Is today's culture making some people crazy?



Is today's culture making some people crazy?
By Sarah Kershaw
New York Times News Service
October 27, 2008


Psychosis in the 21st century looks something like this: You think
your every move is being filmed for a reality television show starring
you, and that everyone in your life is an actor.

Or you think you are under intense surveillance by an army of spies,
whom you refer to as the "www people," as in the World Wide Web, and
they wiretap your furniture and appliances.

Or else you refuse to drink water because you fear that another cup
drawn from your faucet will, once and for all, deplete the world's
water supply.

Those thoughts are from three case studies of what psychiatrists
interested in the intersection of mental illness, culture and society
are calling, respectively, Truman Show delusion, Internet delusion and
climate change delusion; all of them a window, through madness, into
the modern world.

If you have delusions of grandeur in this century, you are probably
not Napoleon, but you may be Bill Gates.

The Truman Show delusion, or Truman Syndrome, has drawn attention in
recent months in the United States and Britain as psychiatrists in
both countries describe a small but growing number of psychotic
patients who describe their lives as mirroring that of the main
character in the 1998 film "The Truman Show."

Played by Jim Carrey, Truman Burbank leads a mundane existence in the
suburbs, starting from the time he was in the womb, while being filmed
for a documentary television show that he cannot escape. Everyone is
in on it, including his wife, and no one will believe Truman when he
discovers clues that his life is being chronicled all the time by
cameras.

With Internet delusion, patients typically incorporate the Internet
into paranoid thoughts, including a fear that the Web is somehow
monitoring or controlling their lives, or being used to transmit
photographs or other personal information.

The delusions are fueling a chicken-and-egg debate in psychiatry: Are
these merely modern examples of classic paranoia fed by the current
cultural landscape, or is there something about media-like reality
television and the Internet that can push people over the sanity line?

"Most likely these people would be delusional anyway," said Dr. Joel
Gold, a psychiatrist at Bellevue Hospital Center in New York, who said
he saw five patients at the hospital from 2002 to 2004 with Truman
Show delusion. Gold and his brother, Dr. Ian Gold, the Canada research
chairman in philosophy and psychiatry at McGill University in
Montreal, came up with the term "Truman Show delusion."

"But the more radical view is that this pushes some people over the
threshold; the environment tips them over the edge," said Joel Gold,
who is a clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at New York
University. "And if culture can make people crazy, then we need to
look at it."

One way of looking at the delusions and hallucinations of the mentally
ill is that they represent extreme cases of what the general
population, or the merely neurotic, are worried about. Schizophrenics
and other paranoid patients can take common fears — like identity
theft because of information transmitted on the Internet, or the loss
of privacy because of the prevalence of security cameras to fight
crime — and magnify them, psychiatrists say.

"There is the old saying that just because you're paranoid doesn't
mean there's not somebody after you," said Dr. Jeffrey A. Lieberman,
chairman of the department of psychiatry at Columbia University.

The prevailing view in psychiatry is that a delusion is just a
delusion, psychosis is psychosis, and the scenery is incidental. Fear,
a sense of persecution and grandiosity are static features of
delusional thinking, many psychiatrists say.

During World War II, for example, psychotics might have believed a
neighbor was a Nazi. During the Cold War, they might have thought the
KGB or CIA was following them. In a post-Sept. 11 world, the
persecutor might be al-Qaida or the Department of Homeland Security.

"Cultural influences don't tell us anything fundamental about
delusion," said Vaughan Bell, a psychologist at the Institute of
Psychiatry at King's College in London, who has studied Internet
delusion.

"We can look at the influence of television, computer games, rock 'n'
roll, but these things don't tell us about new forms of being mentally
ill," said Bell, who said he had also treated patients who believed
they were part of a reality television show.

British psychiatrists, writing in this month's edition of the British
Journal of Psychiatry about the phenomenon, called it the Truman
syndrome and said they had seen a growing number of patients claiming
to be the stars of a filmed reality show.

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders defines a
delusion, considered still to be little understood in psychiatry, as,
essentially, a false belief that is not grounded in reality and that
is held with absolute conviction despite proof to the contrary. The
manual lists a caveat that a belief is not delusional if it is
something widely accepted by other members of a person's culture or
subculture — for example, religious faith. But some psychiatrists say
the exception is too vague.

Some experts studying conditions like Truman Show delusion and other
culture-bound delusions, which are specific to a time or place, are
questioning the premise that culture is only incidental to psychosis,
even as a growing body of evidence has pointed to brain abnormalities
and other biological causes for illnesses like schizophrenia.

Psychiatrists have studied delusions like turabosis, which is the
belief that one is covered in sand, and which has been documented in
Saudi Arabia but would be unlikely to occur in, say, North Dakota.

Another study found a delusion occurring only in rural West Bengal,
India, in which women and men bitten by dogs believe they have become
pregnant with puppies.

Joel Gold, who is writing a book about Truman Show delusion with his
brother, said that three of the five patients he saw with the
condition specifically mentioned the film. He said what distinguishes
this delusion from most others is that it involves the patient's
entire world, and everything real is unreal.

Other delusions are typically narrowly focused — there is a microchip
in my brain, aliens are trying to abduct me, I've been to Mars — and
in those, things that are not real become real.

One of Gold's patients said, "My family and everyone I knew were
actors in a script, a charade whose entire purpose is to make me the
focus of the world's attention."

Another patient traveled to New York City and showed up at a federal
building in downtown Manhattan seeking asylum so he could get off his
reality show, Gold said.

The patient reported that he also came to New York to see if the Twin
Towers were still standing, because he believed that seeing their
destruction on Sept. 11 on television was part of his reality show. If
they were still standing, he said, then he would know that the
terrorist attack was all part of the script.

Psychiatrists say that other movies whose characters are living in an
unreal world or being watched by malevolent forces, including "The
Matrix," "Edtv" and even the film based on George Orwell's "1984,"
have come up in conversations with psychotic patients. But the premise
of "The Truman Show" ("What if you were watched every moment of your
life?" according to a promotional blurb) is strikingly similar to what
patients describe as their own experiences.

Reinforcing their beliefs is the fact that in the movie, Truman is
right about being watched and recorded at all times. Every other
character is part of the conspiracy.

Since the Golds first presented their findings in 2006, they have
learned of about 40 cases of people who say they are experiencing the
delusion or have in the past. Sometimes patients contact them
directly.

Recently, Joel Gold received an e-mail message from a woman who told
him, "It's my show."

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