Personality and mental illness .. Method of receiving crises and vision and respond and adapt to these crises and difficulties



Mood and emotional experiences during human childhood have a great influence on the characterization of personality. This personality may also affect the way in which crises are received and seen, and how to respond to and adapt to these crises and difficulties. Some people, for example, are used to seeing events, even small ones, as major crises and disasters, or they fail to cope with these events. While others are calm and able to adapt to events and crises without causing great disturbance in their stability and psychological life.
People with mental illness often have a prior personality disorder and before the onset of mental illness, although this link is not entirely clear. It is believed that the previous personality of the disease does not occur the disease itself, but rather determines the form of infection and the quality and severity if they occurred. There are various forms of personality disorders, for example there are personal anxious, obsessive, emotional volatile, sad depression, and schizophrenia. It is not necessarily when the psychosocial personality suffers from obsessive-compulsive disorder, but may take a different form, while those with a volatile emotional personality are often at risk of depression or bipolar disorder. In this emotional character we find that the person is always fluctuating between sadness and joy and even for the least reason. This does not mean that emotional personality is the one that has caused bipolar disorder, each of which can be the result of other factors independent of each other.