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We Are Culturally and Generationally Cursing Ourselves by Failing to Understand Schizophrenia

The hidden trauma we keep passing down — and why breaking the cycle starts with seeing schizophrenia clearly

We Are Culturally and Generationally Cursing Ourselves by Failing to Understand Schizophrenia

The hidden trauma we keep passing down — and why breaking the cycle starts with seeing schizophrenia clearly


Please Consider Supporting Me and My Research on This Matter

https://gofund.me/add5abc3d - I am still struggling to get by each day financially.


Schizophrenia is not what most people think it is.

It is far more than hallucinations or delusions — it is a profound disorder of executive function, relational safety, and neuroplastic recovery that has been systematically misunderstood and punished across generations.

In this piece I explore how cultural denial, diagnostic conflation, and generational trauma have created a silent epidemic of suffering. Drawing on lived experience, peer-reviewed research on stress regulation, prefrontal cortex function, and intergenerational patterns, I show how our collective failure to understand the true nature of schizophrenia harms not only those who have it, but entire families and communities.

Real recovery is possible when we stop punishing the symptoms and start supporting the underlying neurobiology. This post is both a personal reflection and a call for cultural honesty.


In this piece I share how our culture has been generationally misunderstanding schizophrenia — treating it mainly as hallucinations or delusions while the real core impairment, severe executive dysfunction, has been largely ignored or punished.

Through years of public video journaling and independent synthesis with Grok, my research has clarified that schizophrenia is best understood as a disorder of disrupted relational coherence: chronic stress (elevated cortisol) damages the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, while lack of safety blocks the oxytocin and dopamine pathways needed for motivation, planning, and emotional regulation. The good news is that these mechanisms are highly responsive to consistent relational safety and multi-modal inputs such as rhythmic movement, music, art, and reflective practices — all of which drive measurable neuroplasticity in the prefrontal cortex, cerebellum, and hippocampus.

I am now working on a four-paper series that will offer a clearer diagnostic framework, disentangle schizophrenia from common conflations, and propose a practical, recovery-oriented treatment paradigm grounded in peer-reviewed science. The goal is simple: move from punishment and misunderstanding to genuine support and healing.

Thank you for watching and for any support you can offer as I continue this independent work.

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