I've both been caught up in a strange mood for the last couple of weeks, as well as being mildly schizophrenic for the last 10 years (lately it's been about as debilitating as having a light cold).
The strange mood I've been in is my new website, arthuman.com, an "artist's chronicle" of my various drawings (many "political" drawings, though I consider democratic politics to be a mostly a sham today). I spent about 10 hours a day for the last 2 weeks working on it.
I've wanted to create this site for several months now, but my energy-sapping job in a bank's corporate HQ left me with no energy left to do what I really wanted to do. I managed to get myself fired (not a difficult proposition - just call in and tell them you're taking a 3-day vacation, no matter what.), so I've had plenty of free time lately.
As far as being schizophrenic, it has been somewhat interesting, at times terrifying. When you can't trust your own senses, it can make getting by in the world a challenge. But it also can make a person extremely open minded and free-thinking in their approach to the world, so it's not all bad.
The difficult part is people's reactions when you tell them you are. Many people seem to think that all schizo's are axe murderers or something. But it's no big deal really. But try getting a job when the employer knows you're schizophrenic, and then think about what it's like to have to be secretive about the fact that you are. It's a lot of BS.
As far as having urges to bite peoples' noses off and things like this which was mentioned earlier, I've read up a tremendous amount on mental health and related stuff. Urges like this could be caused by anything ranging from a vitamin deficiency, to not getting enough exercise and eating junk foods and sugary foods, to a number of other things.
A lot of the mental health 'industry', in the US at least, would want to put someone who had such urges on a chemical medication, but the motives for that are only profit-related; there are natural remedies for things like this which actually cure the problem, not mask it with sedative medications or medications which nullify the mind's 'range of expansion'.
But to get into a strange mood, someone would have to have an inventive personality, and would have to pretty much consider conformity to be the antithesis of a logical way to approach the world, and personally I think that such people are the only hope that humanity has for making the world any better a place. Those who conform or don't do anything extraordinary or special in any way aren't going to make anything change.
I personally consider schizophrenia to have been a blessing for me. I've always been a nonconformist, and extremely open-minded, and this might not have been the case if I had a 'normal' brain. I'm also a very laid-back guy, so even if I do have strange sensory inputs, it doesn't really make me go batty or anything, my reaction is just kind of 'hmm, cool', or 'oh well, it'll pass'.
Normal is an illusion anyway.
That's all I can think of that's relevant, peace.