, just like Trumpers following Trump over the cliff.
1
Replying to @marwilliamson
Politicians seem to think that America is so big that it can handle (absorb) anything. So they cheat, lie and steal thinking they are seizing the moment.
Replying to @marwilliamson
The "family & close friends" must bear some culpability in the psychosis then, no? I mean, what kind of father, mother or best friend says nothing to derail psychosis or thinks it's ok to "play along"?
Replying to @marwilliamson
"We’ve reached a tipping point but act like we still have time." --- bizarre and, dare I say, psychotic remark from MW, whose collapse into slavish VBNMW-ism bespeaks nothing but "we have oodles and oodles of TIME! RELAX!"
Replying to @marwilliamson
Psychosis means hallucinations, delusions, like specific symptoms of reality distortion. America probably is psychotic in that sense too though.
1
Replying to @marwilliamson
Unfortunately, it seems like instead of heading into some psychotic break or catatonic fugue state, we're on the brink of a mass psychotic disassotiative episode... ...I'd prefer catatonia.