Friday, March 20, 2020
Free Essays on Society;s View Of Mental Illness
, society is uncomfortable talking about or accepting mental illness. People constantly turn the other way or refuse to learn about or get to know a person if they have a mental disorder. First of all, we must ask ourselves: What is crazy? Cuomo and Ronacher (1998) say that people are called mentally healthy when they like their behaviour and that people are considered mentally unhealthy if their behaviour is ââ¬Å"unacceptableâ⬠or if they donââ¬â¢t like the way that the person acts. Both the common person and psychiatrists judge or diagnose mental illness this way. Macdonald (2003) says that most of the time with mental illness, there is no medical proof, no evidence that there is anything wrong with you. Macdonald has Psychosis and low-grade Schizophrenia. He says that when he was diagnosed with these diseases, he had CAT scans and blood tests, among many other tests, but in actually being diagnosed, all that doctors can do is ask a series of questions to the patient and make a guess based on the responses that they get. Basically, you are diagnosed by opinion and not by actual medicine. He sometimes wonders if there is no suck thing as crazy, mayb e some people are different than others, maybe some people see or hear things that other people do not hear, but what they see could possibly be real, just doctors and society refuse to believe that it is real so these disorders have been d... Free Essays on Society;s View Of Mental Illness Free Essays on Society;s View Of Mental Illness Societyââ¬â¢s View On Mental Illness Dictionary.com defines ââ¬Å"Mental Illnessâ⬠as: ââ¬Å"Any of various conditions characterized by impairment of an individual's normal cognitive, emotional, or behavioural functioning, and caused by social, psychological, biochemical, genetic, or other factors, such as infection or head trauma.â⬠This definition seems normal enough, seems scientific; but if it is so scientific, if it is common to have a mental illness, then why does society have an ââ¬Å"ostrich in the sandâ⬠view on mental illness? In other words, society is uncomfortable talking about or accepting mental illness. People constantly turn the other way or refuse to learn about or get to know a person if they have a mental disorder. First of all, we must ask ourselves: What is crazy? Cuomo and Ronacher (1998) say that people are called mentally healthy when they like their behaviour and that people are considered mentally unhealthy if their behaviour is ââ¬Å"unacceptableâ⬠or if they donââ¬â¢t like the way that the person acts. Both the common person and psychiatrists judge or diagnose mental illness this way. Macdonald (2003) says that most of the time with mental illness, there is no medical proof, no evidence that there is anything wrong with you. Macdonald has Psychosis and low-grade Schizophrenia. He says that when he was diagnosed with these diseases, he had CAT scans and blood tests, among many other tests, but in actually being diagnosed, all that doctors can do is ask a series of questions to the patient and make a guess based on the responses that they get. Basically, you are diagnosed by opinion and not by actual medicine. He sometimes wonders if there is no suck thing as crazy, mayb e some people are different than others, maybe some people see or hear things that other people do not hear, but what they see could possibly be real, just doctors and society refuse to believe that it is real so these disorders have been d...
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Giving Directions in Chinese
Giving Directions in Chinese Some of the most important vocabulary to prepare before going to a Mandarin-speaking country is phrases and words for asking directions. Especially when traveling through a Mandarin-speaking country, you will need to be able to ask for and understand directions. Here is a quick crash-course in understanding directions in Chinese including a vocabulary list and sample practice dialogues. This Mandarin Chinese lesson comes complete with audio files to help you with your pronunciation.à Audio files are marked with ââ" º Turn è ½â° (traditional form) / è ½ ¬ (simplified form) ââ" º zhuÃŽn: turnÃ¥ ¾â¬ ââ" ºwng:à toward Right / Left / Straight Ã¥ ³Ã ââ" ºyà ²u: rightÃ¥ · ¦ ââ" ºzuÃâ: leftÃ¥ ¾â¬Ã¥ ³Ã¨ ½â° / Ã¥ ¾â¬Ã¥ ³Ã¨ ½ ¬Ã ââ" ºwng yà ²u zhun: turn rightÃ¥ ¾â¬Ã¥ · ¦Ã¨ ½â° / Ã¥ ¾â¬Ã¥ · ¦Ã è ½ ¬ ââ" ºwng zuÃâ zhun: turn left ä ¸â¬Ã§âº ´ ââ" ºyà « zhà : straight aheadç⺠´ ââ" ºzhà : continuouslyä ¸â¬Ã§âº ´Ã¨ µ ° ââ" ºyà « zhà zÃâu: go straight aheadç⺠´Ã¨ µ ° ââ" ºzhà zÃâu: go straight ahead Status Ã¥Ë ° ââ" ºdo: go to / reachedÃ¥ ¿ «Ã¥Ë °Ã¤ ºâ ââ" ºkui do le: almost arrivedÃ¥ Å" ââ" ºtà ng: stopÃ¥Ë °Ã¤ ºâ ââ" ºdo le: have arrivedÃ¥ ¥ ½ ââ" ºhÃŽo: okayÃ¥ ¥ ½Ã§Å¡â ââ" ºhÃŽo de: okay Landmarks ç ´â¦Ã§ ¶ çâ¡Ë / ç º ¢Ã§ » ¿Ã§ ¯ ââ" ºhà ³ng lÃÅ" dÃâng: traffic lightè · ¯Ã¥ £ ââ" ºlà ¹ kÃâu: intersectionå⦠¬Ã¥Å"â / å⦠¬Ã¥âº ââ" ºgÃ
ng yun: public parkç «Ã¨ »Å ç «â¢ / ç «Ã¨ ½ ¦Ã§ «â¢Ã ââ" ºhuÃâ chÃâ zhn: train stationè »Å ç «â¢ / è ½ ¦Ã§ «â¢ ââ" ºchÃâ zhn: bus stationæâ"â¦Ã© ¤ ¨ ââ" ºlÃÅ¡ guÃŽn: hotel Example Dialogue 1 è «â¹Ã¥â¢ ä ½ çŸ ¥Ã© âç «Ã¨ »Å ç «â¢Ã¥Å" ¨Ã¥â ªÃ¥â¦â(traditional form)è ¯ ·Ã©â" ®Ã¤ ½ çŸ ¥Ã© âç «Ã¨ ½ ¦Ã§ «â¢Ã¥Å" ¨Ã¥â ªÃ¥â ¿(simplified form)Qà ng wà ¨n, nà zhà « do huÃâ chÃâ zhnà zi nÃŽer?Excuse me, do you know where the train station is? çŸ ¥Ã© âãâ¬âä ¸â¬Ã§âº ´Ã¨ µ °Ã¥Ë °Ã¤ ºâ è · ¯Ã¥ £Ã¥ ¾â¬Ã¥ ³Ã¨ ½â°Ã£â¬âç⺠´Ã¨ µ °Ã§ ¶âé Žå⦠¬Ã¥Å"âç⠶å ¾Å'Ã¥ ¾â¬Ã¥ · ¦Ã¨ ½â°Ã£â¬âç «Ã¨ »Å ç «â¢Ã¥ ° ±Ã¥Å" ¨Ã©â £Ã£â¬âçŸ ¥Ã© âãâ¬âä ¸â¬Ã§âº ´Ã¨ µ °Ã¥Ë °Ã¤ ºâ è · ¯Ã¥ £Ã¥ ¾â¬Ã¥ ³Ã¨ ½ ¬Ã£â¬âç⺠´Ã¨ µ °Ã§ » è ¿â¡Ã¥â¦ ¬Ã¥âº ç⠶å Žå ¾â¬Ã¥ · ¦Ã¨ ½ ¬Ã£â¬âç «Ã¨ ½ ¦Ã§ «â¢Ã¥ ° ±Ã¥Å" ¨Ã©â £Ã£â¬âZhà « do. Yà « zhà zÃâu, do le là ¹ kÃâu wÃŽng yà ²u zhuÃŽn. Zhà zÃâu jà «ng guà ² gÃ
ng yun, rn hà ²u wÃŽng zuÃâ zhuÃŽn. HuÃâ chÃâ zhn jià ¹ zi n.I know. Go straight and turn right at the junction. Go straight through the park and turn left. The train station is right there. Example Dialogue 2 æËâÃ¥ · ²Ã§ ¶âÃ¥Å" ¨Ã¦â"â¦Ã© ¤ ¨Ã£â¬âä ½ Ã¥Å" ¨Ã¥â ªÃ¨ £ ¡Ã¥â¢Å æËâÃ¥ · ²Ã§ » Ã¥Å" ¨Ã¦â"â¦Ã© ¦â ãâ¬âä ½ Ã¥Å" ¨Ã¥â ªÃ©â¡Å'Ã¥â¢Å WÃâ yà jà «ng zi lÃÅ¡ guÃŽn. Nà zi nÃŽ là a?Im already at the hotel. Where are you? æËâÃ¥Å" ¨Ã§ ´â¦Ã§ ¶ çâ¡ËÃ¥ Å"ä ºâ Ã¥ ¾Ëä ¹â¦Ã¥ ¿ «Ã¨ ¦ Ã¥Ë °Ã¤ ºâ ãâ¬âæËâÃ¥Å" ¨Ã§ º ¢Ã§ » ¿Ã§ ¯Ã¥ Å"ä ºâ Ã¥ ¾Ëä ¹â¦Ã¥ ¿ «Ã¨ ¦ Ã¥Ë °Ã¤ ºâ ãâ¬âWÃâ zi hà ³ng lÃÅ" dÃâng tà ng le hÃâºn jiÃâ, kui yo do le.I have been waiting for the traffic light for a long time, almost there. Ã¥ ¥ ½Ã£â¬âHÃŽo.Okay.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)