A few months ago u/djt4moreyears made this post (https://greatawakening.win/p/16aTQgjMZf/covid19-vaccine---vaccine-induce/c/) about the vaccine causing psychosis in some individuals.
My never-vaxxed adult son became psychotic, and it seems to have been cured by ivermectin and nebulized hydrogen peroxide, which are both Covid treatments. We discovered this by accident, as he was diagnosed with Covid upon transferring from one mental institution to another, despite testing covid-negative when initially admitted with newly diagnosed schizophrenia. I brought him home from the second institution and gave him both covid treatments. Even though he was already on antipsychotics and seemed mentally stable, he got markedly better after the covid treatments.
The timing, and the earlier GAW post about vax-induced psychosis got me to research whether covid caused psychosis by itself. Another clue was that, like my insomnia when I had covid back in 2020, his psychosis was preceded by severe and persistent insomnia. And of course lots of people with covid complain about "brain fog" which is far short of being psychotic, but still shows a brain connection. Anyway, all of it together got me to research. Sure enough, I found a bunch of reports that detail a link between covid and psychosis, although it's obviously not the primary symptom for most people. I have a few links below, but feel free to do your own research.
The main reason I'm posting this is to give everyone a heads-up: if you know anyone with a recent or sudden onset of psychosis, it may be curable by covid treatments. Today my son is living at home, as sane as before, with zero meds, after having been involuntarily committed, as crazy as anyone I've ever seen. Seeing someone you love descend into lunacy is devastating, frightening and disturbing. I'm blessed that he's escaped the pharm(a) system, and has recovered his sanity without meds or having restrictions placed on his ability to work and live, which often happens to people who are involuntarily held for mental health. I hope this post will help others do the same.
I will have another post called "follow up on my son" to thank people for the prayers and medical advice, all of which I followed up on to some degree, and all of which I'm grateful for. The original post is here: https://greatawakening.win/p/16ZqdWMvUS/medical-info-help-request-bipola/ This post is just the heads-up about psychosis.
Some (there are many more) links to articles that show a connection between covid and psychosis.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8511796
https://casereports.bmj.com/content/14/4/e242538
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2773021222000281
The easy stuff was being manic, talking all night. But as time went on, his behavior became both more strange and erratic: he had thoughts not based on reality, like thinking a target employee could give him a dental exam (and trying to get them to do it); he gave away his jacket to a movie theater employee as a donation; he spoke words that couldn't make sentences, and would tell you something that you couldn't respond to (this is technically called disordered thinking and is really weird) because it was so nonsensical that you couldn't derive a meaning. Most of it was strange but seemingly harmless, but eventually it progressed to problems involving other people, like throwing a toy across the street which hit someone, or removing someone's mail to put it in a nearby hole. A lot of totally random stuff. Mostly I followed him around to prevent him from doing things like that. But he gradually became less easy to persuade. Once he put ripped paper - a lot, like half a book- down the drain for reasons only he knew; once he wandered off and cut himself (not self-harm, more like climbing a fence or something) but couldn't say how; he left the front door wide open at 3am; or exit a moving vehicle in traffic; he broke a neighbor's lamppost. But all of it was nonstop, until after he was admitted.