Mental Disorders Extended Ortism in Entertainment Celebrities: Some Exemplary Cases Fostering Innovative Antidotes

Authors

  • Yadav R.C. Bio System Engineer, Chartering New theme ,”Food is medicine

Keywords:

Popularity through madness, Celebrities in entertainment, Maintaining homeostasis, Simplifying complex ideas, Evolution of personality in adapting to circumstances, Transition from 1998 to 2013 and beyond, Developing resilience to overcome challenges

Abstract

Gender development is scientific natural universal creation discovered in early years of 20th Century. The personality development is carved by subsequent indogenic and exogenic factors, which became very clearly visible in developing in devastating scenarios on female genders. The age and transition forced building predominate scenarios, which distorted women from glamour to ruining them. External factors namely Tabloid, music videos, gossips  and snarls intrusion creating faminism brought tremendous mental disorder in women which devastated lot many woman getting crazy joining the wind, but turned in to mental disordered culprit. This study brought exemplary cases, which contributed scenario from good to bad. This study presented varying scenarios of changes in the homeostasis situational transforming from glamour to slavery. This scenarios could be brought in to manageable band to maintain situation remain under control by manoeuvering impulses of brain wave cycles, now a current topics of physics  termed as God particle. With elapse of time there occurred visible changes,  but were not capable enough to bring complete revolutionary change. Nevertheless, this   study brings inner strength in individual to acquire  capability to overcome purplex situations. Thus, it brings a favorable situtions and sustenance in entertainment industries.

Published

2024-07-03

How to Cite

R.C., Y. (2024). Mental Disorders Extended Ortism in Entertainment Celebrities: Some Exemplary Cases Fostering Innovative Antidotes. Journal of Medical Health Research and Psychiatry, 1(1), 1–7. Retrieved from https://medical-health-psychiatry.com/1/article/view/7