hehe Have you heard about the "Trump Anxiety Disorder"? A real disease .

Oh yes it is affecting marriages… Friendships have been broken, hair pulled out, jobs lost etcetera. Symptoms include: Fear of the,world ending, helplessness and loss of control, spending EXCESSIVE MASSIVE WASTEFUL time on social media etcetera.

[SIZE=7]Report: US Therapists See Increase in Patients With ‘Trump Anxiety Disorder’[/SIZE]
[SIZE=6]A ‘symptom’ is feeling as though the world is going to end.[/SIZE]
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Jul 29, 2018 // 9:42am
As seen on Fox & Friends Weekend

Therapists say there’s been a rise in anxiety stemming from the country’s politics, and it is being called “Trump Anxiety Disorder.”
A report from CBC News in Canada says that since President Trump was elected, mental health professionals in the United States have seen an increase in patients whose stress has come from politics.
A prevalent “symptom” of the “disorder” is feeling as though the world is going to end.
Sen. Cory Booker Pleads for Supporters to ‘Get Up in the Face of Congresspeople’

Elisabeth LaMotte, founder of the D.C. Counseling and Psychotherapy Center in Washington, D.C., said that some of her patients feel “on edge” about Trump’s decisions.
“It’s very disorienting and constantly unsettling,” LaMotte said.
LaMotte told CBC News, too, that even those who support the president feel isolated within social spaces or their families.
According to an essay written by psychologist Jennifer Panning, the symptoms of “Trump Anxiety Disorder” include “feeling a loss of control and helplessness, and fretting about what’s happening in the country and spending excessive time on social media.”
A 2017 poll by the American Psychological Organization also found that nearly half of its respondents said they were significantly stressed due to the country’s political climate.
Watch more above.

And in other news further afield…

[SIZE=6]‘Instead, I got Jared Kushner’: How Trump jokes he wishes his daughter Ivanka had married his pal Tom Brady[/SIZE]
By Keith Griffith For Dailymail.com23:27 BST 28 Jul 2018, updated 06:52 BST 29 Jul 2018

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[li]Trump reportedly regularly jokes that Ivanka should have married Tom Brady[/li][li]Ivanka’s mom has said Trump urged daughter to meet Brady but she refused [/li][li]Instead the Patriots quarterback married supermodel Gisele Bundchen in 2009[/li][li]Ivanka also wed in 2009, to New Jersey-born real estate developer Kushner[/li][/ul]
Regrets? He has a few.

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President Donald Trump apparently regularly jokes that he ‘could have had Tom Brady’ as a son-in-law, adding ‘instead I got Jared Kushner’, according to a New York Times report citing five people who have heard the wisecrack.

Trump is said to have tried to play matchmaker between the legendary New England Patriots quarterback and his eldest daughter Ivanka, before her 2009 marriage to Kushner.

‘At one point, Donald wanted her to date Tom Brady, the quarterback,’ Trump’s first wife Ivana wrote in her book Raising Trump. ‘He said, “You have to meet him!” But Ivanka wasn’t into it.’

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Trump and Tom Brady have been friends for years, and Trump reportedly likes to joke that Brady could have been his son-in-law. They are seen above golfing in Palm Beach in 2006
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Ivanka (left) was urged by Trump to meet Brady but wasn’t interested, her mother said. Instead, she married Jared Kushner (right) in 2009
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Brady was also married in 2009, to Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bundchen (with him above after Super Bowl VI). Her influence is said to have put a damper on his friendship with Trump
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Trump and Brady do have a friendship dating back to at least 2002, when the Trump Organization hired Brady to help judge the Miss USA pageant.

The two men struck up a friendship and became regular golfing buddies.

‘We’ve just played golf together many, many times and, you know, I’ve always had a good time with him,’ Brady said in a 2016 radio interview.

‘He’s been a friend of mine, supported our team. He’s been on the Patriots sidelines a lot and always called me after games to encourage me over the course of 15 years.’

Brady married Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bundchen in 2009, and by the time of the 2016 election, her influence seemed to put a damper on Trump and Brady’s bromance.

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Patriots fans pose with a sign proposing Brady for vice president in 2015. Brady stopped short of openly endorsing Trump in the election, and they later locked horns over anthem kneelers
Brady stopped short of endorsing Trump in the election, and when Trump said that the Patriots star had voted for him, Bundchen lashed out on Instagram with a horrified ‘NO!’

After Brady was photographed with a ‘Make America Great Again’ hat in his locker, the chastened play caller said that his wife had told him to stay out of politics, adding ‘I think that’s a good decision.’

Brady and Trump locked horns most notably over NFL players kneeling during the national anthem, an action that Trump vehemently opposed.

While Brady never knelt himself, he did stick up for his teammates who did in the face of Trump’s withering criticism.

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Brady is seen celebrating his fifth Super Bowl win in 2017. Trump reportedly regularly laments that Brady didn’t end up as his son-in-law, adding ‘instead I got Jared Kushner’
‘I certainly disagree with what he said. I thought it was just divisive,’ Brady said in a radio interview with WEEI last fall.

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The Times report about Trump’s son-in-law joke came in a sweeping profile of Ivanka Trump and Kushner, examining how they have weathered criticism and a controversy over Kushner’s security clearance to remain as entrenched at the center of White House Power as ever.

Ivanka’s announcement last week that she would shutter her clothing line seemed to underscore the idea that the couple from New York plan to remain in Washington DC for the long haul.

[SIZE=6]Trump Anxiety Disorder: Therapists claim patients are experiencing President-related anxiety due to Potus’ policies and Twitter feuds[/SIZE]
By Dailymail.com Reporter02:21 BST 29 Jul 2018, updated 08:15 BST 29 Jul 2018

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[li]Therapists in the US said more and more patients are suffering from Trump Anxiety Disorder [/li][li]The unofficial disorder is when patients fear the future of the country because of Trump’s Twitter feuds and policies [/li][li]One therapist said symptoms mimic those of patients who grew up with a parent suffering from a personality disorder [/li][li]Another therapist said her patient asked if Trump was going to ‘blow us all up’ after he tweeted to North Korean leader that his nuclear button ‘was bigger’ [/li][li]The disorder affects both Trump critics and supporters, who said they felt isolated from family and friends because they are in favor of the president [/li][/ul]
Therapists across the United States say that ever since president Donald Trump took office patients have been experiencing more anxiety - and it’s affecting both Trump critics and supporters.

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Several therapists spoke to Canada’s CBC News saying that many of their patients have a fear about the country’s future and if Trump will ‘blow us all up.’

‘There is a fear of the world ending,’ DC therapist Elisabeth LaMotte said. ‘It’s very disorienting and constantly unsettling.’

LaMotte said there is a ‘collective anxiety’ about how Trump’s decisions could affect everyone. Patients and therapists refer to it as ‘Trump Anxiety Disorder’, although it is not an official diagnosis.

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Therapists say that more and more patients are experiencing an increase in anxiety due to president Donald Trump
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She said the ‘disorder’ has been on the rise since the 2016 election, and mimics patients who have been raised by a parent with a personality disorder. LaMotte said those patients typically display traits such as ‘grandiosity, excessive attention-seeking and severe lack of empathy.’

‘Whether it’s conscious or not, I think we look to the president of the United States as a psychological parent,’ she said.

Clinical psychologist Jennifer Panning, of Illinois, wrote a 2017 essay on Trump Anxiety Disorder saying the symptoms include patients feeling a loss of control and helplessness, and fretting about what’s happening in the country. She said they also spend an ‘excessive’ amount of time on social media.

LaMotte said one patient experiencing Trump-related anxiety asked her: ‘Is he gonna blow us all up?’

In January, Twitter users called on Twitter to block Trump’s account or remove his tweet after he told North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un that his nuclear weapons button was ‘bigger and more powerful’.

‘North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un just stated that the “Nuclear Button is on his desk at all times.” Will someone from his depleted and food starved regime please inform him that I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his, and my Button works,’ the president tweeted.

Many people feared that Trump’s Twitter post could lead to a nuclear conflict.

Last week, Trump tweeted a warning to Iranian president Hassan Rouhani: ‘NEVER, EVER THREATEN THE UNITED STATES AGAIN OR YOU WILL SUFFER CONSEQUENCES THE LIKES OF WHICH FEW THROUGHOUT HISTORY HAVE EVER SUFFERED BEFORE. WE ARE NO LONGER A COUNTRY THAT WILL STAND FOR YOUR DEMENTED WORDS OF VIOLENCE & DEATH. BE CAUTIOUS!’

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One therapist said her patient asked her if Trump was going to ‘blow us all up’ after his tweet (above) to Kim Jong Un that his nuclear button was ‘bigger and more powerful’
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Another patient said she was constantly checking social media because of her increased anxiety about what Trump was saying
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Therapists said the disorder called Trump Anxiety Disorder affects both Trump critics and supporters
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Last week, Trump tweeted the above warning to Iranian president Hassan Rouhani not to ‘ever threaten the United States’
John Hawkins, a therapist in Mississippi said his LGBTQ patients worry that Trump’s policies could ‘void’ their marriages. Panning said the same, telling the CBC that one of her lesbian patients is ‘significantly concerned about the legitimacy of their marriage in the future’.

Kevon Owen, a therapist in Oklahoma City, said a lot of his patients fear there could be a war.

Another therapist located in Kentucky said Trump comes up quite a bit in his sessions.

‘Both from people feeling the president is being persecuted and people just beside themselves with worry about the direction of the country,’ he said.

Connie Sherman, the manager of a dental practice in San Diego, told the outlet that she’s been having trouble sleeping since Trump took office and found herself constantly checking her phone all times of night.

‘When [special counsel] Robert Mueller’s indictments news dropped, I wound up staying up in the middle of the night when I should have been sleeping, just thinking about it, just worried for our country,’ she said.

Trump Anxiety Disorder is also affecting those who are in favor of the president. LaMotte said one patient who is a Trump supporter expressed feeling ‘socially or familially isolated’.

Steven Stosny, who works in DC, said a Trump official said he felt anxious at work because of the high-pressures of the job and the criticism directed towards the White House.

The official also said his support of led to his daughter hating him and him and his wife filing for divorce, even though he left his position at the White House.

Jaime Gale, a Trump supporter in Ohio, said her symptoms remind her of how she felt following the September 11 attacks when she felt ‘fear of the unknown and unfamiliar’.

‘It scared the crap of me. Now I’m scared of getting pounced on by somebody who doesn’t like me because of Trump,’ she said.

@patco inakaa umefurahi sana, how do you think the patients are going to vote come the November elections?