A podcast about the myriad ways mental illness is used against humanity.
Listen along weekly as Amanda and Tommy dive into the many ways mental illness has been misunderstood, mistreated, and mishandled.
Latest Episodes
Martin Bryant was a young Australian man who became the infamous mass murderer behind the Port Arthur massacre. Listen along as we discuss Martin's life path leading up to the massacre and what could lead someone to commit such a horrific act of violence against an innocent community.
As either the butt of a joke or a misnomer for fear or discomfort, phobias are chronically misunderstood. Phobias, a type of anxiety disorder, can often be severe and debilitating for the sufferer. Listen along as we discuss the different types of phobias and how wearing a walrus suit for your friend could be both a blessing and a curse.
Born and raised in a traumatic household, Billy Milligan struggled through early adulthood. His arrest for a violent crime as a teenager was only a taste of what was to come. When Billy was arrested and charged again at age 22, his lawyers noticed some concerning odd behavior, which led to Billy becoming the first person to use Multiple Personality Disorder as part of an insanity defense in the court of law.
We're taking a break from telling other people's stories and instead taking a personal look at how ADHD has impacted our lives. Joining us is a friend to tell his story as well.
Content Warning: Child Harm. Naomi was a young, single mother of four children struggling to keep her mental illness at bay. Even after multiple stints in treatment facilities, her post-partum psychosis wasn't being handled properly. Tragically, Naomi's mental illness caused her delusions to spiral out of control on an otherwise beautiful 4th of July day.
Brain injuries can impact a person in unpredictable ways. Learn about studies done on people with post-traumatic brain injuries (TBI), cases where murderers were later revealed to have suffered sever brain injuries, and how a TBI could impact you or your loved ones.
Anneliese Michel started experiencing troubling symptoms in her high school years. After years of trying to treat her symptoms with medication and therapy without success, she was at her wit's end, and was looking for answers anywhere she could find them. This led her to seek out an exorcist, but was she really possessed, or was she a victim of being born too early for adequate mental health treatment?
A humorous and absurdly profane exchange between defendant and judge came to fame when it became a cartoon and played on late-night TV station Adult Swim. But once you look in between the phallic idiolect, a disturbing story comes to light. Was Denver Fenton Allen egregiously disrespecting the decorum expected in a court of law, or was he utilizing whatever tools were at his disposal to eke out what little justice was afforded the poor and mentally ill?
Attention seeking, a cry for help, or a little of both - people have many reasons to fake a disorder. Listen along as we explore the tumultuous world of faking disorders on social media.
A man was seeking treatment in a nearby mental health facility when a young woman was murdered in her college dorm bathroom. With no good suspects and a flimsy lead, police had to find someone to take the fall. James Blackmon, suffering from intense delusions, was coerced into a confession and was wrongfully convicted for decades until he was finally set free after multiple appeals.