Teenagers tend to be that way without the illnesses and injuries.And lets face it, someone who's just lost a limb, or been struck with a life threatening ailment or injury is going to feel confused, or even depressed.

Teenagers tend to be that way without the illnesses and injuries.And lets face it, someone who's just lost a limb, or been struck with a life threatening ailment or injury is going to feel confused, or even depressed.
I know. I was referring to HarvestmanMan saying:pandaphil wrote:Its not so much mental problems we're talking about but mental health issues. We've seen how a lot of the students have emotional issues their struggling with. And lets face it, someone who's just lost a limb, or been struck with a life threatening ailment or injury is going to feel confused, or even depressed. It seems strange that the school doesn't have councillors or someone for the students to talk to when they're feeling sad, or afraid, or lost. The schools fully set up to cater to their physical needs, why not their emotional needs as well?Lianam wrote:
Yamaku doesn't have mentally challenged students.
a school specifically tailored to fit the needs of physically and mentally challenged teenagers
They actually also helped him move in there, but they did that while Hisao was having his first class session.The way Hisao's parents just dumped him in front of the school then buggered off just didn't sit right with me.
Actually, Hanako's panic issues are a perfect example of trauma-born irrationality. The reason she's a recluse is because she has such a hard time trusting others, in a similar way to Emi, but worse. PTSD isn't just caused by physical trauma like a car crash or a house fire...the backstabbing by her friends and the bullying in general are also at the bottom of Hanako's PTSD.Hanako...She's a recluse, but that isn't due to trauma-born irrationality, that's due to shit life experiences.
No, but he was clearly always unhinged, otherwise such a simple event wouldn't have led to paranoia and delusion. Honestly, it's pretty fucked up that the staff just let him go on being that way.Antonymous wrote:It was implied that he wasn't paranoid and delusional beforehand.
The school does have someone for all of that. He's called Mutou. Also Yuuko. Also probably every other teacher who has learned to handle this stuff. Also plenty of other students who have learned to handle this stuff too.pandaphil wrote:It seems strange that the school doesn't have councillors or someone for the students to talk to when they're feeling sad, or afraid, or lost.
Go read fanfics, browse the shimmie or Artwork thread, hang around the forum...And at some point, go replay the game.Shizunaremillako wrote:I think I have PTSD.
He's not as happy as he used to be.Xanatos wrote:...Mutou's sad?
Engels!Katie wrote:He's not as happy as he used to be.Xanatos wrote:...Mutou's sad?
Mutou started teaching at Yamaku Academy in 1980 when he was just 26 years old shortly after the school opened. The first seven years of the school's existence, suicide was fairly common amongst the students of Yamaku. One child per year killed themselves by tossing themselves off the edge of the rooftop. Mutou pleaded with the school board to build a fence on the roof, but they said 'No, the kids there have the right to decide whether they want to live or die. We'll try to give them the best lives we can, but ultimately the decision of whether they want such a life is theirs and theirs alone. so gtfo, okay?'
By 1987, Mutou decided he'd had enough. Without asking the school for permission, he built the chain link fence around the rooftop by himself. Thanks to Mutou's bravery and hard work, never again past 1986 has another child died while at Yamaku. (except for Hisao in the bad ending, but the fence was kinda weak at 20 years old and all.) But the scars etched into his heart from 1980 through 1986 of those children he failed to save shall never fade.
"French are just Spanish Germans, therefore Mexicans."Sea wrote:Comrade, as Khan Bek has convinced me to give Democracy a try.
...That's a neat fanfic but it doesn't really answer the question.Katie wrote:He's not as happy as he used to be.Xanatos wrote:...Mutou's sad?
Mutou started teaching at Yamaku Academy in 1980 when he was just 26 years old shortly after the school opened. The first seven years of the school's existence, suicide was fairly common amongst the students of Yamaku. One child per year killed themselves by tossing themselves off the edge of the rooftop. Mutou pleaded with the school board to build a fence on the roof, but they said 'No, the kids there have the right to decide whether they want to live or die. We'll try to give them the best lives we can, but ultimately the decision of whether they want such a life is theirs and theirs alone. so gtfo, okay?'
By 1987, Mutou decided he'd had enough. Without asking the school for permission, he built the chain link fence around the rooftop by himself. Thanks to Mutou's bravery and hard work, never again past 1986 has another child died while at Yamaku. (except for Hisao in the bad ending, but the fence was kinda weak at 20 years old and all.) But the scars etched into his heart from 1980 through 1986 of those children he failed to save shall never fade.
Horrifying, I'd wager. As if I have any room to talk...Comrade wrote:I wonder what fan fiction from you would be like
Yamaku doesn't have the facilities to cater to mental illnesses in general, the way they cater to physical disabilities in general. But a student who was still able to function in the school environment could still enroll as though he had no disabilities at all. I suspect that this is actually how Hanako's enrollment works, at least on paper.Lianam wrote:Yamaku doesn't have mentally challenged students.
I never said it didn't.Nekken wrote:Also, despite not working with mental illnesses in general, Yamaku probably has a strong counseling staff.Lianam wrote:Yamaku doesn't have mentally challenged students.
What about C-PTSD?Nekken wrote:That said, it's interesting: Emi matches textbook PTSD much more closely than Hanako does.