Seeing, Hearing, or Feeling Too Much? There’s a Way Back.
We decode disruptions in perception, thought, and behaviour using advanced brain-mapping, neuro-modulation, holistic therapies, and psychiatric care, bringing stability back into everyday life.
Understanding Psychotic Disorders
Psychotic disorders alter how the brain processes reality, affecting perception, thinking, emotions, and behaviour. These episodes often stem from disruptions in brain circuits responsible for filtering information. With early intervention and a whole-person approach, stability, clarity, and functional recovery are not only possible they’re expected outcomes with the right care.
The World May Feel Unreal. Your Healing Won’t Be.
Psychosis doesn’t erase your identity; it disrupts the brain’s ability to separate internal experiences from the outside world. With structured, integrated care, these circuits can regain balance.
Psychosis Simply Explained
A clear breakdown of symptoms, pathways, and recovery possibilities, so the condition feels less frightening and more understandable.
Symptoms
Psychotic symptoms can shift how you think, feel, and understand the world.
- Hallucinations: Hearing voices or sounds that others don’t hear, seeing shadows, figures, or images, and experiencing sensory distortions involving smell, touch, or taste.
- Delusions: Strong beliefs not based in reality, feeling watched, controlled, or threatened, and holding fixed false beliefs despite clear evidence.
- Disorganised Thinking: Tangled or rapid thoughts, difficulty organising ideas, and speech that becomes unclear or fragmented.
- Emotional & Behavioural Changes: Reduced emotional expression, social withdrawal, and unusual or unpredictable behaviour.
Assessments
We decode the roots of altered reality through science and clinical expertise.
- qEEG Brain Mapping: Identifies dysregulated networks affecting perception and thought clarity.
- Neurological Review: Detects brain, nerve, or metabolic issues contributing to psychosis.
- Psychometric Testing: Measures severity, cognitive functioning, and patterns in thinking and behaviour.
- Whole-Person Evaluation: Considers lifestyle, trauma, sleep, and substance influences affecting episodes.
Treatment
A stabilising plan tailored to restore clarity, function, and emotional grounding.
- Neuromodulation: rTMS, tDCS, and taVNS calm overactive circuits, improve cognitive control, and reduce symptoms.
- Psychiatric Care: Medication strategies customised to reduce hallucinations, delusions, and thought disturbances.
- Brain Training: Neurofeedback enhances attention, emotional regulation, and executive functioning.
- Psychological Therapies: CBT for psychosis, grounding techniques, trauma-informed therapy, and family psychoeducation.
- Mind–Body Integration: Yoga therapy, breathwork, Ayurveda, sensory grounding, and lifestyle recalibration.
Outcomes
Our approach aims for restored clarity, reduced symptoms, improved daily functioning, strengthened cognitive abilities, emotional stability, and long-term prevention of relapse. With continuous monitoring, recovery becomes structured, supportive, and sustainable.
The Buddhi Clinic Advantage
A multi-layered, tech-integrative path to restoring reality, grounding emotions, and rebuilding functional independence.
Our specialists combine advanced neurotechnology, psychiatry, psychology, and holistic systems to decode the roots of psychosis and create a personalised recovery pathway. With continuous tracking, deep evaluation, and long-term support, we help individuals regain clarity, confidence, and control.
Answers That Bring Stability.
Explore expert insights, practical guidance, and clear answers to your most pressing questions about anxiety and its care.
Is psychosis the same as schizophrenia?
No. Psychosis is a symptom; schizophrenia is one possible diagnosis. Psychosis can also occur due to stress, trauma, substances, or medical causes.
Can psychotic disorders be treated without long-term medication?
Some cases require ongoing medication, but many benefit from neuromodulation, therapy, lifestyle changes, and brain training, reducing dependence and improving outcomes.
What causes hallucinations and delusions?
They often result from dysregulated brain circuits, chemical imbalances, trauma, sleep disruption, or neurological conditions.
Can someone fully recover from psychosis?
Yes. Many individuals return to school, work, relationships, and independent living with early intervention and personalised care.
How do technologies like qEEG help?
qEEG reveals which brain regions are overactive or underactive, helping guide targeted treatments like neuromodulation and neurofeedback.
How do I support a family member with psychosis?
Education, calm communication, early intervention, and consistent follow-up care make a major difference.
Is psychosis dangerous?
Psychosis can be distressing, but it isn’t inherently violent. Treatment and safety planning significantly reduce risks and improve stability.