Baby Shower

Scientologist Tom Cruise talks Tough About Psychiatry




An Empty Nest Is For The Birds
An Empty Nest is For the Birds

by S. M. Calhoun



It was just a simple child's book, its total vocabulary consisting of only five words. Yet, as I .....
Scientology and Tom Cruise--Megastar Tom Cruise has always politely and
respectfully been a Church of Scientology member and supporter. But these days, the War of the Worlds actor has been a lot more smug and outspoken in the media about the views held by him and his church on the field of Psychiatry.

While there has been a media blitz around Cruise and his new movie and new
relationship with the much younger actress Katie Holmes, the actor has been using
much of his time in interviews to talk about Scientology and take a few jabs at
mothers who use antidepressants for Postpartum Depression--like actress Brooke
Shields (Down Came The Rain: My Journey Through Postpartum Depression).

Cruise and Shields have been having a media feud over the topic of medication and
depression, and it appears that Cruise blasted psychiatry and medication use even
further in his Today Show interview with Matt Lauer.

When Cruise discussed postpartum depression, his opinion (based on Scientology
views) was that all antidepressants do is mask the problem of depression. It is his
belief that depression can be treated with vitamins and exercise.

While vitamins are great as supplements to keep the body nourished, let's be frank
here. It is dangerous and almost bordering ridiculous to advise a women suffering
from postpartum depression that she should take vitamin therapy and a long walk
to avoid feeling the urge to shake her crying baby! Or to increase her interest in
even holding her sleeping baby.

Co-sleeping, A Personal Story
When I was pregnant, we knew that we had some fairly fixed ideas about how we wanted to raise our child, including allowing her to share our bed for as long as .....
While no one is recommending throwing antidepressants down every mother's
throat with the baby-blues, postpartum depression on the other hand is a serious
condition that often responds favorably to antidepressant therapy.

Tom Cruise also believes (based on Scientology views), that there is no such thing
as a chemical imbalance.

What Cruise needs to keep in mind is that many treatments in modern medicine are
not based on exact proof, but supposition. It was theorized at one point that drugs
that targeted brain chemicals in humans would either cure on help alleviate
symptoms of mental illnesses.

And now there is proof that certain drugs which affect brain chemicals help the
affected person manage their illness. Ask someone who has been severely
depressed, someone suffering from bipolar disorder, or a schizophrenic. Ask the
people that love them. For many sufferers of mental disorders, there is a difference
and improvement in the quality of their lives when they take their medication. That
is a fact that cannot be denied.

While Scientologists probably mean well-- they have very affective programs
helping drug addicted people get clean and great reading programs for children,
they seemed to have fallen into the traps of many other religions and organizations
by standing on their moral high horse and generalizing or demonizing certain
people, groups, or theories.

My opinion? Tom Cruise needs to go somewhere and start planning his wedding.
Brooke Shields could write another book based on the controversy that has been
thrown her way. And us mere mortals? Well, I know if I start seeing Elvis cooking
green tomatoes in my kitchen, that somebody better get me to the nearest shrink
immediately:)

Visit her for Advice & Counseling, or take one of the Free Life Assessment, Relationship Ready, or Depression Screenings today. Subscribe to the growing self-help ezine "Better Choices".

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