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Mental Illness Facts Article

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How A Psychosomatic Illness Can Affect You?



When a person is said to have a psychosomatic illness, he is actually suffering from an illness that affects both his mind and body.

Some people believe that a psychosomatic illness is something that is superficial or imaginary; however, there is enough proof to show that it is not.

When a person has strong emotions or thoughts that can affect the way his body fights illnesses, then he is very prone to becoming a person with a psychosomatic illness.

There is a link between how a person feels emotionally and how he feels physically. When a person gets sick due to too much stress or due to the pressures of life, his illness can be considered a psychosomatic illness.

Since stress can indeed weaken a person's resistance to certain illnesses, it is then logical that a psychosomatic illness is real and not a figment of someone's fertile or paranoid imagination.

How a psychosomatic illness can happen in a person is basically dependent on how well a person can cope with stress and what part of his physique is the weakest when it comes to resisting illnesses.

The problems that clearly affect a person's emotional and psychological wellbeing as well as his physical health can show themselves in different ways to different people. This means that the stress and the psychosomatic illness that might emerge from stressful situations will often show different symptoms from person to person.

When a person is exposed to a great deal of pressure, like a sudden loss of a job, the loss of a loved one, too much work and other such stress inducing factors, he may experience illnesses that he is more prone to having than other people.

One person who has a stressful life might have his body react with a respiratory illness, like asthma or pneumonia, simply because of the fact that he is more prone to respiratory illnesses.

Another person faced with the same kind of psychological baggage might find himself suffering from ulcers or from stomach problems while a third person who is in the same situation might be plagued by rashes or hives as a result of the stress that he experiences.

All these are possible occurrences, and when a person is beset with physical problems due to mental and emotional anguish, he should treat the problems like he would any illness, with the utmost care and seriousness.

And if the illness is too serious or if it persists for a long period of time, it is advisable that he seeks the advice of a doctor.