Creativity Potentially Linked To Schizophrenia 215
mcgrew writes "New Scientist is reporting that creativity may be linked to schizophrenia via a common gene. Szabolcs Kéri, a researcher at Semmelweis University in Budapest, Hungary, carried a study of creative people. 'Kéri examined a gene involved in brain development called neuregulin 1, which previous studies have linked to a slightly increased risk of schizophrenia. Moreover, a single DNA letter mutation that affects how much of the neuregulin 1 protein is made in the brain has been linked to psychosis, poor memory and sensitivity to criticism. About 50 per cent of healthy Europeans have one copy of this mutation, while 15 per cent possess two copies. People with two copies of the neuregulin 1 mutation — about 12 per cent of the study participants — tended to score notably higher on these measures of creativity, compared with other volunteers with one or no copy of the mutation. Those with one copy were also judged to be more creative, on average, than volunteers without the mutation.' They hypothesize that people with this gene with high IQs are creative, while those with lower IQs are simply prone to the hallucinations that characterize the disease."
Crazy Chef Sato (Score:5, Interesting)
This was on the menu of my favorite Restaurant throughout the 1990s in Beaverton, OR (It died when Tektronix scaled back):
Eight out of ten people are normal
One maybe genius,
One maybe crazy,
I hesitate to call myself genius,
That leaves only one choice
Easily the most creative Japanese/American fusion chef I've ever met.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I miss his Chicken Cheese Katsu, both dinner and lunch versions. When I was contracting at Tek I'd go to his restaurant every day, and I was lucky enough to try everything on his menu.
I wish I had his knife skills- it's hard to cut a pocket in a boneless chicken breast.
Re: (Score:2)
It would also help if I didn't have disgraphia as one of my Asperger's symptoms (I'm as likely to slice my palm off as to get that recipe right!).
Still, it should be simple enough for anybody with the knife skills, it's only a chicken breast stuffed with American Processed cheese, coated in panko and deep fried until the cheese vaporizes- served with Tonkatsu sauce.
Re: (Score:2)
Lucky you don't have Assburger's syndrome. You might slice your butt off, mince it and shape it into a patty.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
And here's today's fortune-cookie quote:
The superior man understands what is right; the inferior man understands what will sell. -- Confucius
Re: (Score:2)
I like that- it explains quite succinctly the main problem I've seen with the free market (that which is good, does not sell; that which is utter crap in a nice package, you'll earn millions off of).
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No, his problem is that objective methods of measurement are irrelevant in a free market, because of marketing and human nature make it so the louder, most garish voice wins out.
Re: (Score:2)
Actually I would say that creativity and insanity really ARE the same thing, just the people we call crazy got a little... TOO creative and with things like their interpretation of gravity and who (or what) they think would be a good conversationalist.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe. But having met people who really did have schizophrenia, I'm a little dubious of this theory (which I've heard before). To use a computer analogy, my perception of their experience was not just that their brains started producing/storing inaccurate data, but that the program code was also not working as intended. One of the most striking examples was their speech patterns, where in certain cases they would say things that had the timbre and cadence of normal English speech, but if you actually paid a
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
If random corruption of "data" and "program code" in the brain is the root of creativity, then it seems to me that creativity is a very inefficient, brute-force method, which is only practical in people without schizophrenia because our brains have the processing power to discard (at some subconscious layer) the huge number of results that aren't worth pursuing.
I think that creativity is the ability to make associations/connections in unusual or unexpected ways. This can be good - applying, say, buddhist ph
Re: (Score:2)
It could be related to synesthesia [wikipedia.org]. Here is a video with a few references to it: http://www.ted.com/talks/vilayanur_ramachandran_on_your_mind.html [ted.com]
Schizo, or just Dutch? (Score:5, Funny)
One of the most striking examples was their speech patterns, where in certain cases they would say things that had the timbre and cadence of normal English speech, but if you actually paid attention it didn't make any sense - it was just nonsensical syllables strung together in a pattern that superficially sounded like English.
So in other words, they were speaking Dutch.
It takes one to understand one. (Score:2)
I know that my language consists of a series of nonsensical syllables; it amazes me every day how we manage in my country to function without understanding each other.
It takes one to understand one.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
I've had full out psychotic breaks where the doctors involved referred to my diagnosi
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
There are, of course degrees. The word salad could be a related aphasia or a great many false associations built up over time assigning false meanings to the words (such that they actually make sense to him).
It could also just be the result of years with a complete lack of internal negative feedback. False associations pop up in the brain all the time. Many are suppressed before they even rise to conscious thought. Others do make it to conscious thought and are promptly dismissed ("What in the &*^%
Re:Crazy Chef Sato (Score:4, Interesting)
That reminds me of a slightly lower functioning autistic (I have Asperger's and I'm into the neurodiversity movement) on youtube as of late- who insists that her behavior MUST be interpreted as communication because she's "communicating" with her environment (water, wind, sunlight, etc). Apparently nobody ever taught her that communication had to be two way with another sentient mind....
Re: (Score:2)
You realise that either of those two alone pretty much instantly concerns me. Especially since I'm someone who actually has those "diversities" FOR REAL, as in diagnosed in a clinical setting with a neurological (rather than psychological) set of disorders that make my life difficult. I'm not neurodiverse anymore than I'm disabled, I just dont function properly.
Re:Crazy Chef Sato (Score:5, Interesting)
I just tell my friends that I'm half crazy. Whether that means all crazy half the time, or half crazy all the time I leave for them to decide.
Went through a period of psychosis in my late teens, but stayed off the anti-psychotics. Took quite a while, but got back on track without the pseudo-science quackery of psychiatry. Now I run my own business and live a pretty balanced life as a respected member of my family and the community.
Interestingly enough, the more 'artistic' (ie music) stuff I do, the more sorta crazy I get, the more I keep the artistic side in check and balanced with other things, the more 'sane' I am. Never really thought about it like that before though...
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Wow, respect! I know how incredibly hard it is to get back on track! You have my full respect! And from the notion of "quackery", I know that you really know what psychatry is. ^^
I hope they soon are able to base psychology on a proper neurologic foundation, and can then throw away what we call psychatry, and many of thosp pseudo-therapies of psychology, and actually cure people, instead of just muting their brain functionaliy or talking and talking without results.
About the music: If you think your stuff i
Hi Tom Cruise. (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
So when did Tom Cruise do something creative? I must have missed that patch, perhaps it was between Mission Impossible 2 and 3?
Re: (Score:2)
So when did Tom Cruise do something creative? I must have missed that patch, perhaps it was between Mission Impossible 2 and 3?
Nobody ever said he's creative ... however, he is a particularly cracked example of a Scientologist on an anti-psychiatry, anti-antidepressant crusade. According to him, clinical depression can be cured by exercise and eating fruit. I sincerely hope he gets diagnosed with some condition that can only be treated with medication (clinical depression would do, and maybe if we're lucky he'll off himself.) Maybe then he'll change his tune and stop trying to convince people with real problems to avoid seeking the
Re: (Score:2)
Went through a period of psychosis in my late teens, but stayed off the anti-psychotics. Took quite a while, but got back on track without the pseudo-science quackery of psychiatry. Now I run my own business and live a pretty balanced life as a respected member of my family and the community.
Interestingly enough, the more 'artistic' (ie music) stuff I do, the more sorta crazy I get, the more I keep the artistic side in check and balanced with other things, the more 'sane' I am.
Wow, that is really interesting. I had the same experience as you, but I'm a musician now. After playing a show, or recording, or writing for a few hours, I feel pretty disconnected, lots of thoughts and ideas just pouring through my head. I actually do crosswords, sudoku, or some programming to 'bring myself back.'
Re: (Score:2)
His grammar was fitting for a man whose first language had a different grammar structure entirely. I suspect strongly that the poem was his own translation.
Re: (Score:2)
I always thought that was weird to- until I realized he really *meant* maybe (as in, synonym of possibly), as opposed to "may be" (as in synonym of "might be").
His wife was his waitress- she was a bit of an odd duck by American standards as well. Your best chance of getting the order right was to use the menu and point at what you wanted- her thick accent combined with her use of Engrish would almost certainly mess it up.
Re: (Score:2)
I say two out of ten may be crazy; the smart ones are real good at faking sanity. Tim S
They're still crazy, all right ... we call them sociopaths.
Ha!!! (Score:3, Funny)
"Moreover, a single DNA letter mutation that affects how much of the neuregulin 1 protein is made in the brain has been linked to psychosis, poor memory and sensitivity to criticism. About 50 per cent of healthy Europeans have one copy of this mutation, while 15 per cent possess two copies."
This explains perfectly the past 250 years of European history.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't know (Score:5, Funny)
The voices have much better ideas than me.
So they are saying... (Score:3, Insightful)
Smart people can tell the voices in their head are their own thoughts, while the less intelligent think they are hearing disembodied voices, not their own?
Re: (Score:2)
Surprisingly, that's almost exactly how the psychologist Julian Jaynes explained [wikipedia.org] the origin of consciousness: people went from hearing voices, to identifying with that voice enough for it to be their "consciousness". He also believed that modern schizophrenia is a relapse to that earlier, non-conscious, "bicameral" state.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I don't think John Forbes Nash is stupid. Nor Theodore Kaczynski, as a more dangerous example. There might be a link between schizophrenia and intelligence, but it's almost certainly not simple and causal. Perhaps the ability to distinguish between crazy-thoughts and intelligent-thoughts can be considered a special kind of intelligence, and the ability to entertain crazy-thoughts without taking them too seriously is what's needed for creative genius. Many exceptionally uncreative high-IQ people seem to lack
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps the ability to distinguish between crazy-thoughts and intelligent-thoughts can be considered a special kind of intelligence, and the ability to entertain crazy-thoughts without taking them too seriously is what's needed for creative genius
I suspect it's more that intelligent people are able to abstractly consider themselves and their own behavior, and accept they have a neurological disability. People who are purely reactive to their environment and don't proactively "push their own cart" so to speak are less likely to reason around their own behavior or ask themselves why they do what they do. The cause of schizophrenia (i.e. the inability to distinguish fantasy and their own speculative thoughts from reality) likely has nothing to do wit
Re: (Score:2)
that little voice inside my head that keeps asking 'is there room for one more' is really saying 'you are stupid'? I took a vote on this and 3/4s of me think its the shrinks that are stupid; the other 3/8s are demanding a recount.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:So they are saying... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:So they are saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
Answer the following:
Which one produces the more fulfilling relationship, the person who "buys a dog and owns it" or the person who "adopts a dog and cares for him"?
Who has a more loving happily-trained pet? The person who treats their dog or cat like one of the family, or the person who treats their pet like something separate from their family?
We haven't lost the distinction. We've accepted the best metaphor for a mutually fulfilling relationship. My dog thinks I'm the leader of his pack. I'm happy thinking of my dog as my 3rd child, the one with all the fur. We both get to act naturally for the most part while those roles mesh perfectly. We both benefit.
If you don't understand that then please please do NOT become a pet owner. Your pet will feel lousy, act out, mope, resent you, and be a "bad pet".
In reality there are no bad pets, just bad owners.**
**Being a good owner starts with the decision of IF and then WHAT EXACTLY to buy. If for instance you buy a pet based solely on appearances, you're most likely to end up with a great looking pet that does not fit with your lifestyle at all. You're screwed before you even get it home. *Adopt* a pet that can become a valued member of your family, or else stay away please. Or maybe a goldfish or hermit crab would be your best choice.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Try teaching a human child the meaning of the phrase "Get off the table!" with pavlovian principles and you'll see how long it takes you to get a visit from social services.
We still h
Re: (Score:2)
Granted cats are different. But
Re: (Score:2)
See, the thing with cats is that they're too clever. If you try to train with treats they won't learn to obey. They'll learn to get up on the table, then get off, so they get a treat. And they'll keep doing it ad nauseum. However if you show them dominance by biting them on the neck, they not only obey, they don't repeat the action out of spite.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
**We haven't lost the distinction. We've accepted the best metaphor for a mutually fulfilling relationship.**
Most of us who own pets and understand this feel sorry for those of you who don't get it. It's like something in you is sadly broken.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
i've always suspected as much. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
...odds of one with the syndrome passing it to a direct descendant are also pretty low ~ 1% chance.
I dunno, it always seemed that crazy ran in families.... mine for example...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Well, gee, you're only completely wrong...
In fact the heritability is quite high:
http://hmg.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/12/suppl_2/R125 [oxfordjournals.org]
In fact I've seen numerous cases of schizophrenia passed down through several generations of offspring.
Geniuses Don't Hallucinate? (Score:4, Informative)
They hypothesize that people with this gene with high IQs are creative, while those with lower IQs are simply prone to the hallucinations
Why do they hypothesize that? There are plenty of geniuses with mental health issues. Take John Nash [wikipedia.org].
Re: (Score:2)
Why do they hypothesize that?
Because it's facile. It's simply an indication about the people producing the hypothesis.
Re: (Score:2)
good. as a mathematician, i have to say that every single movie about math sucks.
I have news for you: practitioners of every technical or scientific discipline of which aspects are portrayed in popular media feel exactly the same way. I'm a software engineer, spent the past thirty years of my life developing software ... how do you think I feel about just about every movie that comes out that in any way involves a computer, software, an AI or anything remotely related to those? I have a background in electronics as well, and they screw that up regularly too. I mean, for crying out loud
Crap soup (Score:4, Insightful)
IQ, schizophrenia, creativity, all vague concepts linked together with "hard numbers" of primitive statistics.
Interesting information, to be sure, but let's not push that and turn it into another psychobabble.
Re: (Score:2)
This is based upon the idea that your stated intention is to "make the world a better place" or "to achieve happiness" the outcome is the same.
Shove your normal agenda UP YOUR ASS. Control your jealousy of people who ARE able to accept themselves and express themselves.
Re: (Score:2)
Psychology 101, Life IS suffering.
Let me guess, your psychology teacher was darkly clad with thick black eye-liner and long hair covering most of his face?
neuregulin mutation count (Score:4, Insightful)
0 copies:
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f4506t.pdf?portlet=3 [irs.gov]
1 copy:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/15/opinion/15dowd.html [nytimes.com]
2 copies:
http://pdfoxy.com/8986-excerpt-from-harry-potter-and-the-sorcerers-stone-pdf.html [pdfoxy.com]
.
.
.
256 copies:
http://timecube.com/ [timecube.com]
Re: (Score:2)
its proportional (Score:2)
YOU CAN HAVE A SECTION OF ALL CAPS if it is balanced against a larger section that is normal case
Re: (Score:2)
Mods have no sense of humour today.
thought that was known for a long time (Score:2)
I thought it was known for a long time that there is a link between creativity and schizophrenia. Seems perfectly natural to me.
Stephan
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly.
Stephan
Re: (Score:2)
It's a principle for fighters that goes back long before the jet age. Perhaps the two most famous fighter planes of World War I are the Sopwith Camel and the Fokker Dr. 1 triplane. They shared a common point: they both had rotary engines, which here doesn't mean one of those Mazda things that go "mmmmmm" but rather a radial piston engine in which the crankshaft was bolted to the airframe and the propellor was attached to the engine casing. The crankshaft stayed still while the entire engine block spun.
John Forbes Nash, Jr.? (Score:2)
What about John Forbes Nash Jr. [wikipedia.org]? [He's the genius they based the movie A Beautiful Mind on.
Obligatory link... (Score:2)
Obligatory link...
"Screwed Up People Make Great Art [youtube.com]" by Groovelily [groovelily.com]
Well, it's obligatory for me at least.
This is news (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Creative/artistic type people have active imaginations?! Holy News Flash Batman! I can't wait for the story about how librarians have a gene that has been tied to OCD.
I'm still waiting for the isolation of the gene which links trifocal glasses, red hair, and lesbianism in librarians, (AKA Thelma) personally. ;)
Not true in my case (Score:4, Interesting)
Well,
1) I have schizophrenia (paranoid delusional, no visual or auditory hallucinations).
2) I am not creative, at all...in any artistic sense. Except maybe with words, poetry, scrabble.
3) I have an extremely vivid and active imagination.
4) My nervous system is very sensitive, I have to take meds to 'turn them down' so I'm relaxed.
5) I have an IQ of 133 and an interest in math and science; degrees in physics and computer science.
Re: (Score:2)
Well... actually, as a person who is paid to be creative, I can tell you what that small difference is. It is that you put the ideas from your imagination into a physical form that other people can understand.
You mean to be creative, I have to create? Forget that! I'm going insane instead.
Anecdotally, bipolar seems more important (Score:5, Insightful)
History and my personal experience are full of manic-depressive artists. No substitute for statistics, of course.
Maybe the connection is just that society drives creative people crazy.
Dead Wrong (Score:2)
But this flies against the past 20 years of research. Nearly all studies show a strong NEGATIVE correlation between nearly all types of mental illness and creativity (as measured using a variety of scales). Schizophrenia and depression are the two that leap to mind. I know there's this popular idea that the crazies are more creative (or vice versa), but it's simply no
Been known, to a degree, for over 2000 years. (Score:5, Insightful)
"There is no great genius without a mixture of madness" - Aristotle (384 BC - 322 BC)
Re: (Score:2)
To find the truly great ideas, you have to conduct an exhaustive search - the low hangi
Joseph Campbell, Stage 12: Return With The Elixir (Score:2)
Linked is a slippery word. It implies causation. Correlated is more like it, meaning that we judge many people with schizophrenia as being also creative at the same time. What kind of creativity?
It could be as simple as this: persons with the diagnosis
How About (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Special, Yes. Desirable, No.
Of course (Score:3, Interesting)
Its easier to solve a problem when you put two people on it. Even if they're both in my head.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
If you are smart enough to know when you have "weird thoughts", you can shrug your shoulders and go on with life, perhaps even putting those "creative notions" to some practical or artistic use.
If you are not too bright, you might believe all manner of crazy shit your mind comes up with and act on it. The worst cases might start a religion or live with the pigeons.
Re:Makes sense of a sort (Score:5, Insightful)
I even expect the cancer rate to be fine tuned between making a species too static in an ever changing world and killing too many individuals. Some species, IIRC crocodiles, practically never get cancer, so it probably is not a limitation of the eukaryotic cell.
Another example is of course homosexuality, understanding went from "It can't be natural - it is the end of the line for the individual's genes!", to finding more and more animal species enjoying it to actually being able to explain that it (male h.) benefits the female line. Dawkin's The Selfish Gene comes to mind again.
Re: (Score:2)
I suspect that there are a lot of alleles that hang on for similar reasons; but sickle cell is particularly unsubtle about it.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Personality disorders are better thought of as a c
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Personality disorders aren't genetic. There may be an underlying predisposition to stress or poor coping mechanisms, but personality disorders are not genetic in nature. They're caused primarily by environmental factors
Right, and the notable differences in brain morphology are merely due to "environmental" factors.
and they're definitely not mental illness in a technical sense.
How about this [wikipedia.org] and this? [wikipedia.org] Those are extremely technical.
They aren't treatable via medication
...
Medications aren't likely to ever help out much.
Have you ever been diagnosed for a mental disorder and prescribed medication? I have, and it makes a world of difference. I know other people who have, and they concur. The meds can mean the difference between being able to live a productive life and being locked down in a padded cell. You don't know what you're talking about.
and even the as yet unproven brain chemistry explanation of mental illness doesn't apply.
...
Personality disorders are better thought of as a culture that's unique the the person and not to the people around which the person is living. It's a systematic adjustment that the brain makes to cope with adverse conditions and it's not something which can be readily separated from the individual's self. As opposed to mental illnesses where people will frequently have periods, however brief, of remission.
Citations, please. Otherw
Re: (Score:2)
Have you ever been diagnosed for a mental disorder and prescribed medication? I have, and it makes a world of difference. I know other people who have, and they concur. The meds can mean the difference between being able to live a productive life and being locked down in a padded cell. You don't know what you're talking about.
Honestly, the GP sounds like Tom Cruise. Now, it's true the term "mental disorder" encompasses a huge pasture, some treatable by meds or psychotherapy, some not ... but when someone makes a sweeping statement that drugs don't help he's plain wrong. I've never suffered from a serious mental disorder (no matter what my girlfriend might say) but I've had severe clinical depression in my family. This was back in the seventies, when antidepressants were just coming out. Initially it was a drug called Elevil, if
Creativity, depression, religion, and IQ rant (Score:5, Insightful)
Creativity is hard to categorise. However, it also isn't completely random. When I'm working on a project, I can get myself into "daydream" mode and gently steer my creativity to find answers to the question or problem at hand, so I would guess that even if it is random firing of neurons, it is random firing of the neurons active at that moment. This means that it certainly is NOT random, because you can choose what to think about, and hence, steer that random firing to get a result. Evolution likes that.
With e.g. schitzophrenia, I think that people who have a double copy of the gene and have a high(er) IQ are more likely to find a way around the problem and deal with it. I would guess I'm one of the lucky guys with a double expression of the gene, but also with a good IQ. A lot of what was said was very recogniseable - I've fought with depression, burnout and more, and also had an immense war between myself and my own mind, and have seriously questioned my sanity, before I finally learned to detach from my thoughts and emotions, and stand behind them as it were instead of being dragged along with them on a very rough rollercoaster ride. Meditation, sports, the forced responsibility of having to run my own company and lots of research saved my sanity. Now my creativity is a tool, a part of my mind which can be accessed at will instead of a scary the-voices-say-the-universe-hates-you personal enemy you can carry everywhere you go. I am the eye of the storm, as it were, and it is no longer easy to rip me loose - I would guess that only a long, sustained depression combined with stress over a period of years could do that (because it means that slowly but surely your belief in yourself and your self-imposed structure will be eroded by the negative emotional flood from the amygdala).
I think the problem is compounded once you get depressed. It seems to me that creativity is rampant throughout the brain. When I was depressed, it seemed that my "logical" brain was less active and my "emotional" brain ran the show - all my reactions were negative and emo. This might be because the amygdala seems to "shout louder" at certain times than others, or maybe the rest of the brain is more overwhelmed by its "voice" during depression because it is less active, I don't know. At any rate, it means you are completely at the mercy of emotional reasoning and the torrent of feelings because you don't have your "logical net" to tell you "nah, I'm dramatizing again" and you simply shrug them off as an itch.
At any rate, I know a few others like myself and their stories are similar: mental override, take control, avoid pitfalls of deep feelings (unless they're positive, and even then keep an eye on them), and view the world as a statistical game instead of a personal interaction. The latter is probably the most important, because once you start trying to ascribe a (negative) personal meaning to the events that influence you - for example: "God made me lose my job because I'm bad / worthless / whatever", then you open Pandora's Box on your own mind. That's also one of my warning signs that I may be stressed out or in a downward spiral, and that I need to take more breaks and relax more: if I find my mind trying to reason like that, I know I'm in the danger zone, so I adjust for it. Not doing so probably means you'll end up creating another religion based on frustrated depression.
Re: (Score:2)
FAIL (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I think a lot of people have conversations with imaginary personalities in their heads.
Sure do. Not really different personalities, but
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Consider the implications of "mutants" the creation of a seperate species within humanity, and it's last occurrence [slashdot.org]
Re: (Score:2)
If you value creativity. Many don't.
Re: (Score:2)
They made that story up to fool us. Don't you see? They want us to link Schizophrenia to creativity because they know that it will cause us to support them. And what's wrong with that? It's because the they're not real people. Real people don't behave that way. What you call "schizophrenia" is really the result of behavioral differences among the class of people who we've come to differentiate as the Nordic type, as opposed to greys, hairies and the other classes. They can live nominally among us as they appear generall to be caucasian. Some counter that they can't be the Nordics, and this isn't entirely untrue because they are just as often offspring between Nordics and humans. Also, time dilation effects from the trasnport mechanisms used to transport them back and forth from Earth to their home worlds cause them to be smaller. Thus, they really are the Nordics and would be tall, blonde and attractive to you; but appear differently due to an effect akin to Doppler shift in their frame of reference. So when you see one of these Nordics on the street you just think they're crazy, but those are actually the social conventions in their culture and I have to go becaue I've already said too much. Just don't believe them becauese if you believe them then things can happen like when I started believing them and then you will believe them too and it will all happen. Now do you see? It's already happening and it's happening because it's too late and it's possibly even later than you think because there is a frame of reference between these Nordic types and the Grays and what you call schizophrenics.
The Norse thought the Finns were wizards that controlled the weather. The truth is that Finns are one corner of the time cube. [timecube.com] I'm a Finnish hybrid. You'll only know I'm near by the effect I have on Doppler Radar. The original Finns had green eyes, but the Finnish Hybrids have blue eyes, to blend in with the other Nordics. You'll never know I'm not Nordic. ...Well it says I have, well it says I have blue but I decided I wanted gray eyes.
Graham: Whatever, ok, you guys can talk to each other now if you
A short bus full of happy faces (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
To be fair, schizophrenia does come from the Greek for "split mind". The fact that it's used to label a disorder characterized by a distorted perception of reality rather than dissociative identity disorder (which may or may not be a real disorder anyway), is rather unhelpful in trying to emphasize the difference.
That may very well be true, but as a highly creative person myself, I can state categorically that my best ideas come from the voices in my head.