If you like this episode please can you do me a little favour and hit the like button on the video! I really appreciate your kindness x ❤👊🏾
@jg65368 ай бұрын
Keep up the great work
@greatscott47888 ай бұрын
Exceptional content consistently 👍🏾
@nirradical8 ай бұрын
Steven you guys continue to get the best guests consistently of any podcast. Home run after home run. Keep up the great work mate.
@tenthlegacy17078 ай бұрын
Done, I think that labeling Masculinity as Toxic is just everyone's social acceptance of how to talk about people like Andrew Tate. If he was toxic and bad, people wouldn't gravitate to him, he's just a big head who talks alot, apart from that, he could be any of our brothers, fathers or sons. Understand that the people who labale it toxic are the same people telling men they have no problems. Kids are trolls and they used Andrew Tate to troll people, that's all, it could of been Kevin and Perry or anything else, we just trolled people based on what was relevant to the time. I used to use Forrest Gump to pick on dumb people, Kathryn Tate to troll chavy people with AM I bothered. Imagine how many teachers was abused with "AM I bothered though" "Face, Bothered", it's just that. Andrew didn't manipulate our children with mysognistic views any more THAN Eminem turned men into girlfriend abusers or serial killers. Understand how psychology works with all this and you will see Andrew is simply a target for mass manipulation of the population. Everything you know of Andrew that's negative was cleverly placed into your head and placed there in such a way that it triggers a negative angry response. We're basically just like Pinocchio before he had his strings attached 😢
@tegridyfarmer25818 ай бұрын
Explain "Toxic Masculinity" first. If u literally want me to choose between degeneracy in today's day and age, specially online or being Andrew Tate and labeld as "toxic" what in the hell let's anyone think for a second i'd rather wanna be some dude who has 0 responsibilities in his life, doesn't work out, feeling sorry for being angry and telling everyone i'm bad because i am a white male? Are u kiddding?? How can Dr. K be so open and wise in general but when it comes to being a men became so off topic? I don't get it. And i understand Dr. K talked about the emotion anger for example and doesn't agree with what society does with it but doesn't provide any solution to it? I also listen to what he talked about being accepted with his needs as a men but at the same time he doesn't understand what the solution is? I literally don't see any difference to the woke cultures and Dr. K talking about "toxic masculinity" besides the fact he accepts anger as an emotion who specially men have.. Anger isn't a negative emotion. It matters how u work with it in a positive way. I get pissed off about my body but instead of quitting working out or eating healthy i just work out harder and optimize my eating as good as i can. I feel like shit because i don't have any responsiblity in life so i look for them and start taking care of them. I'm pissed about my financial situation so i'm gonna change it instead of whining about it 24/7. It's like talking about man's health without understand what most men need. Don't talk about it if u don't have solutions for it. "Do Men Need More Positive Role Models"? - JUST BE ONE I don't wanna have 10 women at the same time, drive a buggati, wear expensive stuff and live in a mansion. I'm healthy, wealthy, i work out, i'm having responsibilitys in my life and i live in a nice apartment. That's literally what all those "toxic masculine men" are pushing for me. And what has the left to offer for me? Oh it's okay if u don't work out, do what ever u wanna do depending on your feelings and this would be literally never have responsibilitys, eat trash all day long, don't work out and play video games all the time. Don't be delusional what "toxic masculinity" looks like. It's literally what helps men to become better and u don't have to copy somebody else to do so but everything the woke culture does is holding yourself back and making u weak as a human being. But hey atleast ur feeling good about doing nothing and don't even accept yourself.@@tenthlegacy1707
@mrcead8 ай бұрын
There's an African proverb about this: The youth who do not feel the love of the village will burn it to feel it's warmth. You can take it literally or figuratively but the message is quite clear
@mastermill798 ай бұрын
Very apt.
@juniperstardust55498 ай бұрын
Wow, this is so wise, Thank you. Explains everything going on in society today
@jadengrant8 ай бұрын
This is actually not allocated to any specific country, this proverb was made up in Hollywood.
@Macheako8 ай бұрын
@@jadengrant and how do you know dat? 😂
@mariahconklin41508 ай бұрын
I’ve never heard of that proverb but it’s so true! It’s like those people going around killing people with weapons. Sad
@HealthyGamerGG8 ай бұрын
The feels got me at the end 😅 Thanks for an awesome convo!
@ralfsroga59658 ай бұрын
You are a Top G for sure, man.
@dian2778 ай бұрын
thank you so much for your contribution to society, and I've learned a lot of new things and perspectives from you in this video!
@vincey78 ай бұрын
Your existence and content has saved and touched so many lives Dr.K, thank you
@djaktak8 ай бұрын
We love you Dr.K! You've helped millions and continue to bring positive change! And yes, I also wish they taught yoga and meditation in school, had to pick it up in my late 20s XD
@Miah_Lake8 ай бұрын
Goat
@thegreatest19758 ай бұрын
"I don't talk about people that I don't know" he gained my respect.
@maxpainmedia8 ай бұрын
His KZbin channel is real as they come
@wabdih8 ай бұрын
@@maxpainmediahis live stuff is so good
@chefsweaty67448 ай бұрын
One of the best ways I’ve heard someone dodge a messy topic, baller 🧊
@jfv268 ай бұрын
28:22
@mariagarza12698 ай бұрын
He said he doesn't talk about people he's not talking to. ❤
@KairosDBT7 ай бұрын
As a therapist who treats suicidal persons and who works with men, and as a fan of Dr. K, THANK YOU for this interview and dialog. Let's help men.
@woo18187 ай бұрын
How do you feel about Jordan Peterson’s work? He is legit the only person who has ever helped me. I see a lot of mimicry in Dr. k. I hope he’s sincere, but after the reeducation episode with Pakman, I suspect not.
@roberttroxell40067 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, men cannot be helped in places such as the United States, because the society itself is what is harming men and rendering them useless. To save men, modern advanced society must be destroyed, so that men can regain an important place again. Men have no worth in settings where women have most of the advantages, and that is in advanced societies. Women always have worth, just by existing, and in any society. Men only have worth in primitive conditions.
@SuperMaster9967 ай бұрын
Jordan Peterson. The great Canadian hope
@SuperMaster9967 ай бұрын
Jordan Peterson. The great Canadian hope
@SuperMaster9967 ай бұрын
Jordan Peterson. The great Canadian hope
@johamu48 ай бұрын
“As a general rule, I don’t comment on people that I don’t speak to.” How would the world be if more of us lived by that rule?
@brocanwetalk7 ай бұрын
💯
@ThisIsMyAlt07 ай бұрын
I loved that quote, people LOVE to judge people based off of one side they can see on a cube without trying to see the other 5 sides.
@Sarkhan697 ай бұрын
spread of information would come to an immediate halt. nobody would know ANYTHING goin on in the world because they wouldn't be able to speak about anyone other than immediate family and friends.
@matheusbarrel7 ай бұрын
@@Sarkhan69 he was talking about imprinting a "bad" or good" label on someone, you can still transfer infromation without doing it
@maurabell56347 ай бұрын
???
@rajakghosh66028 ай бұрын
If you live for the validation of others, you'll die by their rejection.
@Dirkulos8 ай бұрын
That is a good sentence my friend.
@sunilram39688 ай бұрын
This is what the world needs to hear
@GOD999MODE8 ай бұрын
Living for the validation of yourself is the struggle. That's actually what everyone wants, but it's a path requiring you to constantly seek challenge and growth. Sometimes knowing the truth that you aren't enough, is the pain that people want to avoid.
@sashat47618 ай бұрын
Humans need humans it’s a fact it’s the way we were designed. Loneliness is a horrible affliction. The enemy wants us to be in discord and they want this it’s their design world domination starts with the destroying of society. Divide and conquer
@mightystronk43618 ай бұрын
Live for it? maybe not, but whoever claims that validation is not important is either a sociopath or just lies to himself. humans are social animals, we're physiologically hardwired to react to how the tribe views us.
@dealman33128 ай бұрын
Listened to Dr K for years. He’s one of the most articulate men I’ve ever heard
@bigcazza52608 ай бұрын
not only is he articulate but very engaging too. i dont mind listening to him for hours, a real shrink normally pisses me off within the first 20 minutes
@michaljancar3398 ай бұрын
Me too! I'm really glad he gets the recognition that he truly deserves. What a collision of two of my "online words" - Dr K. & Steven.
@Hexanitrobenzene8 ай бұрын
Dr. K's method combines Eastern and Western perspectives. Depending on the issue, he can look at a problem from a monk, neuroscience or psychology points of view. That sets him apart.
@LikeAGroove8 ай бұрын
Gives us an example of a lie that he told during this podcast@@hailuong9295
@bigcazza52608 ай бұрын
he hasnt charged me fuck all to watch his youtube@@hailuong9295
@ying12965 ай бұрын
Watching this as a woman for good food for thought (got directed here because i was watching one of Dr K's shorts earlier). I think I really appreciate how Dr K phrased things here, because he doesn't really undermine women's hardships while also highlighting that men are struggling. It helps me empathize / understand on male struggles more, which is what I wanted to learn about... we really gotta take care of male family members and male friends too
@rggrrggr2902 ай бұрын
may god bless you 🙏 such noble thoughts
@MmyythandleАй бұрын
yeah somehow it’s become an us vs them. I think so many have been hurt by men and vice versa that we demonize the entire gender. We wanted EQUAL rights, meaning all our needs matter, not for one to be superior than the other and to be of blame for all your problems.
@Izanami2050Ай бұрын
Yes i am also a woman and a mother of a 21-year old man who already started on experiencing some of these struggles 😢
@ElyonDominusАй бұрын
@@Izanami2050We start experiencing these things before puberty. Boys don't cry, right?
@Izanami2050Ай бұрын
@@ElyonDominus yes that is one of the many toxic social "norms". Thankfully my adult son is able to cry. He cries from emotional movies, cries out of compassion for others, cries when he tells me about his struggles in life. We have come a long way since he was in school. As my soul was also disfigured by imposed standards, which i was passing on to him just like a "good parent".
@vpassociates39098 ай бұрын
I can completely relate to this. My oldest son committed suicide a day before my birthday in 2020. He was 22 years old. His external factors were solid in that we've traveled all around the world, he was raised with lots of love, he was close to his family, and had good family support. However, his internal factors were that of great sadness. Sadness that no one could connect with. He felt like a failure, and no matter how much we all tried to get him to see the greatness with in, he didn't see it. Your experience sounds exactly like his! He was a beautiful soul and intelligent young man. I will forever have a void... I miss his presence. Thank you for this very informative interview.
@zack74388 ай бұрын
Sorry for your loss, wishing you peace of mind and soul.
@mormegil848 ай бұрын
I am so sorry for your loss.
@DeusGamez8 ай бұрын
sometimes the people who appear on the outside to be the happiest person you've ever known or seen are the ones fighting the hardest battle with themselves, an they try to rationalize a way out of their struggle knowing that the solution they seek is not the one they should take rather they should see the errors and the mistakes, the failures as a strength as experience to help them deal with this struggle an grow as an individual. what we need to teach those we love is that its ok to fail, its ok to not be perfect, to be wrong, to be hurt, to not know what to do, and more importantly that its ok to inconvenience others if you need to ask for help. i am so very sorry for your loss OP and i will pray that your son finds peace an the light guides him forward, similarly i hope someday you also find the peace and comfort that you need an that you deserve.
@vpassociates39098 ай бұрын
@@DeusGamez this is very true. I thank you
@unc12218 ай бұрын
Condolences
@Here_Today_8 ай бұрын
If you’re lonely, volunteering somewhere can help that. Doing something to make others’ lives better has an astounding effect on the value of time/self.
@mothmos8 ай бұрын
as long as it doesn't become another ego identity and 'dopamine fix'. Because I've done volunteer before for the first time because the place was near and I have nothing to do, and boy the ego is just oozing strong in the people there
@brotherzal8 ай бұрын
What measures could one take to give themselves the best chance to avoid said pitfall/problem.
@EmpressFerra8 ай бұрын
Totally agree.
@InternationaLChefSue8 ай бұрын
💯💯💯💯
@pnwlady8 ай бұрын
I have pulled myself out of depression multiple times by doing this. Volunteering with others for others is as necessary for me as moving my body and eating vegetables.
@ginacirelli15818 ай бұрын
I'm a 61-year-old woman and I grew up in that "you're not allowed to complain" household. I'm still sorting myself out, and the past decade has been very healing for me thanks to online access to works from people like Dr. Kanojia. Both my parents drank themselves to death which means that they were also suffering but were "not allowed" to feel. It's definitely not a new thing, and it is generational trauma. I'm glad that it's finally being brought to light.
@BoostedPastime8 ай бұрын
I hate those not allowed households. The whole idea is just messed up.
@HH-kg4fq8 ай бұрын
Even people born in 2000 grow up in that household. We all need to relax and be more vulnerable about the toxic ways our caregivers "raised us".
@IvySnowFillyVideos8 ай бұрын
Its the plastic people family syndrome
@anthonyc50398 ай бұрын
At 36 I have everything else going well for me but dating. Had plenty of girlfriends in highschool and college…just things are different today. Every woman I meet is on psych meds, in debt, and generally doesn’t want to have kids or a family. Not much out there for us to fight for. I think this is stopping a Huge number of men from caring about society. Like how much “better” can I make myself before I just say F it.
@rrpearsall8 ай бұрын
The very fact we have Joe Biden. And Donald Trump as a President nominations, My Parents never drink alcohol, But they learned their behaviors from there.Alcoholic parenthat doesn't mathere if you're drinking alcohol or not, It's about their behavior, I think that my mother and father were deand probably would have been much cooler.They actually did drink a beer.Or they actually did smoke some ganja, They were way too update. And it's they never know how do relax. I am living with someone right now. That does not drink alcohol but can be very violent and act like a drunk peryou know you need some spirituality, Ali some way too. Get out your anger and Express it and sadness. Except for if you cannot communicate then it's just as bad as being an alcoholic and they call them ACC. Or adult children of alcoholics. I have been practicing radical honesty Along with boundaries with my mother and No. Okay, with her hang up, hurry ups her litteral phone hang up On the phone everyday, but at least I do not get angry Anymore, It's better that she can take a time out,
@donnelly57577 ай бұрын
Career failure, debt, having no friends, not being attractive, and almost 50 years of age, the thoughts of wanting to kick the bucket and simply end it have occurred all too frequently, yet I do not want to let failure define who I am or who I would be known as. What is keeping me alive is my will to overcome my failure and not let it define me.
@jadedpaladin66857 ай бұрын
Think of it as an opportunity. Lots of time on your hands to work on yourself and become a beast! Hang in there my friend, kicking the bucket is never the answer!
@donnelly57577 ай бұрын
@@jadedpaladin6685 The biggest hurdle is overcoming this not having job experience to get a job. Having worked these minimum wage customer service jobs have taken a toll on my mental health. Dealing with rude customers has only made my mental health much worse.
@trash00747 ай бұрын
I believe in you bro, u can over come it and achieve whatever you set out to do don't let the failure define you and keep pushing 💯
@jadedpaladin66857 ай бұрын
@donnelly5757 I understand. I would work a minimum job temporarily whilst getting some training/schooling on the side, to work towards something better. If customer service has become too difficult, find something lone working with minimal customer interaction (Delivery driving, night watchman etc etc) just as a temporary fix until you find something better. Something you enjoy. If not, depending on what country you are based in, there are always well paid, professional jobs that offer paid training to get your foot in the door. As for attractiveness. This is subjective. You'd be shocked to see the state of some people who have no problem attracting a mate. Regardless, attractiveness is probably only around 50% genetic. The other 50% can be worked on. Hitting the gym, cleaning up, barbers, stylish wardrobe, carrying yourself with confidence etc can easily take a 4 up to a 6 or 7, a 2 to a 5, a 7 to a 9 etc. Take all this into account and you'll be fine, you'll see.
@donnelly57577 ай бұрын
@@jadedpaladin6685 I’m meeting with my vocational rehabilitation counselor next week to see if we can come up with a plan.
@anonymousdogg15598 ай бұрын
Back in 2020 I subscribed to Healthy Gamer GG because I originally thought he was a gaming content creator that made mental health breakdowns on the side. As I began to watch more of his content I realized just how toxic I treated myself and body. Now thanks to this random Dr. on KZbin my headspace is 100x better than 2020! ❤
@yogidevendrabiriyani17778 ай бұрын
Yaaayyy!!!🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤
@badoli10748 ай бұрын
I only found him some years ago, hence i was already 40+ yo and had to find those things out all on my own. He would have been a huge help back in those days. Hence i'm happy he's here for current boys and men going through these issues.
@Grassdia8 ай бұрын
Same
@starc.8 ай бұрын
wait till realizing how vapid and conflated most of whats said is of course sleep is a state of consciousness when we sleep we are not unconscious but privy to the whole 8 hours just like this 90 minute manure of cluelessness calling the mind an organ or acknowledgement of problems as something bad
@Grassdia8 ай бұрын
@@starc. yeah but sometimes we need to hear it from others for it to make sense
@ne54648 ай бұрын
thank you Steven for changing up the types of people you have on. THESE is the conversation we need to start having.
@takitakirumba228 ай бұрын
Yeah I love Steven too, my favourite charming good-looking good-natured and intelligent host ❣️
@ne54648 ай бұрын
@@takitakirumba22 I mean, I didn’t say I love him. Don’t know the guy. Just impressed there is a different and v important convo going on that isn’t about bio hacking or diet.
@takitakirumba228 ай бұрын
@@ne5464 yeah agreed 💯 and I meant love in a generic way like I love stracciatella ice-cream.. yes he's a very current open-minded and perspective host!! I also hope he does an interview that covers the topic of the dark side of deep fakes, voice change and generative A.I. tools soon.. where do we draw the line between what's ethical when everything is permissible?
@Madchris88288 ай бұрын
It's all cool to have the conversation, but the truth is that nobody cares about it. Otherwise we would be trying to fix it.
@asavelagwadiso86708 ай бұрын
Yeah true... thanks for that Steve
@margusiraptor97298 ай бұрын
The longest study on happiness was done for around 80 years, and, surprise, surprise (not really), meaningful connections, love from friends, family and/or partners are the most deciding factors when it comes to happiness. Seeing how difficult it is for many people to establish connection due to a plethora of issues as well as addiction to technology, no wonder their mental health deteriorates plus the predispositions for mental health illnesses.
@AhaOk23988 ай бұрын
Yeah and people there try to advocate for just living without other people and not caring about others for whole life. Hahaha! Likely they just entered their twenties and think that just because they were fed up with people during school years they won't neet other people forever.
@renzuki58308 ай бұрын
That's true, but knowing this is one thing and living your life accordingly are two different shoes. It's very easy to lose track of that.
@lightworker29568 ай бұрын
Well yeah, but one very important factor is lots of people literally being hostile to men and literally discriminating against men, and it not being socially acceptable for men to say that they have it tough.
@Kimito_Lioku8 ай бұрын
How can you know? Are you all knowing? @@AhaOk2398
@martinkent3338 ай бұрын
Only true paranoids understand the truth.
@charlesdelile85473 ай бұрын
Dr K thank you thank you, I’m a 68 year old listening to you it makes so much sense. A funeral director in my town is fed up of men suiciding that he has organised a meet up once a month to try help men and I’m hoping to Join up. Please please have more talk show so we can change things for the better for men. God Bless you 🙏
@bentnickel74878 ай бұрын
I'm a 74 y/o man, between the ages of 23 to 29 I struggled to ""find myself". Introspection saved me. At 35 I got a divorce and "found myself". For the last 40 years I have known peace and great mental health. This man brings up questions that I had to answer during that 6 year quest.
@bobeeman97308 ай бұрын
Do not rely on others for self fulfillment, you set yourself up to be harmed. Explore what interests you, set goals, and community. Don't focus on the material as long as you have a roof and food, don't buy things to connect to others, save your money and build your stability. Community is huge, volunteer. It gives you a sense of accomplishment and purpose while connecting you with people that have other interests besides themselves. I am 40, I was never more lonley when I thought the other half will complete me. You don't need anyone but yourself. Don't seek approval from anyone but yourself.
@bentnickel74878 ай бұрын
@@eduardoguzman-mu3wh My journey started with a wife wanting more money, a bigger house and more material things to make her happy. I divorced the unhappiness in my life and my perspective righted itself. I needed that experience, however, to give me direction to what made me happy. I was a simple man who complicated his life by looking for companionship.
@samanthaorologio68668 ай бұрын
If you haven’t by now, and you’re comfortable doing so should seriously consider sharing it someway somehow. Even if it’s the recipe that will work for ONE other man, it can change everything for him. I’ve known many a man that needed just ANY walkthrough. And certain things only help certain people. So in my opinion, the more out there, the better. There’s a podcast called other people’s lives. Just an example. Idk their criteria, meaning idk if they want current events in a persons life or if past events leading to now will qualify. But they just have people willing to share send emails and they get on calls and let the people speak. There’s bound to be many many others that are looking for stories just like yours to help other men reach true introspection and progression and peace etc. Thank you for sharing even this summary here for us to find. It does give me hope for the men I love.
@APinTheAK8 ай бұрын
@@bobeeman9730being of service is sooo unbelievably profound. Like really truly so unbelievably powerful.
@unlockedsecrets95438 ай бұрын
When you divorced did you have to pay alimony ? Because that's the most dis-gusting law around the world
@kapinder1238 ай бұрын
When he said "some people have work on one screen, porn on the other" is so accurate to my circumstance that it makes me want to cry. I have watched porn daily for almost 15 years, and this year for Lent I've decided to give it up. On DR.K's video "What makes porn addiction so dangerous" I left a comment going into detail about how much the first few days giving up porn sucked. I'm on day 23, I feel great, and I will get through this. I will not allow my addiction to control me any longer. Edit: Day 40 Early February I told myself “There is nothing wrong with my porn habit because I’m hurting no one.” 5-6 weeks later and I feel confident that I will not allow porn to trap me anymore. I have found a new appreciation for my existence, and a new appreciation for life. Road rage has ended. I’m not lying to myself or to others every opportunity I get. This mindset of, “Fuck the world and fuck everyone in it” is finally coming to an end. Anxiety and stress is still there, but nowhere near as bad as it was the weeks before. Lent isn't over yet, there is still a few days left; but I believe these 6 weeks of being porn-free has made an amazing change in my life. To anyone who has ever asked themself, "Am I addicted to porn?" May this comment be one of your first steps into you wanting to make a change.
@soggycookie3458 ай бұрын
Congratulations!! You’re great and awesome 🎉
@niftybaker59678 ай бұрын
You’ve got this. This streamer believes in you. Be a beacon of hope for others!
@Aaashnative88 ай бұрын
Definitely give it up. You don’t want to view something that could be illegal & end up getting a search warrant. Happened to my ex
@jenniebensch72168 ай бұрын
Praying for you to completely heal from this!
@everyonedeservestogohome29498 ай бұрын
I pray you continue in your healing❤ as a mom whose son has suffered since very young due to our abuse and trauma from his father, I see his struggles and I am empathetic with anyone who suffers.
@ryanchattertonYT8 ай бұрын
I've been following Dr K for a few years now and his work has been a huge part of the transformation of my life from addicted to on the path to self fulfillment. His talks on awareness, addiction, ADHD, and how interconnected they all are have quite literally changed a portion of my life. I remember it stuck when he said the following: "it's not about willpower, it's about awareness." That quote on the Ice Coffee Hour bound together everything I'd been learning to that point and started me on a now 3-months long journey of self-reflection, meditation, and self-improvement. Thanks Dr. K!
@thossi098 ай бұрын
Yeah, he's grand. I still haven't quite kicked my nicotine and alcohol addiction. But at least I'm not smoking any more, and what's the harm in having a couple of beers to take the edge off at the end of the day?
@ryanchattertonYT8 ай бұрын
@@thossi09 Quitting smoking is awesome! Great work! The only thing that got me to keep off alcohol without mostly ever thinking about it, was meditation. I no longer (and I mean this completely honestly and also thought this was bullshit when other people said it) that I don't at all feel the need to take the edge off with alcohol. Meditation and journaling has been the only thing that worked for me. I go out all the time w/o alcohol now and don't feel any desire or weirdness about drinking. But that's me. If there's anything I've learned from Dr K, it's that you gotta do you bro.
@etta54878 ай бұрын
Where did you learn to meditate? I'm trying to kick a couple addictions right now, but I'm not sure where to start with meditation@@ryanchattertonYT
@shaxpx8 ай бұрын
Wow that's wonderful
@mrsir42746 ай бұрын
They always say "talk about your mental health" until you do. Then your job is in jeopardy since now they have to worry about you, your wife sees you as weak and can't count on you, and even doctors and councillors don't care, and you're treated like an afterthought that pays you $200/hour to pretend to care. ... And by "you," I fully mean ME. It's great to talk about it until you actually talk about it
@unaa93805 ай бұрын
You don’t need to disclose to work, find a more supportive/understanding spouse
@mrsir42745 ай бұрын
@@unaa9380 thanks for reinforcing my comment. They say you can talk a ou6t it until you start to talk about it
@zaxscat53575 ай бұрын
@@unaa9380 just do better, is honestly how this feels... Like thanks i already know "juet do better" but obviously thats the fken struggle
@diamond8525 ай бұрын
Why are you talking to your wife and colleagues? Everyone says get therapy, not talk to your colleagues who are only in your life because you work at the same place nor your wife who's the victim of your issues.
@sebastienledoux75665 ай бұрын
Good point.
@Alypnwcutie8 ай бұрын
Hi I’m a woman .. I’ve experienced everything you said about isolation, no prior history of mental illness and the feeling of no way out. Grew up in foster care… no where to turn to.. no since of belonging… it’s a real thing.. stay strong everyone.
@mayamichelle67418 ай бұрын
Yes. This is an affliction for people. Not one gender.
@subhadramahanta4528 ай бұрын
Relatable, ig, all over the world..
@brushstroke37338 ай бұрын
I've heard volunteering is an excellent way to calm fears, anxieties, etc., at least while you're working. You could try soup kitchens or animal shelters or thrift stores, etc. Exercise is also helpful for releasing tensions and restoring some balance and calm. Time in nature (jog or walk outside if possible.) Finally, meditation and the spiritual to understand self, life, existence can help you find your sense of belonging in who you are, what everything is, at the core of being. If none of that works, try to find a club or group or class that does something you're interested in. Maybe it's art, dance, music, sewing, cooking, dog walking, playing cards. I myself don't have any friends and this is something I'm always telling myself to do. Problem for me is I sleep all day and stay up all night so I don't have many social options.
@luckystoller61718 ай бұрын
@@brushstroke3733 Volunteering has always lifted me into a higher space of gratitude and peace
@chronicfatiguehermithiker30228 ай бұрын
@@brushstroke3733 Wouldn’t it be cool to create a club that is a nighttime club; a bunch of people that dress up weird and meet to play board/card games and only meet at night. The Insomniacs club.
@americandissident90628 ай бұрын
As a man in my late 30’s, I will say that I have no feelings to harm myself, but I do understand the feeling of having no one to connect to. I have my wife, but she is not the one I lay my burdens on. Men need friends, other men, to connect with as well, but most men have no one.
@SirAlucard9998 ай бұрын
This, It is REALLY hard to find friends as an adult, everyone is busy at work, or with their family duties that finding somene who shares similar interests as you AND has the time to share with you is like winning the lottery. Honestly at this point of my life I just try to have a decent time with the ones I have close, but having expectations about friend relationships is not in my list anymore, I've found really nice people at work but again, life happens, they quit, I quit, or things just change and all you can do is accept and move on.
@tyronelorenzovalentio34148 ай бұрын
Big lie
@FullofCrapp8 ай бұрын
It gets lonely sometimes even when they are there. I know because Im 50 this year! thats a bar!😂😂😂
@kevin.skorupa8 ай бұрын
I have the same feelings at 24, I have tremendous personal success, but have experienced much pain in loneliness. I would never take my own life, but I've experienced that pain and learned from it. The best thing to hear is that I'm not as alone as I often feel I am.
@Tedzee88 ай бұрын
Try Boardgames and Geek people who aren't addicted to cpu games too much :)
@sarahmarshall93668 ай бұрын
I've followed Dr. K for a couple of years, and I love his advice. He's very thoughtful, caring, passionate about helping others, and often asks for "time to think" to gather his thoughts when interviewing clients on his YT lives. All the while not sugarcoating his message. His YT videos and the people he interviews give me hope for the upcoming generation, no matter how small the glimpse of hope. TY for having him on your channel; this interview is long overdue. Great job!
@ninogvarjaladze37963 ай бұрын
This Interview really changed a lot for me as a Mom of a little boy and a little girl. I have read Dr. K's book afterwards, even though my kids are stll very young to be gamers and I frequently listen to his channel. Turned out, my gamer husband knows him too and as he saw me listening to him, we had a long meaningful conversation on verious topics. Thank you for this interview. It would be great to have him here again, talking about spiritual topics more. No one could interview him better on this than you, I beliebe
8 ай бұрын
Wow as a person who is also a woman, a wife and a mom of two teenage boys I learned so much and got aware of another perspective to see them, to comprehend what's going on on their side. Thanks a lot Dr Kanojia and thanks a lot Steven!
@etta54878 ай бұрын
Dr K's channel is such a good resource! Send it to your kids!
@cc1k4358 ай бұрын
There were some good books written on similar topics 20-30 years ago that got quite a lot of attention at the time, pertaining to boys and their mental health. I don't know what's happened since, but clearly, we still have work to do. 😢
@YuyiLeal8 ай бұрын
❤
8 ай бұрын
@@etta5487 👍🏼 That’s a good idea:)
@lednevnik8 ай бұрын
@@cc1k435 do you by any chance remember the names of these books?
@GemmaMR8188 ай бұрын
Steven you’re getting so good. You’re listening, attentive, interjecting with the right questions at the right time. Grown right into this. Well done friend.
@savesoil31338 ай бұрын
He is quite skilled and also chooses great guests to learn from #SaveSoil
@darininicholas36578 ай бұрын
Agreed, he has become a skilled listener and thoughtful in how he engages. All around a pleasure to listen to especially when the Speaker is knowledgeable and has much to share with the world.
@chopsuey16258 ай бұрын
Just another story to share - I'm a mid 30's man without meaning or strong consistent connection to others in my life, I've alway felt welcome to participate in social gatherings, but mostly felt unable to join in as I am, I alway have to be the person I'm expected to be, which is exhausting. I have a good, important job, I finallly manage my own finances well and am trying to build a life for my self but am still unsure wtf I'm supposed to be doing, or how to fix the feeling of emptyness. I've been watcing Dr K vids for about a year and he has helped me to put words to my feelings, in a way no other healthcare proffessional has ever done. He's incredible, thank you Steven for having him on and helping to spread the message of self reflection and societal responsibility for our holistic wellbeing as a species. I love this guy, thanks again for having him on
@mordie318 ай бұрын
Try semen retention.
@Notme-tq4xs8 ай бұрын
I am not sure this is different from your grandfather or previous generations. Things get settled and 40's are nicer.
@alexdingle78778 ай бұрын
I don't know where I'd be without a relationship with Jesus Christ. I don't' know if you'e read the Bible but I recommend it - not just reading it alone but in a Christian community.
@MaudMargretheRex8 ай бұрын
You touched my heart ❤ Thank you for sharing 🙏🏼
@jimf9378 ай бұрын
@alexdingle7877 you wrote nearly exactly what I was thinking. Read some classic Christian works. The scripture of Jesus Christ.
@callanrose7 ай бұрын
thank u for having dr.k on. he’s truly a force of nature on this topic. grateful he’s out here.
@raymondmayfield20927 ай бұрын
I agree best podcast I've ever seen
@arnonym52084 ай бұрын
❤ Dr. K. ❤
@KHBogWitch8 ай бұрын
I have loved this channel and been subscribed for a long time but you bringing Dr. K on just made me a member. Absolute top tier guest and episode!
@TheDiaryOfACEO8 ай бұрын
So good! Thank you so much for your support!!
@livingintheforest39638 ай бұрын
🙏🏻👍🙏🏻👍
@maurabell56347 ай бұрын
@@TheDiaryOfACEO what is the name of the person that’s doing the interviewing 5:29
@ElyonDominusАй бұрын
@@maurabell5634Do you mean Dr. K? HealthygamerGG.
@aquilinaciamacco24108 ай бұрын
Excellent speaker! I love his "no filter" approach to just saying things as they are! Let's all live our "authentically, unapologetically, truest selves"!
@BDee31268 ай бұрын
He's gotta be, he could get cancelled😮😮
@blondequijote8 ай бұрын
I unapologetically Potterselytize the magical new religion of Tadaism with no filter, but the non-magic world is mostly not ready to receive the magic truth form Good Wizard (G-d or short) that Harry Potter is the true magcial savior and all believers in his victory over Voldemort can go to Hogwarts on fullride scholarships. G-d still believes in all of us and the Bill of Rights.
@danh67206 ай бұрын
I think he’s very filtered actually. No one just manifests fully complete and correct thoughts. We have a reactionary thought to many things and we have to learn how to filter them and refine them. Filters are great and necessary, you just have to make sure you install the right kind.
@peace_truth14718 ай бұрын
I couldn’t stop crying. I loved Dr. K before, I love him now even more. I’m a father of 3, and I also chose to be attached to my little ones. I never had a functional family. My parents broke up when I was 2. I’m not a perfect father, but I promised myself that my life’s mission would be to give my daughters what I never had. Despite being 40, and being on Elvanse, I do have addiction problems (gaming). Meditation might be the key to solve my hurdles.
@mikeyC797 ай бұрын
there are many kinds, so feel free to explore the options
@joebenzz7 ай бұрын
I understand what you say but why? Why give them what you never had? It's a very oddly specific task. My parents have been like this and i truely respect them for what they did for me but over the years i realized that they were doing this for them, not for me. They never spoke to me about what i truely wanted which usually was the things that money doesn't buy like the simple fact of listening to me, to my problems or my fears, getting to know me simply. You are doing what you need to do to provide for them but you are also living through them as well in a sense. What about what you want? What about what they want? Now i'm saying this solely based on your comment so i don't know anything about you so take it as you see fit. Peace to you 👍
@Neroevelocity7 ай бұрын
@@joebenzz I get where you are coming from and while the possibility of living vicariously through them is a POSSIBILITY it's more likely that he's talking about family structure and it doesn't deny the fact that he's not open to their opinions, heck he might even be more open. In your situation it sounds more like a lack of communication and what he is talking about is just giving them a more kind environmment, he never suggested anything about it being a more controlling one.
@joebenzz7 ай бұрын
@@Neroevelocity I don't doubt that it was about them having a better life overall. But in the offchance it was something like what happened to me, better to say it out loud to prevent this as this specific aspect is never talked about anywhere especially as it is a relatively common problem in families. But i am an alarmist in nature so i'm fairly sure that i'm looking at this a bit too much.
@ThinkRust7 ай бұрын
u got it big man take care of them kiddos
@MisaelAcosta-d1d6 ай бұрын
Yesterday I had a money argument with my wife, and I just collapsed in tears because I was called Egocentric for not haveing enough money when all I´ve got goes to her benefit, to buy her food, to help her with her therapy, to buy our child his needs... She said I was being manipulative and I just wanted to make her feel guilty. I know this is not the space, but this video is helping me going thru today, I just realized I cannot relay on anyone close because they want me to be strong or paired with their opinions, I just lost my voice as a man, and I feel so guilty for letting me down that way.
@TheDiaryOfACEO6 ай бұрын
The future is bright for you brother, stay the course! I’m sending you my love across space and time 👊🏾
@seraph37616 ай бұрын
She’s egocentric. You should leave her straight up
@lennard53936 ай бұрын
Why do u even expect logic from a women.
@AlastorTheNPDemon6 ай бұрын
Damn narkies... they ruin every relationship they've in. Hold your head high, friend. You did nothing wrong here.
@wildpendulum6 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear that you're going through this stuff. I hope it will get better for you.
@giselac6258 ай бұрын
Dr. K is a gift to humanity 💚 I started watching his videos to help my son who's a former gifted kid with ADHD now struggling as a young adult. I ended up getting so much help for myself. Thanks so much for the work you are doing.
@justinlockenwitz55108 ай бұрын
Dr. K is a living legend. You won't find interviews this real and genuine without some effort. Thanks for bringing him on and introducing him to a wider audience. This is what we need.
@partlybloudy8 ай бұрын
I will adopt that tendency for sure
@grapenut60948 ай бұрын
Just because he has a degree doesnt mean everything he says is 100% factual. Its much more sinister than this.
@danakaleb48828 ай бұрын
@@grapenut6094did he claim that he was 100% factual?
@crissantos448 ай бұрын
Dr. K!!!! Never pressed on a video so fast 😅 This man has helped me tremendously! Wonderful human with a very good understanding of the human mind.
@Daniel-cm3xh8 ай бұрын
Same!
@shaxpx8 ай бұрын
yesss!! he is epic
@sebastianmuller42988 ай бұрын
what has he done for you so far?
@crissantos448 ай бұрын
@@sebastianmuller4298 helped me understand my depression triggers and how to not fall into the depressive mindset again If you suffer from clinical depression and listen to him you'll understand how he helps. If you don't, then you're lucky you don't have to fight your brain every day of your life
@TopLobАй бұрын
"You don't have anything to give up." is a pretty brilliant response from the Ashram. They saw a kid who was destitute, and realized he wasn't there because he was ready to give up anything. He was there because he had nowhere else to go.
@daoistdansah548 ай бұрын
Probably the best guest ever🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉 As a Psych Mental health nurse practitioner I really appreciate Dr. K's insights. Bravo.
@VinceViglione8 ай бұрын
Dr. K is such an impossibly passionate and brilliant mind of our time. This interview is honestly the best interview I have ever seen. You gave Dr. K so much space and freedom to communicate what he needed to. I have endless appreciation for you both.
@emmaphilo40496 ай бұрын
He is not a thinker, he is an excellent communicator instead. Accross videos he says anything and everything depending on trends. He is an excellent speaker though.
@georgebrown3198 ай бұрын
RIP to my good brother Diego who took his own life at 23 because like was so hard for him. God rest you soul, I wish I could’ve done more for you brother
@JosiahLord7 ай бұрын
Dr K has been the single most helpful source for my growth in learning about and improving my ADHD. Great chat guys, super helpful, thank you!
@movsess8 ай бұрын
What an unexpected collab! I'm not a man but i love doctor K so much he's doing a LOT for the gaming community
@Sono._.mukuru.x_x8 ай бұрын
He's doing it for everyone❣️
@averyintelligence8 ай бұрын
im not a gamer but im a fan of his channel too. i first watched his interview he did with a murderer and found it very impactful.
@Zmiana_Pogody8 ай бұрын
I'm 46 yo woman, never a gamer, and this doctor explained me dopamine issues like no one ever!!! (I highly recommend to check out his 30 min. podcast about dopamine - it's just great & easy.)
@finze18 ай бұрын
You're welcome here.
@Janevelyn8 ай бұрын
@@Zmiana_Pogodycool I will check it out, thanks! From a 47 yo woman , perimenopause struggle is real!!
@finisheseverythi8 ай бұрын
sitting here, feeling the pull of avoidance into yet another video game. Today, I will instead spend time with the pain I am driven to escape from. Thank you
@bleezy80078 ай бұрын
Imagine living a life where everybody you have come into contact with has never heard a single thing you have ever said. That's been society for about about 50 years now.
@jinwong23605 ай бұрын
I have been through a lot lately, my father has passed away then got into an accident that broke my knee. So I was just miserable and half disabled for sometime, I’ve been crawling my head thinking about how to actually get over all those sadness, anger, sorrow. But this video has taught me one thing that works, take in some personal time and space for introspection, thank you dr. K!
@miloradstrbacki42488 ай бұрын
I've dismissed Dr. K for so long because of his online name - Healthy Gamer GG, it didn't seem like something i'd be interested too much in, and recently i've come across a clip of his somewhere talking about rather interesting things, and ever since then i have been binging his stuf because the man is a MOOOUNTAIN of knowlege and wisdom. It's absolutely insane how well he articulates and talks some stuff that i've felt but didn't exactly know how to put into words.
@phylippezimmermannpaquin20625 ай бұрын
Man i feel the same! I thought the name was cringe and honestly i dont know what made me give him a chance but my god im glad i did
@RusticKey4 ай бұрын
@@phylippezimmermannpaquin2062 Funnily enough the cringiness and 1337 energy of his channel's name caught me almost instantly back when he was just starting out.
@nGEnigma4 ай бұрын
He's the definition of "never judge a book by its cover" I was the same way but what got me started on his content was his shorts delving into deep topics and his capacity to break things down into very understandable terms. If I could afford to actually be one of his patients/clients I'd happily do so
@PifchoBG3 ай бұрын
its that little judge inside of you
@Julia-b9xАй бұрын
Me too!! He needs to redefine himself!
@breeve128 ай бұрын
He's articulated so many things I was thinking but was unable to identify by myself. While addressing so many things that most people miss. This put a lot of things into perspective for me. Awesome guest!
@kevlar20378 ай бұрын
Check out his channel his lectures are awesome :)
@Lizrains8 ай бұрын
I started watching dr k during some of my darkest days. This may be the best episode I have listened to yet. Dr.ks insight, expertise, and passion is unmatched. Thank you for doing this and everything you do at diary of a ceo! This podcast is changing my life… truly! ❤
@vivianrichards13137 ай бұрын
Social media has ruined society. Thanks to social media, we are the most connected we have ever been as a species, but we are also the most disconnected from each other and reality that we've ever been.
@sudhirjoshi64666 ай бұрын
Yes both possiblitis are there i try to Meet Person in real. If it is Not possible i stop Kontakt. Greetings Form Berlin Germany.🙏🌹
@bigrobotman68 ай бұрын
When you were talking about meditiation techniques for people with ADHD, I actually got cold shivers and yelled out loud, it made so much sense to me what you said. It made me realize that this technique you explained I have already been applying often to help me fall asleep, or to refocus my mind when I am having bad thoughts. To hear you explain so precisely what it is that I had already been doing felt eye opening. I never really believed much in meditation before, and in a few sentences you not only opened that door for me but made me realize I was already walking through it.
@AvoidTheCadaver8 ай бұрын
when he was talking about it, I was reminded of when I used to attend yoga class. At the end of it, we always had a few minutes of quiet time to subside into ourselves, kinda meditative I guess. My yoga instructor would instruct us not to think of nothing, but to let the mind contain every thought that runs through it, but don't pick up the thread of the thought. I guess you could call it floating in a sea of thoughts. It became this moment where I could have any number of thoughts running through my head, but my mind was almost completely divorced from those thoughts. These days, I still practice that to go to sleep even though I don't do much yoga anymore
@shaxpx8 ай бұрын
YEAH THAT WAS EPIC
@jjg15017 ай бұрын
my question to him would be how does one apply this in the real world. i live in a town with 18000 people. i have a very hyper active mind. there is nowhere i can go where my brain would ever get overwhelmed or tired out like he explained. it did sound like a good idea though.
@KH00DANIEL7 ай бұрын
I noticed very similiar powerful emotional reaction to his adhd videos as well... its amazing how well he explains and connects topics to his audience
@ObinnaOkehie7 ай бұрын
@@jjg1501 have you tried it yet, though?
@mishuru57738 ай бұрын
omg dr. K is here! the collab I never thought would happen :O
@TheDiaryOfACEO8 ай бұрын
Frankly, he's awesome
@PlanetJeroen8 ай бұрын
...the one I could have done without...
@ehaaron8 ай бұрын
@@PlanetJeroen another 'dr.' from 'Harvard'. that's a red flag for me.
@flakyfan14968 ай бұрын
right, and this was one of the best, i wish it was longer
@flakyfan14968 ай бұрын
@@PlanetJeroenreally? i found it perfect he nailed it man. the only part that was hard for me was the idea of humans evolving to give up on the things we used to care about to pave the way for technology and stuff, but i think hes more just pointing that out that its inevitable.
@smack7708 ай бұрын
HealthyGamerGG and TheDiaryOfACEO are my 2 favorite channels on KZbin. I’m so happy to see you 2 collab. Your channels are the most helpful channels I’ve discovered. I’m truly grateful for your work Steven and Dr. K🙏🏾
@melissaswartz29878 ай бұрын
Preach!! 🙏🏼🙌🏼
@mandastarlight6998 ай бұрын
Same! ^-^
@Paula-i5h5b8 ай бұрын
Agree wholeheartedly!
@MsLinda1657 ай бұрын
This guy has helped me so much. I like myself more because of this guy. Thank you Steven for bringing brilliant minds to my attention.
@kellygreenwell16408 ай бұрын
I completely get why you've reached over 5M subscribers. You're interviewing skills are amazing! I really appreciate your flow and presence with your guests. I appreciate your willingness to be vulnerable and I appreciate the diverse conversations. Look forward to seeing where your headed as you open the conversations globally. Keep it up my friend. All the best. 🙏🕊
@jc-jg9pp8 ай бұрын
Dr K has been such a big part of my life, glad to see him get more and more recognition
@Baz871008 ай бұрын
Dr K is a fabulous asset to the youtube community. His channel has helped me with my moderate ADHD so much.
@lukebruce52348 ай бұрын
he's just another narcy scam artist
@sticks78578 ай бұрын
I feel like he's just flowing with the tide, following trends. I stopped following his channel years ago when he made a video about men basically telling us that we're living life on easy mode and we need to suck it up because women are the ones that have it hard. Now he's here with a totally flipped script, just feels disingenuous.
@anonymousunknown89388 ай бұрын
@@sticks7857 Link to video? That does sound like something he would say.. but as some kind of example or get people to take their own responsibility. There are victims who aren't victims but say there are, those exist. However, when you said " Now he's here with a totally flipped script, just feels disingenuous. " To me, that just sounds like you have a hard time believing people could change. Anyone who is actively learning, will eventually always have a "totally flipped script".
@sticks78578 ай бұрын
@@anonymousunknown8938 "addressing misogyny"
@gamerdude44658 ай бұрын
@@lukebruce5234 Ahahhh, how is he "just another narcy scam artist"? and who are you to be so pious? what credits do you have to talk about it?
@Pernikitty7 ай бұрын
Such a great interview!! This really hits home for me. I am committed to connection with my boys. I have taught them about the need for oxytocin and hugs and obviously they don’t want their mother’s touch, but they know the neurochemical reasons for seeking touch and allow me to hug them as often as I can. I feel like starting a movement of mothers against male exclusion or something to force women to take male exclusion seriously!
@francoforte53827 ай бұрын
As a man, thank you so much for this!
@nottheone582Ай бұрын
You can't force inclusion in this case. Create men whom others feel safe with and they will be included.
@v9b23j8 ай бұрын
I held space and listened to someone with alcohol, cigarette and porn addiction without judgement and with compassion.This person was on SSRI, unable to regulate their own emotions, had impulse control issues with a baseline emotion of anger and had "a constant stream of negative emotions" like Dr. Alok described. I tried to change/rescue/help this person by giving advice including showing the benefits of daily meditation and yoga nidra from my own experience. Eventually, I learned to radically accept that you can lead a horse to water, but you cannot make him drink. The desire to change has to come from within.
@hellmanksingh79678 ай бұрын
Same from experience. Don’t force anyone for change even if it can be for their good. It’s their journey and choice. If they choose the Abyss or peace, their call.
@takitakirumba228 ай бұрын
Well said.. I had a similar experience too.. You did what you were called to do😊
@RockstarRocky108 ай бұрын
Stephen Stephen Stephen,please don’t say ‘toxic men online’ they don’t exist!
@ChiCityLady8 ай бұрын
I think this needs to be said more. AA brings it up a lot, but it reminds people that they don't need to wait for some outside to start helping themselves. They can start immediately to try and change things for the better.
@tschickel278 ай бұрын
Self determination !
@TraderDan-e6z8 ай бұрын
After roughly a dozen episodes, this one resonates the most by far the most with me. I'm going to share it on Facebook as the doctor's interview can change lives in a totally personal way for the viewer, their family, and their friends. You're keeping your promise to subscribers and I'm proud to be one of them. Thank you.
@simplySY88 ай бұрын
Dr K talking about success as an addiction. It's about how success is thought of. To many it's a better house, more money, more power,better job, better body. Always improving something all the time or increasing materials and possessions and superficial things to a ridiculous extent. Peoples definition of success needs to change. Being content,happy having mental health more stable, relationships doing well, feeling fulfilled in your own unique way whatever that is is a better path to me these things represent success more than the latter.
@Lil.Lon3Ly8 ай бұрын
"Success" these days are weaponized to trick younger people into thinking that grind through their programs, their rich lifestyle, their expensive cars will lead to escaping your miserable life, except its not how it always works, for most people, Its all a scam to make money off of these people.
@captainrorz7188 ай бұрын
we all feel success in our own ways their not real definition between success its just as long as you truly feel like you achieved your opinion is like droplet in the ocean
@KingDomsKingdom858 ай бұрын
There's a word you used in there which hit the nail on the head for being TRULY happy... and that's "content". Being content is to be truly happy.
@Sandlund938 ай бұрын
The game of life is individual, so the question becomes personal. How should my definition of success change, in order for me to get the most out of life? Most of us keep fumbling in the dark without ever changing our definitions. And even if we do, we never reach the point of our success anyway. Probably because we don't know how, even if we are convinced we do. But depending on our definition it can all depend on other people, at the end of the day we can't control everything. But sure, if we assume that everybody means material wealth when they say success, then yes, that is a poor definition.
@micheleele7299Ай бұрын
One of the most enjoyable & helpful interview conversations I’ve heard in quite some time. Dr. K’s compassion & drive to help human suffering is inspiring & he is excellent in articulating the cause….Class Act! 👏
@NBJackson-y8s8 ай бұрын
28:22 .. perfect, impressive, answer… „..I don’t comment on people, that I don’t speak to !“ and then asking for „specifics“. PERIOD !!!.
@doorwhisperer8 ай бұрын
His body language didn't match his words though :-/
@Apoc2K8 ай бұрын
When I look at what young folks have to deal with these days, it's no wonder a lot of them feel lonely. It really does seem like the world has grown a lot colder and callous, and why they're desperate to somehow escape the cycle. - A lack of a communal belonging (Church, extended family, associations, unions or the neighbourhood) - A lack of an easily accessible third place (Some kind of bar, pub, club or hangout) - An overwhelmingly negative media cycle, regardless of what end of the political spectrum you're on it seems certain doom looms around every corner. - A dating scene has been usurped by apps on which posturing is the norm. The hookup culture stemming from these and the subsequent commodification of sex probably isn't helping either. - Social media is a giant polarising feedback loop that inevitably leads to simple disagreements turning into irreconcilable schisms. - A wide "cancel culture" attitude in which everyone's reduced to a set of opinions which range from "good" to "bad".
@mormegil848 ай бұрын
You hit the nail on the head. It's sad that our friends have devolved to numbers on social media.
@keen80878 ай бұрын
As someone who grew up and is still growing up in this generation… you’re exactly right with all of those. I feel there’s this massive “us vs them” mentality that makes it hard for people to discuss their differences
@reformed_attempt_18 ай бұрын
bunch of excuses. Churches, bars still exist. People still meet their partners through friendships. You just have to put your phone down and go out in the real world.
@putent96238 ай бұрын
Just want to mention things like dating apps (which you mentioned) are only hard for men.
@lillia27248 ай бұрын
I want to say that while those do still exists, you have to realize that social medias and dating apps now are the norms, because not only is it easily accessible, it is also much more convenient. Let's say, you're at school or at somewhere else right now doing things, then you suddenly get a message or whatever, you can easily reply back to them while still be able to do what you're doing. You can talk to s1 without having scheduling to meet up with them irl. And also, with the fact that computerized system is now the norm in our daily lives as well, be it work, some times meeting, emails, uber eats and all that, ppl can find it hard to "put your phone down and go out in the real world". I mean, why would they? When everything is so easily accessible, right at their fingertips.
@kimb65088 ай бұрын
I went through literal hell all from the age of 10 to 32 years old. At times I was so depressed I thought I would never make it out and constantly thought about suicide, but I think I'm finally crawling out the other side, and I'm surprised I even made it out alive, although it does suck to realize all the time that had been lost in that period of my life.
@Venusbabe668 ай бұрын
Well done! ❤ Keep going! You've been 100% successful at survival so far... just keep focused on being whole and going forward.
@kimb65088 ай бұрын
@@Venusbabe66 So true although I have to give credit to everyone who stuck by me during these times. If it weren't for them I'd probably be dead. Not that that would matter much on the grand scheme of things.
@user-lk3gn4dn9o8 ай бұрын
If it's not too personal, what helped you get over those issues?
@kimb65088 ай бұрын
@@user-lk3gn4dn9o Well at first I was so down that time was the only thing that could heal me. Had to just tough it out for awhile, and then once I felt capable, I started understanding how other people operate/ think etc. which also helped me learn how to be a better person, but also how to forgive certain people. Putting time into improving my own life financially, socially, and physically. Figuring out how to make meaningful connections with others. It's a very complex issue and I went to therapy for all my problems every day for 1 year and I can't say any of that ever helped. I basically gave myself self therapy lol. Realistically I would say time is the best healer. If you're feeling like you want to give up you just have to remember that there will be better days ahead. This doesn't mean you shouldn't take action to improve your life in some way in that recovery time, as that can be equally detrimental to your mental health. If I were to go back to my 18 year old me, I would have forced myself into the world to experience as much as possible instead of sitting around.
@kimb65088 ай бұрын
One thing I should note, is that the reason I say the self reflection helped a lot, is because it's possible I picked up some narcissistic traits along the way after I was sexually abused, so once I saw that maybe I was part of the problem that allowed me to work on myself which, in turn, let me heal myself from all the trauma essentially, which is basically like breaking out of that little world I was once stuck in. I can now actually see reality for what it really is instead of the delusional mindset I used to have.
@100nation87 ай бұрын
True story....years ago, an ex-girlfriend was physically attacking me bcuz I refused to marry her. After multiple attempts trying to walk away. I called 911 to attempt to calm her down and get my personal items out of our house. The female dispatcher replied " Is this some type of prank or a joke. She said she would send a squad car to come out. No one ever showed up. Men are not being heard and are treated as disposables.
@williamchamberlain22637 ай бұрын
That's harsh, really harsh. You're probably the first man she's heard who's been brave enough to call for help in that situation, and the system - training, protocol, prioritisation, follow-up support - let you down, and likely won't be there for other men who try to do the right thing. It's a huge blind spot.
@tihanaharrison67287 ай бұрын
I’m so sorry that bay to you, and likely to many other men. A lot of people don’t want to admit that women can be and are abusers. The system lets down a lot of men and children abused by the female partners/wives, etc.😢
@100nation87 ай бұрын
@@tihanaharrison6728 Thank you soo for your sincere and kind words 🥰
@100nation87 ай бұрын
@@williamchamberlain2263 Thank you, bro..your comment means da world 2 me. I agree it's definitely a blind spot! God bless.
@sweetcheeks57757 ай бұрын
but you’re stronger than her. why weren’t you able to just leave ? it’s not natural for men to come save men in situations like this unless the chick has a weapon. sorry but handeling problems like that on your own is part of being a grown man.
@patriciaferrini-xt1ry8 ай бұрын
We live in a sick society. We need to live again with values : respect, empathy, solidarity, responsability, protection..... We do not need wars everywhere around the World.
@duanebartholomew57828 ай бұрын
Thank the governments
@HandleBars3968 ай бұрын
We never lived by those values….
@peace-and-quiet8 ай бұрын
We need to live again in a Christian society.
@SergioGarcia-cn2kd8 ай бұрын
I hope you don't kill and eat animals then
@ahmedfiasco64128 ай бұрын
The West need wars to keep the living standards that they didnt earn
@zakariahmardon57028 ай бұрын
WOW LOVE this guy. Pragmatic, addressing root causes, holistically. This is what true intelligence and care sounds like. This man is on a mission for truth and healing, not false idols and bandaid solutions. Awesome interview - thank you.
@tomevers66708 ай бұрын
If he actually knew what to do, he wouldn’t be who he is. You listem to strong people on how to be strong, not weak.
@zakariahmardon57028 ай бұрын
And who are you, oh mighty part-time KZbin commenter, that I should listen to you? It would be rude for a teacher to not introduce themselves to the class first, no?
@quantumvideoscz20528 ай бұрын
@@tomevers6670 He WAS weak. Look at him now: insanely successful, rich as fuck, has a wife and a couple children... Where weakness?
@theyfukenwmesubliminally8 ай бұрын
@@tomevers6670 if you suck at smth, best way to learn how to get good at it is listening to people who were bad at it at one point and managed to get good despite it. Not people who were born with a god given natural talent for it. Youll see how true that it is if you go try it yourself, ask around in your life. Thats why dr k is good at his field, and able to so effectively communicate these insights. Bc hes had to go thru the process of learning them.
@siddharthraychaudhuri7250Ай бұрын
@@tomevers6670 You listen to the weak who have become strong. Not who have always been strong and not even those who always remained weak.
@Courteny2838 ай бұрын
When Dr K said that we need to stop relying on the government and society to fix the problems because its not working. We need individual responsibility, " you need another individual to hug you, you cant hug yourself". The way the tears fell down my face. This conversation as a whole was meditation and therapeutic. Dr K is the man!! And this channel is only going to get bigger and better. Who wants to join me on the taking social responsibility train?? We have to start somewhere.
@pie0ful8 ай бұрын
I don't agree at all! Its actually the helicopter parents who teach no responsibility ...nothing to do with government.
@Courteny2838 ай бұрын
@pie0ful who are you not agreeing with? Dr K?. His words not mine.
@pie0ful8 ай бұрын
@@Courteny283 I don’t agree with his notion that we rely on government … I don’t think we rely on government at all .. we have the most individualistic society in the free world and THAT is not working. We have very little help from the government for health care / mental health / education .. and the countries that do like Finland are doing FAR better than us by every metric!!
@Courteny2838 ай бұрын
@pie0ful ok, well contact Dr K and let him know how you feel. 🤷🏾♀️
@quantumvideoscz20528 ай бұрын
@@pie0ful The government can fund mental health services via public healthcare like in the civilized world (aka Europe), but even here, the problem isn't about that. We as individuals need to care about other individuals in our friend/family circle.
@aidanmohrman94936 ай бұрын
Dr. K you are an amazing human being. You have no idea how comforting it is to hear that you failed time and time again, but still have achieved the success you have today.
@nirradical8 ай бұрын
Saw this Dr K dude on a podcast recently and was riveted by just about everything he said. I swear this keeps happening where I stumble upon some incredible mind and within days or weeks they appear on Diary of a CEO. They are consistently getting the most interesting best guests of any podcast out there.
@juliekeeney15388 ай бұрын
Your habits are generally stronger than your intentions. Best intentions won’t easily overcome engrained habits
@TheDavveponken8 ай бұрын
Making good things easier than bad things are essentially the key. The rest of yourclife starts today
@MJ315798 ай бұрын
But you can purposely and intentionally change your habits.
@GnosticCushite8 ай бұрын
You have to make it harder for yourself to not engage in your bad habits. Then keep at for 21 days in which you will break the bad habit. They key is DISCIPLINE.
@MrBank-hc1jg8 ай бұрын
i have severe adhd but somehow i managed to watch 1 hr of this pod with little to no distractions. well done doc. i used to meditate and it made me calm down my adhd and the train of overthinking thoughts that i couldnt stop, but then i stopped after getting better, bcz i got lazy :) but now im going to start again.
@americandissident90628 ай бұрын
Do you have ADHD? Or is it really that there is so little in this world that is worth paying attention to?
@PomaFan23 ай бұрын
1:42 went from 5 mill to 7 mill in 5 months, that's amazing man. I've watched you for a little over 2 years now and the progress you've made is insane. Keep up the amazing work man💪
@phoenixofthewolf8 ай бұрын
Something really stood out to me this weekend. I'm a woman on a volunteer fire department, and I made a comment about really liking my new boots because my old ones used to chafe my feet until they were irritated. Another guy said he'd been asking for boots for years and never got them. I encouraged him to really go for it, because it inhibits our ability to help others, but he didn't want to be "that guy" and complain too much. It makes me really sad for him and others, and the people who we need to help.
@illestvillain19718 ай бұрын
I have a similar problem I'm not a volunteer but the boots. I taped them to stop it and wore thicker socks sometimes twice but somehow it fixed itself it was painful for a few months though, way after I got them
@jaybee42888 ай бұрын
Also a woman. While this is sad and all, he hasn’t tried and this is a common problem with men today. They’ll complain and complain but they won’t do anything about it. And this is odd because my grandad and dad’s generation would literally be demanding the boots or walking. Guys have become very timid and almost fragile. And that soon turns into resentment that you got the boots and you’re a woman and then he’s following Andrew Tate at which point he’s undateable. When in reality you likely got them because your need was greater or you asked better. It’s all rather ridiculous.
@merix27418 ай бұрын
At my current work, i discovered after first month that they dont pay us extra for weekends (50% saturday,100% Sunday) whic is extremely fucking illegal, but nobody wanted to be "that" person, so I went to my boss and told him he needs to pay me weekends its in the law, so he started, but only me, now everyone resents me because I get payed more. Seriously, some people are just docile kids.
@user-og6hl6lv7p8 ай бұрын
@@jaybee4288 Oh look. Men have problems and somehow its their own fault. Yeh not getting tired of this sentiment at all. I suppose you think men should just "man up", but then "toxic masculinity" is also the problem. Gtfo. Don't comment on mens issues unless you're willing to help. F off.
@Meganolord8 ай бұрын
@@jaybee4288 Okay... But do you have to go on a schizo-rant about how every male nowadays is weak and follows Andrew Tate? Because that is far from the truth. And why does it even matter if he's dateable? Nobody has brought this up. This has nothing to do with this conversation. Also she wrote that he'd been asking for boots for YEARS. Which makes your statement completely wrong. You completely disregarded the original comment and inserted your own experiences and resentment for men instead of writing something constructive and helpful... Also you don't know that guy and wouldn't know if he would turn to resentment over such a minute situation. Only if you were to assume that all men are the same. But I guess most men are just timid, fragile and misogynistic in your eyes. You know we would be able to achieve so much more if women and men would just work together instead of bashing each other at every opportunity. But that's apparently very hard for some people.
@classactracing8 ай бұрын
Fascinating conversation, it always impresses me seeing Dr. K's emotional intelligence and how he is able to discuss concepts with such a wide range of people. Fantastic conversation! Thank you both for sharing it with everyone. Being a man was much better ten years ago. Now a days, I am constantly being forced into a box, manipulated or controlled through threats of reporting to senior management or other agencies. I truly feel bad for all the young men out there.
@auntiebonnie81998 ай бұрын
Thank you for the ideas on how to talk to my sons. I am a mother of three grown sons in their 20’s and one is 30. One thing I really encouraged my oldest son to do was have a social network. I really emphasized the benefits and importance of it for everyone. He developed a group of guy friends and besides playing video games together they rock climb, go out to eat, hike, run obstacle courses etc… when one of their mom’s died they went out to eat together to support him. When one of them needs to move they all pitch in to help. He will say sometimes that he would rather stay home but the importance of maintaining his social network is more important. In college he connected with a couple of guys, in his engineering program, who had gone to school together for 1st thru 12th grade and he got to know them and some others did as well so now a decent size group of men. None are married and only one has a girlfriend. Interestingly enough they represent a broad range of society in a number of different aspects. I don’t know how I had the presence of mind to suggest it to him but I am so glad I did.
@lukemartens88858 ай бұрын
great work!
@MrShafdaddy8 ай бұрын
Its cause ur a good mother that actually cares about the well being of her children. Such things are rare today and I appluaded you for that. With a mother like you your children will go far in life.
@juliebraden8 ай бұрын
"a decent size group" of men in their 30's & only 1 has a girlfriend? I get the not married thing but whhhhaaaatttt? R they just perpetually dating? I guess they can continually date a few women @ a time w/out calling any of them their girlfriendnd. if it IS only 1 girl, then y not call her his girlfriend? I can't imagine that many men just having continual 1 nite stands??
@indrajeet8 ай бұрын
@@juliebraden There is a thing in modern western society called "hypergamy" - look it up!
@Joe-li3zj8 ай бұрын
@@juliebradenno, no one night stands, no perpetual dating, no one’s interested. There’s 1000s of great guys that r swept under the rug.
@hollyberry867 ай бұрын
Stephen, you’re the best interviewer. You help your guests shine, ask such good questions and have a real conversation. This is such a great interview
@trishkenrose99328 ай бұрын
I am so relieved to FINALLY hear someone speak about what I can actually do to help. Thank you
@feanorian21maglor388 ай бұрын
I'm a woman, living in a town of 35,000 people. The number of men who have committed suicide in the last 10 years is absolutely horrific. I knew two of them personally, both lovely, intelligent men in their 70s. Older men are at risk too. A friend's son, who was sectioned after a failed attempt to kill himself aged 21, is doing so much better now. He's the same age as one of my daughters, who despite having suffered a very serious illness, and like him, getting caught at University in the middle of the Covid crisis, was so much more resilient, even though she felt depressed too. Women are likely to have more resources, certainly more supportive social circles. I have warned my husband and his ex about my 24-year old stepson, who I am very worried about, because he seems so lost and low, and nobody's been able to help him so far. It's a real crisis, as a society we are failing our young men, in particular, but older men too.
@UKindness48 ай бұрын
Parents need to do better at raising men to be respectful and relaxed at whatever they choose to do. American culture of Wall Street neurotic bad values is not conducive of a good life, and should not be admired but this is the most important decision l of horrible values we have today and it needs to change. .
@peachesandpoets8 ай бұрын
The crisis with males is that instead of taking accountability for anything and growing, they're looking for someone to blame AND doing nothing about it but increasing the femicide rate and starting sexist podcasts instead of going to therapy. Women, decenter males. Focus on you.
@BitcoinFootball8 ай бұрын
18 year old boys need adventure. Have to have adventure!
@debbiemoore27478 ай бұрын
Snap. I see it in the British town I live in. Brits need to stop this polite nonsense of "how are you" "fine" and start opening up!
@dian2778 ай бұрын
squeaky wheel gets the oil, when there's a need there'll be a market. women now have so many resources and so many people willing to help us because 1 we are naturally more inclined to look for help than men and 2 we've been shouting for help for a long time. I think now as we're more aware and outspoken of men's crisis and men are more inclined to look for help than before, there'll be more resources growing for them.
@pnwlady8 ай бұрын
“Psychiatry is the one medical field where we’re losing the war”. Oof. That is so true. But it’s a product of our society being so polarized, lacking meaning and community/connection. People think it’s okay to hate others. I’m not saying we all need to go back to church but having a spiritual practice with others to focus on things like charity, love, forgiveness and grace has a lot of good in it.
@フフーガ8 ай бұрын
It’s cosmopolitanism
@-lord17548 ай бұрын
you said it perfectly@@Snake369
@DaAxiomatic8 ай бұрын
It's *valid* to hate others. Whether it's okay or not is opinion.
@dtcdtc83288 ай бұрын
@@Snake369 that's some strong character in you to say this. I am not a religious person, not atheist either. I believe there is a God . But I despise the commercialization of churches. Years ago (1999) when I was trying to change my ways, ie get sober and quit drugs, I sought out a church. Went to 4 different ones in 4 weeks and gave up. Every Single One wanted money for "3rd worlders" and it truly pissed me off . Even then you could see where our Country and communities were heading and these people wanted something like 7% of your income every month to live large and bring foreigners here. I do agree, the more they remove God the further our Country and communities turn to crap in every way. Looking back , it was and is intentional.
@michasokoowski66518 ай бұрын
@@Snake369 And with new affilations that people build their personality around we are back at basically having religious wars. Christianity needed centuries to finally stabilise to stop having constant crusades and revolts and we threw all this progress to trash. Now we are back at the beginning with all inquisition (cancel culture) and all that comes with it
@OttoNascarella8 ай бұрын
"I am just gonna do the best that I can and I will never succeed... and that's OK" - resonating strongly with me!
@iLAGnDC8 ай бұрын
@Joel-uc5lo It is acceptance. The 1% of men that make millions is the 1% for a reason. It is fine to aim high but at the same time, it is not for everyone and you got to accept life is like that. Living fairy tale dreams is worse in my opinion.
@martinkent3338 ай бұрын
You are a happy sort!
@martinkent3338 ай бұрын
@Joel-uc5lo Happiness is an elusive fish.......................
@martinkent3338 ай бұрын
@@iLAGnDC Why not act like a child and pout? It works! Look at Trump!
@iLAGnDC8 ай бұрын
@@martinkent333 You make it sound like men never throw tantrums... ever...
@AbbyMoneyhun8 ай бұрын
This goes down as my favorite interview on your channel. I have never heard this subject so concisely explained in a scientific/emotional/intellectual way. I could actually understand and process addiction for the first time. My brother and my son are both addicts and I have been addicted to helping them. I helped by “doing for” rather than enabling them to do for themselves. I’m really grateful for this podcast. Thank you! ❤️❤️❤️🙏❤️❤️❤️
@nathanielacton37688 ай бұрын
Not sure if you know the term, but the situation you described is called codependence. Most people engaged in it don't realise they not only are they not helping the problem, but thy are harming themselves by creating at attachment to performing the 'helping' action, which as you stated probably stops them from raising themselves out of their own problem.
@AbbyMoneyhun8 ай бұрын
@@nathanielacton3768 totally agree! And I’m glad you mentioned that because the book “co-dependent no more” was life altering for me. Huge aha moments, and now years of consciously implementing changes in myself… Ever evolving …🦋👍🙏 Byron Katie’s “the work” also helped a lot.
@Madhukirtan8 ай бұрын
I am so happy to see Dr. K here!! I've been listening to him for awhile and I think this guy is absolutely amazing!! Humble, realistic, sensitive... I love him!!!!!! Wow... the question about the "last paragraph for his kids" make me cry and I am not even a mother! Thank you Steve, for one more incredibly useful, deep, meaningful interview!
@mysteriousu55288 ай бұрын
Since Dr K delved into the realm of meditation, I am going to give you the spiritual meaning of the word mother. A mother is one who runs to the aid of others in suffering. Sadly, like the way the word yoga got its meaning twisted and convoluted by the westerners, the word mother also got only the plain biological meaning. I cried too along with Dr K at the end. Dr Alok is an amazing human being from non material aspect. Peace and happiness cannot be achieved by force but only through understanding.
@MsLadyhorse5 ай бұрын
It's not just men. 90% of this applies to 43 yr old me, too.
@LazyReaderKanon7 ай бұрын
I want to say that this video changed my life. But I think action speaks louder than words. So, I'll say that after I actually put to action all the advice. Thank you so much for this video. The questions were perfect.
@BWW878 ай бұрын
This was genuinely one of the most meaningful and informative podcasts Ive ever come across. Thank you.
@Carby.J8 ай бұрын
Psychiatry has become an awful lot of pill pushing, and not enough of actually listening to what is going on in patient's lives. Medications do not solve the root problem, they merely inhibit the symptoms while leaving the real issues unsolved. I think it is absurd that you can have someone you love die, and within two weeks if you are not over it you can actually be diagnosed with major depression and be given medication indefinitely. There is a massive overmedicalization of normal human emotions, and a lack of understanding on how to deal with these emotions in a useful manner that results in one's problems being solved in the long-term.
@frarfarf8 ай бұрын
FYI Johan Hari, who you are directly quoting without credit, has been widely criticised by the medical community for his false representation of anti-depressants
@FortunateSon-re9bh8 ай бұрын
I am 40 and my brother recently died. I had several people suggesting that I go on a vacation or go do something fun. What kinda suggestion is that. I’m sad over the loss of my brother going on a vacation or doing something “fun.” Vacations are only going to make what I’m feeling worse. I can not believe the thoughtless suggestions I have received. I don’t want to be surrounded by happy people. People thought I would bounce back in a day or two.
@Notaforumguy0078 ай бұрын
@@FortunateSon-re9bh societies current solution is to push pills into you never helping you grapple with that loss in a healthy way. It sucks to lose someone so close and unexpectedly not many have the perspective to effectively empathize with it which is why you get the just 'go have fun' as a solution cause it sounds harmless enough. When really you need someone to sit down with you and make you remember the good things about the person you lost so you can be happy about the life they lived with you rather then anything negative about the person. I'm not a therapist or psychiatrist but I think its important to come to terms with issues rather then slap a band aid like pills on your mental issues stunting your growth as a person because a pill is basically masking your mental anguish by pumping some happy chemicals and suppressing bad ones.
@the_expidition4278 ай бұрын
@@FortunateSon-re9bh There is always going for friends with group hugs
@TheDavveponken8 ай бұрын
@@frarfarf PSSD
@Forever-4115 ай бұрын
You have never felt alone, until you've felt alone in a room full of people.
@CharaTheChampion8 ай бұрын
It's good to see Dr K being interviewed for once 😅 really looking forward to this one!
@notus2998 ай бұрын
chris williamson got him on as well
@srilakshmi11638 ай бұрын
my god, social media is triggering ego of comparison and that's true. I realized this and started working on it. this is reminder again to me.
@XeLYoutube8 ай бұрын
i think about how other dont care about others, then it help me reduce my importance i call it "billions ants and bee, antins and beeing , bz bz bz" everyone too busy to be top 1% top 0.1% to see others top 1% too busy to see others and too high, people grinding or arugying or defending being top 1% , cat fight everywhere about attention, backstabing each others, crying we want validation and attention while 20 billion want it too lol free market! "your a queen buy my product" then "im a queen buy the product i sell" then planet is 20 billion queen princess independant rich entrepreneur, but no one is poor and buying and unpopular and not 1% xD or a guy that gym all his life for abs and is poor and short and everyone avoiding him, hes searching his 1% beliving hes 1%.. while millions are like him millions and billions of 1% judging 99% 100% 1%, while the 99% 1% judge them back.. there is also an inception where you are egoistic about being egoless "im so good at being no one" then tis a contest of minimalism and egolessness and antimaterialism (has tons of advnatage and the inception is funny) but competing honestly or with lies and deception or not to be 10% 1% while probably being 99% , depend our favorite suffering ego, egoless, ego of being egoless, egoless about having ego, im 1% other are 99% meanwhile 99% think they are 1% that others are 99% .. but no one want to admit it. cause it break the disney storyline of finding a 0.0001% billionaire 7 foot 8 inch 9 figure alpha male or a 0% body mass index kind funny cooperative agreable women 0.00001% when 1 woman has 100 date and deserve top 1 on 1000, and 1 of 100 men has 1 date that he should be very honored and lucky.. aint no reason to wake up go work, extinguish fire, protect country, clean street and sewer, buy rings... buy a ring to lose a ring and lose a house lol, for her top 1% 3rd husband 4th father billionaire she deserve
@janinekay8 ай бұрын
Just come off social media … if I can do it.. anybody can 😉
@Phresh4ever8 ай бұрын
@@XeLKZbin I'm gonna be honest I feel like you wrote this while being High but You got your point through.
@darininicholas36578 ай бұрын
This convo is so needed and so helpful for all of us, certainly one of the better shows I've listened to. We're all responsible for helping people to connect to us and each other. I saw a quote from Mr. Rogers today where he said we don't have enough time to self reflect, he said that in the 90s-- long before mobile phones and all this social media and apps that suck our time. Also it would be great for men to learn how to advocate for themselves and learn how to share and process their thoughts and connect on an emotional level with other men and people. Arcane expectations and masculine and gendered norms are so passé and here we are decades later still taking up space over who should pay on the first date and that it should still be men! I don't believe men should still be expected to bring home the bacon nor pay for first dates, especially when women can too, and I don't buy that thing that it's nice when men pay, it should be nice when any person or human offers to pay, take turns in this modern world of give and take where it's nice to be generous or when it's receiving is appreciated --All regardless of gender. It's the gendered traditions that get in the way of adapting to change, and seeing each other for our kind acts instead of our genders. It's an episode like this that creates space for breaking the silence, especially about mental health.
@TheDiaryOfACEO8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for being a part of the conversation! Glad you enjoyed the episode. Team DOAC 🙏
@David-rj1ru8 ай бұрын
I feel like women need to stop sharing their thoughts it's not good for society.
@christinabertelsen16048 ай бұрын
@@David-rj1ruhow this comment different from telling men they don’t have struggles , they should shut up ? A part of women’s struggles is being told to shot up. Maybe you shouldn’t think about it is really, the case that a whole group of people shouldn’t not say anything ?
@RobertDniroLHC8 ай бұрын
theres a crisis going on with men...now click my link and pay for 20 sessions per month at only 30 dollar per session (in a group) total of 600 dollars per month which I will not take part in but rather hired a "certified HEALTHYGG GAMER coach" (which is an underpaid undergrad student lol). I charge you this much so you can feel invested AND I CAN get back the money I paid to this channel to advertise my services. I kid you not this is actually all true!
@Lupostehgreat8 ай бұрын
I think that men and women, both, need to realize that the other side has a point. Men need to realize that it's not weak or pitiful to give the women around them the things they need (emotional support, space, dignity, and respect), but women need to realize that now that they're free and independent they need to stop looking at men as just paychecks or labor. Both also need to stop dehumanizing the other side. Men need to stop calling women who complain about patriarchy whiners, and women need to stop ridiculing men who express that they feel lonely and isolated. Lastly, we need to begin to elevate boys and girls, equally, when we are raising them. Teach boys to be as conscientious about their own thoughts and feelings as girls are taught to be, and teach girls to be as assertive and self-reliant as boys are taught to be. In an egalitarian, feminist society, men and women should be raised almost the same way, except when their biologies intervene.
@aracmeria501628 күн бұрын
Came here to widen my views on the problems men face, ended the video with a better outlook on life (while also gaining the former). This was wonderful. I'm glad I was able to push aside my bias (as an afab) and gain clarity on the actual state of men nowadays. I find it hard to connect with men, even with my brother, cause I barely understood them. This was a good starting point, especially when they spoke about male anger. My brother has troubles with addressing his anger and gets aggressive. Nothing dangerous, but as a smaller woman I do get scared with his intimidation (ig) since our parents aren't around. Even though I'm the eldest, I have no idea how to deal with his anger and may have aggravated it on some occasions. He's not open enough to talk about going to therapy either. Its really important to understand and be able to properly address the male anger especially when there's less resources for men to reach out for help.
@karenvitto30768 ай бұрын
You made him (and all of us) cry in the last minutes! Great interview, thanks Steve and Dr Alok Kanojia.
@fantastical_hermit8 ай бұрын
I LOVE the conversation about anger. Anger can be such a cathardic emotion when it’s pure. Women typically have the opposite problem where they dont allow themselves to feel anger and internalize those feelings. Emotions deserve to be felt and explored and i stand by that 100%. Edit: hello I am women, growing up I was expected to be docile and subservient. If I was angry about being told who I should be or how i should act I was in the wrong. Instead of being angry at people who confined me to that role, I was taught to be ashamed at wanting to be something else. Hope this helps to clear some things.
@Fredjoe58 ай бұрын
Women aren't equipped to deal with anger. Not anger as men experience it. They don't have the neurology for it.
@xBINARYGODx8 ай бұрын
do you know any woman? do you actually know them, or you do but your stuck in a bubble in that regard?
@ruustyaim61168 ай бұрын
@@xBINARYGODx mate what 💀
@jiminsbabo26148 ай бұрын
What do you mean by "when it is pure"? I am genuinely curious because I struggle with anger. Both mine and others. The example in the conversation about the woman crying and man yelling unlocked questions in me because I am unable to accept anger and its manifestations such as yelling. Although I know it is just like any other emotion, if a person shows anger(Commonly, people around me yell and it's always the men who yell), it induces fear in me and I immediately detach from them. It affects my relationships too. Is yelling when angry the equivalent to crying when sad? How do I understand anger without being so afraid of it?
@basementhomie26748 ай бұрын
@@jiminsbabo2614you can be sad without crying and be mad without yelling but man it feels good when you do 👍🏾 to me it sounds you have some trauma from when you were little and now cant stand when someone yells so you detach yourself from them
@HaleyOSaidSo8 ай бұрын
Woman here benefitting from hearing this… I’m addicted to podcasts, KZbin videos, true crime etc. and always have something going in my ear. The part where he says if we’ve always got something going on the outside we can’t hear our internal cues and therefore can’t figure out who we are or what we really want- very much resonated w me. I’m 10 weeks preg and one of the things I’m experiencing in addition to debilitating morning sickness is a loss of interest and even disgust in always having something in my ear. I just like quiet right now.
@recklessmermaid8 ай бұрын
I notice this sometimes too. I have adhd so I’m constantly seeking stimulation but sometimes I get overstimulated without realizing, and I continue to seek out media distractions to escape the overstimulation… when really I just need quiet.
@Kaydewrites8 ай бұрын
I feel the exact same!
@azizakaseruuzi2068 ай бұрын
@@recklessmermaidsame but I be too scared of the quiet too 😭
@Linda-fr4dj8 ай бұрын
Your going to have a beautiful Zen baby 😊
@HaleyOSaidSo8 ай бұрын
@@Linda-fr4dj I hope so, thank you 🤍
@shawnturner78367 ай бұрын
Steven, I want to thank you man.. You're straight up giving out free therapy in some of your episodes, especially this one. To try to keep it short, I truly feel like I should have paid for this. You have no idea the good you're doing.. keep going, please. Not even for me, for US.
@jessjohnson9988 ай бұрын
Cutting goals in half is so real and the main reason I watch Dr. K- if you don't get to your goals check this guys material out. I'm a woman and barely his target demographic and he helped me a lot.
@kalasue77 ай бұрын
Me too. I don’t like separating men and women issues. We don’t live in separate societies, and we won’t solve societal issues separately.
@emmaphilo40496 ай бұрын
@@kalasue7this is so so true!
@danh67206 ай бұрын
I think his real concern is people. But he realizes the more personal an invitation is, the more likely you are to come. Women in general have done this much better than men for as long as I can remember, and it’s super admirable. Women’s support groups, general invitations to feel, voicing that even having this resources doesn’t solve everything, etc. But the way I see it, Dr. K sends it like a wedding invitation were it’s addressed to ‘you’ and often plus a guest. The +1 is super welcome and valued, but it’s nice to see your name on the envelope.
@jessjohnson9986 ай бұрын
@@danh6720 yeah I don't have a problem with it I just think it's good content for everybody. I wish men would watch stuff for women too just for the perspective gathering- that's the initial reason I looked at this, trying to figure out why some guys I knew were acting how they did and how to help- then I found it relatable and also got helped which is nice.
@Amanita._.Verosa._.6 ай бұрын
@@kalasue7Exactly! We gotta move forward together because we are together!
@radmirbakimov8 ай бұрын
You just made my day! I am so happy to see Dr. K - I love him and I think he is the reason why I am still sane…
@annalisabagatella91228 ай бұрын
I was about to write basically this. He's a gem!
@southernshine47238 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering this!! I really hope this reaches many men struggling!
@Housestationlive8 ай бұрын
you look adorable miss south.
@johnstajduhar96177 ай бұрын
I'd never heard that part of the story - that he was told he can't become a monk because he doesn't have a life worth giving up. That's some heavy reality, but damn is that a powerful way to reframe your perspective.