Yellow Wallpaper Mental Illness

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Often in life things that are meant to help can hinder and positive intentions do not always bring about desired effects. “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charolette Perkins Gilman illustrates such an occurrence. In the short story the narrator is locked away in a lonesome room in an attempt to free her from a nervous disorder. During this time period, the kind of treatments the narrator describes were common and considered beneficial. The narrators husband, John, is a physician and believes this and forces his wife into a treatment of solitude. Rather than healing her psychological disorder during this time, the treatment contributed to worsening her effects and sending her into a downward spiral of depression. Under the orders of her husband, …show more content…

She said, “I am getting angry enough to do something desperate jump out the window would be admirable exercise but the bars are too strong to even try.” Towards the end of the story, the narrator becomes delirious and is constantly creeping around the room. John went upstairs to check on her and finds her in a deranged state creeping about the room through the torn wallpaper causing him to faint. instead of stopping to check on him, she just continues to creep over his body. She say, “ Now why should that man have fainted? But he did, and right across my path by the wall, so that I had to creep over him every …show more content…

This is a fairly common side effect of childbirth that comes at the time in her life when the woman is supposed to be happiest and most satisfied. However, with her mind suffering from the effects of her body's frantic attempt to realign its chemical components into a balanced state, the new mother is confronted by moods that are the opposite of what she is told she should be feeling. These expected and experienced emotions can create tremendous guilt in a woman, even a very strong woman. To lessen this guilt, the mind can develop a psychosis, such as delusional disorder. The narrator was very perceptive in looking at her own bout with delusional disorder and its progression into a more severe emotional disorder, even to the point of including her lack of concern for her baby. Classic symptoms of delusional disorder are varying degrees of visual hallucinations (although not normally as prominent as shown in the story) and olfactory hallucinations related to the delusional theme(s) or object(s). Delusional disorder does not markedly impair psychosocial functioning or cause a person to display odd or bizarre behavior when other people are known to be present. Undetected and/or untreated delusional disorder often degenerates into schizophreniform disorder, or even full blown schizophrenia, and the delusions take control over the person's mind (DSM - IV Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental

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