On the set of En aparté this Wednesday, May 25, Ramzy Bédia explained that he was interned in a psychiatric hospital after his time in the army. The comedian remains very marked.
“I spent three months in psychiatry”. In As an aside this Wednesday, May 25, Ramzy Bédia confided in all sincerity about his stay in a psychiatric hospital, in his youth. At the time, it was thanks to books that the comedian and actor escaped from his daily life. “I had never read a book in my life before because for me books were at school. All that was Madame Bovary, and I was drunk. Stendhal, Le Rouge et le Noirremembered the sidekick of Eric Judor. In psychiatry, I didn’t want to leave my room because there were only crazy people. And I was going to the bookstore, I came across some books, and I started reading. And I ate it all.” If he was interned in a psychiatric hospital, it is because Ramzy Bédia did everything to be discharged from his military service.
“I wanted to be reformed so I acted crazy in the armytold the comedian on Canal +. But I think I went a bit too far. So they said to me: ‘You are reformed, but you are not going home. You go to a civilian psychiatric hospital. I found myself in Reims and stayed there for three months with people who had real problems. I was like, ‘Damn, I screwed up a little too much’.” At the time, Ramzy Bédia sought to be reformed P4, which “indicates the present and prolonged presence of personality and adjustment disorders definitely incompatible with the continuation of the service”, according to the Army. But he was reformed P5, which means that the doctors detected the presence of a proven and evolving psychiatric pathology incompatible with the commitment or the continuation of the service.
Ramzy Bédia: “They told me to open my mouth to take my pills”
Very secret about his intimate life, Ramzy Bédia had revealed to have spent time in a psychiatric hospital in an interview with Brut. “That is to say that I still served three months in the army, but they released me and they said to me: ‘You are reformed, but you are not returning to civil society. You go to the civil psychiatric hospital'”, he had explained to our colleagues. And there, it changed my life, because the psychiatric hospital is not a good memory.” In the columns of MarianneRamzy Bédia explained that these past months “with patients stuffed with pills” had it “marked for life”. “I kept telling them that I wasn’t crazy, that I had just screwed up a little so I wouldn’t join the army, he remembered. They told me to open my mouth to take my pills.”
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