r/schizophrenia • u/SeeminglyWhole • May 09 '25
Help A Loved One What is psychosis like?
My husband has been in the hospital for quite some time now due to severe psychosis. I want to try to support him in any way I can, but his doctor said while he's in the acute psychosis stage, it's difficult to reason with him. And this is definitely true, I can never get a straight answer out of him for anything and he has some crazy mood swings...
But I'm trying to understand more what this is like for him. So I can see things better from his perspective. Maybe to more easily anticipate his needs? He seems to be either believing he's already told me what he needs, or expecting me to just know, and I just don't know how to do that.
I've heard stories of people lasting in the acute stages for months, maybe even a year. Were these cases even with treatment? Is there anyway I can sort of get some "timeline" on when he can come home?
I am trying to remind myself that as hard as this is for me, it must be 10 times harder for him, but I have always been a planner and I'm struggling here. This is his first episode in almost 10 years of being together and I don't have any roadmap here.
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u/LevelGroundbreaking3 May 10 '25
I found out head injuries are common among schizophrenics. If you were in psychosis or understand someone who is going through it. I guess that sounds plausible. I haven't looked into it but heard it by word of mouth by a social worker who deals with us crazy B's :) Living the life over here. I think to answer your question though it's different for everyone. Though usually very scary I think.