Why DELUSIONS OF GRANDEUR Does Not Apply To Me

 




On paper I check all the boxes.
AI Overview
Delusions of grandeur are fixed, false beliefs of superior intelligence, fame, power, or special identity, often rooted in serious mental health conditions like bipolar disorder or schizophrenia. Symptoms include claiming divine powers, immense wealth, or secret relationships with elites, which are impervious to reality. Treatment involves antipsychotic medication and therapy.
Symptoms of Delusions of Grandeur Individuals with grandiosity may exhibit:
  • False Beliefs of Importance: Believing they are deities, celebrities, or historical figures.
  • Supernatural/Special Talents: Conviction that they have unique powers (e.g., mind reading, immortality).
  • Secret Relationships: Claiming intimate contact with world leaders or royalty.
  • Inflated Self-Worth: A complete lack of self-doubt and disregard for reality.
  • Resistance to Evidence: Becoming upset, hostile, or dismissive when challenged.
Conditions Associated with Delusions of Grandeur These delusions are rarely a standalone diagnosis but are associated with:
  • Bipolar Disorder: Often occurring during manic episodes, which include high energy and impulsivity.
  • Schizophrenia: A, common symptom for many with this diagnosis.
  • Delusional Disorder (Grandiose Type): Persistent false beliefs without other major psychotic symptoms.
  • Dementia or Brain Injury: Some organic brain conditions can cause these beliefs.
Causes and Underlying Factors While not fully understood, causes include:
  • Neurochemical imbalances: Changes in brain chemistry linked to psychosis.
  • Mental Illness: Primarily driven by schizophrenia, mania, and bipolar disorder.
  • Psychological Defense: Acting as a mechanism to compensate for deep-seated insecurity or low self-esteem.
Types of Grandiose Delusions
  • Religious/Messianic: Believing one is a chosen prophet or god.
  • Famous Identity: Believing one is a famous person.
  • Special Ability/Discovery: Thinking one has invented something groundbreaking or possesses unique intelligence.
  • Wealth/Power: Falsely believing one has absolute power or infinite money.
Diagnosis and Treatment
  • Diagnosis: Conducted by psychiatrists or mental health professionals, based on clinical interviews and exclusion of other causes.
  • Treatment: Generally involves antipsychotic medications, antipsychotic medication, and psychotherapy, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), to challenge distorted thinking.



I have been diagnosed with this FIVE times between applying for SSI (if one can exploit a BS diagnosis, why not? I was turned down 3 times), being sent to rehab and jail...

If only it were that simple.

If I were stupid and short and fat and ugly then the diagnosis would be valid.

The diagnosis hinges on the word UNFOUNDED.

 My claims are founded. Read the other blogs.

Interestingly, despite this diagnosis no effort was ever made to correct my "delusions".

IRL I am a totally reasonable, coherent, kind, and functional human.

Only one person has accused me of being bipolar, but he is a male karen geezer cunt gangstalker, also a hoarder and malignant narcissist - fuck you, Joe.

My "Messiah Complex" is not rooted in a chemical imbalance, endogenous or self-imposed. In 1996 I had no sycophant AI to encourage me




 I voluntarily went to a shrink in Ithaca out of due diligence shortly after my revelatory vision. I saw Dr. Brink, who told me I had cannabis-induced psychosis. 

Go home and drink your 🍷, bitch. Cannabis saved my life...and metal


Pop psychiatry has no business here in the first place.

By their standards ANYBODY that accepts the reality of God and Spiritual Realms should receive the same diagnosis.

I would welcome a THREE CHRISTS OF YPSILANTI
kind of encounter.




I know of 2 more to round it out.






The difference between me and these nutjobs is a matter of fulfilling prophecy, of being a "genius" and asshole 😚



Now you could argue that I am bragging about being handsome and smart and therefore that is indicative of a Narcissist Disorder. OTHER people tell me that! 

If anything I'm the opposite of a narc, I'm a megalomaniac. I don't need external validation...

Obviously the claim in and of itself is patently insane but...

SOMEBODY has to be the guy.

Who gets to qualify my claims? A Shrink? A Rabbinical Council? Fox News?

The Higher Ups in The Program don't think I'm crazy 😂




As long as we're throwing around mental, I accuse all you NPCs of 


Delusions of Mediocrity


You think the secular / matrix reality is the 

be all, end all.

You wallow in polyticks, sports, gossip...

You keep up with the Jones'...

You are sure to ask your doctor...

You bitch about how your kid was bullied at 

school but feed it junk food and pharmies, 

same as the bully's parents.

Your kid is named Harper or Jayden.

Your pet is named Luna.

Your reality bubble does not extend past your

phone.

You heard someone add a K to their "ing" and now

you too are fuckingk annoyingk.

Your biggest flex is having a loud truck.

You probably use Glade products.

You line up for, and battle other adults for cubes 

of goo





You basic bitch! 

Planning for a future that 

will never happen. You never read ingredient 

labels. You mock "conspiracy theorists" and 

bend over for your shots...


...and I'm the crazy one!






I have had brief periods of madness - after my child was kidnapped, after my fiance cheated on me, after my sister had me arrested...

Y'know, AFTER I was deliberately provoked. NORMAL human reactions.

We all know about the fine line between creativity and madness. (still not clear on what that word means specifically...) 

Nobody questions my creativity.


In this book



It is suggested a NORMAL man is not sufficient for leadership in times of crisis.

Historians have long puzzled over the apparent mental instability of great and terrible leaders alike: Napoleon, Lincoln, Churchill, Hitler, and others. In A First-Rate Madness, Nassir Ghaemi, director of the Mood Disorders Program at Tufts Medical Center, offers a myth-shattering exploration of the powerful connections between mental illness and leadership and sets forth a controversial, compelling thesis: The very qualities that mark those with mood disorders also make for the best leaders in times of crisis. From the importance of Lincoln's "depressive realism" to the lackluster leadership of exceedingly sane men as Neville Chamberlain, A First-Rate Madness overturns many of our most cherished perceptions about greatness and the mind.

The eschaton is about as crisisy as it gets 😜

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