Arevelion wrote:
It's hard for me to judge how disabled people are through this forum, therefore making it equally hard to know how severe their anosognosia is. What I do know is that in general people, disabled or not, have trouble knowing their true condition. It's like trying to know what your own face looks like without a mirror. It's why it pays to have people you can trust tell you.
And even with a mirror, you don't know what you look like due to the inversion of the image.
I also wonder, Bea and others, what is anosognosia and what is just a coping mechanism to keep from dealing with an overwhelming problem. Is the problem that I can't see/understand what I am doing or is the problem that I can't face it and so keep denying it to the point I don't even know it is there? Is it a skill one could improve upon, like OT or speech makes improvements in ability? If one could improve on this skill, would it be worth the effort?
To your original question, Bea, there do certainly be posters on the forum who are "stuck" in one spot and can't seem to get off it in spite of encouragement and suggestions. But does that mean they actually can't see the problem? Or it is too scary? Or they don't have the skills? Sometimes, the only thing you can do is tread water....
All the I's and you's and they's are editorial and do not refer to anyone in specific. They are generalities.
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The river is the melody
And sky is the refrain - Gordon Lightfoot