• Jo Miran
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        488 months ago

        I suffer from chronic and sometimes severe insomnia. About ten years ago something triggered a “severe” episode and it refused to let up. After about two months of ~90 minutes of light sleep per 24 hour period, my mind began to shatter. I won’t get into details here about how bad it got, but I can totally see how someone could accidentally put a raw chicken in the crib and the baby in the oven.

        • @[email protected]
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          8 months ago

          I also suffer from insomnia - I regularly get 3 hours of sleep per night, and rarely get more than 6 (rarely as in 1-2 times per month). For a week and a half or so, though, after a death in the family, I was getting between 0 and a half hour per night, with obviously no deep sleep.

          I developed severe ataxia (I couldn’t walk without a cane), I lost the ability to speak coherently and it would take me minutes to form a sentence. I couldn’t follow conversations, and my appetite decreased to the point where I was down to about 50-100 calories per day (eg, I could sometimes manage a can of coke).

          When your brain starts to shut down, things really go south pretty fast. I managed to kickstart things using those meal substitute drinks (which I’d consume by chugging it in one go), and eventually my eating and normal 3-6 hour sleep pattern came back, but I was probably about 24-48 hours away from needing an ambulance.

          Luckily I live with my partner and although I put them into a panic, I didn’t have to manage the house/pets and just took sick leave from work. Even after going back, it took some time to return to my normal level of working. At the peak, I would have been absolutely incapable of operating if I lived alone.

          • Philo
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            108 months ago

            Sounds just as awful if not worse as depression can be.

          • @[email protected]
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            58 months ago

            When my insomnia hits it’s days of zero sleep… Like I see the 3 hours of sleep and I immediately (and unfairly) dismiss that you have insomnia, I’m just like, “bro, but you ARE getting sleep”).

            As I got my things under control I pivoted to Polyphasic sleep anyway. 1 30min nap every 6hrs and I absolutely adore it. Extra exertion or any kind of injury will warrant more rest, but then, thats resting with a purpose.

        • The Snark Urge
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          98 months ago

          My god. Having a kid and only getting a few hours per night for half a year drove me to the brink, it’s genuinely chilling to imagine what you’ve been through. I hope you’re sleeping more now.

          • @cynar
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            158 months ago

            We got the “don’t shake the baby” talk at the hospital. It was extremely over the top and patronising. It made a lot more sense later however. What was obvious and extremely patronising when rested and alert, barely cut through the fog, once sleep exhaustion kicks in. I can fully understand how parents can shake their baby to death, with no ill intent.

            A baby in the oven sounds bad, but I can see it happening, under the wrong circumstances, with the wrong person.

            (Oh, and my daughter made it to almost 2 before reliably sleeping through the night. The sleep deprivation was hellish.)

            • The Snark Urge
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              88 months ago

              We had a good run of keeping a solid bedtime ritual between 6 months and 3 years where ours would sleep through the night. Then we found out our kid is a morning person with ADHD. 🪦

              • @cynar
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                68 months ago

                We’ve both got ADHD, so I definitely feel for you. Thankfully, our daughter seems to be more of a night owl. Not perfect, but a lot easier to cope with than an ADHD lark would be!

                • The Snark Urge
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                  8 months ago

                  I would almost prefer to have it myself, so at least then I’d know what they’re going through.

                  • @kofe
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                    28 months ago

                    It has like 73% heritability. Surely they got it from one of y’all? I’ve just started exploring a diagnosis in my 30s, and holy hell is it helping me make sense both of why I struggle so much and why my dad’s so bonkers. Really recommend working with some professionals. I’m working on a degree in psych and can navigate the criteria from the DSM fairly well but I’m also working with individual and family therapists to help me and my family work through the hell it caused us from not knowing, plus how I can better understand/manage it moving forward

    • Drusas
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      118 months ago

      Mental illness or drugs could definitely cause this. She could be lying, but she might not be.

    • @[email protected]
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      18 months ago

      If I had to guess, the mother had to have been high on something. How the hell does someone mistake an oven for a crib?

      • DigitalTraveler42
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        768 months ago

        Love how people always jump straight to drugs, but there’s a variety of mental illnesses both permanent and temporary that could cause a mother to do this.

          • @[email protected]
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            388 months ago

            What quick conclusion should people arrive at in your opinion

            I’d wait for relevant information before arriving at a conclusion, but that’s just me.

          • DigitalTraveler42
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            8 months ago

            People should stop being dumb af and wait until we have all of the information, but this is also on journalism too since there’s so much emphasis on “if it bleeds it leads” and other reasons to pump out an incomplete story, they should emphasize on accuracy instead and make a bigger deal out of retractions and corrections, especially in this age of disinformation and propaganda.

              • @[email protected]
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                8 months ago

                My reaction is “how fucking awful” and this would be my reaction regardless of how the baby came to be in the oven. What other reaction do you expect people to have? Why are you seemingly equating waiting to be properly informed with not caring about the subject?

                We’re on a comment thread on Lemmy, we’re not involved in investigating this case. I don’t see why we’d be “poking” around.

              • DigitalTraveler42
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                108 months ago

                Like the other commenter I think “how fucking awful” then read the story, then wait for more details when the details are lacking.

                Again, in this age of disinformation and propaganda you have to exercise some discipline and critical thinking, and not jump to conclusions, also this is the real world, and people in the real world need to gain some discipline and critical thinking abilities, because it seems far too few of us have those abilities. I mean ffs we could find out tomorrow that this whole thing was an AI generated article that didn’t really happen, just like how the recent “toothbrush botnet hack” story that went viral this week was fake.

              • @[email protected]
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                58 months ago

                Being snoopy so you can feed something inside of you is silly at best. If that’s all you’re after go read a mystery novel.

              • andyburke
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                18 months ago

                Are you the lead investigator on this? Please do let us know what you find since you actually have access to the necessary evidence.

                Otherwise, tf are you on about?

          • @douglasg14b
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            58 months ago

            What quick conclusion should people arrive at in your opinion

            You make a great counter example of what not to do. So, none, they shouldn’t be making a quick conclusion on a complex topic. Like the above comment…

          • Melkath
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            8 months ago

            How about no quick conclusion?

            I have never in my life heard of roasting a baby outside Hansel and Gretel.

            I have, however, heard about a LOT of drug use.

            That would suggest we have an extremely complex situation here with no “quick” answer.

            I would guess this one is mostly sleep depervation and poor diet.

            Tuna casseroles are cheap, but they are not very nourishing. But that only begins to explain this one.

            • Philo
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              48 months ago

              Happened locally. The mother claimed it was accidental and that is exactly how the story read but after a police investigation it turned out it was intentional but the mother changed her mind a little too late.

              • DigitalTraveler42
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                78 months ago

                Which absolutely sounds like textbook post partum depression going too far.

                • Philo
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                  38 months ago

                  I think that might have been the reason, it was about 5 years ago.

              • Melkath
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                28 months ago

                Sounds about right to me.

                Also sounds like psychosis that you can’t blame on a drug.

                Runs deeper than that.

          • Philo
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            8 months ago

            My first question would be why was the crib near the stove?

            • DigitalTraveler42
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              68 months ago

              Why do people keep assuming the crib would be in the kitchen? Or that a crib is the only place we put babies? There’s basinets, bounce chairs, high chairs, play pens, strollers, car seats, and all kinds of other things where a parent can put a baby while they do things around the house, like cooking and cleaning in the kitchen.

      • Jo Miran
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        318 months ago

        This is how you tell people you have never been severely sleep deprived without telling people you’ve never been severely sleep deprived.

      • eric
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        68 months ago

        Maybe she swapped the two putting the roast in the crib.

      • @[email protected]
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        28 months ago

        You could guess a multitude of things. My money is sleep deprivation. A lack of sleep can really fuck some people up. Different people have different tolerances for it.