Decades/Outro~ Joy Division
7 жыл бұрын
Russia on Ice~ Porcupine Tree
7 жыл бұрын
Escalator Shrine~Riverside
7 жыл бұрын
I See a Darkness ~Johnny Cash
7 жыл бұрын
Richmond Fontaine ~Santiam
7 жыл бұрын
Never Coming Home ~ Airbag
7 жыл бұрын
The Eternal ~Division of Joy
7 жыл бұрын
Suicide Terrorism
11 жыл бұрын
substanceabuse
12 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@RYwoodview
@RYwoodview 4 ай бұрын
Psychiatrist here. These recordings (there are a few others) of Freud are historically very meaningful. Psychiatry is a relatively young medical field, 2-300 years old in terms of people trying to help the mentally ill live better and begin to heal. Freud's theories, which he developed analyzing his own psyche, were essentially the first useful psychological approaches to treatment. HIs theory of the unconscious, with ego, id & superego, with oral, anal and genital stages, were seminal ways of thinking about the mind. These have provided much healing, properly applied. But so have other psychological approaches (Jung's archetypes, interpersonal therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, object relations, family & systems theory, and others). None of them, including Freudian psychoanalysis, are the final word or the overarching approach. All are useful and have applicability to certain patients and situations. But Freud started the ball rolling. We are still closer to Freud historically than to the founder of American psychiatry, Benjamin Rush. My analyst's analyst was analyzed by Freud. All psychoanalysis stems back on the same family tree. It's like being Freud's great-grandson in a way. Cool.
@Nv_Del
@Nv_Del 9 ай бұрын
Gran filósofo 👏
@user-ks7pb5yj4n
@user-ks7pb5yj4n 11 ай бұрын
That little girl's face at 3:45 reminds me of how it felt to be at my Grandmother's when I was little. The spirit can feel scary to a child. Where it's mostly quiet, maybe she was resonating in the void? When I come back to it in the silence now, I am taken back to that time as a child. I would stare at the picture of Jesus she had in her living room. I knew there was nothing to be afraid of, but it was there I recognized how quiet life really is. Couldn't wait to get back to the house and the t.v. at home though! But now, here I sit in a silent home. Full circle. ❤ Glad that little girl got that opportunity!
@saumyojitdas4212
@saumyojitdas4212 Жыл бұрын
This video is gold. Should be kept in museum. I pay my tribute to you sir. Mental health is one complex domain. It doesn't matter how much money you earn you can still be a vic of any problem.
@atomatman3104
@atomatman3104 Жыл бұрын
REAL IS NOT AT ALL JUST A TEST OF THE EMERGENCY GLOBAL NETWORKS YOU GOT YOURSELVES CAUGHT IN NOW YOU NEED A GRU TO GET FREE FROM THIS BS YOU CREATED.
@ajeje1996
@ajeje1996 Жыл бұрын
Great video, nothing pairs with Jason Molina quite like solemn industrial landscapes. This was shot at ArcelorMittal Cleveland East, just south of Cleveland and about 25 miles east of Lorain, the town in which Molina was raised.
@willtowin9996
@willtowin9996 Жыл бұрын
A genius
@leosaris2579
@leosaris2579 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic. And so sad.
@portlandfavorite7183
@portlandfavorite7183 Жыл бұрын
As part of basic counseling skills, some poor problem solving and missing reflection of feeling noted including validation of courage it took to tell someone since she has no one to talk to about the situation.
@nanipanini
@nanipanini Жыл бұрын
thank you for uploading!!!
@user-ei1hs9ji1h
@user-ei1hs9ji1h 2 жыл бұрын
a true lovely teacher. از در درآمدی و من از خود به درشدم گفتی کز این جهان به جهان دگر شدم گوشم به راه تا که خبر می‌دهد ز دوست صاحب خبر بیامد و من بی‌خبر شدم چون شبنم اوفتاده بدم پیش آفتاب مهرم به جان رسید و به عیوق برشدم گفتم ببینمش مگرم درد اشتیاق ساکن شود بدیدم و مشتاقتر شدم Saadi Shirazi
@user-pb8rs9uo8v
@user-pb8rs9uo8v 2 жыл бұрын
Unbelieveble
@heavilymeditated108
@heavilymeditated108 2 жыл бұрын
When he looks at the camera at the end he is looking straight into the viewer’s soul ❤️
@smartman123
@smartman123 2 жыл бұрын
amazing how we are watching video 120 years old
@reecethomson5990
@reecethomson5990 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Ram Dass. I hope you are doing well. ❤️
@pzer04
@pzer04 2 жыл бұрын
I was only Three years of age when this video was posted. Today, I'm Seventeen. That makes me feel some way, to see a Thirteen year old video. Dr. Freud is interesting.
@owlrust5965
@owlrust5965 2 жыл бұрын
Lol, for a second I thought you were 85 because of the first part of your sentence. I had thought you were 3 when this video was CREATED haha.
@pzer04
@pzer04 2 жыл бұрын
@@owlrust5965 lol
@frodolikeabadhobbit9831
@frodolikeabadhobbit9831 2 жыл бұрын
Suffering is a backward looking mental activity based on choice that keeps you trapped in a state of feeling emotional sadness, loss and regret. There are four types of suffering: mental, emotional, physical and spiritual. Check out this teacher based in the USA who breaks this down very logically. Check the Channel at DIVINE WISDOM RISING.
@lucaagiszabo1868
@lucaagiszabo1868 3 жыл бұрын
This video is narrated by his daughter, Anna Freud. Thats why the voice is not masculine.
@sofilust
@sofilust Жыл бұрын
He is also speaking in a language that is not he native tongue, he spoke French English and German. Sometimes when you speak second language you speak it is with a different tone or cadence. Actually most of the time I speak three languages and I sound differently in each one
@martingp6977
@martingp6977 3 жыл бұрын
Mi admiración total
@ryanini999
@ryanini999 3 жыл бұрын
I love you Ram Dads ❤
@kamleshbagrecha7957
@kamleshbagrecha7957 3 жыл бұрын
thank you ram dass sir🙏🍑🍑🍓🍓🍉🙏
@alindley3128
@alindley3128 3 жыл бұрын
omg, my dad does those exact hand movements, and has done them all his life, without ever having seen this video. And his face and cheekbones are the same shape, but we got Henry James' nose and long limbs from the love of Henry James' life (who refused to marry him), Emily Bradley Beetle, who inspired the character of Isabelle Archer in Portrait of a Lady. So our nose is different from Freud's nose. The hands, though. They're really good for playing guitar, lute, or cello. Pity Freud didn't take up music. There are many, many German lutenists who have Freud's face and Freud's hands. I have the hands, though I never had the chance to study lute or guitar.... And the best thing about Freud's teeth are that the enamel is really great! I don't know how much of his theoretical work has panned out as true, but that Tooth Enamel has made a major contribution to Modern Developed Society, thanks to Eugenics. Yea, Freudian Tooth Enamel! (And don't forget to floss! As long as you floss daily, your Freudian Tooth Enamel will last a lifetime!) NB: I cannot change the atrocities of the Human Eugenics Breeding Program. I can't undo the terrible carnage and injustice caused by their horrifically racist false "science". But I can lampoon the heck out of them. And so did my darling grandpapa, each time he brought in a sperm sample to the Eugenics doctors, as he was asked to do when he had achieved the highest score on record for his generation on the Stanford Binet IQ test. He'd breeze into the Eugenics Sperm Donor office to drop off his sperm sample, chortling, "What's UP, doc?" And thus inspired the cartoon character of Bugs Bunny, with his irreverence, his gazillion biological children conceived via that sperm, and his habit of snacking on carrot sticks..... What's UP, Doc?
@alindley3128
@alindley3128 3 жыл бұрын
My personal opinion as a neurologist is that Freud's ideas are...uhm, .....overrated at best. (Or, as the character Polly says of the Witch Jadis' story of how the children woke her up in the C.S.Lewis novel The Magician's Nephew, "Not EXACTLY true? It's absolute Bosh from beginning to end!!!") But wow: Those Genetics! I wish my dear old daddio would just watch this video. Or just Look in the Mirror. (His father, my paternal grandpapa, was born nine months after his grandfather and grandmother returned from their visit to Vienna where my dad's granddad did a Postdoctoral Semester studying psychology with Sigmund Freud. Then the great granddad of our family went on to become chairman of the psych dept at Indiana when Dr. L. Bryan was caught in flagrante delicto with a faculty member's wife and had to resign, stat, in disgrace. The great granddad went on thence to become a major American College Administrator, establishing programs in Indiana, Idaho, and Kansas, that survive to this day, and also establishing the legitimate need for University Appointments to be made based on academic excellence alone, without political litmus tests for faculty appointments and other university employment.... Yea, Academic Freedom! Yea, the absence of political litmus tests for faculty appointments at American universities! Durned shame this tradition isn't better respected to this day, because it was an important one for our American universities in the past.) And the great granddad's influence reached down to modern times via his inspiring one of his students, named Lewis Terman, to go on to study psychology and to do his PhD at Clark with G. Stanley Hall. Terman, in turn, went on to teach psychology at Stanford, where he modified Alfred Binet's developmental screening test for school children to become the Stanford-Binet IQ test that the U.S.military used for testing recruits, to assign them to jobs that matched their cognitive ability as measured by this test, thus transforming Binet's mere screening test for normality in school children into a test to assign "grades of normality" to people within the normal population. Nancy Bayley's work showed that much of the underpinning theory behind the Stanford-Binet IQ test was false: In reality, IQ varies within and between individuals considerably, especially in childhood up until around age eighteen years, and even afterwards in the same person. But we still discount Bayley's fact-filled work, preferring instead to believe that IQ measures some real, immutable, genetically-determined quantity, a number measuring real cognitive power and value, as it were, stamped (metaphorically speaking) on the forehead of each individual.....to indicate their cognitive value.... (And according to Bayley, that whole concept of an immutable inborne set IQ is nonsense, not to mention later insights into the concept that there are several different TYPES of cognitive intelligence.... e.g., artistic, musical, mechanical, literary, mathematical, social, emotional, etc. etc. etc.) Yet oh my golly, those Freudian cheekbones, that slight hunch of the shoulders, that facial shape and those mannerisms...... those TEETH! Even I can see them whenever I look in the mirror. My gosh, they're evident in my dad, who wears a full beard, and whose face is exactly the same shape as Sigmund Freud's face. My dad looks like a smiling version of Grumpy old Dr. Freud.... the smile really helps the look, I'll give him credit for that!
@jjvs9
@jjvs9 Жыл бұрын
are you ok
@anna-zh3xr
@anna-zh3xr 3 жыл бұрын
4:27 powerful information!! secret in life
@1995yuda
@1995yuda 3 жыл бұрын
Look at those eyes in the end, and the conviction in which he says his name... This man had a full, happy life, the kind we should all wish upon ourselves.
@prince-solomon
@prince-solomon 3 жыл бұрын
That´s impressive. To hear his voice, many decades after he perished. Technology is amazing!
@VikingLord2000
@VikingLord2000 3 жыл бұрын
Hate him or love him, but at least history remembers him. What about you?
@HosaasH
@HosaasH 3 жыл бұрын
This his voice ?
@pamela-vi7rp
@pamela-vi7rp 3 жыл бұрын
Phenomenal. This that abandoned mall in Northern California. I also hear The Other One by the Dead. Drones are no joke. Thx for Ram Dass vid🕊️ Beautiful arrangement.
@nietzschearistofanes
@nietzschearistofanes 3 жыл бұрын
A mentally sick man.
@erikstickevers250
@erikstickevers250 3 жыл бұрын
Anyone here from Sam Vaknin?
@pajefoster2494
@pajefoster2494 3 жыл бұрын
Suffering brings me close to God. Love is our divine light manifest. Two things , ah Baba Ram Dass, it is the Universe! 😇🙏
@angelmusicvideos
@angelmusicvideos 4 жыл бұрын
the soul attaches it's self like honey, it's very sticky, within each plain a soul will embody it's self to a sticky situation because that is what it wants, its funny how what we want is what we want to get away from, that is both suffering and love, so without acknowledging both the good and bad we wouldn't experience true reality, which I understand now we learn to relinquish suffering by surrendering our selves to that suffering, transmute it to love, this is no easy matter. "I hurt every time I fall in love but it's what I wanted all along"
@TheLeon1032
@TheLeon1032 4 жыл бұрын
so so very beautiful, thank you Ram
@isabelladuquedaza5971
@isabelladuquedaza5971 4 жыл бұрын
The laughs are stressing me out
@saimai4630
@saimai4630 4 жыл бұрын
The way he talks is so cute?! The more I learn, the more I grow to admire this absolute genius.
@timothywait9457
@timothywait9457 4 жыл бұрын
Love bless the female child with red hair
@Feber2001
@Feber2001 4 жыл бұрын
Penis Envy.
@Melissa-nd8qc
@Melissa-nd8qc 4 жыл бұрын
Oh Baba Ram Dass. This was his loving service to us all by trying to have a session with us right after his stroke. He just couldn't find words for awhile but kept going FOR US. he said he doesn't wish his stroke on anyone. But the grace from the stroke. Ive gone thru guided meditations with him even after his stroke and it was slowly. Yet deliberate, Real, and patient Love. I never skip this period of his teachings in time. He sure didn't.
@explorer4435
@explorer4435 4 жыл бұрын
Melissa Jackson I’d love to hear more about your experiences with him after the stroke
@Melissa-nd8qc
@Melissa-nd8qc 4 жыл бұрын
@@explorer4435 I never got to meet him as I didn't make it to the last retreat before he surrendered his vessel. But I have every book hes ever written and all his lectures and meditations are online, my mom and dad taught me about him since I was little. My dad actually had acid made fresh from Timothy Leary and had the pleasure of meeting them both.
@Melissa-nd8qc
@Melissa-nd8qc 4 жыл бұрын
@@explorer4435 I just love this particular time period in his teachings (after his stroke) when alot of people didn't have the patience to listen to the slow speech, but I find just as much meaning in the pauses to find his words as much as the words themselves. His breathing in between. Its all just so powerful to me
@explorer4435
@explorer4435 4 жыл бұрын
Melissa Jackson I love what you’re saying. It’s definitely going to give me more insight into the pleasure of listening to him during this stage... my connection with him in past two months has been the most beautiful thing I’ve experienced in my life. Basically, I can’t stop crying when I start listening to him. Tears of gratitude & joy 😊
@explorer4435
@explorer4435 3 жыл бұрын
This is crazy Melissa ... I find myself randomly clicking on this video. Then reading your comment, and wanting to reply .... then I realize I’ve messaged you 8 months ago! Find me on ig: yayagorbani ... I’d love to learn more about baba through you
@elmo2800
@elmo2800 5 жыл бұрын
I made this ethical dilemma. The dad got her pregnant and she wanted an abortion. The issue was complex but it required the counselor to know her legal rights of reporting incest with a minor. After the dad was brought in and it was made public he signed autographs at Epsteins island and was booty grabbed by Bill Clinton himself. The dilemma ended with the counselor murdering her lesbian lover and claiming self defense because of the victims badonkadonk was to die for
@anninoschristoforou3442
@anninoschristoforou3442 5 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/e4nGm56qmLdmoLs
@lukkash
@lukkash 5 жыл бұрын
and actually that’s true ... CBT and still psychodynamic therapy are mostly used and very popular around the world. In the US there are many psychiatrists representing psychodynamic approach. The only one issue with psychoanalysis was that they didn’t perform falsification of that theory and didn’t check these assumptions to know what is a fact and what is just one of fantasies of creators.
@diegomelomello962
@diegomelomello962 5 жыл бұрын
Saudades
@roudeep
@roudeep 5 жыл бұрын
The Best
@stevenforman3044
@stevenforman3044 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much. I also appreciate Ram Dass. 🤲 I have also been enjoying lots of Sri Avinash Do at the moment to help with my spiritual awakening. #SriAvinashInnerPeace I find his talks have helped me to feel a lot more peaceful.
@MrMaidennn
@MrMaidennn 6 жыл бұрын
1:43 positive reinforcement (:
@LendallPitts
@LendallPitts 6 жыл бұрын
Freud's work was one of the major truth events (in the sense used by Alain Badiou) of the 20th century, the others being the innovations in music conceived and developed by Arnold Schoenberg (Badiou agrees with this), and quantum physics (Niels Bohr and others).
@blacksk4
@blacksk4 7 жыл бұрын
I admire him for his pioneering work on the unconscious and for raising his voice that for. But to be honest I also think he was an asshole and if I could choose of S.Freud or C.G.Jung I certainly would prefer to speak to Jung at least as double as much as with Freud.
@user-jv7ge1oo4c
@user-jv7ge1oo4c 7 жыл бұрын
프로이트여 영원하라! 최초의 무의식의 발견자 이자 보편화 체계화한 프로이트는 인류 에 영원히 기억되리라
@MrDaftJustice
@MrDaftJustice 7 жыл бұрын
The father of the most influential psychological movement... the one that started everything, thank you Freud