As it turns out, Jasmine may in fact suffer from Bipolar Disorder which is a manic-depressive illness that causes people to have unusual mood shifts in a cyclical pattern.
NarcissisticPersonality Disorder
Those characteristics of NPD are proven in Jafar in Aladdin movie (2019) as and Cinderella's Step Mother in Cinderella movieas it is discussed below.
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.
Gothel is a once-beautiful but now aging narcissist who restores her youth and beauty as long as she is exposed to Rapunzel's healing long hair. Gothel is the archetype of the worst in deceptive, abusive, and even violent narcissism.
Rapunzel frantically is trying to find Pascal and she returns back to the tower to locate him cause she knows he will be there. Upon seeing the place where all the abuse happened to her she shudders and falls back, suffering a small PTSD shock of returning here.
A: Mother Gothel in Disney's Tangled. In this re-telling of the classic Rapunzel story, Mother Gothel is a narcissistic, emotionally abusive sorceress who abducts the infant Rapunzel from her crib. Mother Gothel raises Rapunzel as her own, isolating her in a hidden tower to control Rapunzel and her magical hair.
As such, Elsa's position as Disney's first disabled princess becomes even more important since her film is garnering more attention than any Disney film ever made including golden-age classics like The Lion King and Beauty and the Beast.
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). First, she directly experiences a traumatic event relating to a near death experience (Criterion A1).
14 Anna: ADHD
Anna is the youngest of the sisters, and unlike her sibling, she does not possess ice magic and is far more outgoing and lovable. But, she also likely deals with having Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).
In Part I of the Frozen series, I suggested that Elsa experiences something like borderline personality disorder (BPD). In this interpretation, Elsa's frozen rages are an outward display of the emotional dysregulation she feels inside.
Demi Lovato is a 19-year-old Disney star best known for her role in the made-for-television movie Camp Rock. She was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2011 while receiving inpatient treatment at Timberline Knolls in Illinois.
In the film Frozen, the main character, Elsa, suffers from Post-Traumatic-Stress Disorder. This stems from an event as a child in which she accidentally hurt her sister, Anna, when they are playing together.
As if that wasn't disturbing enough, The Mary Sue also noted that Jasmine is a highly sexualized character, with Jafar (a middle-aged man) even commanding the genie to make her fall in love with him (um, problematic much?).
Pocahontas - Pocahontas
The sad truth is poor Pochaontas is a schizophrenic. Wandering off from her tribe, she spends her days playing out her delusions in the wilderness of rural Virginia and the shock announcement that she is to be married to one of her father's warriors only increased the intensity of them.
Hypothyroidism and Cushing syndrome having been excluded from our differential diagnosis, we conclude that CHPD deficiency and pseudohypoparathyroidism are the strongest candidates for an accurate clinical diagnosis of the seven dwarfs, since these conditions may account for most of their clinical characteristics.
At the beginning of Frozen, Elsa accidentally injured Anna while they were playing with Elsa's magic power. In the name of protection, her parents taught Elsa to hide what she is capable of, in order to stay safe. Not only that, they erased Anna's memory, pretending that Elsa's power did not exist.
Self-isolating, immobilized by the weight of personal expectations, and largely unable to experience joy, Elsa is the Anxious Girl's heroine. The model for Disney princesses has changed over the years, but every one of them has fallen somewhere between aggressively perky and blindly optimistic.
Rapunzel
Rapunzel was dangerously naive. Like, the most naive of all the naive princess. Which, yes, one should expect from someone who spent her entire life locked in a tower. But that means when Rapunzel was finally out in the world, she had to rely on a random dude to rescue her.
“Pinning an autism diagnosis on a Disney heroine may seem audacious, but Elsa displays a lot of traits reminiscent of those that clinicians and researchers have highlighted among girls with autism. As a model, Elsa can provide us with some clues about how autism is expressed in girls. . . ” Read more here!
Merida, a princess of the mystical Scottish highlands, has not only the archery skills of Katniss Everdeen in "The Hunger Games" but the parent-stopping pout of Bella Swan in "Twilight." She sulks with a brogue -- "Ach, Mom!" -- but her eye-rolling and tantrum-throwing are universal.
“It's about raising money and helping parents get their kick start but also about giving them the ability to help the kids throughout their lives.” Toni Braxton – In addition to being public about her son, Diezel, being diagnosed with autism at 2, she has been just as open about his success.
Gothel had been using the flower to stay young for centuries, so she kidnapped Rapunzel and kept her locked up in a tower. Although Gothel pretended to be Rapunzel's mother for years, Rapunzel eventually learned the truth.
Mother Gothel is the main antagonist of Disney's 2010 animated feature film Tangled. She is a wicked crone who has retained youth for hundreds of years through the healing properties of a magic, golden flower.
Gothel, terrified of growing older, is motivated by fear. As a result, she begins to display symptoms of BPD--to the point where she will literally die without Rapunzel and her magic hair.