Tag Archives: mentally

Taylor Schabusiness wasn’t mentally ill when she dismembered her ex-boyfriend and scattered his body parts, Wisconsin jury finds – CBS News

  1. Taylor Schabusiness wasn’t mentally ill when she dismembered her ex-boyfriend and scattered his body parts, Wisconsin jury finds CBS News
  2. Taylor Schabusiness decapitated and mutilated her lover in a meth-fueled tryst. Then she bragged to police The Independent
  3. ‘F**king Loser’: Taylor Schabusiness’ Dad Says Drugs, Her Husband Sent Her Into a Spiral Law&Crime Network
  4. Jury finds Taylor Schabusiness did not have mental disease or defect during her crime WeAreGreenBay.com
  5. Taylor Schabusiness: Most Shocking Moments From Case That Horrified Nation Newsweek
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Green Bay woman wasn’t mentally ill when she killed and dismembered a former boyfriend, jury finds – The Associated Press

  1. Green Bay woman wasn’t mentally ill when she killed and dismembered a former boyfriend, jury finds The Associated Press
  2. Wisconsin woman convicted of gruesome murder, sexual abuse, dismemberment of former boyfriend Fox News
  3. ‘F**king Loser’: Taylor Schabusiness’ Dad Says Drugs, Her Husband Sent Her Into a Spiral Law&Crime Network
  4. Jury determines Taylor Schabusiness was competent at time of the crime WGBA NBC 26 in Green Bay
  5. Taylor Schabusiness decapitated and mutilated her lover in a meth-fueled tryst. Then she bragged to police The Independent
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Louisville shooter left notes revealing part of his goal was to show how easily a mentally ill person can buy a gun in the US, sources say – CNN

  1. Louisville shooter left notes revealing part of his goal was to show how easily a mentally ill person can buy a gun in the US, sources say CNN
  2. Louisville shooter Connor Sturgeon reportedly detailed reasons for rampage in manifesto New York Post
  3. ‘Tears and blank stares’: Chaplain says Louisville bank shooting WLKY News Louisville
  4. ‘Is there anything we can do?’; Friend of Old National Bank shooting victim calls for gun reform WHAS11.com
  5. Louisville bank shooter wrote about mental illness and ease of buying guns in ‘manifesto’, report says The Independent
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Do not let Wy come to my funeral. She’s mentally ill’: Naomi Judd’s devastating suicide note

Naomi Judd left a suicide note insisting her daughter Wynonna was barred from her funeral – and claimed she was mentally ill.

The Post-it-style paper was found near the 76-year-old’s body after she shot herself dead at her Tennessee mansion in April.

It said: ‘Do not let Wy come to my funeral. She’s mentally ill.’ The word ‘not’ appeared to have been underlined.

The note was among a series of documents released by Williamson County Sheriff’s Department this week.

Wynnona did attend the funeral, a source told Radar Online, and believes the note was written when her mother was not in her right mind.

The cops also shared images of the country music star’s blood-stained bedding as well as a photograph of a gun on her nightstand.

Meanwhile they made public a series of notes written by a deputy who attended the crime scene, saying Naomi had threatened to kill herself ‘half a dozen times’.

The Judds – daughters Wynonna, 58, Ashley, 54, and husband Larry Strickland – tried to prevent the police report being made public, but dropped the case in December.

Naomi Judd left a suicide note beside her bed, insisting her daughter Wynonna should not attend her funeral

Naomi Judd (right) is seen with her daughter Wynonna (left), in one of their final appearances in public. She is pictured waving at crowds at the CMT Music Awards on April 11, 2022

Sheriffs released photos of the scene where Judd took her own life

The startling images from the scene showed the Post-it-style note stuck to what appeared to be a magazine.

It also showed her grand bed covered in blood that had stained her sheets and pillow after the tragedy.

Meanwhile a deputy’s notes shed more light on what happened the day she died, including conversations cops had with the family.

Strickland, her husband of 33 years, was in Europe at the time of her death and the police report noted she did not like being alone.

‘Didn’t like being alone/Larry in Europe,’ a sheriff’s deputy wrote, in a handwritten note from the scene.

‘She threatened to kill herself a half a dozen times, guns were involved. She locked herself in her bedroom. She would threaten to shoot the people who took her (illegible.)’

The police report also details how Ashley found her mother and comforted her as they waited 30 minutes for an ambulance to arrive at the Leipers Fork home, 25 miles south of downtown Nashville.

Ashley found her mother in a manic state and called the family doctor, Dr Ted Klontz. The actress told police her mom screamed: ‘Kill me, kill me now. I don’t want to live!’

She said she replied: ‘Now, mom, you know I’m not going to do that.’

Ashley texted Klontz, writing: ‘She’s having an episode. Yelling and crying and pacing … Emergency … Please come to mom’s … Now.’

When Klontz arrived, she told him: ‘She was screaming and speaking in tongues.’ Ashley said her mother calmed down when the doctor arrived, and later left them alone to discuss her condition.

When she returned to the room, she found her mother with a bullet wound to the head. She told the doctor: ‘She did it. She finally did it.’

Ashley Judd (left)  with her mother Naomi  Judd (center) and her sister Wynonna Judd (right)

Naomi Judd’s home in Tennessee where she was found with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head

In a harrowing essay in The New York Times, Ashley in August described how discovering her mother was ‘the most shattering day of my life.’

‘The trauma of discovering and then holding her laboring body haunts my nights,’ she wrote.

But instead of being able to comfort her mother in her dying moments, Ashley said police officers harshly interrogated her and kept her from her mother.

‘I felt cornered and powerless as law enforcement officers began questioning me while the last of my mother’s life was fading,’ she wrote.

‘I wanted to be comforting her, telling her how she was about to see her daddy and younger brother as she ‘went away home,’ as we say in Appalachia.’

Ashley said she was in such a state of shock after she found her dying mother that she answered questions from police she did not want to.

She said: ‘I would never have answered on any other day’ and never thought to consider whether the public would later have access to it.

‘In the immediate aftermath of a life-altering tragedy, when we are in a state of acute shock, trauma, panic and distress, the authorities show up to talk to us,’ she wrote.

‘Because many of us are socially conditioned to cooperate with law enforcement, we are utterly unguarded in what we say.

‘I never thought to ask my own questions, including: Is your body camera on? Am I being audio recorded again? Where and how will what I am sharing be stored, used and made available to the public?”

According to the report, the gunshot that killed Judd ‘perforated through the right side of the scalp and entered the skull through an entrance-type gunshot wound’ 

The country superstar died of a self-inflicted bullet wound in April 2022 at the age of 76

Ashley Judd (left) with her mother Naomi Judd (right). Ashley and her family filed a petition to seal police records of interviews taken in the moments after Naomi’s suicide last April. The family dropped their efforts in December

Both Ashley and Wynonna were written out of their mother’s will, with it left to Strickland to make decisions over her estate and assets.

The Judd family said in a statement confirming her death: ‘Our beloved mother and wife succumbed to mental illness. 

‘Everyone who has gone through this tragedy understands that in the depths of a mental health crisis, thinking is profoundly distorted.

‘Moreover, the worst days are never representative of the comforts and pleasures of the days free from the disease.

‘In the aftermath of this tragedy, our family has tried to grieve, together, with our community, and importantly, with the privacy that everyone who loses a family member deserves. 

‘We have always been a forthright and open family about both our hardships and the depth of our love for each other.

‘In this particular matter, however, we ask for privacy, because a death with privacy is a death with more dignity.’ 

The Judds were the most successful country singers of the 80s, winning five Grammys, nine CMAs, and selling 20million records.

In the immediate aftermath of their mother’s death Ashley and Wynonna supported each other in their loss, attending her induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame, May 1 – the day after their mother’s suicide.

Naomi and Wynonna Judd pictured in their heyday

 On May 29, one month after her mother’s death, Wynonna wrote an emotional Instagram post in which she spoke of her unbearable grief and her fear that she would never be able to ‘surrender to the truth’ of the way her mother left this life

Naomi had a tumultuous upbringing – and in part she attributed her depression to the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of an uncle when she was just three.

When she was 22, Naomi was raped and beaten by an ex-boyfriend, a trauma that saw her flee Los Angeles for rural Kentucky, where she lived with her children on welfare while training to become a nurse.

They lived in a home with no electricity, phone, television or indoor plumbing.

Naomi moved to Nashville when she qualified and ultimately became head nurse in an intensive care unit.

It was there that she learned a patient’s father was in the music industry. She made a tape of herself singing with Wynonna, gave it to him and ‘The Judds’ career in music was launched.

On May 29, one month after her mother’s death, Wynonna wrote an emotional Instagram post in which she spoke of her unbearable grief and her fear that she would never be able to ‘surrender to the truth’ of the way her mother left this life.

She wrote about ‘personal healing,’ her sense of being ‘helpless’ and the few things she knew in the face of such despair and drama.

She said she would continue to fight for her faith, herself and her family, to continue to ‘show up & sing.’

And she vowed to ‘break the cycle’ of addiction and dysfunction that has stalked the Judd women.

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‘Cognitive Immobility’ – When You’re Mentally Trapped in a Place From Your Past

Summary: Cognitive immobility is a form of mental entrapment that leads to conscious or unconscious efforts to recreate past instances in familiar locations.

Source: The Conversation

If you have moved from one country to another, you may have left something behind – be it a relationship, a home, a feeling of safety or a sense of belonging. Because of this, you will continually reconstruct mental simulations of scenes, smells, sounds and sights from those places – sometimes causing stressful feelings and anxiety.

This describes what I have dubbed “cognitive immobility”, outlined in my new research article, published in Culture & Psychology.

The study used autoethnography, a research method in which the author is also the topic of investigation. The research was partly based on my feelings, thoughts and experiences while living in the UK and Germany, far from my ancestral home in Igbo land, Africa.

Cognitive immobility is a stressful mental entrapment that leads to a conscious or unconscious effort to recreate past incidents in one or more locations that one lived in or visited in the past. By doing so, we are hoping to retrieve what is missing or left behind.

When people cannot remain in locations because of conditions beyond their control, such as a war or family or work commitments, their bodies may physically move to a new world, while their minds are left behind – trapped in the previous location.

Thus, these people might be described as being “cognitively immobilised”. During this time, such individuals may seek consolation through the reconstruction of events or physical movement to the locations that they migrated or departed from.

This may be related to homesickness, but it is actually different. Homesickness is a feeling of longing for a previous home, whereas cognitive immobility is a cognitive mechanic that works on our attention and memory to mentally trap us in a place – whether it is a previous home or just a place we’ve visited.

Our conscious memory (made up of semantic and episodic memories) allows us to remember not just what happened in the past, but also basic knowledge of things around us. Specifically, episodic memory helps us remember or reconstruct events we experienced or events that could have happened in the past but didn’t.

Indeed, research shows that recalling memory is a process of imagination – we often recreate past events in a way that isn’t necessarily accurate, but rather affected by our current beliefs and emotional state. This can make our past look even better than it was.

The entrapped mind

I believe the experience may be very common for people who migrate. In an unrelated study on Syrian students who fled to Turkey, one of them stated: “I am still in Syria. My soul is there. I always have memories of my dead cousins. This affects my getting used to here.

Those days will never come back.” Another Syrian student said: “I left my homeland, my nation, my relatives, everything in Syria. I was physically here, but spiritually there.” Both students are clearly suffering from cognitive immobility.

Due to cognitive immobility, some people who have moved from their homes to new locations perpetually long to visit their old homes. But cognitive immobility still applies – when they do visit their old home, they immediately long to return to their new homeland.

So, according to my research, a person who has migrated may have a “homeless mind” while experiencing a situation where no home is truly a home; even the previous home – the ancestral home – has lost its distinguishing features and allure in the real world.

It is easy to see why. Ultimately, there is no place without self and no self without place. Therefore, who we are is greatly influenced by the places we live or go and where we desire to be in the present and future.

See also

The implications are serious. For example, it could lead to problems integrating into a new place and making new friends — potentially making us even more trapped in the past as we don’t have an engaging present to distract us. Constantly being stuck in the past could also get in the way of thinking ahead. This can have knock on effects for our wellbeing – we need to focus on the past and present as well as the future to feel good.

What could be done

According to my research, there are three stages of cognitive immobility. The first entails becoming aware of the stress and anxiety caused by leaving the location where the mind is entrapped. During this stage, most migrants experience a lot of uncertainty, which hinders their efforts in many aspects of their lives, including resettling, acquiring new skills such as language and making new acquaintances.

The second stage involves deliberate efforts to reclaim the lost or abandoned object, creating more tension than the first stage. Here, the person might engage in activities such as travelling to their ancestral land, reconstructing their memories and reading about the lost location. Although physical visits to sites could alleviate the stress, this could be a temporary solution.

Sometimes the body moves, but not the mind. Image is in the public domain

The last phase consists of deliberate efforts to retain values and seek goals that will alleviate the loss. This approach might consist of using artefacts to symbolise the lost home, such as art or images.

It has also been argued that migrants could “make new homes”, but also represent their memories and aspirations – for example by making friends with people who come from the same place, or have the same religion. This is in fact one way to ultimately reduce the anxiety.

For now, it is evident that cognitive immobility has no perfect cure. But psychology offers some solutions which may prove to be useful, although they are yet to be investigated in the context of cognitive immobility.

For example, there are psychological interventions that can help us balance our mental focus on the past, present and future. To avoid being stuck in the past and become more present focused, we can write down something we are grateful for every day. And to become more future focused, we could imagine our “best possible self” five years from now – it worked for many people during the COVID lockdowns.

About this psychology research news

Author: Olumba E. Ezenwa
Source: The Conversation
Contact: Olumba E. Ezenwa – The Conversation
Image: The image is in the public domain

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LeBron calls All-Star Game “slap in the face… I’ll be there physically but not mentally”

It’s all but official: The All-Star Game is coming to Atlanta on March 7. As the leading fan vote-getter so far, LeBron James is on his way to Atlanta where he will again be an All-Star Game starter.

Just don’t expect him to be happy about it.

After the Lakers took care of Denver on national television Thursday night — with LeBron putting up a triple-double of 27 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists — LeBron vented about the NBA’s pivot to play the All-Star Game this season, via Dave McMenamin of ESPN.

“I have zero energy and zero excitement about an All-Star Game this year,” James said… “I don’t even understand why we’re having an All-Star Game…

“And then coming into this season, we were told that we were not having an All-Star Game, so we’d have a nice little break. Five days [in March] from the fifth through the 10th, an opportunity for me to kind of recalibrate for the second half of the season. My teammates as well. Some of the guys in the league.

“And then they throw an All-Star Game on us like this and just breaks that all the way up. So, um, pretty much kind of a slap in the face…

“I’ll be there if I’m selected. But I’ll be there physically, but not mentally.”

Note to gamblers: Don’t bet on LeBron for All-Star MVP.

LeBron likely speaks for a lot of players, particularly veterans who would prefer the rest, but also younger players like Sacramento’s De’Aaron Fox, who said of having the game, “I’m going to be brutally honest, I think it’s stupid.”

The game will go on because it makes the league — and, by extension, the players — more money. Turner Broadcasting, which shows the game, wants it. International broadcast partners want it. This season for the NBA is about making as much money as they can considering the situation, crown a champion, and move on to next season when things hopefully will be back to something closer to normal.

The game will go on, just don’t expect LeBron to be happy about it.

Check out more on the Lakers

Jared Dudley: Lakers weren’t sure they’d see their families again… Jokic jokes on LeBron comparison: ‘The speed is there. We are the same… NBA Power Rankings: Jazz keep on playing the right tune, move to No. 1

LeBron calls All-Star Game “slap in the face… I’ll be there physically but not mentally” originally appeared on NBCSports.com

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