Psychosis Relationships Progressive

**Relationship psychosis** is a term used in psychiatry to describe states of mental disorder and illness that lead to disruption and distortion of human relationships. Relationship psychoses may include symptoms such as paranoid and manic relationships, low self-esteem, irritability, aggressiveness, mistrust and negativism. Patients may have difficulty connecting with others, have difficulty understanding themselves and others emotionally, and withdraw from social relationships and change their behavior due to unseen influences. Adolescents and young adults most often suffer from relationship psychosis. This condition requires the intervention of an experienced psychologist or psychiatrist. Psychotic care aims to understand the underlying elements of the disorder, identifying individual factors associated with the presence of symptoms and treatment. Treatment of relationship psychoses requires professionals with extensive experience, as they require increased support, understanding and guidance.

As is known, relationship psychoses are classified as disorders accompanied by a certain perversion of consciousness. And in this connection, it is extremely important to differentiate them from psychoneurotic conditions (especially since neuroses and psychopathic and psychosomatic disorders are very often accompanied by them). A person with relational psychosis is sensitive to disturbances in interpersonal relationships only when the state of affairs disrupts his or her own sense of well-being and security. This is what he sees as a problem that needs to be solved. Depression occurs less frequently within relationship psychoses than hysterical disorders. Patients with psychosis often experience emotional instability and high levels of personal tension in relationships, but at the same time they are able to maintain common sense and awareness of circumstances, even when situations around them are beyond the comprehension of a normal person. Due to their psychotic perception of reality, such patients are often distinguished by clarity of beliefs, while everyday life may seem crumpled and incomprehensible to them, as if it were written “from the outside.”

Relational psychoses are manifested by a complex interaction of psychological and physical aspects of adaptation. The majority of patients have mental disorders, the most common of which are