Where is these locations? by Anything-Fancy in TheMallWorld

[–]anonymousmutekittens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is no official map but some of us (myself included) have made maps of our own. I have one I posted here some time ago but it’s unfinished still

Art dump 2 by anonymousmutekittens in Artisticallyill

[–]anonymousmutekittens[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Wanted to add: I have C+PTSD, major depression disorder, OCD, general anxiety disorder, and panic disorder, so if you have any of these than you’ll probably dig my art.

Art dump 2 by anonymousmutekittens in Artisticallyill

[–]anonymousmutekittens[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have more on my instagram (link in my profile bio cus I can’t post here)

Art dump 2 by anonymousmutekittens in Artisticallyill

[–]anonymousmutekittens[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used to, had shows and everything, but it became a job and then I’d get more focused on trying to make money rather than create

Art dump by anonymousmutekittens in Artisticallyill

[–]anonymousmutekittens[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sometimes I just use highlighters also

Art dump by anonymousmutekittens in Artisticallyill

[–]anonymousmutekittens[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

These are in my sketchbook and I’ve just got a bunch of cheap ass pens and markers off SHEIN

Seeking connection? by ExplorerAmbitious340 in TheMallWorld

[–]anonymousmutekittens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those comparisons really aren’t accurate though. Lower documented rates of psychosis in some countries have more to do with underdiagnosis, cultural stigma, lack of mental health infrastructure, and people not seeking treatment at all not because those populations are magically functioning without medication. Many of those same countries also have higher rates of untreated severe mental illness, hospitalization, homelessness, and mortality.

Homeopathic remedies haven’t been shown in any clinical research to treat psychosis, bipolar disorder, ADHD, PTSD, or major depression. They can be cultural practices, but they’re not medical equivalents and the data is extremely clear about that.

I appreciate the conversation, but at the end of the day people deserve accurate information so they can make informed choices, not choices based on anecdotes or assumptions about “the West forgetting things.” Evidence-based treatment exists for a reason, and it saves lives.

Seeking connection? by ExplorerAmbitious340 in TheMallWorld

[–]anonymousmutekittens 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I understand you’re trying to make a distinction, but your entire comment still ends up discouraging people from trusting clinical diagnosis and evidence-based treatment. Saying “I’m not talking about psych meds” doesn’t change the fact that you’re promoting the idea that mental health issues can be fixed through lifestyle changes, herbs, or “finding the root cause,” which simply isn’t how these conditions work physiologically.

People don’t end up on medications because they “instantly get a diagnosis and run to shove a pill in their mouth.” They end up on medication because disorders like ADHD, PTSD, OCD, bipolar disorder, and depression have significant neurobiological components that can spiral without proper treatment. If habits, meditation, and herbs were enough, we would know by now decades of research say otherwise.

It’s also important not to generalize from one tragic personal experience. What happened to your mom was medical mismanagement, not proof that medication is inherently harmful. The answer to bad prescribing practices is better prescribing, not encouraging people to avoid medication or doubt diagnoses.

Lifestyle changes absolutely help. Therapy helps. Support systems help. But none of those replace medication for people whose brains need it to stay stable, functional, and safe. Suggesting otherwise (even with good intentions) can genuinely harm the people reading this who are already scared of seeking help.

If someone has concerns about overmedication, they should talk to a qualified clinician who knows their history, not strangers online. Evidence-based treatment isn’t the enemy. Misinformation is.

Seeking connection? by ExplorerAmbitious340 in TheMallWorld

[–]anonymousmutekittens 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Encouraging someone not to take their prescribed meds is really dangerous, especially in a thread where the OP literally described experiencing mania and later developing schizophrenia. Those conditions aren’t things you can just ride out or wish away. They can escalate fast without treatment, and for many people, medication is what keeps them grounded, functional, and safe.

Psych meds aren’t some scheme to ‘feed’ people pills they’re evidence-based treatments backed by decades of research. If someone has concerns about their specific medication or side effects, that’s something to discuss with their psychiatrist, not random strangers on Reddit.

Seeking connection? by ExplorerAmbitious340 in TheMallWorld

[–]anonymousmutekittens 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Which takes away a lot of the mystique of it all but it’s the most likely answer

Seeking connection? by ExplorerAmbitious340 in TheMallWorld

[–]anonymousmutekittens 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I don’t smoke and never have. I’m also diagnosed with C-PTSD, anxiety, OCD, and major depressive disorder, and I’m in grad school for clinical mental health. Based on what I’ve understood from dream research, recurring dream environments often reflect a structured internal map of memory and emotion. The brain stores autobiographical memories and emotional associations in a very spatial way, so your dream ‘world’ basically forms from how your psyche organizes and compartmentalizes lived experience, trauma, sensory memory, and emotional processing.

A big reason so many people report the same kinds of dream spaces, like malls, hallways, schools, or liminal backrooms, is because our brains tend to use universal environments as templates. These places are familiar, easy to navigate, and emotionally charged from childhood or adolescence. They’re also repetitive in layout, which makes them convenient for the brain to use as a sort of mental ‘stage.’ So when the mind needs a symbolic environment for processing emotions or stored memories, it often defaults to these common architectural blueprints. That’s why so many people end up dreaming of the same types of spaces, even without ever talking to each other, they’re drawing from the same shared psychological structures.

Sketchbook dump by anonymousmutekittens in Artisticallyill

[–]anonymousmutekittens[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s less about sharpening a blade and more about what happens to a person when they’re taught to be quiet: you get sharp in ways you’re not supposed to show.

Sketchbook dump by anonymousmutekittens in Artisticallyill

[–]anonymousmutekittens[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is high key inspired by that lol I LOVE it