What sets Elsa apart from the mass array of Disney princesses is her inner battle with mental illness, anxiety and depression. In Frozen II, Elsa is the only person who can hear a voice but everyone couldn't.
After they visit the trolls, Elsa is forced to keep this big secret from his sister and the rest of the world. This sends her into a state of depression because she doesn't want to keep a secret from anyone, but she feels like she has to. Elsa also doesn't know how to control her powers which gives her anxiety.
The result of this research shows that Count Olaf has a personality disorder called antisocial personality disorder. Antisocial personality disorder is also known as psychopathy, sociopathy, or dyssocial personality.
The character of Anna does not have Clinical Depression or Anxiety. In her case, she is faced with debilitating grief that threatens to paralyze her. But being overcome with immobilizing levels of fear, hopelessness, and overwhelmedness has many origins. Depression and anxiety can be crippling.
Delusions of grandeur. Psychologists worldwide have examined Anna's mental disorder and say she has 'delusions of grandeur' which is when you think you have more wealth or power or other qualities than you do.
The Wonder Ending Explained. After Lib isolates Anna from her family, the little girl begins to starve, confirming the nurse's suspicions that it was not a religious miracle. Lib realizes that Anna is surviving on food that her mom chewed and passed into her daughter's mouth through kisses.
Anna Fox suffers from agoraphobia due to a traumatic car accident and lives a reclusive life at her large home in New York City.
Anna's parents rush her to the sacred realm, where discussions with the trolls reveal that Elsa was born with her powers/ depigmentation and deafness, rather than them being due to illness or accident. Grand Pabbie troll heals Anna but removes her memories of Elsa's magic.
Anna, Frozen - Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) The most popular character on this list is, of course, Anna from Disney's 2013 animated film Frozen. Anna is a perfect example of what it's like to have ADHD.
Elsa was rejected, isolated, and basically imprisoned by parents she just wanted to love, and that left a lot of wounds. Elsa is able express her feelings in song, and begins to move forward with the true family she has now, and the unconditional love of Anna and Olaf. In Frozen 2, a lot of Elsa's PTSD is gone.
In the movie The Little Mermaid (Clements & Musker, 1989), Ariel displays symptoms of disposophobia, which is defined as the fear of getting rid of things.
One of the diseases that Dora the explorer has is Dissociative Fugue. This a disease that causes Dora to forget every where she goes. This is why she always asks the viewers where to go. Dora is showing early signs of dementia because she constantly forgets where to go and she always has to ask her viewers for help.
Rapunzel, though, genuinely cares for Gothel, which shows that she suffers from what is known as Stockholm Syndrome, a mental disorder in which a person becomes emotionally bonded with their kidnapper/captor; and even when Rapunzel learns the truth, she still expresses love and grief for Gothel when she dies.
Children respond to stories that employ magical realism, so Elsa—as a superhero with what one of our daughters (Maryam's) and her friends call “ice powers” (the ability to create a whole castle of snow and ice using only her fingers)—has special appeal.
Lee says the core of the story was always about two sisters, and romance just wasn't where they were with Elsa as they wrote the sequel. "We couldn't change that from the outside because it wouldn't be authentic," Lee said. "So we didn't build Elsa a romantic story line.
Though Elsa never intended to, her attempts to keep Anna safe from her powers only resulted in her sister being physically and emotionally hurt. Elsa eventually discovered that she had froze Anna's heart, causing her to slowly transform into solid ice.
Snow White can be classified as having Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. The Princess meets all eight of the criteria listed in the DSM-V to diagnose PTSD (See Appendix A).
Ariel. Ariel from The Little Mermaid clearly has signs of Obsessive Compulsive disorder (OCD), where she is obsessed with collecting useless things.
Renee is a thirteen-year-old girl who is nonverbally autistic. She appears in the Pixar SparkShorts film, Loop. Renne enjoys playing ringtones on her phone and touching interesting textures (like reeds). She communicates by vocalizing, gesturing, and showing people things on her phone.
Elsa might be an animated fictional character but she's also just a lady dealing with mood disorders. Here, Wing See explores the character and how she represents those with a variety of complex mental illnesses.
Although Elsa is not the only character with disability in the Disney canon, she is the first princess 1 to be designed with disability in mind, and one of only two human characters with visible disability to make the cut at all since Quasimodo in The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996).
Elysium is the first daughter of Elsa and Jack Frost, protagonists in Frozen and Rise of the Guardians. She is also a Princess of Arendelle and Junior Guardian of Winter. She is the older sister to Elise and is the first heir to the Throne of Arendelle.
Living with agoraphobia can make life difficult and very limiting. Professional treatment can help you overcome this condition or manage it well so that you don't become a prisoner to your fears. You also can take these steps to cope and care for yourself: Follow your treatment plan.
The person may be afraid to go out or to be far from home. The name comes from the ancient Greek word “agora,” which refers to a place of assembly or a marketplace. People often misunderstand agoraphobia as a fear of open spaces, but it is more complex than that.
Agoraphobia is a type of anxiety disorder. A person with agoraphobia is afraid to leave environments they know or consider to be safe. In severe cases, a person with agoraphobia considers their home to be the only safe environment.