Working With Others: Demonstration of Love
Amid Crisis, the Lovers of Humanity Are Building a New World
There are ways of showing love for humanity during these troubled times.
Those who work with the troubled face opportunities and responsibilities of a vast magnitude. With great urgency, within our hearts, we must resolve not to be drawn into society’s feuds and ephemeral biases.
Enfeebled civilization is enervated by materialism and torn by strife.
Behavioral crises and the severe emergencies they create are not uncommon, so knowing how to deal with them is essential. You make the situation as bearable and safe as possible when those involved remain calm and keep the sufferer under observation.
Not only do crises in behavior arise due to addiction, but also from mental illness, substance abuse, or medical conditions.
Medical conditions can cause cognitive/behavioral emergencies. These include low blood sugar related to diabetes or hypoglycemia, a traumatic brain injury, hypoxia or lowered blood flow to the brain and central nervous system, infections or meningitis, and acute inflammation of the protective membranes covering the brain and spinal cord.
Anxiety is a well-known mental condition that can usher in a behavioral emergency. An estimated 10 percent of all adults suffer from anxiety, making it a prevalent psychiatric illness.
Symptoms of distress include, among others, extreme uneasiness coupled with worry, agitation, hyperactivity, and restlessness.
In addition, people who experience anxiety can have panic attacks. These are overwhelming, intense episodes of fear and tension.
They may quickly lead to losing the ability to concentrate, focus, and rationalize feelings and jeopardize the body’s usual responses to those feelings.
When confronted with a behavioral emergency, it is essential to be calm.
Fear and uneasiness show indecision. Indecision and weakness will only escalate the situation and possibly make the sufferer’s panic and agitation worse.
It is necessary to speak directly to the person, establish and stay in eye contact, and reassure.
Do not dart about. The sufferer may think this is an attack.
Do not close in or try to corral the sufferer. Keep some distance between you.
Always stay with the sufferer. Please do not go off and leave them alone.
A psychiatric breakdown involves significant stress for everyone. Recognizing the actions that precede the crisis and dealing with the problem is essential.
Knowing how to calm down the sufferer will go a long way in making the situation as bearable and safe as possible.
The sufferer will likely require intensive treatment after the episode to either recuperate from an underlying physical medical condition or diagnose and treat a mental medical condition or substance abuse problem.
Treatment is crucial to reduce a second episode.
During a crisis, the sufferer cannot make the right decisions. This situation requires someone to remain supportive, avoid accusations, or condemn the sufferer. Getting the sufferer to perform simple tasks may help keep them here and now instead of losing them in a delusion or hallucination.
We will take what we need from our working knowledge and transfer all we can to the vision of the fruits of our labor.






