PLS CAN YOU DO EVERY PHOBIA IN 30 MINS OR 16 MINS PLSSS THERE IS MORE PEOPLE THAT WANT THAT PLS ❤❤❤
@danger_the_kid6 ай бұрын
@@its_me_megi good idea
@ErdrickHero6 ай бұрын
Shame on you, shill
@MrMississippi_Gaming6 ай бұрын
I guess I have Urbach-Wiethe Disease
@idontthinkislol6 ай бұрын
savant syndrome is the literal personification of “i spent all of my points on one stat”
@floppyisnoic6 ай бұрын
LMAO
@sait_rainworld6 ай бұрын
you spawn in with max stat points but all of them put into one singular stat
@hollow94826 ай бұрын
Min maxing
@savanthuman88096 ай бұрын
😢
@jpraise67716 ай бұрын
Greetings my friends from beyond and within the grave. In the short time in which we inhabit this world, It would be my honor to offer you a new life with Christ. Let today be the day you begin✝️
@Liam-c6g1t6 ай бұрын
Hey! I have synesthesia Keep in mind, synesthesia responses aren’t always literal. They *aren’t* more often than not - All it means is one sense triggering another In my case, I associate different notes, songs and chords with color. It’s blessing and a curse when learning music, I can name individual notes by what color they are, but it’s also a crutch, because I’ve relied on my synesthesia to tell me what key I’m in, instead of relying on practical (and important) knowledge. I probably won’t know what note I’m gonna hit until I play it Sorry for rambling, but I hope that was interesting
@melvinzhang26996 ай бұрын
So let's say you press a chord and suddenly you see red? If so then listening to rush E must be one hell of a party
@utraspeed166 ай бұрын
@@melvinzhang2699oh shit yea
@mrosskne6 ай бұрын
that's still cool af
@TheOsage266 ай бұрын
@@melvinzhang2699heck yeah dude.
@zefte6 ай бұрын
Wait this is crazy because I too always felt this way especially when I was younger. Though my hearing may not be beyond perfect as it may have been in the past, so now I feel like niche colors which I would associate with certain sounds can be harder now to immediately identify.
@luciafantin5 ай бұрын
My grandad had tricho-dento-osseous syndom and I can confirm. When he was 90 years old, he was hit by a bus. He only ended up with large bruises but no broken bones and no damaged organs. The bus even ended up with a dent. On the other hand, he became deaf at a very young age due to overcalcification of the bones inside his ears. In addition, his skull gradually deformed into a strange conical shape and his bite became misaligned because of that as well. He lived till 94. but yeah, it had its pros and cons.
@feelshowdy4 ай бұрын
That is fascinating. I hope he is at peace wherever he is now
@geetapatel54214 ай бұрын
Super grandpa 🦸♂️
@agathar71154 ай бұрын
surviving getting hit by a bus at 90 is insane. most surgeons even refuse to perform a simple knee surgery on a patient that old due to how delicate you are at that age.
@howtobreatheidiedyearsago78043 ай бұрын
He *dented* the BUS!???!
@nicholas-dv1mg3 ай бұрын
@@feelshowdy dead
@ravenxplode9856 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, hyperthymesia never lets you forget the physical and emotional pain you experienced in life with this condition like, breaking your arm or finding out your wife is cheating on you
@AJgaming-ce1ln6 ай бұрын
Pretty sure your brain normally does that
@ravenxplode9856 ай бұрын
@@AJgaming-ce1lnits different from a normal person cause a normal person can move on with a bit of time but its basically near impossible to move on with hyperthymesia because of always have to remember the heartbreaking moments and leave them to go to depression alot likely than normal people
@kazukawasaki976 ай бұрын
@@ravenxplode985its coping or humble shi, its not like they are experiencing everything at once, yes the feeling as well comes to mind but with a strong will its really not a big deal, not just professions but daily skills like so much things caj one do with that type of memory Like the only reason we don't have that type of memory is theoriesd to be a cause of evolutionary trade off to linguistic expression,but its nothing bad really to have both if brain has room enough
@Lord_AB6 ай бұрын
like permanent shower thoughts
@superchinmayplays6 ай бұрын
@@Lord_AB wait what do i have that
@Irate_Beau6 ай бұрын
Echolocation: *AHHHHHHHHHHH* There! I got a pretty good look at you.
@SLX__135 ай бұрын
"My name is Toph, because it sounds like TOUGH! And that's just what I am!" Hello, fellow Avatar fan :D
@dylanjanuwardi37565 ай бұрын
So its basicly irl daredevil
@joshmandm5 ай бұрын
Toph my fav 😂
@DeanneM17265 ай бұрын
😂 I picked up that reference.
@DeanneM17265 ай бұрын
I can't remember the name of the island, but it's the fire nation stage performer playing as Toph. And Toph was ecstatic about it.
@SpruceyTurtle5 ай бұрын
Both me and my sister have Williams Syndrome. Its a odd and unique Syndrome but it does have some draw backs. Of course im always happy and have a smile but im also prone to a lot of other emotions like anger or sadness, i can get random mode swings out of nowhere. I also trust people way more then i should. You know when you where a kid you was warn to watch for strangers? Well in my eyes strangers was just another word for friend. My experiences with living with this Syndrome has grown more and more, recently i have had the motivation to help others, whether its finding something in a store for someone or just giving out free things to people. Living with this Syndrome has made me very social and friendly too where I can be friend someone I just met but it also has made me more anxious as I grew up. It also can flare up a emotion of where if im losing in a game or debate or something, I will really upset. I do love music and always wanted to be a musician, I barely tried learning too play anything but i would love to do something with music. Right now at age 18 I have picked up the hobby of reading and writing and I hope that one day I can write a famous book about something I love.
@H.S_Aslan2624 ай бұрын
How does this exactly work? Because i feel like i have been experiencing the described “symptoms”. How does one get a test for it?
@markbrowning43343 ай бұрын
What???? That's called being friendly. That's not a condition or a disorder.
@SpruceyTurtle3 ай бұрын
@@markbrowning4334 If you don't believe me then look it up I'm not making this up and I didn't "self diagnosis" myself this, a actual doctor diagnosed me this Again I'm never always friendly as I have other moods, it's just that all my moods are 10x stronger then most moods
@alexissanchez30092 ай бұрын
Some of yall people gifted and special
@brunnomenxa27 күн бұрын
Profile picture checks out.
@Auriorium6 ай бұрын
I have seen a lot of gym influencers outright telling people they have Muscle Hypertrophy Syndrome and that they are not using steroids. While being unwilling to do a test to see if they are on gear.
@thatdamncrow91976 ай бұрын
Funny thing is that as far as i can tell there are only like a couple people known to have this condition I could only find a single one
@madara9925 ай бұрын
@@thatdamncrow9197I genuinely think Eddie Hall and Ronnie Coleman has it
@CallMeMrChainmail5 ай бұрын
The little boy's parents almost certainly put him on gear too since once he hit puberty he mysteriously lost all his muscle and no longer has the condition.
@jameswilkes4515 ай бұрын
@@thatdamncrow9197 Eddie Hall the strongman is known to have this condition. Another name for it is Myostatin Deficiency. Babies with this condition look swole af!
@CircuitReborn5 ай бұрын
Around 8 years ago I heard they were supposedly developing a medicine to replicate the effect by blocking the protein in question, an artificial version essentially.
@robyncore6 ай бұрын
I have savant syndrome almost exactly how you described it. I decided to take a piano course when I was 14 and my teacher had to practically stalk me because she couldn't give me anything other than a 100%. I only ended up at 98% because I forgot the term pizzicato and wrote "pizza something" on my exam.
@nadiagrady96016 ай бұрын
pizza something is amazing haha... have you tried any other instruments???
@skittle28216 ай бұрын
wait why would learn pizzicato when you’re playing piano, that’s like a string instrument thing😭 (i play piano and the viola)
@just42.6 ай бұрын
yeah what? pizzicato is a string instrument technique (Violin, Viola and Violincello)
@dimekeep6 ай бұрын
@@skittle2821 piano is a string instrument
@-Kryptid-6 ай бұрын
Yeah, the keys pull strings to make noise :D
@muguly45914 ай бұрын
Im 100% confident this is going to convince people they have one of these.
@markbrowning43343 ай бұрын
I guarantee it. I didn't even watch the video. I just came to the comments to see all the morons brag about their wanna ba super powers. I was not disappointed.
@655913 ай бұрын
This is silly. It mainly means some people that do have one will find out. I likely have tetrachromacy (12%, or 1 in 7 women) and had hyperlexia (84% of them are autistic). As an autistic woman, it's not that unlikely. Also, me and relatives suspected those traits years ago, i'm just finding out about the term tetrachromacy only now. Disorders aren't that uncommon. Depression is 1/6 people, anxiety is 1/10 people. It just seems like people with disorders are popping up more than ever before because awareness is raising and people gravitating at that content are usually people with the disorders themselves trying to understand what's "wrong".
@markbrowning43343 ай бұрын
@@65591 everyone gets depressed, so that's not always a disorder. Its just a matter of how one handles it. We tend to have more free time with not having to spend every waking hour trying to hold the simplest day to day tasks together. With that free time, people tend to reflect more. Also they tend to compare their lives with others, and lets not disregard the false images and standards that the entertainment media creates and showers us with to also help us question the value of our own lives. Anxiety is complete bullcrap. We all have that too. Anxiety is just an excuse to not do something. The reality is that people want to have these disorders. They want that crutch. They want to brag to their friends, relatives, or even strangers that they have depression, anxiety, adhd, and good lord the autism. I've never heard of as many people claim or boast about their autism as I have in the last five or so years. People wear these like a badge of honor. And most of them don't actually have the disorder......or at least in any clinical sense. But autism is on another level. There are autistic people, and there are people who say they have autism. The ones who want to claim they have it think that it makes them a savant or a genius. They couldn't be prouder of themselves. It ain't all sunshine and roses for the real autism cases. And it ain't all solving high level math equations or memorizing the names of every star in the sky while you're still in diapers either. Sometimes we just need to accept that everyone has a collection of different emotions to react to different stimulus, and there's nothing abnormal about that.
@655913 ай бұрын
You're confusing disorders with feelings. That's like confusing joy and mania, stress with PTSD. The poison is in the dose. Have you studies psychology enough to be able to disprove the scientific consensus? Feeling depressed is something that everyone experiences, and goes away in no time, on its own. Clinical depression can last from weeks to months, with major depressive disorder potentially lasting years. Same with anxiety. I meant generalised anxiety disorder, lasting from weeks to months, not your run of the mill acute stress that lasts 3 days. Half of people will, in their lifetime, experience a mental disorder. Only 1/6 to 1/3 maximum people will experience depression in their lifetime. Saying that max 1/3 is everyone is as if saying every single man in the US will have cancer. By following your reasoning, PTSD is an excuse because you consider the 1/10 people that experience generalized anxiety are using excuses, because you consider regular stress an excuse. Do you think PTSD is an excuse to be lazy then? There are also noticeable physiological differences, like how much cortisol a control group produces compared to people (or animals like rats) with generalized anxiety, that can be measured by doctors and made obvious for the general public. You mentioned how people can be different and that's okay. To what extent then, is Alzheimer an excuse? And if we relate physical health to mental health, is being in a wheelchair an excuse? After all, everyone is different so surely having severe COVID or diabetes isn't important or doesn't need to be cured or looked after. I'm also glad you mentioned autism. This is speaking from experience; it is rarely EVER worn as a badge of honor, and rarely misdiagnosed. I've talked about it to friends, strangers, that did and didn't have it. The idea that autism means you're a genius is still just a stereotype, and even then far from that widespread, at least outside of the USA. Most people that didn't have autism who i mentioned the word to immediately saw it as something to be ashamed of. It's not something to be inherently proud of either, just neutral, but is rarely ever seen as actually honorable. It has its pros and cons and most clash with society, meaning the pros are often outweighted by cons. I've also never met someone irl that claimed to have autism without a diagnosis or with clear signs they don't; only had people claim they're considering a diagnosis because i told them i think they may have autism. I think the reason you believe autism is glorified is because you mostly see it talked about from people with autism, in communities mostly comprised of people with autism too, that are trying to stop being shamed for having autism or meet more people will autism that understand their struggles. It makes it seem like it is perfectly accepted and even glorified, or like half the population has it when it's 1/100 to 3/100, which is still a lot if you imagine yourself walking in a big crowd for just 10 min; so not unlikely you've met plenty of people with autism. Anyway, of course everyone has good and bad experiences as well as their own quirks. There are however noticeable shifts in patterns of behaviour, and a certain limit to "average", the same way the average person and someone sick mentally or physically are very different. I'm sure you agree that being healthy and having COVID for months is very different as well, even though the difference is similar to the one from a healthy individual and someone with major depressive disorder. Disorders like autism may also not be inherently bad, but more difficult to manage due to society being made for most people. Anyway, just because you can't observe the brain easily, it doesn't mean it can't get sick or be clearly different from the norm like any organ can be, and need to be looked after. i think you need a discussion with a therapist if you believe mental illnesses are merely excuses; whether it's in others or yourself. It might genuinely improve your life, some hotlines and videos are free so you could get a decent amount of information from just those. At worst you'll have more arguments to defend your point. The psychiatrist doctor K. on YT is pretty good at explaining mental health in general, highly recommend you check him out.
@markbrowning43343 ай бұрын
@@65591 Thanks for the analytical approach to your reply. However I have to ask, did you read any number of the comments just on this section for this video? It is a smorgasbord of people boasting about their "super" abilities due to their autism. It may be just the community talking, as you mentioned. But it sure sounds like a lot of people screaming for attention and pounding their chests. My brother has a foster kid who, I am certain , is autistic. This kid has no "super" abilities. In fact, he will likely never be able to live as an independent adult. As a middle schooler, he can't make eye contact, he can't focus on anything long enough to make sense of it, and he's probably going to peak at about a 3rd grade level. You'll never find him bragging on the internet about how super smart or intuitive he is. Hell, I don't think he knows where he is in a given moment, and that's not me trying to be wise. I don't doscount that people have these disorders, but I also don't believe they are as prevalent as we are led to believe. I think we live in a time where people are overdiagnosed. I believe we live in a time where the medical profession is incintivized to unnecessarily diagnose, treat, and vaccinate patients, but never ever cure them. I think it has become sensationalized and popular for a person to be able to tell people that they have a disorder or a handicap. And I absolutely think people use the idea of these disorders as a crutch. I don't have all of the statistical info that you were able to reply with, but I do have eyes, ears, and the ability to perceive what I see, hear, and read. I get that I have an unpopular opinion on this, but I feel like its an opinion that holds water.
@Johnson-Unknown6 ай бұрын
Never felt so bad about not having a disorder
@Kurby_uxz5 ай бұрын
Same. I feel cursed
@Acudit5 ай бұрын
Noooo! I am normal! 😢
@glorytoarstotzka3305 ай бұрын
I was born with ASD (autistic spectrum disorder) and I have a very strong perception and understanding of stuff. I am extremely skilled in programming, in game design and in psychotherapy, 3 completely unrelated stuff, and I did loads of projects and stuff despite this, you actually get very used to any superpower you might have, so much so that it becomes the norm, and anytime it goes away or doesn't work properly, you feel horrible. I have a career and so many skills yet I feel like I can barely get to enjoy them additionally ASD comes with a lot of drawbacks. very high social difficulties. getting really sensitive to light and sounds and to a lot of things that regular people don't get bothered by. you will constantly be called out negatively for being sensitive and that is somehow your fault. there's a lot more than what I described, and I personally feel really alien and different from the rest of the world. at times I wish I was just not so skilled at stuff, but not have these issues even if ASD was just pure upsides, think that your baseline for what's normal would still go really high up and after a few years of wonder in your early life, you just get used to it, and you realize that all you really have is the ability to sometimes enjoy where you are at right now, whether it's super high, super average, or super low.
@LeckerEichelkaese5 ай бұрын
@@glorytoarstotzka330 I myself have tetrachromia. And I really enjoy it. I don't know a world without it so I don't have a comparison. But I can just enjoy art so well with all these different shades and I just thinks that the world looks so beautiful. I always though, that others just dont care about the beauty of the world that I really enjoy, but since I found out that they just see the world differently I am glad to be tetrachromic. I can just look at the faces of the people I love and I see how beautiful they are.
@melodymethyst15745 ай бұрын
I have hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia, but for me, it's not as fun as described in the video 😅 I always had unhealthy pale skin, messed up teeth and very thin and transparent hair, and my classmates were excluding me and nearly bullied me. Also, contrary as said in the video, I have huge problems with light and heat - I get sunburns super quick, even during rain sometimes, and if it's too warm, I'm always the first one to have headaches. And still, I belong to the lucky ones with ED to be able to sweat, even if it's not as much as an average person, I know some affected people who can't sweat at all, and it's super dangerous. My pain tolerance is normal, I would even say I'm more sensitive to pain than most people... So sorry to disappoint you, but I don't have any "superpowers" or advantages from this diasability, and neither does anyone from the support group I'm in. To be honest, I'm confused why it's even in this video, because I've only experienced negative effects of it 🤷🏽
@lifelessjack6 ай бұрын
Williams Syndrome is literally that guy that has "no enemies" lmao
@HyperVanilo5 ай бұрын
Yeah but from what I've read your body will have so much problems, one of them is chronic ear infections
@SamRMoyer5 ай бұрын
Yeah the video here just didn’t decide to discuss the actual terribleness of Williams syndrome.
@h3llboyyy4075 ай бұрын
@@HyperVaniloidk if this is a joke but this is hilarious
@HyperVanilo5 ай бұрын
@@h3llboyyy407 I read some medical articles about this syndrome and every one of them mentioned about this ear problem, you're welcome if you want to see it for yourself
@ironhell8135 ай бұрын
There was guy that likely had this in my hometown that used to go walking around singing everywhere. He got on the local news
@CookieMage275 ай бұрын
Bruh, I can’t even tell if I HAD lunch yesterday, let alone 20 years ago💀💀💀
@lisadooley38724 ай бұрын
Wow I normally can’t remember what I did five minutes ago but you can remember what you did yesterday!!!
@passarogamer65243 ай бұрын
You guys can remember?@@lisadooley3872
@passarogamer65243 ай бұрын
@@lisadooley3872you guys can remember?
@passarogamer65243 ай бұрын
@@lisadooley3872you guys can remember?
@passarogamer65243 ай бұрын
@@lisadooley3872you guys can remember?
@CANON5556 ай бұрын
As someone who has tetrachromacy, i always get mad whenever i see the different shades for a twilight or sunset or my phone can't pick up the colors.
@Jason-eo1rh6 ай бұрын
Sounds spazzy
@Alpha-h7t9r6 ай бұрын
Fr!!!!!!!!! I get so confused like wtf?
@PhantomQueenOne6 ай бұрын
I see more colors than most people, and it drives me batty when other people can't see the same colors I do. I can hold up a page with various colors on it, I can see the difference, they can't. They will say it's the same color. Like most people will say 'black is black' when in fact it's not always the same color. ie: Brown black, grey black, purple black, blue black, red black. The one nail polish that was a deep black cherry color. Some people said it was black, but it sure wasn't. Very pretty color!
@mal2ksc6 ай бұрын
@@PhantomQueenOne Sometimes with those near-black colors, it's just a matter of catching the light right. It's easy to make your painted nails flash into your _own_ eyes, somewhat harder to duplicate that effect for someone else. It is in those flashes where you'll see the color behind the black.
@PhantomQueenOne6 ай бұрын
@@mal2ksc Many people can't see the difference in strong light either.
@lemon.lime.slushie6 ай бұрын
I learned to read at about three years old. According to my parents, they had taught me barely anything about reading, and that I taught myself. I was that one kid in the kindergarten class who sat in the corner reading while everyone was learning the ABCs. I was professionally diagnosed with ADHD when I was around seven or eight. I’m gonna do a ton of research about hyperlexia and come back to y’all.
@georgesangeda10906 ай бұрын
feedback?
@lemon.lime.slushie6 ай бұрын
@@georgesangeda1090 i forgot 😭
@Cry_Like_A_Swamp_Puppy6 ай бұрын
@@lemon.lime.slushiethe true ADHD experience! Fellow early reader and also diagnosed with adhd at 8
@lemon.lime.slushie6 ай бұрын
nope. setting aside that i probably shouldn’t self-diagnose, it seems like i just.. read early. i found a couple symptoms i related to, but most of them are just, “you liked to read” or something like that. additionally, my comprehension skills are just fine, and i have effectively no other symptoms besides just liking to read.
@just_a_person27176 ай бұрын
I learned to read at an early age too! I am super good at orthography and I taught myself how to read in Italian (I spoke Italian at the time but I didn’t know how to read) and I speak almost 4 languages then my psychologist tells me that I most likely have adhd 🤨 I also have a very high IQ on verbal comprehension. Maybe all of these things are related??
@PACSTIK5 ай бұрын
3:24 almost made me jump out of my toilet while I was “doing business”😂😂😂
@h3llboyyy4075 ай бұрын
LMAO
@bikeshmehta20025 ай бұрын
well, recently my parents told me they had encountered a snake in my toilet. I double check ever since
@ryderthomas246 ай бұрын
A friend of my dad probably has Urbach-Wiethe Disease. His body doesn't produce adrenaline, I am not saying that in an exaggerated jokish way like his body literally doesn't. Which is probably why his main hobby is owning and taking care of venomous snakes
@acheybones5886 ай бұрын
That sounds like Addison’s disease, or secondary/tertiary adrenal insufficiency. I have to wonder how that coincides with Urbach-Wiethe
@meredithmayeux37316 ай бұрын
Oh gosh-
@nobodyno65136 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure that he Doesn't't have it since adrenaline is produced in the adrenaline glands sitting above kidneys,maybe you meant addison's disease?
@VegetaPrinceOfSaiyans5 ай бұрын
It's also produced in the medula oblongata. @@nobodyno6513
@agathar71154 ай бұрын
yeah like the other comments said your adrenals and your amygdala are two different parts of the body
@1_D_K_W_N6 ай бұрын
“It’s impossible to remember what you did when you were one month old” Anime characters: allow us to introduce ourselves
@floatingfroggy5 ай бұрын
Mushoku Tensei reference?
@prayasbiswas25015 ай бұрын
Ray from tpn
@SuperGoose425 ай бұрын
Broly lmao
@iliveinadysfunctionalfamily2865 ай бұрын
what does your username mean@@ИсследовательЕкатеринбурга
@txdorovaa5 ай бұрын
@@iliveinadysfunctionalfamily286I think it means explorer of Yekaterinburg
@Axel-ve3vd2 ай бұрын
1:57 “so I started keeping a journal” ahh 😭 🙏
@ItzRealNPC2 ай бұрын
KZbin has evolved
@Storm_280Ай бұрын
Brainrotted
@LeonHerbert-fc9ihАй бұрын
Stanford has a similar condition called polydactyly, which means he has an extra finger
@BEEscuit111112 күн бұрын
LMFAOOOOO
@an_honest_lad49986 ай бұрын
Severe Synesthesia person here, I experience difference emotions or certain feelings depending on the scents I smell. The candle aisle is often my worse nemesis, smells like sulfur and foul smells makes me freighted (yes, the sewers is like impending doom), while sour or more citrus smells acts like an anxiety reducer. Bland smells like wood, paper, and (rain) water is similar to feeling guilty. I've heard individuals receive audio ques when they taste certain foods, Synesthesia is a weird condition.
@charlafox57016 ай бұрын
What scent is happiness?
@Walmart_Shopping_Bag6 ай бұрын
can you taste colors?
@ari6386 ай бұрын
I have a synaesthesia that let's me hear movement! It's not like the actual sound that something moving would make in real life, but rhythmic or dramatic motion creates an involuntary corresponding sound in my brain. Can be nice if the sound is pleasant, but sometimes rapid repetition like flashing lights or gifs can be as loud and grating as a car alarm
@an_honest_lad49986 ай бұрын
@@Walmart_Shopping_Bag I cannot! It is strictly scents and a mild temperature reaction, cold makes me irritated, even flowing breezes from a car window.
@an_honest_lad49986 ай бұрын
@@charlafox5701 The closest scent I can get is terrible smells like deep wood smoke from campfires. But if I ended up using it like how people used drugs to make them happy i'd be long dead haha
@arandomboy86046 ай бұрын
Hyperthymesia is such an overpowered "superpower", BUT lets be real, some "things" are better off forgotten for our own good😦
@irritatedslightly6 ай бұрын
seriously tho 😨
@k9u016 ай бұрын
@@irritatedslightly funky town video ☠️
@irritatedslightly6 ай бұрын
@@k9u01 💀💀💀
@mosesc.6 ай бұрын
ignorance is bliss- 👀👀👀
@exosproudmamabear5586 ай бұрын
It would be nice if you never forgot an information but memories and emotions that come within also remembered which makes it increadibly traumatising if you have any sad situation like ptsd you live that moment again and again everytime fuck
@Rgs1273 ай бұрын
0:40 bro was born with a heavenly pack (he lacked cursed energy)
@TheOsage266 ай бұрын
I actually have Synesthesia. I can “hear colors” in a way. Nobody ever believed/ took it seriously though. When I was younger I would listen to music on the radio and say out loud “That song sounds so pink” my parents were so confused 😅.
@emilyzee74836 ай бұрын
I have Synesthesia too! Though I taste sound and emotions are colors for me.
@yobro55936 ай бұрын
@@emilyzee7483taste the rainbow
@TheOsage266 ай бұрын
@@emilyzee7483 that sounds really fun!
@RasazyPlusUzi6 ай бұрын
Fair
@quempire26566 ай бұрын
whats it like
@SuperGoober694206 ай бұрын
Yo, someone with both Muscle Hypertrophy and Tricho Dento Osseous would be so OP bro 💀
@Zed-Corps6 ай бұрын
I have both but I'm not muscular; handling and manipulating an object that weighs 100 pounds is as easy for me as an average person can easily move a 30 pound object.
@SuperGoober694206 ай бұрын
@@Zed-Corps I have Muscle Hypertrophy, but not TDO 😭
@BrookD.Artist5 ай бұрын
@@Zed-CorpsYou should start training at an MMA gym and become the main character.
@thatguy64825 ай бұрын
@@Zed-CorpsDamn you must be literally the only person in the world with it given that muscle hypertrophy has a less than 0.1% chance of occurring and there are only a few thousand people with TDO in the whole world.
@Zed-Corps5 ай бұрын
@@BrookD.Artist I already finished that chapter of life during highschool; I used to frequently participate in an underground fighting ring, had 52 fights in total. Way more intense than some run-of-the-mill MMA gym hehe.
@muruharu4 ай бұрын
5:22 Bruh their reaction, the way their jaws dropped is hilarious i can't! The piano player's jaw drop is absolutely the cherry on top. The exact same reaction as theirs
@R3al1tyE5cap1st6 ай бұрын
missed opportunity to go over congenital insensitivity to pain and anhydrosis - basically can't feel pain but there's a downside to it as one wouldn't know if they're injured (since they can't feel it)
@jantosoup75286 ай бұрын
This isn't a superpower, it destroys life expectancy
@BenMockford-og1us6 ай бұрын
Thats why it isnt a super power because it has a major drawback
@burntcrumbs6 ай бұрын
imagine you have an infection and simply can't tell, since you dont feel pain, that's horrifying!
@plugshirt17626 ай бұрын
@@BenMockford-og1usbruh nearly all of these have major drawbacks
@BloodSweatandFears6 ай бұрын
They actually have very low life expectancy because pain is SO necessary for humans to keep themselves alive/safe.
@DreamyyArt6 ай бұрын
I allegedly have hyperlexia, my mom told me I learned how to read books at 2 & 1/2 yr old. I got diagnosed with autism (Asperger's) so I guess it makes kinda sense Edit: for those of you all that are denying this, there are so many other fellow autistics in the replies confirming the same condition I have. Not all autistics are the same and it's kinda heartwarming to see y'all back up each other's claims. Wonderful stuff, we're one community 💗
@TheEvaluat0r6 ай бұрын
wow!! that's cool
@RachidAlwardiHeiaee6 ай бұрын
I learned to read a 3
@RachidAlwardiHeiaee6 ай бұрын
I also had autism at 3rd grade but now I have only a little bit EDIT: thx for 40 likes
@sillybillwuryzfan6 ай бұрын
@@RachidAlwardiHeiaeesame
@OilRig-16 ай бұрын
@@RachidAlwardiHeiaeeyou cant lose autism?
@655913 ай бұрын
Thanks to just the thumbnail of your video, i got curious of tetrachromacy, did some tests and just found out i may have it. Perfect scores. That'd explain why i like messing around with values on digital art so much and am so specific about colours i like. I also had hyperlexia, but due to severe stress and social anxiety i lost that ability some years ago and am now trying to build it back up. The rest of the video is just as interesting and instructive. Thank you!
@Untitled-w6t6 ай бұрын
Imagine having a baby throwing table around, I could just imagine the parents going "Hey, drop it, DROP IT." *the kid yeets the table* "bad hulk, you're going in the timeout corner"
@sylbez6 ай бұрын
Lol what they gonna do about it
@Untitled-w6t6 ай бұрын
@@sylbez exactly
@kermit81735 ай бұрын
@@sylbez get the sandal.
@robocatssj3theofficial5 ай бұрын
@sylbez they probably wear full body armor when putting him in the timeout corner
@Krimpin-nj1pm6 ай бұрын
Two things I noticed about the vid, is that one Muscle Hypertrophy syndrome, does have downsides, our bodies regulate our muscles for a reason, such as Your heart having thicker muscles which can cause shortness of breath and chest pain due to your heart having an irregular electrical system that can lead to irregular heart beat, which is usually followed by heart failure. Second, hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia does not give you heat resistance, its actually the opposite, though you might not feel it as much I guess, sweating is how your body regulates its temperature, not being able to do that would obviously not make you "heat resistant".
@iliveinadysfunctionalfamily2865 ай бұрын
Definitely with the 2nd point, the ability to sweat was actually OP back in the day. No other animal had the ability to regulate their body temperature as flawlessly as us, giving us more stamina in a sense
@melodymethyst15745 ай бұрын
I have ed (ectodermal dysplasia) myself and I only have problems with light and heat 😅 I always need additional sun protection like long clothes or sun cream, even if it's for a short time or not even during summer, and I get head aches from heat very quick, it's really not funny. Also, I have pretty pale skin, messed up teeth and very thin and transparent hair, which is why I was excluded and nearly bullied in school. My pain tolerance is normal, maybe I'm even more sensitive than average people, and I've never really experienced advantages of my condition. There are people in my support group who are affected worse than me, because they have no sweat glands at all, and none of them has a "superpower" - you should be glad you don't have this disability 🙈
@Krimpin-nj1pm5 ай бұрын
@@melodymethyst1574 I appreciate you telling me this, its always good to learn new things, and I didnt know that it came with other effects too but that makes sense
@RedFloyd4695 ай бұрын
Also: modernity and youtube gymn rat propaganda have warped our view of what is important in the "genetic lottery". The idea that you need to CONSTANTLY eat in order to survive if you have muscle hypertrophy, is NOT a benefit. It's only a benefit IF you're wealthy enough to afford such a diet on a DAILY basis since BIRTH. There is a reason our survival does NOT revolve around being "the fittest". That would be a horrible curse. Our survival is linked to simply being "fit" for the situation we mostly find ourselves in. Our ancestors did not need to become bodybuilders. They needed to survive off of whatever food they could find, harvest, and hunt. Keep in mind that your metabolism, if it's extreme like this, will find OTHER matter to burn if it can't find organic material that you ate. If you don't eat what your metabolism demands to eat, it will start to destroy your body from the inside. Basically, what might seem as something glamorous is in fact a physical curse. You are doomed to have to eat immense amounts of food all the time. You are literally constantly bulking. That's a horrifying existence. It's a death sentence if you're not wealthy enough FROM BIRTH.
@DragonBonded5 ай бұрын
i was looking for this comment. "no drawbacks" on muscle hypertrophy is a load of bull and false information.
@PersimmonHurmo5 ай бұрын
Hyperthymesia does not mean you can remember every single hour or minute of your life, that is not how memory works. First of all, you do not have a clock in your head that tells you the precise time something is happening. So if you recall a memory and didn't check the date during that time that you formed the memory, you won't be able to tell what time it was. The human brain does not have enough space to remember every single second of your life in 4k HD. Usually human remember a complex memory that can be made out of internal feelings, thoughts, sounds, sensory feelings etc., not just images. And as others mentioned, there is a downside - you do not choose what you remember. Every single painful memory will keep coming back to you. Sometimes I remember an entire embarrassing episode from middle school - it overflows and overwhelms me in an instant. I seize up and can't do anything until the experience flows away. I remember when I knocked off my finger nail while on a swing. I remember the first time I ever got embarrassed in pre-kindergarten. Breaking the glass door in the kitchen, cutting my arm open, seeing my tendons and my skin flapping out, the smell of blood and profuse bleeding on my white shirt, I was in third grade and skipped school that day, and then getting it sewed closed with my mom holding me in her arms and comforting me at the hospital. They only gave me local anaesthesic so I was awake to see it. My uncle accidentally bashing my head against the ceiling when I was a toddler... You also remember stuff like first time learning the meaning of words and concepts, my favourite is 'hole', when I seen a picture of a hole in a kids book I actually thought it led somewhere 😂 . I remember the times I couldn't read, so I would ask grandmother to read me stories from my books, times when I would still piss my bed, when sat on a baby chair at the table... Times, when I didn't have an internal voice and times when I did not have an imagination, I couldn't imagine anything like an apple. It was something I had to learn... There are a lot of misconceptions around hyperthymesia. It is not machine memory. You do not remember like your phone does: this 960x480 photo was taken on 20/10/2010. Think about it - how would someone remember the date they did something in their childhood, if they couldn't even read back then? You remember like any other human, but you remember it as if it was yesterday, like fresh in the mind. It's not super memory for things like random data either. If it's just a long string of numbers, you won't remember it. It usually has to evoke some emotions within you. What is happening, I believe, is that the mechanisms for culling old memories for some reason doesn't work as well as in most people. That's why with hyperthymesia you struggle to forget. Even your best memories can come back to haunt you. It is as if yesterday that my first best friend's ball was kicked over a wall while we were playing football on the streets. It grazed a pointy metal tip on top of the wall and it popped. It was a new ball too... I remember how before moving, under the stars we promised each other that we would fry potatoes camping style again as we did in my backyard... Oh god, I remember his eyes... Every time that memory hits I just miss him so much more... Those days are still so fresh in my mind... And that's just a little bit, the tiniest bit of things in my life that I remember. I can go on like this forever. The worst part is really remembering the brightest days you've spent with your friends but no longer having them by your side. I often dream as if I am with them... But wake up and realise we're worlds apart. You really do carry on the memories of them forever with you. No matter what you do, you'll never forget them. When I say I'll carry you in my heart forever, I do mean it💙💚✨~~
@myayatanarkhin83745 ай бұрын
I hope you and your best friend meet again in the future and talk about those memories once again💫
@lightsinthedarkness5 ай бұрын
Sorry for the very nosy questions but With this being reality do you ever try to look for memories you forgot? And when you do forget how does it feel?
@kingkarma42864 ай бұрын
I didnt finish reading yet, but , i havebit as well, and i dont knos if you need this,but, i love you, and i hope you love yourself. Its ok, and its not your fault and if it was your fault , you can change who you are. Also , you can control it if you practice. You remember everyrhing you find of interest or novel, its essnetially using your ego as an cloud storage space and the priorty is set by what you value in each moment. Being present in every moment and decidi g what you apprexiate can help with the depression aspects of it. Value the great beautiful and good things more, and youll store more of that in your memory.
@rogerdodger19844 ай бұрын
Youre one of the 100 people in the entire world that has this? You people get so bored you make up these crazy stories to feel better. Go to bed.
@Hanako-San1004 ай бұрын
@@rogerdodger1984you’re just jealous you don’t have it lol
@YourSillySwampCritter6 ай бұрын
9:40 I can relate. I’m autistic and I enjoy reading when I don’t want to go outside, and a couple months back, I read a dictionary every time before my English lessons started! Think it’s became a good habit of mine!
@DreamyyArt6 ай бұрын
@@YourSillySwampCritter as a kid I liked reading, but now i find drawing & art more enjoyable so I think it balances each other out (and I can write, yay)
@YourSillySwampCritter6 ай бұрын
@@DreamyyArt I love both of those things! :3
@DreamyyArt6 ай бұрын
@@YourSillySwampCritter ayy, similar interests!! fellow autistic :]
@Stonercrab6 ай бұрын
@@DreamyyArt i love drawing
@DreamyyArt6 ай бұрын
@@Stonercrab heylow fellow artist :D
@historymaker48946 ай бұрын
There are people having such interesting experiences. And I'm here being the average human. And I'm pretty gratefull for that. As a doctor in the making I hear about the most terrible conditions and think "I am so lucky to be average."
@cristian-TI6 ай бұрын
Underrated relatable comment
@historymaker48946 ай бұрын
@@cristian-TI When I was reading about cystic fibrosis I felt like I was so lucky to not have to live like that.
@anonomuse90946 ай бұрын
Hey, how do they test if I have Tricho-Dento-Osseous syndrome? I've fallen off of so much stuff right as a kid and nothing's ever broken, but my little cousin just did the same thing and her wrists broke.
@lithunoisan6 ай бұрын
The average person has not seen this video.
@ChristIsKing4ever-l9w6 ай бұрын
@@lithunoisan I am an average person and I have seen this video.
@ViperChief5 ай бұрын
Most people: REVISION REVISION REVISION People with Hyperthymesia: imma sleep now
@finleymakee48506 ай бұрын
I have synesthesia. It makes learning music super easy through hearing certain sections with certain colors. It's awesome
@TheEvaluat0r6 ай бұрын
Do any of my viewers have this superpower disorder?
@Imdeluluverydelulu6 ай бұрын
Sadly no😭
@cedarmoth6 ай бұрын
Yeah I commented it above lol
@galaxyyxxmidnight6 ай бұрын
Nope but I read a book call the miscalculations of lightning girl ,it's a good book with the character name Lucy having savant syndrome 😀👍
@deadlyoz0076 ай бұрын
I have a superpower, it's called autism and OCD it's a double whammy to make every encounter I have insufferable. Where I just remember so thing random and blurt it out.
@colorfulphoenix236 ай бұрын
Maybe, I started reading at like 3.
@Billol-gravifun5 ай бұрын
This is the perfect content to listen to while trying to sleep
@ivymyrtz6 ай бұрын
Bro’s style changes more than nutshell animations 💀
@isabelcastillo5146 ай бұрын
Overexaggeration, you dont know how much nutshelle animations possibly change style
@Efeoyunda316 ай бұрын
Nah
@AmandaKelley-tw2dp6 ай бұрын
NAHHHHH
@nightniko6 ай бұрын
they have a lot of different animators now
@RareAs_a_Ace6 ай бұрын
Im pretty sure nutshell has like over 89,00 animating styles or something. Nobody can compare to nutshell
@Kambrawlstars6 ай бұрын
Didnt know this existed!! We learn new things everyday and most of it are because of your channel keep up the GREAT work
@TheFrugalMombot4 ай бұрын
Hyperlexia here!!! I was reading Little House on the Prairie books when I was 2. I don’t remember not knowing how to read. and yep i’m on the spectrum! my twins have synesthesia. all letters and numbers have their own corresponding color. it actually helped them with math and memorization. a math problem would be art for them.
@AverageGamer20106 ай бұрын
"Yo this music tastes fire" 😂😂😂
@jillianklassen1175 ай бұрын
Lolll
@marvin_hakim6 ай бұрын
you forgot short sleeper sydnrome where you only need half as much sleep as an ordinary person to stay healthy
@damri_notfound6 ай бұрын
...ok i- no. just because it's not in the video does NOT, i repeat NOT mean THAT HE FORGOT IT HE MAY HAVE CONSIDERED PUTTING IT IN AND DIDN'T THERE ARE SO MANY DISORDERS I COULD SAY HE FORGOT ALL OF THEM HE DIDN'T HE JUST DIDN'T INCLUDE THEM anyway yeah SSS is kinda cool
@KURENANI6 ай бұрын
@@damri_notfoundare you okay🤨
@crimsonemperor22196 ай бұрын
@@damri_notfoundare you ok?
@marvin_hakim6 ай бұрын
@@damri_notfound he said "Every superpower Disorder Explained in 16 minutes." If he said every then it should include every mental disorder that gives you superpowers so i think you're wrong.(respectfully)
@shirley69476 ай бұрын
@@damri_notfound you fine.?? 😃
@NYXDRAWZZ4 ай бұрын
4:30 …. I SWEAR ALL MOMS GOT THIS THING
@princesspipergirl6 ай бұрын
I have been diagnosed with synesthesia pretty recently, but i always thought it was completely normal to be able to taste or smell what i can see. every time i talked about it, i usually got labeled as crazy or weird, but now it makes sense. and now everyone thinks its super cool and constantly show me things to ask what they taste or smell like. though i've never had much problems with synesthesia, unfortunately sometimes i can see something i dont like or something that doesnt look pleasant, and taste or smell something completely awful, which can be very annoying at times. but it's pretty cool, i'm used to it!
@damri_notfound6 ай бұрын
i don't have it but i know someone who does and he told me "all the base 10 numbers have different shades of blue, but 8, 8 has a deep maroon. i don't like 8." in fact he hated 8 so much he treated it like the insanely superstitious people treaat 13 and i STILL DON'T KNOW WHY 8 IS MAROON unless it changes between people but yeah he also said my speech is orange(uhhhhhhh) and when i say "bottle" he tastes raspberrys?????? idk it's an insanse disorder for sure.
@Man-I-Love-Frogs6 ай бұрын
@@damri_notfoundeights purple it's literally the best
@djmetaljack28186 ай бұрын
As a dyslexic I’d assume being in the same room with a hyperlexic would be…… odd.
@iliveinadysfunctionalfamily2865 ай бұрын
Hook up, awesome Wattpad story
@woodhousii24454 ай бұрын
I was considered hyperlexic as a child and later went through testing for dyslexia (I have the screws up directions, both "turn left/right" AND first cook the egg, then grab the eggs out of the fridge, never know where I am when I walk around town even though I've lived in the same town for 13 years and go for walks with someone frequently, and other lack of spatial/relational/verbal awareness), and it's weird I guess. On one hand I read a lot, I study a lot of varied topics in depth, I had a college level reading score from 4th grade onward, on the other hand, please god don't ever ask me to tell you what I just read unless you're hoping for a jumbled up summary followed by multiple pauses of "no, wait, this goes first, how about I just draw you a diagram and recommend a few books... Uhh if I can remember them"
@iliveinadysfunctionalfamily2864 ай бұрын
@@woodhousii2445 Is it carried over to how you structure your sentences, I somehow can't read your words properly.
@woodhousii24454 ай бұрын
@@iliveinadysfunctionalfamily286 yeah, I think so. I also have schizophrenia and a big part of that is jumping to seemingly random topics and even though I'm not going through psychosis anymore, I still get comments from random people saying what I think makes perfect sense, makes no sense. Basically, dyslexia has gotten worse over the years with the addition of schizophrenia.
@iliveinadysfunctionalfamily2864 ай бұрын
@@woodhousii2445 id never think you would be a schizophrenic. ive never met another schizophrenic on the internet, a first. thats strange to me, because when im not experiencing an episode, i would be completely articulate. and during an episode, i would speak absurdly. something like "my neurons are barreling" which is something i kept saying. i couldnt think, i could only think by connecting unrelated concepts together, and even then, the result would be even more unrelated. "the floor is like a trampoline, how would my feet touch the tiles if theyre bouncing away, too far to reach? i cant walk in the living room." and this is how i thought, not just spoke.
@ToffeeAintCoffeeАй бұрын
These videos are getting wayyyyy better
@chyechyewattanasakulake45896 ай бұрын
I think my teacher has Polymelia, he has an extra thumb that doesnt work
@floofyflor6 ай бұрын
that’s polydactyly
@TheOfficialBlackHole6 ай бұрын
If it doesn’t work, it’s polydactyly.
@tuna10006 ай бұрын
Why did i think polydactily was pterodactly
@ReaIise6 ай бұрын
@@tuna1000 Haha, I thought the same for a sec
@imakepancakes6 ай бұрын
your teacher has polydactyly, I have it too, I have two extra pinkies that don't work
@TheRealRadio_active6 ай бұрын
Imagine you have hyperlexia and dyslexia so you just read normally
@iliveinadysfunctionalfamily2865 ай бұрын
guys i think i have dyslexia and hyperlexia i am
@cinnimakesvideos5 ай бұрын
genuinely i have hyperlexia and dyslexia somehow and i can read a novel in hours (will i comprehend it? no but i can read it) but I can keep misspelling the same word, read it over 50 times, and still not understand what is wrong. its a mixed bad :')
@cinnimakesvideos5 ай бұрын
*bag
@dirt_farmer9585 ай бұрын
@@cinnimakesvideos Exactly
@H_Hailie.5 ай бұрын
@@cinnimakesvideos maybe ADHD.
@MapsCharts5 ай бұрын
9:18 I was literally spelling out a word in the air with my fingers when he told that I guess I might have this one 😂
@MapsCharts5 ай бұрын
I always considered myself normal but it's true that I learned writing and reading at 2 and doing mental math calculations at 4, I was recognising myself in every sentence he said, that might actually be related
@irenealvarado55846 ай бұрын
I always learn something new and I am fascinated every time , I will never get tired of this. 🙂
@Jerome12222H6 ай бұрын
Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
@Malaikamuskan-v5z6 ай бұрын
Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!
@Malaikamuskan-v5z6 ай бұрын
Is he on instagram?
@ThailandLottery-vz3pm6 ай бұрын
Yes he is dr.porassss.
@ejmabrothers67436 ай бұрын
Microdosing helped me get out of the pit of my worst depressive episode, a three year long episode, enough to start working on my mental health.
@baibhabhbose60176 ай бұрын
@@adhamsoliman-ue2knI hope you and your husband find peace and safety.
@wadsey17805 ай бұрын
everyone having cool superpowers and i just ain’t scared of things 😂😂😂
@kingfloppagaming6 ай бұрын
"Your memory would be as clear and as vivid as if it just happened." Jokes on you, I have short term memory loss!
@nuclearmouse63545 ай бұрын
missed opportunity to repeat the comment
@Kippenhok20195 ай бұрын
@@nuclearmouse6354 "What comment?"
@nuclearmouse63545 ай бұрын
@@Kippenhok2019 wait what are you talking about
@BBG_CJ5 ай бұрын
wow, me too!
@BBG_CJ5 ай бұрын
wow, me too!
@ezrajinxgrimm6 ай бұрын
unlocking the secret hidden colours is one of my biggest flexes as a tetrachromatic artist ✌🏼😎✌🏼
@Mischievous_Moth5 ай бұрын
Bet it can be a bit frusterating when other people dont see what you see though, yeah?
@ezrajinxgrimm5 ай бұрын
@@Mischievous_Moth oh absolutely lol i was always told i was being a pretentious art student about colours, but turns out i LITERALLY see more colours than most people
@Akke-hv5ds5 ай бұрын
Same, but the worse part is when I’m coloring something in and I see how different every color is! Even single color pencils looks different because I can see each speck of color!!!!
@ironhell8135 ай бұрын
@@Mischievous_Moth not really, it allows him to draw it so you can see it.
@SecureHandle5 ай бұрын
@@ironhell813you still wouldn’t be able to see it.
@CowboybubPercussion5 ай бұрын
I’m a guy and I can see infrared light. As a kid, I used to play with the remote looking at it’s light bulb while pressing buttons and my parents would look confused when I say there’s a white pinkish light blinking when I press the buttons. It was only later I figured this out
@Lidcats6 ай бұрын
As an autistic servant, autism is a living nightmare. Imagine being in a room with only the sound being nails on a chalkboard and a fork scratching on a plate
@KaitlynChihuahuaFan6 ай бұрын
I am autistic, the voice of some people irritates me , so I put on a drama though I don’t want to . They call us “sick ppl” in Asia.
@realDonald-trump6 ай бұрын
"Ah yes, serve me my Autism".
@ChrisisCroissant6 ай бұрын
I also have autism, but I'm not a savant, unfortunately. I'm curious how many differences there are between autistic people with and without savant syndrome. As in if the ones with savant syndrome experience more difficulties elsewhere or if it's just a soft of "autism + very very talented in something"
@sait_rainworld6 ай бұрын
you're literally saying hell but in more words
@ChrisisCroissant6 ай бұрын
@@sait_rainworld Wouldn't call the condition itself "hell" it's more how -The world perceives and welcomes us And -The world accommodates for us Both are often the hardest parts of living with autism, but if we had some future technology or something similar. I think I'd keep my condition because it's so fundamental to who I am right now.
@SamONellaKrummlauf6 ай бұрын
My papa has Hypohidrotic Ectodermal Dysplasia. The one thing I know he's scared of is abandonment too- But on the fourth of July, he set off the fireworks and just stayed 1 foot away from those crackling balls of ember while everyone else was 12 or more feet back. He says, "it just doesn't hurt getting hit with a ball of fire."
@SamONellaKrummlauf6 ай бұрын
"You can do anything, aye? Think of a new color!" People with Tetrachromacy: "I'm bouta end your career."
@UnfairDare6 ай бұрын
“My favorite color is *BRRKSTSBLAODJRBBSJDJE*” - some dude with tetrachromy
@nightniko6 ай бұрын
so you could say he got HED?
@SmallSpoonBrigade6 ай бұрын
@@UnfairDare That can apply to trichromats as well. My 3 sets of cones are spaced oddly in terms of their response range, so I see colors that don't technically exist for most people because they're outside of the normal range. It's hard to really describe them, for instance one of them is blue and white at the same time, but the blue and the white aren't actually mixed, the color is both of them at once. I think that happens because the eyes are sending messages to the brain and the brain doesn't really have a sense of a color for the sensation.
@UnfairDare6 ай бұрын
@@SmallSpoonBrigade you explaining it: "its like blue, but like its also white, and blue at the same time, but its not blue and white, its not white blue, but they aren't seperate, so technically calling it 'bluite' would be a crime, because its not really a mixture, but like it is kinda like blue?"
@Lerence-t5m3 ай бұрын
I found this video really interesting because I can relate to some of the experiences described, but in an athletic context! I’ve trained in Muay Thai since I was a kid, and over time, I realized that I could pick up other physical skills really quickly just by watching others. For example, I’ve learned to dribble like Kyrie Irving and perform soccer moves like Messi by observing their movements in videos and applying them in practice. It’s almost as if I can 'feel' the moves just by seeing them, and I can usually replicate them without much practice. I’m not sure if it’s a form of athletic savant ability or just the result of years of martial arts training, but it’s amazing to explore how our bodies and minds can work together in unique ways!
@ForeverGoshlynn30046 ай бұрын
Hyperlexia reminded me of being one grade level ahead in math in fifth and sixth grade. Everyone else played in class, ate snacks, and listened to music.
@SecureHandle5 ай бұрын
ok
@Fmajor75 ай бұрын
“Polymelia is rare” AI photo generation: “Hold my beer 😏!”
@thatguy54 ай бұрын
"HciD mmj Bgef", the AI says, still holding the beer with all six fingers, as the man contorts onto the motorcycle jetski hybrid and drifts down and across the runway at an airport before turning around to pass the camera again this time riding a horse up to a guy at a resturaunt where they eat noodles in each other's arms while the ocean laps at the beach in the background.
@SasamuelTheCool2 ай бұрын
@@thatguy5Hja YYm yT? heē?
@Luxapparentlywastaken5 ай бұрын
As someone with synesthesia I have been able to kind of bookmark past thought by just thinking about it and then interacting with something random such as picking up a flower while thinking about finishing a game and the next time you see said flower you remember wanting to beat that game which is a pretty useful thing to have
@Nisa4444-h1v5 ай бұрын
Wait, I thought everyone had that.
@Luxapparentlywastaken5 ай бұрын
I only recently found out it’s a synethesia thing
@frogforest6 ай бұрын
As someone with synesthesia, here are some quirks: -songs do have colours for me, and listening to a song attentively will give me "closed eye visuals" in that song's specific hue. Independent notes or chords however do nothing for me. -numbers have colours, but this causes some problems because some share the same colour. 4 and 7 are both red, so I mix them up sometimes. -Words or letters do nothing for me. -Not sure if this is part of synesthesia, but abstract ideas are sometimes linked with colours or more often, a "vibe". For example, if left and right (directions) were to be meals, left would be a heavy meal with lots of meat and potatoes, and right would be more like a light salad. Left feels heavier and darker, right feels lighter and brighter. -People are also assigned a colour, from the very first moment I meet them.
@kermit81735 ай бұрын
you should try lsd or mdma.
@Nisa4444-h1v5 ай бұрын
Same. I honestly thought I was the only one.
@Dranok15 ай бұрын
@frogforest (I'll start with an aside: it's nice that the first reply to "frogforest" was from "kermit";-) I've never heard of directions being associated with synaesthesia! Is it only medial references for you, no other axis? Does it distract you, make you prefer actions to the right, be averse to things coming from the left? (If someone puts a new food item in your left hand will you learn to dislike the taste of that food? Do you have different hazard responses when you are walking or driving?)
@raptordarwish8875 ай бұрын
What does Electric Dance Music's color?
@mohammedd21285 ай бұрын
I can taste food just by smelling it.for example if I were to smell a completely new food I can tell that it's sweet,savory...,what ingredients is used and .... Is it this syndrome or am I an idiot?
@polarconductor7986 ай бұрын
14:15 "Click" Oh thats my Annoying Cousin!
@MawdyDevАй бұрын
7:09 I was wondering why you added this one, since being unable to sweat makes you more prone to heat stroke and more sensitive to heat, and then you said it makes you LESS sensitive to heat, and now I know how little you know about biology overall. As annoying and uncomfortable as sweating is, it's a necessary cooling mechanism.
@Worm_Void6 ай бұрын
Having synesthesia While being autistic is absolutely the worst! Like yes, it's really cool to be able to see a plethora of colors whenever I'm listening to my favorite music, But whenever I enter a loud over stimulating area with nothing to buffer it out. I essentially get blinded. every. single. time.
@Man-I-Love-Frogs6 ай бұрын
Flash bang through a kaleidoscope
@DovahGirlie6 ай бұрын
It was one hundred percent worse when during a middle school sock-hop, out of nowhere, the DJ yelled at everyone to scream if they wanted some popular song - probably Baby by Justin Bieber in 2012 - and I just collapsed forward. I swear my senses felt like there was an earthquake, and all my body could do was cringe in recoil from suddenly doing the flop. I don't know if I could deal with roller coaster screams like that ever again; but then again, the acoustics were nuts in that gym.
@NahomAmanuel-yb6bj5 ай бұрын
Kid: reads a newspaper at the age of 2. Doctors: you have a disease, let's fix you.
@RedFloyd4695 ай бұрын
Wholly depends on your definition of "disease" or "condition". I can't recall what official book doctors tend to use for definitions, something called like the "drm 5" or something, but the book inherently attempts to remove social, ethical, normative bias when naming conditions. The problem is that this is a contradictory philosophy with tons of problems. Still, it's the one most used today. Basically, just because the official definition says you have a "disease", that doesn't mean doctors want to "fix you". If the condition is mostly harmless, why fix it? But it could very well be that this video misinforms us a little bit. What might seem glamorous and "super" may in fact be debilitating. I won't judge because I know too little about these conditions myself.
@655913 ай бұрын
Not disease, a disorder. Dis-order. Different to how most people's brains are organized. A disorder doesn't have to be inherently bad, like autism; but it is significantly different the norm, which is the case here with autism and for most disorders, to hinder the person because society is made for the norm, not them.
@atomaraffe4 ай бұрын
0:04 Don’t forget leg day, seriously. 😂😂
@Mewshrooooooom6 ай бұрын
I have Synesthesia words have colors + sounds have colors) and I only realized that it wasn’t normal to have a freaking rainbow shoot though you vision every time I listened to music after reading a book on it! It’s always nice to hear people talk about it because it’s not as commonly as know about :>
@ldgaming42136 ай бұрын
Do you have Perfect Pitch? Do certain notes trigger certain colours?
@Man-I-Love-Frogs6 ай бұрын
You don't have synthesis, you have synesthesia I have synesthesia
@Mewshrooooooom6 ай бұрын
@@ldgaming4213yeah! I have pretty good pitch, which made it very easy for me to learn the flute (which I have been playing for 6 years!) It’s different for each instrument, but higher notes or louder sounds tend to trigger brighter or sharper sounds (loud music is hard lol) and lower notes often are larger and darker :D for example a high note on a piano has a bright lavender coloured spike and a low note has a indigo swoop that swoops downward
@Mewshrooooooom6 ай бұрын
@@Man-I-Love-Frogsyeah, it was a typo lol
@ldgaming42136 ай бұрын
@@Mewshrooooooom very interesting! I have very good learned perfect pitch but I could never even imagine seeing it all as colours. You are very lucky!!!
@vibes_VT6 ай бұрын
combine muscle and bone disorders: is a super human
@Fred_lost5 ай бұрын
I’m a gymnast, I have the bone disorder. But its funny I can perform tricks that my peers that have way more years and muscle mass compared to body weight easily.
@steamyninja88815 ай бұрын
Hyperthemesia would be such a cheat code for school. You can study the test material for like 15 minutes and ace it. For some college courses, you may not even have to do the HW cause it’s typically 10-15% of your grade.
@jaywboxing-pf5zy5 ай бұрын
And then remember all the embarrassing and painful and tortureous moments you had in school? I'm okay 😂😂
@steamyninja88815 ай бұрын
@@jaywboxing-pf5zy Success for a little bit of trauma 😆 It would work for memorizing every possible interview question and answer as well in the future
@jaywboxing-pf5zy5 ай бұрын
@@steamyninja8881 lol true 😂 its got its pros and cons i guess
@keanuhawnelle5 ай бұрын
2:06 I got a basketball ad after this
@markbrowning43343 ай бұрын
Best comment on here.
@Snipersjaratelol6 ай бұрын
I do have hyperreflexia, When I was at the ages of 4-8 I used to speak Native Arabic (I didn't master it, but I knew how to speak it from the cartoons I used to watch as a little child, now that I'm older, I've improved it a lot!). At the age of 9, I've mastered and studied the Engilsh language and its history. Now, I've managed the language, and I began writing poems and articles about various topics and subjects despite not having a good educational system in my country. And...well...let's just say I've got diagnosed with Autism so...I guess it makes sense why I'm highly fixated on scientific topics and researchs lol
@Lulxec6 ай бұрын
Same here with the native arabic thing, except i learned french instead of english after that.
@Snipersjaratelol6 ай бұрын
@@Lulxec that's actually pretty good! French is quite easy, especially if you speak Engilsh Fluently
@ChrisisCroissant6 ай бұрын
@@Snipersjaratelol And here I am, French person who speaks fluent English since about 6 or 9. I can tell you that 3/4 of the people in class (20/28 or so people, though school year ended so I will move onto another school) could not make a single correct, complete and coherent sentence in English to save their life. Something seemingly just does not fit with most French people when trying to learn English, I personally find they aren't too similar but personal opinions aside. I did an English (sorta' half-official) test for volunteers, it was optional and like out of 800 students of the school, about 50 did it. Out of 16.400 people in the same grade as me, I am 47th in the entire country. Now, sure, fluent English skills help a loooot, but still, when it feels like even our own presidents do not understand how to speak English, that's how we know we're not really doing all too well on education over here (education system has issues, and it's getting worse)
@alexpresso2434 ай бұрын
did you mean hyperlexia
@iamapersonnamedme24 күн бұрын
The explanation at the end of hyperlexia describing where it came from makes sense
@jerey66 ай бұрын
This guy's analogies are insane
@sarahhnolan35596 ай бұрын
Stumbled upon this channel, and now I'm hooked lol this is awesome 👌
@CoilSB28 күн бұрын
I learned reading in 3 years old and it was awesome
@StarLex.A.star.6 ай бұрын
The “Williams” on the thumbnail made me think of I ALWAYS COME BACK
@starboy_69696 ай бұрын
I have hyperlexia and learned to read at 2 :3 Though, I was placed in harder classes and that quickly burnt me out. And I’m autistic.
@EnderFyre85794 ай бұрын
2:02 I'm sorry, why did he just- "You might be flaunting three arms, or even *FOUR!!!* 🤠🤠🤠"
@juliannaferrell32256 ай бұрын
I love how the evaluator makes videos very recently, keeps me entertained 👍🏻
@izaslayzz6 ай бұрын
i literally love ur channel i learn more here than school tbh lol
@robinmaurer26455 ай бұрын
I just have ADHD and id love to have tetrachromacy and would fear hyperthymesia because i'm already haunted by miniscule mistakes i made once
@DigitalEssencexX6 ай бұрын
i have synesthesia. i usually hear colors through songs. when i was smaller, i didn’t know what key signatures were and would describe them by color. for example, songs in f major (think of no surprises by radiohead, 21 guns by green day) would be associated with the color purple. probably why im into music, art, and drama now lmao. i also have it in food as well. i hate peanut butter because it always tasted like the color black to me. i only had it once, and a few years later, i found out i developed an allergy to it. synesthesia is wacky asf tbh.
@Dimkam306 ай бұрын
I was watching one of your videos and as it ended I got a notification for this video 😂 Lettttsssss gooooooooooo
@ImLaffe6 ай бұрын
Same lol
@arericarnau47735 ай бұрын
The fact that there are so many people self diagnosing weird disorders is... probably bad, unless diagnosed by a doctor...
@melodymethyst15745 ай бұрын
Sometimes, self-diagnoses are more reliable than the opinion of a doctor. Everyone knows himself best, and if you do a deep and reliable research and ask people who know you, you have a high chance of being correct. Doctors, on the other hand, only see the surface and have to rely on what you tell them. It's not unusual that they practise "medical gaslighting", intentional or unintentional, because they don't know or recognize the symptoms or they don't take you serious. So, if you have self-diagnosed yourself by reliable sources and your doctor doesn't confirms it: Don't give up, you are not necessaryly wrong, and you're not alone 💙
@Tqueenboss15 ай бұрын
@@melodymethyst1574 I was medically gaslit by my psychologist years ago, so I completely understand what you're saying.
@GrieferBT5 ай бұрын
@@melodymethyst1574True, but still, chances are a lot of people here are lying for attention.
@RedFloyd4695 ай бұрын
@@GrieferBT Not neccessarily lying. Just maybe reading too much into a singular experience they once had or a minor quality that MIGHT coïncide with what the video describes. Expert opinion is expert opinion for a reason. No, we shouldn't trust "doctor A"'s opinion immediately. Hence why "a second opinion" is such a widely used but unfortunately undervalued phrase. Conspiracy nuts and people who know nothing about scientific methodology in general like to huff and puff about how "doctors know nothing" just because that one time 5 years ago they got a bad diagnosis from some overworked local surgeon or some shit. There is a reason "peer reviewed" is an important quality for a study. It's not for bragging rights like the internet pretends it means. It just means the more people reviewed it, the less prone to mistakes and bias it is. It's not black and white, but it's better than some random joe schmoe's opinion on the internet claiming he knows better than 90% of the scientific community. So having said that: be careful with self-diagnosis, and be careful about trusting a singular "expert" without looking into the matter further than that. It's a matter of finding the right balance that is the most intellectually honest.
@GamerPro-gv8nf6 ай бұрын
if you have tricho-dento-osseous syndrome and muscle hypertrophy syndrome you basically become the hulk cuz of muscle mass being a lot and VERY thicc bones
@christiananggoro6 ай бұрын
Synesthesia is wild. I don't have it, but had experienced it through psychedelic trip. I saw sounds, tasted with my fingertips, smelled color. All the senses were merged. I still remember the experience, tho I don't remember the exact sensations since I can't reproduce it. It's hard to explain.
@Phxntom_694205 ай бұрын
Bro ur dad jokes crack me up so much 😂😂😂
@cedarmoth6 ай бұрын
I have auditory tactile synesthesia! I found out when I was 8 when I thought I was going insane lmao
@mossiest_moss6 ай бұрын
Do you like hear what you touch or sense what you hear?
@cedarmoth6 ай бұрын
@@mossiest_moss well sometimes things I hear can be triggered and I can see faint colors or shapes/ patterns but it can’t really “hear” it :)
@Heteroslayer6666 ай бұрын
Imagine someone who has all of those disorders 💀💀
@PlxsteredH34rt6 ай бұрын
Thye’d be dead tell you
@Randomthingswithmidnight6 ай бұрын
I have 5 of them and I will say having hyperthyesia is more of a curse then a superpower
@damri_notfound6 ай бұрын
@@Randomthingswithmidnight *5*?!??!?! BRO IS A WALKING LOTTERY TICKET and yeah hyperthymesia kinda sucks but i don't have it as extreme
@Asheatskids6 ай бұрын
@@Randomthingswithmidnight which ones? I really want to know how you handle all of them at the same time but if it's private you don't have to tell me.
@BroReallyFoundThis6 ай бұрын
You stole my comment 😭😭😭
@dtm14723 ай бұрын
hyperthymesia might seem cool at first but if you think about it for a bit you can understand how much a horror this disorder can be. imagine having a traumatic event happen to you, or a pet dying, etc, and you being able to recall each and every second of it. id imagine its more of a curse than a blessing honestly
@YTCat1236 ай бұрын
Evaluator: *explains Polymelia and that you can be born with an extra finger as well* Me: STANFORD PINES MENTION-
@NYANcat-qf7eg5 ай бұрын
He is called sixer by bill so lol
@XCarbonX6 ай бұрын
So I apparently have tetrachromacy, which only occurs in 8% of men. This would explain the fights with my family about what color our old Suburban was.
@mace.055 ай бұрын
my friend has hypohidroric ectodermal dysplasia and it’s actually quite opposite. because she can’t sweat her face gets really red and she gets dizzy or faints often because her body isn’t cooling her down and she can’t tell when she’s getting to hot for her body. she also had to drink extra amounts of water so she doesn’t get dehydrated cause if she is dehydrated she won’t know.
@YourLocalLobotomist6 ай бұрын
I have Synesthesia and sometimes people would be asking me what their voice looks or tastes like
@SPidrmAN_20996 ай бұрын
hi, just a suggestion, make video sections in your video for people to navigate easily in the video
@loops_gdАй бұрын
I have a friend with Split Brain Syndrome one time he grabbed a Coke out of the fridge, but his other hand grabbed the milk, and he had to ask me to grab the milk out of his other hand and put it back 😂
@noxakra6 ай бұрын
I was a hyperlexic kid! Learned how to read at about 3 years and I was obsessed with a particular comic book series. Not surprisingly, I'm autistic too lol
@Walmart_Shopping_Bag6 ай бұрын
"hehe, this food tastes like colors"
@emeraldspark87946 ай бұрын
Taste the rainbow Literally
@RazorSharpMC5 ай бұрын
You know you’re annoying when even your friend with William’s Syndrome gets mad at you