Mental disorders effect millions of people in the world and can lead to years of psychotherapy. In some cases, the psychological problem suffered is extremely rare or bizarre. This is a list of the ten most bizarre mental disorders.
10. Stockholm Syndrome
Stockholm syndrome is a psychological response sometimes seen in an abducted hostage, in which the hostage shows signs of sympathy, loyalty or even voluntary compliance with the hostage taker, regardless of the risk in which the hostage has been placed. The syndrome is also discussed in other cases, including those of wife-beating, rape and child abuse.
The syndrome is named after a bank robbery in Stockholm, Sweden, in which the bank robbers held bank employees hostage from August 23 to August 28 in 1973. In this case, the victims became emotionally attached to their victimizers, and even defended their captors after they were freed from their six-day ordeal, refusing to testify against them. Later, after the gang were tried and sentenced to jail, one of them married a woman who had been his hostage.
A famous example of Stockholm syndrome is the story of Patty Hearst, a millionaire’s daughter who was kidnapped in 1974, seemed to develop sympathy with her captors, and later took part in a robbery they were orchestrating.
9. Lima Syndrome
The exact opposite of Stockholm syndrome – this is where the hostage takers become more sympathetic to the plights and needs of the hostages.
It is named after the Japanese embassy hostage crisis in Lima, Peru where 14 members of the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA) took hundreds of people hostage at a party at the official residence of Japan’s ambassador to Peru. The hostages consisted of diplomats, government and military officials, and business executives of many nationalities who happened to be at the party at the time. It began on December 17, 1996 and ended on April 22, 1997.
Within a few days of the hostage crisis, the militants had released most of the captives, with seeming disregard for their importance, including the future President of Peru, and the mother of the current President.
After months of unsuccessful negotiations, all remaining hostages were freed by a raid by Peruvian commandos, although one hostage was killed.
8. Diogenes Syndrome
Diogenes was an ancient Greek philosopher, who lived in a wine barrel and promoted ideas of nihilism and animalism. Famously, when he was asked by Alexander the Great what he wanted most in the world, he replied, “For you to get out of my sunlight!”
Diogenes syndrome is a condition characterised by extreme self neglect, reclusive tendencies, and compulsive hoarding, sometimes of animals. It is found mainly in old people and is associated with senile breakdown.
The syndrome is actually a misnomer since Diogenes lived an ascetic and transient life, and there are no sources to indicate that he neglected is own hygiene.
7. Paris Syndrome
Paris syndrome is a condition exclusive to Japanese tourists and nationals, which causes them to have a mental breakdown while in the famous city. Of the millions of Japanese tourists that visit the city every year, around a dozen suffer this illness and have to be returned to their home country.
The condition is basically a severe form of ‘culture shock’. Polite Japanese tourists who come to the city are unable to separate their idyllic view of the city, seen in such films as Amelie, with the reality of a modern, bustling metropolis.
Japanese tourists who come into contact with, say, a rude French waiter, will be unable to argue back and be forced to bottle up their own anger which eventually leads to a full mental breakdown.
The Japanese embassy has a 24hr hotline for tourists suffering for severe culture shock, and can provide emergency hospital treatment if necessary.
You can read a much more indepth article on Paris syndrome here.
6. Stendhal Syndrome
Stendhal Syndrome is a psychosomatic illness that causes rapid heartbeat, dizziness, confusion and even hallucinations when an individual is exposed to art, usually when the art is particularly ‘beautiful’ or a large amount of art is in a single place. The term can also be used to describe a similar reaction to a surfeit of choice in other circumstances, e.g. when confronted with immense beauty in the natural world.
It is named after the famous 19th century French author Stendhal who described his experience with the phenomenon during his 1817 visit to Florence, Italy in his book Naples and Florence: A Journey from Milan to Reggio.
You can read a much more indepth article on stendhal syndrome here.
5. Jerusalem Syndrome
The Jerusalem syndrome is the name given to a group of mental phenomena involving the presence of either religiously themed obsessive ideas, delusions or other psychosis-like experiences that are triggered by, or lead to, a visit to the city of Jerusalem. It is not endemic to one single religion or denomination, but has affected Jews and Christians of many different backgrounds.
The condition seems to emerge while in Jerusalem and causes psychotic delusions which tend to dissipate after a few weeks. Of all the people who have suffered this spontaneous psychosis, all have had a history of previous mental illness, or where deemed not to have been ‘well’ before coming to the city.
You can read a much more indepth article on Jerusalem syndrome here.
4. Capgras Delusion
The Capgras delusion is a rare disorder in which a person holds a delusional belief that an acquaintance, usually a spouse or other close family member, has been replaced by an identical looking impostor.
It is most common in patients with schizophrenia, although it occur in those with dementia, or after a brain injury.
One case report said the following:
Mrs. D, a 74-year old married housewife, recently discharged from a local hospital after her first psychiatric admission, presented to our facility for a second opinion. At the time of her admission earlier in the year, she had received the diagnosis of atypical psychosis because of her belief that her husband had been replaced by another unrelated man. She refused to sleep with the impostor, locked her bedroom and door at night, asked her son for a gun, and finally fought with the police when attempts were made to hospitalize her. At times she believed her husband was her long deceased father. She easily recognized other family members and would misidentify her husband only.
The paranoia induced by this condition has made it a common tool in science fiction books and films, such as Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Total Recall and The Stepford Wives.
3. Fregoli Delusion
The exact opposite of the Capgras delusion – the Fregoli delusion is a rare disorder in which a person holds a delusional belief that different people are in fact a single person who changes appearance or is in disguise.
The condition is named after the Italian actor Leopoldo Fregoli who was renowned for his ability to make quick changes of appearance during his stage act.
It was first reported 1927 by two psychiatrists who discussed the case study of a 27 year old woman who believed that she was being persecuted by two actors whom she often went to see at the theatre. She believed that these people “pursued her closely, taking the form of people she knows or meets.”
2. Cotard Delusion
The Cotard delusion is a rare psychiatric disorder in which a person holds a delusional belief that he or she is dead, does not exist, is putrefying or has lost their blood or internal organs. Rarely, it can include delusions of immortality.
One case study said the following:
[The patient's] symptoms occurred in the context of more general feelings of unreality and being dead. In January, 1990, after his discharge from hospital in Edinburgh, his mother took him to South Africa. He was convinced that he had been taken to hell (which was confirmed by the heat), and that he had died of septicaemia (which had been a risk early in his recovery), or perhaps from AIDS (he had read a story in The Scotsman about someone with AIDS who died from septicaemia), or from an overdose of a yellow fever injection. He thought he had “borrowed my mother’s spirit to show me round hell”, and that he was asleep in Scotland.
It is named after Jules Cotard, a French neurologist who first described the condition, which he called “le délire de négation” (“negation delirium”), in a lecture in Paris in 1880.
1. Reduplicative Paramnesia
Reduplicative paramnesia is the delusional belief that a place or location has been duplicated, existing in two or more places simultaneously, or that it has been ‘relocated’ to another site. For example, a person may believe that they are in fact not in the hospital to which they were admitted, but an identical-looking hospital in a different part of the country, despite this being obviously false, as one case study reported:
A few days after admission to the Neurobehavioural Center, orientation for time was intact, he could give details of the accident (as related to him by others), could remember his doctors’ names and could learn new information and retain it indefinitely. He exhibited, however, a distinct abnormality of orientation for place. While he quickly learned and remembered that he was at the Jamaica Plain Veterans Hospital (also known as the Boston Veterans Administration Hospital), he insisted that the hospital was located in Taunton, Massachusetts, his home town. Under close questioning, he acknowledged that Jamaica Plain was part of Boston and admitted it would be strange for there to be two Jamaica Plain Veterans Hospitals. Nonetheless, he insisted that he was presently hospitalized in a branch of the Jamaica Plain Veterans Hospital located in Taunton. At one time he stated that the hospital was located in the spare bedroom of his house.
The term ‘reduplicative paramnesia’ was first used in 1903 by the Czechoslovakian neurologist Arnold Pick to describe a condition in a patient with suspected Alzheimer’s disease who insisted that she had been moved from Pick’s city clinic, to one she claimed looked identical but was in a familiar suburb. To explain the discrepancy she further claimed that Pick and the medical staff worked at both locations
Contributor: JT






















Rephrase it? Nope, I like the way I phrased it the first time. Appeasing your captors while they have you hostage is one thing. But visiting them in prison AFTER you’re out of harms way? Nah, that person’s got a thing for convicts. Ya start excusing them, next thing you know, you’re excusing the guy who’s TAKING the hostages in the first place. His crime may be worse, but the justification process works much the same way. Rationalization is a very contagious virus. I call it “no one’s at faultpox.” I like to immunize myself from time to time. Conversations like this serve as a great “booster shot.” BTW, Thanx.
You’re stating that Stockholm is both bunk And legit? “… visiting them in prison? Marrying them? That person enjoyed her “captivity.” You fail to grasp what Stockholm syndrome actually is if you are using this as an argument Against it’s existance.
counsellingresource.com/quizzes/stockholm/index.html
I’m really tired of trying to wade through your logic.
And I guess you won’t put forth a better definition of “Rooster Poop” either.
I find #10 and #6 really interesting. I almost wish I had suffered any of these instead of anxiety.
Crimanon, the link doesn’t work. It’s…”rooster poop” if you don’t mind me quoting ya, dave4248, lol. Any other way I can get to it? Don’t really feel like searching it, so I’m gonna let you procure that link for me.
Oh, and as far as the “disagreeable troll” comment, hahhahhaha! That just about cracked me up. Call me easily amused, but he’s got a point, Crimanon. Hehe.
In my opinion the Stockholm Syndrome is another “Syndromized” name for an emotion that perfectly normal human beings can go through. Not trying to say that a person falling in love with or symathizing with their capturer is mainstream and perfectly acceptable, but I can definetly see a situation happening in which some one takes some one else hostage over an elongated period of time, and the hostage, having all the time in the world, per say, to sit still, be quiet, and study the hostage taker’s behavior, responses, and so forth, begins to understand the emotions and/or reasons for the hostage taker to be doing what he or she is doing and does not act judgemental or scared, and perhaps happens to be attracted mentally or physically to the hostage taker. It would have to be an open-minded individual who understands that people who do bad things are not all bad at heart or *****ed up in the head. As far as falling in love with your capturer and marrying him/her…whatever floats your boat man. But totally possible, with out the need to call it a syndrome.
I think what dave4248 is saying by “Anyone who identifies with their captors, did so long before they were taken ‘hostage’” is that the person who is identifying with their captor is just a desperate woman who’s into the whole bad-boy-treats-you-like-***** image therefore when she gets taken hostage she feels excited and attracted to the badass captor, so she follows up and whatnot after she is freed. “That person enjoyed her captivity” just means that she was into it. Like you said, Crimanon, you could see some bored, depressed, attention-needing individual with the Stockholm Syndrome. It’s just because she was bored and needed some excitement (and she’s also dumb and “crazy” if you ask me), and after a period of time in which her life is simply meaningless, something like this would revive her, and she would want to keep in contact, or marry, the captor, as an attempt to keep that excitement in her life.
This, of course, is a different case from my last comment, in which I was talking about a person merely sympathizing and understanding the captor. Which I don’t look down on. You don’t have to tell the world what an ***** your hostage-taker was, dave4248, if you can feel his pain. But if you marry him, you are stupid and are going to have some serious ***** to deal with for the remainder of your marriage. But like I said, whatever floats your boat…it’s possible, and it’s not a syndrome. The word syndrome just makes it seem like it’s a disorder and it can happen to anyone or anybody may have been born with it, like Down Syndrome, just not so obvious, or under the right circumstances it could come out in any of us. BULL.
In any case, I just thought I would try to elaborate on dave4248′s comments, from what I understood of them, anyway. You just seemed so confused, Crimanon. Get it now?
My main point is, stop calling these things syndromes, they are things that can happen, and no, it doesn’t mean that there is something wrong with you mentally if it happens to you. We are all human, and we display human emotions. The drug companies need to stop trying to find bogus reasons to drug up the world for the love of money, and power.
Dank: We agree more often than you think.
http://listverse.com/health/another-10-bizarre-mental-disorders/ part deux
////////You’re stating that Stockholm is both bunk And legit?/////
No, Crimanon I never said it was “legit.” You’re not READING what I say, which is probably WHY you’re having a hard time understanding me.
Do we now. How ironic. Checking out the other list as we speak.
Runner up-
not sure what it’s called but it’s a disorder similar to the capgras delusion where one does not recognize one’s own body parts, instead thinking them someone else’s.
It usually goes away but sometimes patients insist that another man’s leg or arm has been attached in place of their own.
There have been cases where people have gotten up in the middle of the night, seen a strange leg, and tried to push it out of the bed only to go tumbling over the edge themselves.
Meh
ha
MEH!!!
meh heh
i have an alergie to coffee if that counts
I am intollerant to dairy products!!!
my friend has terex
I lurv Chocolate!!!
:):):) MMMMMMM…… yeah!!! Am eating sum now. Bet UR jealous. I am. Jealous. of myself. not!!!
I am surprised that Munchausen Syndrome or Munchausen Syndrome by proxy did not make the list. Now, for all those people who do not know MS, it is a bizarre mental condition wherein one would deliberately mutilate or inflict damage in his own person so that medical staffs in the hospital will flock his way to get the attention he “desereves”. MS by proxy is worse! The “sick” individual would inflict bodily harm or injury to a member of the family (like a mother to a child), friend, or somebody he cares about just so he could get the attention of the medical staffs. In short, people who suffer from this syndrome realy gets a kick basking in the attention the hospital staffs is extending to him. Now, if that is not bizarre I dont know what is!
SpunMe: It’s on a later edition, this one is only the first of three. It was three right?
Is there a third mental disorders list I don’t know about?
Dank: can’t remember, bad week. maybe I confused it with the Mysteries lists.
I have it on good authority that Crimanon + Dank are now happily married + living in a psychiatric institution….although as patients or staff???…I can not be sure!
On another note I do think loneliness, isolation, stress and being persistently bullied leads to extremely low levels of the feel good hormones which does lead to clinical depression and severe mental illness.
And when it comes to children who are a bit ‘wonky’, have ADD, many of them do SUDDENLY develop symptoms straight after their MMR vaccination!
Pay No Attention To Purplehills’ Torn Straight Jacket or Hanging Electrodes! He/She (it’s a disorder thing) must be a little confused after the latest treatment.
I have a friend who has a strange tendency, when he takes Ketamine he will often believe he is French ( wear a beret, scarf, draw on a mustache and talk french sounding bollox and simple phrases. Don’t suppose thats a disorder?
Capgras delusion, Fregoli delusion, Cotard delusion & Reduplicative paramnesia… I have experienced all of these. Not without having ingested a hearty serving of mushrooms, of course. They weren’t awful experiences, but pretty uncomfortable and I’m sure each would be pretty brutal on the psyche if experienced for long. I say they’re disorders. I sure as ***** wouldn’t want to live like that.
Bonjour, Special K monsieur?
this friend we are talking about here…wouldn’t be you, would it?
i get the strangest feeling…lol
The most widely publicized myth about the robbery, or rather about the Stockholm syndrome, was that one or both robbers became engaged to their captives. This is simply not true, and may stem from the language barrier: the phrase “engagera sig i någon” in Swedish does not mean “to become engaged to someone” (which would be “att bli förlovad med någon”), but rather “to care deeply about someone” (this sort of resemblance between two words in different languages that are not synonyms is known as a false friend).
As stated above, Kristin Enmark and Clark Olofsson became friends, and Jan Olsson married one of his female admirers, but there were no engagements between anyone present during the events.
This was taken from wikipedia link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norrmalmstorg_robbery
Despite that great site and greets from Ireland
Ca Va?
Have you ever heard of a person being described as a ‘hysteric’?….meaning no core personality, takes on the persona of those one is surrounded by at any given time…
Come to think of it, I’m sure I make much more sensible comments on other web sites…..
Wow
i am sure ive got a syndrome that has not been invented yet, i feel like ET, lost on a strange planet with even stranger people that i have nothing in common with and all i want is 2 go home, but i dont know how, PLEASE SOMEBODY HELP ME!!!!!!
I have a disorder. I think I’m 722 years old. I remember everything about my life, all the way back to Netherwoods where I was born, near Kinghorn, during the Turnberry Bond. If I remember everything, has it happened?
HEEEELP !!! I NEED HELP FAST !!!
hi homesick alien
i think u r normal….not many people admit they feel exactly same xxx
no, i most definatly am not normal, never been, dont wanna be (ask my friends)
i hate everything and everyone thats “normal” , means u r like the norm, in other words, like everyone else, to be “unnormal” to me, means being special
i love being different, and love everyone and everything thats outside the so called norm, so being called normal is quite offencive to me
As long as u not as abnormally unlucky as myself, who cares.
all u misfits and freaks out there, pleeease dont ever change, i looove you ! ! !
Interesting list.
There is a mental disorder where the person feels a limb should not be there. They look at this limb like it does not belong on the body and they try very hard to get it removed. Once it is gone they feel better.
I don’t think doctors know very much about it or how to treat it but I thought it was pretty bizarre but interesting.
Has anyone heard of this?
no. never heard of this but sounds very interesting, as i have a love for everything out of the ordinairy… do you have it?
I have heard of ‘I want a limb cut off’ syndrome. Can’t remember where or what it is called though…..a prize 4 the first person who finds out should be on offer!!! Saw a docu once about a man who was determined 2 have both his eyeballs taken out + donated 2 someone. Obviously no doctor would do it. Also a man on Jerry Springer who cut off his willy + flushed it down toilet. He initially blamed his partner but later admitted the truth. And have read about a man who cut off his own FACE including eyeballs but will not admit it + blames his dog. Also a man who was in acute permanent pain because his injured leg was in such a mess. Doctors would not amputate so he carefully managed to put it on a railway track so a train would slice it off. He said he felt so guilty afterwards when he saw the surgeon who had tried so hard 2 save it.
Body Integrity Identity Disorder (BIID), also known as Amputee Identity Disorder, refers to the psychological feeling that one would be happier living life as an amputee and is usually, if not always, accompanied by the desire to amputate one or more healthy limbs in order to enact that desire.
I saw an awesome documentary where a guy sat in his car with his legs in dry ice. He got his wish, both his legs were later amputated. I don’t think he ended up nearly as happy as he had imagined he would be.
Homesick Alien, no I don’t have that disorder and quite the opposite, I think I would die if I ever had to have anything amputated. That is one of my biggest fears that’s why I found the disorder interesting.
There is a wikipedia link I believe and if I remember correctly some people that feel nothing for that arm or leg are actually quite content having it taken off finally. Like they feel it wasn’t natural or part of their body to have it so when it’s gone there is relief. For only some I’m assuming.
hey guys, what do u think is going on with me, i ve got an intense fascination with everything and everyone that is not “normal” to the extent that i get bored after 5 sec talking to a “normal” person my mind just drifts off (ok, have ADD but the funny thing is thats not happening if i talk to a “freak”) i just find most people bloody boring and predictable
is what i have some sort of disorder or is it just the way i am?!
U sound like u r alot more vibrant and ‘alive’ than most people. Rejoice in that.
May I guess things homesick alien?
I reck u r a male of around 19 years?
Oldest child or only child?
I will be guessing what car u drive next….lol
Hope not bored u…..got no difficulty with acting a bit mental every now + again.
Try guess things bout me
hmm, pretty close purplehills
im 99.9999% sure that ur a female, guess ur youngish, somewhere between 0 – 99 years old
what area of this planet do u call home? r u american?
Yeah, am female. V young in heart and mind, but over 21. Most of the people on this site do seem 2 be American but I live nr London.
Now let me guess more things…..according to the balance of probabilities u r American but I am going to stick my neck out + guess that u r British. Mmmmm…..Welsh in fact….why? I don’t know.
What do u have an interest in I wonder?
Phsychology? Art? Maybe you look a bit gothic? U like the group Evervesence and single at the mo after a recent romantic hiccup?
If I was right about all this u would be correctly guessing that I am a v succsesful computer hacker who gained all this info from your e mails…lol
The more things u guess, the stronger the likelyhood that something will be correct. Got that bit right at least!
This is true. Almost twenty years ago, at the insistence of a friend, I sat and spoke with a Jesuit priest about my very complex and unusual life. A few days later, he called me and asked me if I would do him a small favor. This entailed meeting a friend of his who was a “specialist in religious phenomena”. According to the Jesuit, he wanted me to tell the psychologist all that I told him, which i did. After our conversation, the psychologist told him that he believed everything I told him ( and not the old “I believe that YOU believe it ” line ) and, that either “something so deep tapped into you, or, you tapped into something so deep that it goes beyond all human understanding”. This is true….
Hi Michael…….finding someone who genuinely understands you is such a good feeling…agree with that
truly interesting.
That is a very poor description of what happened in Stockholm and therefore of Stockholm Syndrome.
First, in Stockholm the original crime, an armed bank robbery was committed by one man. When he had taken the hostages, he demanded that a friend be used in the negotiations. This friend was then allowed into the bank. Once the hostages were all freed, BOTH men were arrested. The hostages went to court to defend the second man saying he was there to help and he was released.
Second, neither man married a hostage.
The second man did subsequently commit another crime for which he was imprisoned. He did marry a woman he met when he was in prison and who was a pen-pal.
Many psychologists now believe that Stockholm Syndrome as described does not exist, but what does occur is a natural
and normal human instinct to bond as you understand someone. As you bond it then becomes more difficult to harm either way.
Your facts as described above are incorrect and should be changed.
If you wish to find out more about what I said in 168, look on wikipedia for Norrmalmstorg robbery.
Very well said David. I did not know that.
Let people read through 300 comments b4 finding the true facts though……is more fun
Thanks purplehills.
I was going to leave my post off for another few weeks but impatience got the better of me. There was an interesting discussion in the thread (from c.110-130) about Stockholm Syndrome (which is what these lists are about – discussion), but I’m pretty sure the discussions would have been different if they’d known the facts.
David in London,
Or should that be David my neighbour considering we are on an international site?
I think I have seen a docu or fictional film about some1 bn kidnapped for at least a year by a militant group and the hostage took up the cause and was arrested for illegal activities and used ‘stockholm sydrome’ as a defence. Is this correct?
I have many more difficult questions 2 ask…..if you feel this is too easy for you to solve!
Hello again purplehills.
Actually you have have already read about that on this list. Patty Hearst was mentioned above under Stockholm Syndrome. She was the grand-daughter of the publisher William Hearst and although she was kidnapped and held for ransom, she subsequently took part in an armed bank robbery.
My guess is her lawyers used Stockholm in her defence.
You are too good!!!
Do I have a bizarre mental illness?
Tell me your opinion.
I am looking through a forum at the mo about people who are going through trauma because of divorce etc.
Even though I never have bn….married or divorced I mean.
Think we all bn through trauma
I don’t consider that bizarre at all; it’s taking an interest in your fellow human beings.
This might not be a great example but you will have heard of The Samaritans; why do you think people volunteer? It’s not necessarily because they have experienced a traumatic event in their own lives, but they realise the impact it could have if it did occur.
You probably know the answer yourself. Why are you reading that forum? Is it because you enjoy reading about others’ problems or because you are trying trying to understand their trauma? Or some other reason?
I think yall all are crazy, all in need for help.
lol……that’s what I like about this site. Never know what the next comment will be

David,my point was I was going to tell u name of other forum 2 c if u could guess who I am on it…..by ur powers of perception
I have studied counselling with a view to becoming one. Every1 in the class had issues of one kind or another. Did psychology for a cpl of years.That was better. More realistic.
Go on then purple, (I hope you don’t mind the familiarity), what is the name of the site. I’ll see if I can spot you.
(Assuming you’re not mauvemound)
wiki
Now you’ve lost me. Wiki isn’t a forum