Do you have sleafia, mental disorder, or addiction?

According to Oxford's English dictionary, a cyphical is a photo that someone takes to himself, usually through a smartphone or other device, and it's divided into social media. From the perspective of a psychologist, the doing of a culinary is a self-originated act that allows users to determine their individuality and importance and yes [...]
According to Oxford's English dictionary, a cyphical is a photo that someone takes to himself, usually through a smartphone or other device, and it's divided into social media.
From the perspective of a psychologist, the performance of a philanthropist is a self - misled act that allows users to determine the individuality and the importance of themselves and is also linked to personal characteristics such as narcissism.
However, taking a self is more than just a photograph. It may also include the editing of color and contrast, the changing of the background, the increase in other effects before it is divided on the network. These added options and the use of integral editing have more popularized the making of selphies, especially among teenagers and young people.
But there are also those experts, such as members of the American Psychiatric Association, who classify the serf as a mental disorder. The organisation defines them as an obsession desire to take photos of itself and post them to social media to compensate for self-esteem and fill gaps in privacy.
Also, according to her, there are three levels of disorder; the border line, the quality making at least three times a day, but not to post them to social media, acutely, making them at least three times a day; and posting them in social media, and chronically, the uncontrollable need to make seditious and post them in social media more than six times a day.
This theory was rejected, however, despite the fact that many who could vice the criteria used for dividing three levels, border lines, acute and chronic.
Experts, however, continued to examine the problem, and one of the findings is that people with chronic levels of seditiousness seek to adapt to those around them and can show symptoms similar to those of other adicious behavior.












