Disgusting, using this on children and "ruley housewives". I don't think I've ever been so sickened in my life
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0aNILW6ILk[/media]
Well yes quite disturbing.
Imagine having a pin driven into your brain, then inaccurately and wildly twisted and turned to destroy a part of your brain.
If I'm honest I'd expect nobody surviving such a treatment in the first place.
Saw this doc at least 4 times, one of my favorites.
Pffffuck.
I gotta watch Shutter Island now.
[QUOTE=Devil Wind;38839770]Pffffuck.
I gotta watch Shutter Island now.[/QUOTE]
and one flew over the cuckoo's nest
I'd rather die than have a lobotomy.
[QUOTE=HazzaHardie;38839862]and one flew over the cuckoo's nest[/QUOTE]
True
[editline]15th December 2012[/editline]
Dead Thread.....:suicide:
Oh my god my whole body feels weird after watching that.
Did anyone else notice this flashing image?
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/91fjH.png[/IMG]
I got this done as a Christmas gift last year, I was told it was well good
Look up Eugenics. It's just as bad.
Lobotomy's are literally my worst fear ever
Shit, I got light headed when they started the describing the procedure.
[QUOTE=HazzaHardie;38839862]and one flew over the cuckoo's nest[/QUOTE]
and Session 9
That's fucked up on a different scale.
The late 40s and 50s sound like grim times.
I heard he drove around the country in the Lobotomobile :v:
[sub][sub]No really[/sub][/sub]
[QUOTE]Following his development of the icepick lobotomy, Freeman began traveling across the country visiting mental institutions in his personal van, which he called the "lobotomobile."[8] He toured around the nation performing lobotomies and spreading their use by educating and training staff to perform the operation.[/QUOTE]
God dammit, my eyebrows ache after watching that.
When they were driving the pick inside [I]whyyyyyyy[/I]
Do they even work?
When I first heard about lobotomies, I was always scared at night that when I fell asleep someone would lobotomize me. Keep in mind this was when I was 8 or so, but lobotomies are still one of my worst fears.
[QUOTE=HazzaHardie;38839862]and one flew over the cuckoo's nest[/QUOTE]
Poor Mack...
So very, very tired...
[QUOTE=milkandcooki;38848531][media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94FuUEPkzrQ[/media]
Related. Really depressing.[/QUOTE]
that's the creepiest thing i've ever seen. what do these people even think after being lobotomized? what's left of their humanity? how could someone do this sort of thing to another person or want it to happen to themselves?
It is no surprise that older approaches to psychology serve as endless inspirations to horrors and nightmares.
[QUOTE=Fourm Shark;38849328]I hope one day in the future, we can find a cure for all mental problems, without physically mutilating people.[/QUOTE]
ur a little late dude. anti-psychotics made lobotomies obsolete except in specific circumstances.
[QUOTE=Fourm Shark;38849421]I know that, but we hardly have a cure for most major psychological disorders. They usually are for life.
[editline]16th December 2012[/editline]
Sure, symptoms can be levied, but I see people everyday still suffering, even with medication.[/QUOTE]
i hope that in my lifetime i will see us find a way to interface directly with our brains; to eliminate our illness from the source. i hope that one day we will look back and cringe thinking about how we needed to pump people full of chemicals to make them function, to alleviate their suffering.
[quote]Over the years, Freeman developed a reckless enthusiasm for the operation, driving several thousand miles across the country to carry out demonstrations at asylums and hospitals. [B]An instinctive showman, he sometimes ice-picked both eye sockets simultaneously, one with each hand. He had a buccaneering disregard for the usual medical formalities - he chewed gum while he operated and displayed impatience with what he called 'all that germ crap', routinely failing to sterilise his hands or wear rubber gloves. [/B]Despite a 14 per cent fatality rate, Freeman performed 3,439 lobotomies in his lifetime.[/quote]
crazy fucker
I'm sure he'd be lynched for what he's done if he were alive today. Such a sick fuck, why would you even begin to think that scrambled-egging a persons brain would "fix" the problem?
He was probably mentally fubar but because it worked in that day and age, no one was any bit the wiser to his bat-shit insaneness.
So I'm not the only one who felt like throwing up?
[QUOTE=download;38850263]So I'm not the only one who felt like throwing up?[/QUOTE]
I think if the professional surgeons that were around him at the time when he was lobotomizing people felt sick, then no one will think less of you for wanting to throw up.
my fucking god, when they showed the first lobotomy being done, I was JUST able to throw my headphones off and look away, just as I heard the guy hammer the pick in his eye
terrifying shit
[QUOTE=Scientwist;38850027]I'm sure he'd be lynched for what he's done if he were alive today. Such a sick fuck, why would you even begin to think that scrambled-egging a persons brain would "fix" the problem?
He was probably mentally fubar but because it worked in that day and age, no one was any bit the wiser to his bat-shit insaneness.[/QUOTE]
How exactly did it "work"? I mean, all those people that you can see in the aftermath video look totally nuts.
Or tripping on something.
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.