What should I react to next? Here's a link to my upcoming newsletter (use it to follow for updates for my CBT course!): eepurl.com/iMHJp6
@dskjbkdjbzdkjdnkdJNKJf9 ай бұрын
my grandma passed from korsakovs and liver damage from long term drinking. please drink responsibly folks, trust me when i say its no way to go out. she was only 60
@ladybaabaa32949 ай бұрын
My grandma died the same way, from alcoholism and liver failure. She was only 63. My dad was only 35 and I was only 5. Very sad. My dad was also an alcoholic but thankfully stopped drinking completely when I was 14, and has been sober now for 31 years, thank goodness. He's 75 and doing well.
@dskjbkdjbzdkjdnkdJNKJf9 ай бұрын
@@ladybaabaa3294 im glad your dad is doing allright now! such a wonderful achievement to be sober that long he should be very proud of himself
@AndrewMcevoy-d8n8 ай бұрын
Im 46 and have developed class B Cirrhosis. Stopped drinking about 14 months ago (I dont keep track of the days) and now need a transplant, which statistically isnt likely to happen. It can creep up on you. Get regular liver function blood tests people, if you drink a lot. I recognise this guys thiamine deficiency delirium. Had it once before xmas, like a dementia. Its like being in an awake dream.
@patchworkundead47872 ай бұрын
My dad was 42, enlarged heart from chronic hypertension and chronic alcoholism
@tracyd12339 ай бұрын
"and you're safe here" - how wonderfully comforting. Excellent.
@Jabafish9 ай бұрын
I love the input you are giving. I myself have had multiple psychotic episodes, so hearing what a psychiatrist is thinking is very insightful!
@taybyers8 ай бұрын
I'm no doctor, but as an alcoholic myself this man has a quality that is very familiar to me. I'm almost 10 years sober and videos like these remind me to stay the path and that alcohol has nothing to offer those of us who cannot moderate our usage. I really hope this guy got better.
@ladybaabaa32949 ай бұрын
It's interesting how long it often takes for the gentleman to respond to the questions. He doesn't speak overly slowly in general, but he seems to take a while to process the questions before being able to find words to try and answer them.
@HJ-pm2dx7 ай бұрын
I think this man went to high school with my (now deceased) uncle. His godfather's name is the same as my uncle's step father. He grew up in the area, the accent is dead on, and he went to the same college during the same years... I'm...just wow. Wasn't expecting that from a 5 am youtube rabbit hole. It's so heartbreaking to watch this man. The pandemic really changed the way I understood the (medical) significance of alcoholism. Was working at the state alcohol control at the time and was classified as essential. I received genuine thanks from (mostly ER) medical providers because as dangerous as alcoholism is, had the spirits dried up overnight the hospitals would have even more critically ill people needing help.
@spshc9 ай бұрын
I hope this man got better. My mom was in her 90's when she started losing her grip on reality. I assume it was dementia. To be this young and to be in this state is sad.
@tiffanylynn83769 ай бұрын
Another thought I had is that it really hits me when he says “yes, sir” it’s just really sad what he’s going through idk
@hairpainter9 ай бұрын
I've missed these types of videos from you! I'm so glad to see you're still making them and hope to see many more! 😊 Thanks for the great content!
@davidlincolnbrooks3 ай бұрын
I love this guy in the 70's video. As the British say, "Someone always draws the short straw in life." If he is an actor, he's doing a great job.
@denisearevalo55688 ай бұрын
I poured my drink down the kitchen sink after watching this!
@ThePsudoAntagonist9 ай бұрын
Interesting. I heard him mention West Virginia State College, now called West Virginia State University. There’s not much said about West Virginia because we are thought of as a failed state in my respects. Anyway, I thought I’d mention that. I watched some of these videos before I found your channel; it’s nice to have an actual psychiatrist give their feed back to them.
@ThePsudoAntagonist9 ай бұрын
I did the first 2 years of my education there.
@rosemadder55478 ай бұрын
I love West VA. My family is all from there. Spent every summer going up from east Tennessee. We have a lot of family history in Williamson. I'm going to move there-abouts some day. It just feels like home.
@mievaa009 ай бұрын
in past i had osdd(dissociation disorder) due to (c-)ptsd but not anymore because years of therapy, good life balance and ssri(for anxiety) has helped me a lot💜 i still have anxiety but its under control, years ago when i had a lot of dissociation(depersonalization and derealization) i didnt recognize myself from mirror and i often didnt quite recognize who i was, who people around me were and where and when i was, especially during flashbacks(havent had that in years💜) and when that dude didnt know the time and place it just felt really sad, i hope people treat him well in the hospital, im also surprised how chill he seemed to be, many people would probably get scared and anxious if realizing how they arent aware of their surroundings, maybe he didnt realize how out of touch he was and that abled him to not get very tense? or maybe im just not good at reading peopleXD or maybe he couldnt express himself very clearly due to his current state
@Amazing_missB8 ай бұрын
I had depersonalized/derealization indirectly due to CPTSD. I was misdiagnosed with Bipolar and pulled cold turkey off my SSRI and I pretty much went insane. They pumped me full of lithium and benzos and refused to put me back on an SSRI. My DP/DR came when they did a rapid (2 week) benzos taper. That symptom was absolutely awful. It felt so scary and I thought I’d never feel like myself again. It was pretty much constant for about 4 months and then slowly I’d get 5-10 minute clarity every few days. Almost two years off of them, I only get that feeling for a brief period and only when I’m very, very stressed.
@rosemadder55478 ай бұрын
Perhaps he already knows? I have been diagnosed exactly as you described, dissociative disorder from CPTSD, manic depression, anxiety characterized especially by OCD, and trichotillomania. I don't know if I always recognized my dissociation, but I feel like I did. I definitely have known I do it since my teens, and I'm 37 now. Wasn't diagnosed until a s**cide attempt at 22. I wasn't put off at all when they told me. I'm very glad you're so much better. I am too. I'm an EMT now and can help other people like myself ❤
@Aleksandr-x3c5 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing ! We need to know more about... In different aspects... Lovely !
@MrWillyMrBrightside8 ай бұрын
I am sitting here as a fairly smart, alert person and really struggling to do the numbers backwards test haha
@heedmydemands15 күн бұрын
You have a good heart, I'm glad u r doing work in mental health ❤
@apiyo_puzzles9 ай бұрын
Just want to send a thank you for your content, Dr Syl. It's some of the most carefully and professionally considered mental illness content I've come across. Also, en écrivant ce message je viens d'entendre ton petit "a bientôt!" Je ne savais pas que tu parles français. J'apprécie cette jolie touche :)
@thuggie18 ай бұрын
I have never looked people in the eyes ever since I can remember. It makes me uncomfortable. Also, I can process what others say a lit easier when I don't have to deal with people's facial expressions putting me off.
@sixfourtyfive9 ай бұрын
Is there any chance he thinks he's talking with different people all the time because of his memory problems, instead of a misidentification issue? Very interesting video and points, thank you:)
@mmamallama18278 ай бұрын
Thank you. I enjoy your content ❤
@ImSoberOfficer6 ай бұрын
It's so intriguing that his thought processes keep leading back to his Godfather, I wonder if it's because he felt safety from him, or if its just a core memory he still has
@EmmaCooksYouTubeChannel9 ай бұрын
Do you think alcohol/drug problems need to be addressed before mental health problems?
@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe3 ай бұрын
A Psychiatrist with Heart! Thanks!
@Wendy-bd9zu9 ай бұрын
I have discalculi, that means i cant do math so that part i would fail also 😂
@MiaCNoir8 ай бұрын
I would be very interested to see more of those assessments on your channel. Can you also make a video on it?
@AndrewMcevoy-d8n8 ай бұрын
Its funny Dr Syl, when you take a sup from your blue cup with the flavour tag sitting out on the side, I recognise how some people working from home a few years back myself included would have wine in that cup and tape the tag string to the inside of the cup for when in the many zoom meetings. An old/new trick.
@clonaztevedreamkiller52777 ай бұрын
I got the DDTs. The good news is I fixed my flea problem
@Wendy-bd9zu9 ай бұрын
Very interesting, i have seen them all but i like to hear you about it. Greetings from the Netherlands
@Vickiglennon9 ай бұрын
This man makes me feel so sad 😢
@briandoyle61884 ай бұрын
Spasmodic confabulations are a definite problem for our doctor 🤗😆😆👍...so sad for this gentleman as he's stil relatively young seeing hearing him struggle with those number recalls was very upsetting to watch and those sayings i hope he was able to give up booze and maybe give his body a chance to repair if it was possible watching these uploads is both interesting but also unsettling to watch❤️🏴🏴🏴...ive just read it could be undiagnosed in 80,% of cases of patients with it..very sad..but it does seem treatable though 👌👍..
@sandracairney60077 ай бұрын
Lovely to hear a person in power ( never understood why people having no empathy,study and do jobs where empathy could make such a huge difference ) . I think your compassion is utterly relatable ,people are blessed to have you as a dr. Speaking as a patient prescribed addictive drugs as a teen,on repeat for years. I should never ever have been prescribed them ,ie methadone for painkiller dependence ,opiate ones and never heroin or anything of the sort. I deal with prejudice and patient generalisation continually,it could have inspired suicide as its horrible stuck on a socially unacceptable drug but without a criminal record,bad character or low iq,all of these are assumed i have as the culture is so negative in Scotland regarding trauma and dependence. Its ignorance,my current dr refused to anything at all to protect his patients from abuse in the pharmacies,community services, etc. ive been accused of being a risk to a child because of a prescription ive had for years that has no effect. Im having to prove im not a threat instead of the other way around and despite raising another child in exactly the same circumstances. Its accepted. Discrimination.very emotionally damaging.
@terricrowe89448 ай бұрын
Love a good reaction video from you from time to time! 🎉👏
@isabellefaguy73518 ай бұрын
The number thing, I can't do it, because of work memory deficit. I'm autistic, so there's that. What I want to say is that it is really exhausting to try to do this kind of task when you have a deficit of work memory. When the guy says it's too much, he's tired of doing this test, he really means it.
@Jillrussell-mj4yw9 ай бұрын
Just came across this and enjoyed watching. Very interesting
@curly__headed9 ай бұрын
Thank you 💛
@xenabobeena8 ай бұрын
Love these vids! I’m in grad school to be an LMFT and these types of videos are so helpful!!!!
@tiffanylynn83769 ай бұрын
My favorite type of videos from you honestly!
@Alayhoo9 ай бұрын
If someone has a hallucination of an animal bite, would they also see an animal bite on their body?
@JoyArt334 ай бұрын
Ah I hate that ‘count back from 100 in 7s’ test! I was in a psych ward and they’d test me and the truth is I’m just bad at maths in general no matter what state my mental health is in!
@Saintpeccatrix7 ай бұрын
What really got me in the feels w this video was the fact that this man seems so poignantly aware of what’s really going on, but so unable to communicate properly. A profound confusion about his inability to connect the questions being asked to his own functionality. To me, it seems like he knows the answers are wrong, but he can’t understand why. I relate to that, and it’s extremely disorienting and jarring… I felt like I could see it in his eyes, idk.
@Rudra01419 ай бұрын
Thak you.
@loriyates66178 ай бұрын
Dr Syl, love your videos. Have you ever posted a video on exploding head syndrome? It really can interfere with people's life. I actually called the police bc I thought someone was trying to break in.
@Kuchizukeonna8 ай бұрын
You're gonna be a talented psychiatrist, dr Syl. Thank you for the explanation about Wernicke - Korsakoff syndrome. In our religion, alcohol is strictly forbidden. So in my 27 years of life I've never once tasted alcohol (foods with rum also forbidden). Now I kinda understand why alcohol is awful.
@andreascrimshaw43968 ай бұрын
I love your channel Dr Syl . super Interesting , love your analysis. I wish I was even half as smart as you lol ❤
@frugaliciousfashionista51089 ай бұрын
Oh man, when he was talking about getting sick with a certain substance. I can’t stop gagging it has been like 30 mins what the heck do I do lol 🤢😳
@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe3 ай бұрын
This has the Makings of a great real c and w song. The Bottle let me down?
@lisatuckett63869 ай бұрын
Very interesting video.
@Mk.K.8 ай бұрын
Dr Syl, my name is Michalina and I greet you warmly. I have BD for many years and have been treating it for four years. Not once in my entire life and illness have I been depressed and have depression. Over the following years, I have at least 1-2 (once 3) episodes of mania with hospitalization per year, I have mania with delusions and psychoses, but not always. Between manic episodes, I still have recurring hypomania (light and medium) very often and it's hard to count. My first episode of the disease was a huge, spectacular "happy" mania with delusions of grandeur and acute psychosis. I wonder why this is happening to me? Drug therapy was very long and difficult to establish, I had to gain 146 kg and suffer a lot of side effects. It's very hard for me because I take large doses of medications and do everything as prescribed. What could be wrong with me? < I am pasting the corrected version of the questions again> sorry
@doreenplischke21698 ай бұрын
Sounds like the drugs you are taking might not be effective either by dosage or all together. Are you sure you do have BP? Seek perhaps another assessment or second opinion…
@Amazing_missB8 ай бұрын
Have you taken a generic test to see what medications might be the most helpful. I tried dozens of meds and none helped with my depression and insomnia- turns out, these medications were highlighted to likely be not effective. Once they switched me to medications that were indicated to be most likely to work- my world changed completely and I’m finally able to function again.
@regalkammerlocher61629 ай бұрын
So sad. Is this sort of thing reversible in any aspect? If they stop drinking and take any medication or vitamin?
@HeathenTrucker6 ай бұрын
You didn't mention how he did well at saying numbers backwards
@coraldell30919 ай бұрын
Those silly fazes , can be interpreted in lots of ways.. i think but Im dyslexia. Yes its vey sad, 😢 as you do wonder why someone drinks alcohol to excess. Yes depression, lots of reasons.
@daniaabuleila3 ай бұрын
Where can i find the video??
@uknighte9 ай бұрын
The make your own bed comment was somehow higher level thinking in my opinion. He knew they were talking about sayings at least and it somehow connected to the glass houses saying. I know information is limited but would there be a reason for him to be faking some of this?
@uknighte9 ай бұрын
Plus Thorazine
@sandracairney60077 ай бұрын
Very sad,its a very fascinating organ the brain,it essentially deals with perceptions and motor functions. Most terrifying thing you could suffer but im interested because of my fathers condition he had and the genetic component. Id like to study it properly,maybe..i never ever touch alcohol. I remember too many dark and sad things.
@audreyhepburns9 ай бұрын
nice
@feralbluee5 ай бұрын
would you believe i did not ever know the stone moss thing. it made no sense to me. i majored in biology and that’s the way i’d look at that one. i’d see it in my head. neither did the spilt milk. cause, yeah, i’d be upset. there goes money down the drain. The opera of Hansel and Gretel - the mother sings, “There goes the milk on the floor!” and it just bothers me, cause things happen and you can’t ignore them!! sometimes i think very concretely. but i also study psychology and animal behavior (double major). so what does that signify? a stitch in time and a bird in the hand, i get! people’s minds are so idiosyncratic. but in cases like this? of course, something is wrong. poor guy, he seems like he was a nice person. to be as far gone at his age he must have started early and drunk a lot. i hope he was able to get better. 😕🌷🌱
@gepmrk8 ай бұрын
I thought this was an Andy Kaufman reaction video.
@sonzogonzo8 ай бұрын
So this poor man who looks quite young would have had to live the rest of his life in this state?
@HLB3139 ай бұрын
WAIT A MINUTE. I’m 39 and I think you just made me realise I’ve misunderstood the people in glass houses saying this whole time 😂 I thought kind of like he said - it would be a stupid thing to do in the circumstances. But you’re saying it’s because then other people might throw stones BACK and break your house? 🤯 Not delirious as far as I know but I have a high degree of ADHD and don’t ever do the “white lie” thing and cannot for the life of me explain the concept of a double bluff because it involves knowing how people will respond to lying (I think?!) so I guess that also applies to doing mean things on purpose like throwing stones 😂
@d145518 ай бұрын
You've got it, don't give people a hard time for something you're guilty of yourself is how I read that saying.
@katella8 ай бұрын
Dr Snippi?
@danielcollison85796 ай бұрын
That`s sad to see for sure. All the potential that this man had has been squandered because of alcohol. And yet we see all of the KZbin videos of all of those drug addicted people all over America (and Canada) - all wasted humanity. It`s just so NOT the reason we are here, that`s what I keep thinking, anyways. But like you say, they have their own reasons for slowly destroying themselves.
@kaguesnaАй бұрын
Dr Syl! Vous parlez français!?
@briandoyle61884 ай бұрын
Isn't confabulations a word black adder said to the inventor of the dictionary 🤔🧐😆😆...
@reececaldwell7223 ай бұрын
My gf’s uncle developed that syndrome briefly from long term heavy drinking and had to go to the hospital. When he got back, he told us he had a tumour the size of an orange in his head, and had 3 months to live. Gf’s dad went with him to next appointment, where he got an MRI, and the doctor (different doctor, elective appointment) seemed bewildered as there was nothing there. I really couldn’t tell how much was confabulation and how much was typical lying from shame, but was incredibly bizarre. He had to get thiamin injections and basically be on test with vitamins for a while.
@explainyourself67578 ай бұрын
There is a good documentary called Drunk In Public about a California man who got arrested over 500 times for being drunk in public. Nobody thought he would survive that long but he did and he got wet brain and eventually died. I think it is scary that I am still addicted to alcohol after seeing that and going through it myself but I am on vivotrol shots now which are supposed to help so I hope that works.
@explainyourself67578 ай бұрын
And its not easy to just quit when you get seizures and shakes and all that. Often times it is safer to keep drinking.
@lavishwhisper67538 ай бұрын
Keep going! Honestly life is so much better and simpler when alcohol isn’t even an option anymore. A hard decision, but best one I’ve ever made. All the best to you ✌️
@Ehecatl11119 ай бұрын
Well, I tried to comment seventeenth but it didn’t go through so I guess, eighteenth.
@Ehecatl11119 ай бұрын
Seventeenth!!!
@Melchizedek119 ай бұрын
The person has pharma chemicals in his body, or not?
@kondition-kode-nine8 ай бұрын
That "patient" is an actor. He's a very bad liar, and anyone who can discern will see that clearly. This doctor must surely know fake from reality, right?
@leahcat45 ай бұрын
Huh??
@deborahbasel1849 ай бұрын
You keep stopping and interrupting the video too much. We can tell when he's got things wrong without you telling us.
@sixfourtyfive9 ай бұрын
Eh, that's the whole point of the video though, if you want to watch the original version I believe it's on youtube without commentary.
@HeLLo-rj8rf9 ай бұрын
Bruh the whole point is for him to explain what’s happening 💀
@hairpainter9 ай бұрын
That's what makes the video interesting.
@JasonDIY9 ай бұрын
that bothered me too, and as i was skipping ahead i noticed the sign wasn't blinking. thanks for 'fixing' it!
@F.U.E.L9 ай бұрын
It looks like My mother and her son from her husband have it