Ah the good times, when this video was posted one minute ago.
@blazehawkins27592 жыл бұрын
Man, it sucks now, when the video was posted 12 minutes ago
@eideticex2 жыл бұрын
In the last 38 minutes, things have really went to hell. Why can't they make videos like this anymore ;p
@hkr00652 жыл бұрын
They don't make em like this anymore.
@m888-w5q2 жыл бұрын
Dude it’s been a whole hour since this video was posted??? Holy fuck I’m getting old
@bobobsen2 жыл бұрын
I wish I could go back to when you posted this comment. Those were the days.
@DelDel__2 жыл бұрын
I've literally started to hoard and dig up memories (like photos, my drawings, all kinds of old KZbin videos) in a file, it's like a little timeline of myself (I know that sounds dumb.) I have to be honest, all these nostalgia kicks have become extremely addicting especially because I don't really see a future for myself and have been living in the past for the last five years, since I turned 20 and realised, now the good times are actually over. In most situations nostalgia just makes me cry and paralyzes me, but when I work on this thing at a calm night it makes me very happy. The happy hormones have become like a drug to me, but I've become desperate for them for far too long anyway.
@nickspeelman91742 жыл бұрын
I was an unhappy child and teenager and was miserable for most of my 20s. Life didn't start getting good for me until my 30s. And now in my early 40s I'm happier than ever - and that's independent of how much of a shitshow I feel like the world has become. The good times may still be ahead of you. You just have to put the work into it.
@scoopitywoop2 жыл бұрын
I'm 25 and my life didn't even start until 20. I wouldn't go back to being a teenager for any amount of money. The idea that the good times are long gone is a self fulfilling prophecy.
@rudecat79182 жыл бұрын
It doesn't sound dumb, it's something that I always wanted to do but I always get overwhelmed by where do I even begin. But at 20, you think the good times are over? That's so sad and bleak.
@embrace70522 жыл бұрын
Same, I don't see a future for myself too, i never saw a future, i just couldn't imagine growing up and when the realisation hit me that I was in fact growing up, a tsunami of old memories just rushed in. For a period of time I completely lost track of the present. It was during my 18 birthday, it triggered something, for days I felt like I was stuck in some loop. Thankfully now i am out of it.
@embrace70522 жыл бұрын
@@scoopitywoop so true
@frenchfries35982 жыл бұрын
This is me right now. I've gone as far as downloading old games i used to play, rewatching playthroughs of youtubers from 2014, and browsing old photos and vids. I needed this
@ZeroGDucks2 жыл бұрын
I was redownloading all my old Mac games the day I moved to the dorms for my new job (3 weeks ago) I think it was literally a week later, I still haven't touched the laptop. Ive been too busy wanting to try every new thing near my new home 😂
@neoguy28092 жыл бұрын
Same but for me it's everything 2015-2016
@mkhokhelis2672 жыл бұрын
I’ve literally brought back my ps3 and playing ps2 games. I just miss those good times. 🥹😂
@armorkny Жыл бұрын
that might be a side effect of games being shit or scummy nowadays not necessarily nostalgia@@mkhokhelis267
@Consul992 жыл бұрын
I think it all depends on your current perspective. If you had a bad life experience but now you're happy, you'll look back and think, wow I came so far. On the other hand if you had positive life experiences but now you're depressed you'll think, wow my life sucks I want to go back.
@CR0WYT2 жыл бұрын
This. Most of my teenage years sucked, and every time someone asks me "don’t you miss being young?", I go "Hell no, adulthood is better than that hellhole."
@thijs29062 жыл бұрын
What about people who have had a bad past and a bad present? It's logical from their perspective to view life as a perpetual negative feeling, since the good times have not outweighed the bad times in their life. Why would they keep going on, since you can make the same argument that you can't tell them it will necessarily get better since you too can't see the future.
@GlitchPredator2 жыл бұрын
@@thijs2906In that case, What is there to lose if you try?
@bobobsen2 жыл бұрын
Idk, I'm pretty okay now (still somewhat unhappy but not depressed) and I look back on my depressed years with nostalgia sometimes. Not because of how I felt, but because of what I had. Family was still all alive, my best years were ahead of me, I even had more friends.
@bobobsen2 жыл бұрын
@@CR0WYT what about childhood?
@JStack Жыл бұрын
I had a huge amount of my depression/anxiety relieved when I heard the saying “you can never step in the same river twice. For it is not the same river and you are not the same person.” Just accepting I can’t recreate the past 1:1 but it’s more finding out what I loved about the past and trying to bring it into my present. I can step in a potentially better river as a potentially better person. I am not doomed to what I was
@mind-of-neo2 жыл бұрын
The point about nostalgia being much darker with depression is very true...
@4xzx42 жыл бұрын
It's like watching a movie: if you constantly are worrying about when the movie is going to end (because it will end eventually) then you won't enjoy it as much. That's why enjoying it scene to scene without thinking "wow this is such a great movie, I don't want it to end! But it will sooner or later end - the question is when??" is so bad. Life is a little like that you know. When I played Final Fantasy VII last year I was taken by how amazing and awesome it was. Instead of thinking "I never want this amazing game to end...!!" (which I thought several times mind you) I started to think like this instead: "so many people would have KILLED to experience the game "blindly" again, so I'm going to take this opportunity to enjoy every single bite of this game as much as possible!" and I did! It was sooo much more enjoyable because of that!
@PrestoJacobson2 жыл бұрын
Right. Seeing your Paper Mario Thousand Year Door profile pic though, I think I gotta replay it again somehow. ;D
@4xzx42 жыл бұрын
@@PrestoJacobson My favourite game ever.
@nuke291 Жыл бұрын
Dr.k your lectures are not only giving information, I actually feel like I'm hanging out with virtual friends about life and common experiences. It's like so chill. Thank you n.n
@dameanvil Жыл бұрын
00:00 🌟 Nostalgia is influenced by our present mindset; being present in the moment enhances enjoyment of things. 01:38 🕰 Nostalgia isn't universally positive; it can vary based on personal experiences and mental state. 03:26 🧠 The perception of the past being better might involve cognitive biases, especially linked to feelings of depression. 04:51 🤔 Instead of dismissing nostalgia, explore why the past felt better; understanding those aspects could help recreate a similar experience in the present. 06:23 🧭 Nostalgia serves a purpose; dwelling on the past aids emotional processing and helps in moving forward. 08:12 💭 Counterfactual thinking, imagining alternative scenarios, helps correct behavior and generates motivation. 10:20 🔄 Cognitive reframing is essential; it's a skill that can reshape perceptions of the past, aiding in gratitude and improved outlook. 16:52 ⏳ Living in the present generates happiness; as we age, societal pressures and responsibilities pull us away from this mindset. 18:29 📆 Society doesn't prepare us to retain presentness as responsibilities grow; the temporal dimension increases suffering and contributes to nostalgic views of simpler pasts. 23:09 🌟 Dwelling excessively on future concerns can rob present happiness. It's not about ignoring responsibilities but reframing to prevent undue dwelling. 24:24 🎮 Recreating past happiness might not work as circumstances change. Adapt to current situations for enjoyment. 27:57 ⏳ Living in the present becomes harder with age and societal pressure. Learning to live in the present is a skill that needs conscious effort. 31:22 🌸 Recognizing life's transient nature can initially cause anxiety but embracing the present is the only way to truly enjoy life. 36:01 💸 Circumstances influence happiness but aren't the sole factor. Financial security creates fertile ground for happiness, but it's not a guarantee. 41:20 🤔 Being present isn't ignoring present circumstances but appreciating them while also planning for the future sensibly. 44:00 🧭 Negative emotions signal necessary changes. They can guide toward improvements in various aspects like creativity or loneliness. 46:24 🕰 Fearing pain will last forever affects motivation. Studies show hopelessness leads to giving up; realizing it's not eternal is crucial. 47:52 🚣 Recognize future projections as emotional, not always logical. Despite evidence, assumptions about eternal loneliness might not be complete. 48:18 🧠 Future projections often stem from emotion. There are practices, like meditation, that help train the mind to live in the present.
@pandurlolgg57802 жыл бұрын
I posted a similar thread on the reddit, and hoped to get an answer or two of people who feel the same, but sadly, I didn't. The reason I mention that is cause it made me feel really alone on that field. That's why I am happy to see this video now. Nostalgia can really be crushing. I suffer from it a lot. I collect old video games from the 90's and early 00's, hoping to reactivate the feelings I had back then. It kinda works, but then I always get reminded that those times are over. Old friends are gone. I grew older. I got a lot of responsibilites now. I have the money to buy all the things I always wanted, but I don't have time to spend it or enjoy the things I have now. It goes much deeper than that, but I am not good at describing it. Old times simply have passed. Nostalgia appears to be a pleasant thought but it just drags us down so much without even noticing, because it's true face hides behind the shroud of pleasantness.
@Vivi_92 жыл бұрын
I think we go to the past to things that comfort us when we feel depressed, or when we're doing particularly well. Sometimes this works, in my case I would go back and watch old cartoons/anime I grew up on, or play old school video games, and have an absolutely blast. It would be like being transported back to that other time. Sometimes it doesn't work, and I resent the fact that I'm not feeling anything. So I'd like to think those old video games you've collected may induce that feeling in you again! Can't guarantee it but I hope it works, at least temporarily.
@2clair2clair2 жыл бұрын
i needed this so much, i have been so paralyzed by nostalgia and everything that branches out from that nostalgia since covid started, and i have never been able to get through it, i dont know how to express my gratitude except saying, "thank you Dr. K"
@Hyurno2 жыл бұрын
I really needed this
@aeyde2 жыл бұрын
no
@BlankFaceAma2 жыл бұрын
Lol "the GG zone" is my new favorite saying Also, there is something deeply poetic about "I can't keep this tea warm forever, so if I want to enjoy it, I have to drink it now".
@keithprice65812 жыл бұрын
"Even the humble grilled cheese - can be delicious" fav quote.
@Th1s230 Жыл бұрын
I really do think about 1999 playing mario 64 and starting to draw while playing, really was a chill and interesting times and I was 5.
@Balloonbot2 жыл бұрын
It was easier to be present as a kid (for those with a relatively normal upbringing) because your whole life is on rails, both mind and body. Just existing means you'll grow physically, your brain will develop you'll get smarter, you'll progress in school, you'll take new classes meet new kids possibly make new friends. You remember enjoying cake, sweets, video games etc. because it was automatically limited by your parents so you could let go of all self control. Now we have guilt for that - which can overwhelm the enjoyment of anything because you know you can get addicted with no one here to stop you anymore, no one to automatically give you a job promotion because you're a year older, your body will just decline without excercise. In a sense learning to be present as an adult is that "Letting go" again, and these things will feel more automatic, as your life will be lead more on instinct than guilt or fear. At least that's the ideal.
i wasn't that present, i fantasized myself away most of the time to endure the present
@Heretiksb2 жыл бұрын
Or build new rails.
@blaireofhylia15722 жыл бұрын
I've been alone my entire life and I'm 32. These young peoples fears are valid, they were not taught the skills to connect with people and without immediate help, they will end up like me. It's not weird at all
@himanshukumawat34199 ай бұрын
Is there's any solution to this fear?
@bryannicholas21305 ай бұрын
@@himanshukumawat3419no
@DominusNoks2 жыл бұрын
One thing about living in the present that's very hard for me is letting go of perfectionism. It goes like "oh, life used to be so good, I need to make it good again" and then when I can't make it AS good, I feel incredibly sad. Feels like a failure, a bad compromise. How do I just drink my cooling tea instead of constantly running to the microwave to reheat it, loosing time and enjoyment in the process?
@简澜 Жыл бұрын
I feel there is no possible way to always feel positive all the time. Not in the past not in the present not in the future.
@possibleproblem4792 жыл бұрын
i was literally just reminiscing and getting stuck in the past not even 1 minute ago. i swear dr. k, you have like an internal tap into my brain waves or something.
@PeterParker-fx9dl2 жыл бұрын
I can't relate to "the good ol' days" nostalgia. I can't remember any time from childhood when I wasn't depressed and anxious. Been a hard battle for many years as an adult, but I'm finally feeling less emotionally disregulated for long enough periods of time to make progress in my mid thirties.
@tanvvir89962 жыл бұрын
Before the pandemic I was a high school student, life was simpler. But now we moved to a different city away from my friends but closer to my college. I’m doing pointless online classes and and honestly everything sucks.
@saedt2 жыл бұрын
Man adulthood is great, I just miss the friends I had, we’re leading different lives. One thing that helped me get over the nostalgia is acknowledging that they were beautiful memories, and they do make me more attached to that time, but it also reminds me that I should try and stay connected to them but not love by them nor expect that they will ever be the same had they happened again. My childhood friends will always be my brothers, but right now I need to focus on doing something with my life, and my break from reality is elden ring.
@billiejeanslover89292 жыл бұрын
This ended beautifully.
@bryannicholas21305 ай бұрын
Elden Ring is trash you have bad taste in games and are probably terrible at video games
@watermonsters18102 жыл бұрын
I used to be of the mind that all my life's troubles would fade if I could just be in a relationship with someone to share experiences with, but then I was like, "oh yeah, life goes on and life is still hard"
@anamhasan24 Жыл бұрын
You watch 3 Dr. K videos in a row and you already start to understand yourself better but also begin to process life experiences better. Love this content
@the_markoman2 жыл бұрын
Had this epiphany while running my fingers through my hair of all things. A person can worry about having their hair go grey or fall out as they grow older, or just appreciate the feeling of what their body does have going for it in the moment.
@Mimikz2 жыл бұрын
“Living in the present is what creates pleasantness” - I never realized this but it’s absolutely genius!
@DannyBoy4433 ай бұрын
HERE WE GO lol. My man, at 17:42 is what I'm talking about. Whenever I was at a family gathering or social event, I'd always get the chuckle and nudge from the older person (uncle, friend of my dads etc) who would say "live it up my son" or "'your world now young gent" and then, ....what? lmao. Can I get some feedback from you on what that means or would look like to me?
@mr.cauliflower35362 жыл бұрын
another difference between "I'm not dating yet" and "I have been alone my entire life" or how much the person wants to date. if you ask people "have you played game X" you'll meet people who will say "no, not my kind of game" and others who will say "aw, I really wish, but I don't have the money to buy it" so how much you want to do something is also a huge factor And yet another one might be hopelessness, as the one who "isn't dating now" may have already dated so for them being alone is something that comes and goes and not a fact of life.
@mootahginger2 жыл бұрын
"12 year old doesn't think about the past" I remember having nostalgia and a longing for the past as early as 11. Wondering if anyone else experienced this at an early age?
@andreskattan21972 жыл бұрын
Yes. I cried and had nostalgia at 10-12 about our previous home before 7 years of age, my grandma died and my dad had a stroke when I was 10, and about lots of videogames I played at 3-8, since at the time there were just shitty shooter games. Life inevitably gets shittier by age. I’m now 23.
@mootahginger2 жыл бұрын
@@andreskattan2197 I hope things look up for you soon
@dazzdazzle87582 жыл бұрын
From my own experience around 11-12 is when emotions start feeling significantly more intense and we start actually thinking about the past in terms of loss.
@nuke2912 жыл бұрын
He didn't mean that they wouldn't have memory, but they wouldn't get stuck on it. I think that's the message.
@richerDiLefto Жыл бұрын
I had intense nostalgia for the past at age 12, and even before that. It was in my preteens when I really started to worry and be conscious of growing up.
@monicodempsey5349 Жыл бұрын
I love nostalgia and tend to reminisce on my childhood quite often, it was such a simpler time
@WindowsXPFrog2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this
@poli79972 жыл бұрын
all my nostalgia stems from the time before i turned 13, because my mom died when i was 13 and i don’t see anyone w this experience here in the comments. so when dr. k says “what are the variables that made life better? maybe we can recreate that” and i’m here like… how do we bring my dead mom back? idk it’s just. my whole life was better when i was with her, and once she passed away i started having depression, anxiety, suicidal tendencies.. i’m doing way better now, i’m gonna turn 23 tomorrow but i still grief and feel nostalgic of our time together ten years later. what’s different in this processing of the past is that i’ll never experience my life w her anymore. with everything else, you can kinda recreate stuff, but not when you lose a person, especially a parent, who you still wish were in your life, especially when 99% of people around you who are your age still have their moms and will have them for years to come
@简澜 Жыл бұрын
I remember in Japan people could rent a mother
@简澜 Жыл бұрын
I feel doctor k explain this pretty much in the video if this comment is after the video. People could have nice experience with their parent, but don’t miss possibility to get nice experiences with others in the present as well due to doomed in the past. Unfortunately I don’t really understand how experience with mom can feel nice, it’s a small chance thing for me.
@happythoughts49772 жыл бұрын
This is so opposite for me. Like, I struggled with parentification (paying bills, working for them, managing their emotions etc) when I was a kid and my life improved so much when I left home. I didn't get to be a kid then but I'm super happy enjoying childish hobbies now
@SirBojo42 жыл бұрын
Enjoy!
@nomal89542 жыл бұрын
thank you dr. k this is something I've been struggling with since middle school. I had figured out some of the stuff you said while self reflecting but its reassuring that some of my conclusions were right. Really helpful stuff, I had kinda given up on trying to regain that present happiness for a while since it had been removed for so long. Im not depressed and would probably say I'm happier than most of the people I know, but there is a distinct feeling of happiness that disappeared after I entered middle school and time felt like it started moving faster.
@nickmiller93052 жыл бұрын
There is a specific quality to these videos that I love. Each video is like stumbling across a cool rock by a stream. Some have bugs under them, some have cool designs. Every once in a while you flip a rock over and, oh fuck, there is a mirror under there.
@Troubleshooter11 Жыл бұрын
I know Dr.K has a mostly young audience, but this trap of getting your mind stuck in the past is happening to me right now at age 40. I wish i could go back to 2005 when i was in my early twenties, enjoying college and playing world of warcraft.
@rhythmandblues_alibi7 ай бұрын
Same. I'm of a similar vintage and feel like I wasted my 20s feeling insecure and not realising how awesome I really was. Since then, illness, injury and emotional abuse has changed me so much, I mourn the old me with my strong healthy body 😓 I have zero self confidence now and I feel mostly invisible. I feel like most of my memories are tinged with loss and regret.
@LennyTheHopeless2 жыл бұрын
The past was better, I didn't have to work a 9-5 soul sucking job, I actually had friends, I wasn't shy or socially anxious, I even had people I was interested in romantically. I have none of that now. I was one of the kids who never wanted to grow up cause I knew I'd hate it. Now I'm grown up and I really do fucking hate it. It'd be bearable if I could go back to working part time. Like if I could move in with one or two people who also only want to work part time, we could each split the rent and internet and just live life with a lot of free time... Time is better than money, 1000% I'll literally quit my new job if someone would do that with me...
@LennyTheHopeless2 жыл бұрын
I actually quit my job after posting this. I'm gonna fucking do that shit. I will live life how I want to live it.
@catcraze86732 жыл бұрын
@@LennyTheHopeless the good ending
@tryfanevans70472 жыл бұрын
@@LennyTheHopeless Was going to say, why is that an if? Major respect for actually making moves, I wish you the best
@naazahs90452 жыл бұрын
@@LennyTheHopeless How are you doing now? Did it turn out okay?
@LennyTheHopeless2 жыл бұрын
@@naazahs9045 Welp, I'm still looking for a new job. Trying to get something remote. Moved back to my home state,, with my aunt, and feel a lot happier now... Also joined an online school for a free class in something techy. Still getting my life together, but all my "dark" thoughts have lessened marginally, so I think that change was for the best.
@reyne-soundtherapy4692 жыл бұрын
I've actually learned to use the temporal component for the nausea/ throwing up Dr. K talks about at the end. I ALWAYS feel relieved after I throw up, so knowing that relief is coming relatively soon helps my mental during the "process". In the moment, It feels more like releasing the demons as opposed to experiencing pain.
@catcraze86732 жыл бұрын
Posted at the best time I've been stuck in the past for months.
@Wemby8182 жыл бұрын
I’ve had this exact feelings when I was depressed ( October 2021 - March 2022) while I was dealing with my first major heartbreak and grieving over a friend that died I was getting really close with at the same time
@sovietdoggo37792 жыл бұрын
This is a good one for gamers, considering how most people feel about the game industry right now Edit: Look, I never said I disagreed or agreed with the sentiment that the video game industry is in a bad state, the point of the fucking comment wasn't to say "your wrong about it being bad.", and for the record I've always been bitter about video games as they never meet my absurd expectations and hopes. Every. Single. Time.
@thedovahkiin78962 жыл бұрын
Would you disagree?
@lupoallupato33052 жыл бұрын
Tlou2 battelfield 2042 cyberpunk 2077 death stranding overwatch 2....... Games objectivly sucks now
@09Maggio2 жыл бұрын
Not active at all with gaming news and gaming in general what's going on?
@lupoallupato33052 жыл бұрын
@@09Maggio nothing good thath it
@veronicalagor47712 жыл бұрын
I don't know, there have been a lot of real changes in gaming that aren't necessarily best for the gamer. Like today there are far fewer options for same console multi-player than there were in the past, so it's harder to use the hobby as a bonding activity.
@komatsulol2 жыл бұрын
thank you Dr. K, You have helped me so mcu more than you will ever know and I am forever greatful. love the content, keep it up!
@wownice17712 жыл бұрын
i really didn't expect Dr. K's approach on nostalgia here, the angle and emphasis on cherishing the present surprised me a lot
@lastplusfirst2 жыл бұрын
“When we were living in squalor, wasn’t it heaven?” -Tame Impala
@byrongovender54432 жыл бұрын
The fact that I'm writing my thesis on nostalgia as this was uploaded is baffling
@kristjanbirnirivansson5282 ай бұрын
The video is spot on, with that said I think it also depends on what we are nostalgic about and I don't think it's a problem if it evokes positive memories and is not causing pain in the present. So Lets say you read this James Bond novel many years ago and have found memories of reading that novel. You can re-live those memories by re-reading the novel if you still have it around if not (for some reason) you should be able to track down another copy by searching the internet. I would say nostalgia only comes with pain (and grief) if you are longing for a person, pet, or place which are no longer there.
@SpookySkeletons6 ай бұрын
how do you live in the present, when there is nothing to enjoy in the present. All there is is to hope for a better future and dwell on a better past..
@andrewkelley94052 жыл бұрын
This video might have saved my life. Impeccable timing.
@hanzo0022 жыл бұрын
Thank you I really need this 🙂
@LearningKaizen10 ай бұрын
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 🤔 *Adopting a mindset focused on the present moment can enhance enjoyment and reduce nostalgia.* 02:46 🌟 *Nostalgia can lead to romanticizing the past, especially when feeling sad or depressed, but it's essential to critically examine such feelings.* 04:51 💡 *Understanding why the past felt better can help identify factors for present improvement.* 08:12 🔄 *Counterfactual thinking, reflecting on what might have been, serves to correct behavior and motivate change.* 11:57 🧠 *Cognitive reframing can help combat cognitive bias, fostering gratitude and positivity.* 16:52 🕰️ *Living in the present contributes to happiness, but society often pulls us towards past and future, requiring skills to maintain presentness.* 20:09 🕰️ *Adding a temporal dimension correlates with suffering, leading to nostalgia as life becomes more complex.* 24:24 🔄 *Recreating past circumstances to find happiness in the present often leads to disappointment.* 27:57 🧠 *Learning to live in the present becomes harder as we age due to increasing temporal stress.* 31:22 💡 *Acknowledging life's transient nature can initially induce fear but can transform one's perspective on happiness.* 34:51 🌟 *Fully enjoying the present moment requires letting go of past regrets and future anxieties.* 39:55 🛤️ *Learning cognitive flexibility and optimizing experiences for the present can lead to greater happiness than trying to recreate past experiences.* 41:00 🤔 *Present thinking involves acknowledging present circumstances while appreciating future implications.* 44:00 📉 *Negative emotions like feeling lonely or lacking purpose can serve as signals for change and direction.* 46:10 🕰️ *Projecting present pain into the future can lead to hopelessness and hinder motivation, but understanding that circumstances can change offers a path forward.* 49:01 🧘 *Meditation and mindfulness practices can help train the mind to live in the present and overcome negative projections about the future.* Made with HARPA AI
@inchriswemistrust10 ай бұрын
TLDR; try going for a walk without your phone, music, or any device. You’ll feel like a kid again I had this same revelation the other day. For context, when I’ve gotten nostalgic, thankfully it’s more of an appreciation for those times and memories, rather than a longing to return to those times. It’s cuz I appreciate my current life, and I know in the future, I’ll be similarly nostalgic for these times. Aka, just be present! Haha But yeah I was on a walk, which I’ve become infatuated with, and asked myself the question “what does feeling like a kid actually feel like?” And I boiled it down to a total presence in what I was doing. This walk in particular, it was really nice out and got me thinking of playing outside in warm weather as a kid. There’s a big factor that has influenced the enjoyment of my walks, tho. I don’t walk with any audio and I don’t have my phone on me. This has made a huge difference. Thankfully my area is safe to do this. But walking without a phone/device has made all the difference. Even having it off or on airplane mode doesn’t suffice. It cannot be on me. This has given me time to be fully immersed in the present, and to allow my mind room to breathe and work thru what it needs to. It’s so amazing! There’s so much detail in nature, the sounds, scenery, and landscapes. I am authentically present, physically and mentally. If someone wants to reach me, they’d have to physically find me. It’s such a small detail but it makes all the difference, and I realized, going for walks (and other events in general) without a phone is a GREAT practice in feeling like a kid, aka being present. It’s like your mind has no other choice but to be present, and it’s truly freeing and rejuvenating.
@elamrani14492 жыл бұрын
Im shocked by how perfect the time of this video is for me. i met a group of siblings recently who i havent seen in almost 5 years and seeing them brought back a lot of painful nostalgia for me because it reminded me of the days when i would go over to their house or theyd come over to mine or their dad would buy ice cream for me and my sister or when wed play together as kids etc. etc. it was painful because meeting them reminded me of that part of my childhood that id forgotten, that was so good. life got bad after that and has been going downhill ever since, for these past five years.
@detour522 жыл бұрын
Perfect timing!
@MrAbraxaeon2 жыл бұрын
These video are nice. I wake up, go to work, start up a Dr K video while going through emails, its a daily ritual at this point.
@lightbluedev Жыл бұрын
This was perfect for helping me sort this subject out. I particularly enjoyed the parts about going through the qualities of the past that you liked and finding appropriate ways of engaging those qualities and experiences in the present 👍. Works for me. I realized what I most missed was the freedom of playfulness those I so enjoyed as a young person and that’s definitely something I really want and can reconnect with inside me.
@upsurge79742 жыл бұрын
This is probably the most useful video on KZbin. I wish this had more views!
@jeffreyware78082 жыл бұрын
Wow I needed this video
@cubescihist67372 жыл бұрын
I can relate to what Dr. K says about the difficulty of recreating the same circumstances. I once wanted to game all night long, past midnight, in order to recreate the fun memories from my teenage years. But I just couldn't do it, because I was always getting way too tired to do that.
@devilsoffspring55192 жыл бұрын
As a teenager, if I gamed all night long it was because I was depressed as heck and couldn't sleep!
@cubescihist67372 жыл бұрын
@@devilsoffspring5519 That's understandable as well. We all have different experiences! Hope you're better now, though!
@devilsoffspring55192 жыл бұрын
@@cubescihist6737 Nope, I'm 45 and much, much worse now. Thanks for the thought though :)
@cubescihist67372 жыл бұрын
@@devilsoffspring5519 I'm really sorry to hear that :( What has been going on?
@devilsoffspring55192 жыл бұрын
@@cubescihist6737 No concise way to put it other than having been a targeted individual since I was very little. Hard to describe, but it's a form of domestic terrorism. My country (Canada) has problems with it and apparently it sometimes happens in the USA too.
@KumTR2 жыл бұрын
There’s no time in our history you can point to where people were good & times were good
@JimothyTheGreen2 жыл бұрын
There are many times in our history you can point to where people were good & times were good
@KumTR2 жыл бұрын
@@JimothyTheGreen when? If race wasn’t oppressed then gender was if not that then class was
@tanker00v25 Жыл бұрын
@@JimothyTheGreen so why did you not point any out?
@Chudchanning Жыл бұрын
Man this is relatable, between loving things that were most relevant when I was born, being born early enough to live an analog childhood, and being born late enough to be mostly incompetent with today's technology, I find myself hating the idea of pushing 30 and amounting to nothing significant. As a musician every genre I love has been done to the point it feels impossible to be original. my rock, punk, and metal heroes are dead or the bands broken up. I hate humanity's insatiable thirst for technological advancement to the point that my "smartphone" is designed to fail after a year or two of ownership. I hate that the housing crisis and need for a credit score prevent me from ever owning a house and I'm stuck in a decrepit travel trailer. I still collect physical media and dislike the majority of the art and movies that are produced today . I know the past wasn't necessarily "better" objectively, however I was born and raised in a world of Walkman tape players and 2 dollar gallons of gas, but I'm stuck in a world where not even cash is relevant and I can't apply to a job unless it's "Online". I specifically wasn't designed for this digital dystopian hellscape
@ouranji762 жыл бұрын
I am currently feel like im stuck in the past. I miss college. The whole life of it. I miss holding a book in the classroom, walking to the building, waking up in my room etc.
@vojnici948 ай бұрын
this was the best video ive ever needed
@25thsora102 жыл бұрын
Literally the perfect time for me this video popped up thanks algorithm
@PolyesterAvalanche2 жыл бұрын
I've had a lot of stress lately and this was very helpful. Thank you
@yoshigottagun2 жыл бұрын
I relate to this so much. If I went back in time, I don't think I could look myself in the eye..
@ratskraad58902 жыл бұрын
Always good topics bruh
@ScheffCity2 жыл бұрын
Nostalgia hits so hard because times were SO good. For the country, for a lot of families, the future didn't look so bleak. It was a peak, in ways... Now we have the internet so we are aware of so much more, money isn't what it used to be and younger people are stuck, the world is on fire and dark and the future looks rough. And also we're all older.
@cronchyskull2 жыл бұрын
I have the song from Casablanca stuck in my head going around and around watching this video and now I feel nostalgic for that.
@sebastianprzybylski72572 жыл бұрын
Dr K never misses with the topics
@nyox29782 жыл бұрын
I like the fact your videos are very long , usually people do 1 minute vids or highly edited 5 minute videos where the don’t even properly explain. My attention span also gets better here , I mean if I can’t watch a video that I’m very interested in bcs it isn’t grabbing my attention after 10 minutes anymore I got a fcking problem
@tm00542 жыл бұрын
Chances are there is something going on in your life right now that you'll feel nostalgic about in a few years.
@MetalGuitarTimo2 жыл бұрын
ahh the nostalgia.... 2 years lockdown, 5 years no gf, only work eat sleep. the good old days. now im dead :D
@m.f.m42992 жыл бұрын
Highly doubt it
@Wemby8182 жыл бұрын
@@MetalGuitarTimo don’t rely on a relationship to be happy you can’t rush them
@MetalGuitarTimo2 жыл бұрын
@@Wemby818 i was in relationships between the age of 18 to 29. Since im 30 and also since i finished uni and work fulltime i am single and depressed. Cant be a coincidence
@MetalGuitarTimo2 жыл бұрын
@@Wemby818 also im 35 soon and then its nearly impossible to start a family
@Kotifilosofi2 жыл бұрын
I studied to have a moderately high-paying job so I could do well enough with half a working week so the another half I could still spend as a kid: as a free person doing whatever I wanted, without the stress and pressure and expectations and rush. I literally worked to not let go of the nostalgia of childhood. Time is the most valuable resource out there, because it can never be earned back once you lost it. (Also, the teenage years were the worst to me so I just wanted to work so I would have the freedom once times would get better so I could finally enjoy my life. Sounds depressing but I was always very optimistic about my future, like I was convinced when I was older and more experienced, everything would be easier. Turns out I was right.)
@timbenz18292 жыл бұрын
Wow players in shambles rn
@anxietyebriety65532 жыл бұрын
How long you been holding out on this Dr k? Needed this sir.
@furrosama2 жыл бұрын
The one thing I notice that is recurring is the term 'acknowledgement'. For example, the difference between living in the present and making impulsive choices is in the former, you acknowledge your present situation and how its temporal effect extends to the future, e.g having a $10k debt but is still able to enjoy the present with $20 right now, knowing that you have done your best to pay $20 every day. In the latter, you use up all your savings for a gacha game in order to 'stay in the present' while ignoring the debt you have as well as lose the motivation to put in effort into paying back the debt. Living in the present really do sometimes make me enjoy the present more. However I do not fully agree with Dr.K that 'living in the present' is always the answer because in my opinion it is draining, and might make you a non-empathetic person - if you dismiss people's problems by always telling them to enjoy a moment of deprivation, e.g in poverty or abusive situations. Furthermore, I think that another perspective is that living in the present is not just done to achieve happiness but also to _acknowledge_ the current situation and realistically think of a pathway to more happiness. Maybe this is just me, but sometimes I feel that I am ok with the present too much to the point where I might not desire anything too extraordinary for myself and might even downplay ambition as just 'dreams'. Perhaps this is something to work on. Either ways, insightful as always Dr. K, I love your work!
@summernights57417 ай бұрын
I feel i am stuck in the past. I romanticize about the friendships and things i did. But.... i intentionally created these wonderful vacation, events and memories, knowing i would have something beautiful to remember. Now im too attached to these people who are not attached to me. Nor do they remember it as nicely as i have. My life has been on hold because i dont want to move on to the future because once it's gone, it's gone for good.
@yolover1112 жыл бұрын
You know it's all bad in life, when you start downloading or collecting old retro games to get a glimpse of your childhood back. Joking but recently I have been really getting into retro games and other stuff again. It's so nice to see things you couldn't get, or lost back then.
@TheDexp Жыл бұрын
"I'm being alone whole my life, I'm 16". That was truth for me until 24. But since that time I was able to form some kind of relationship with three girls, and everytime it fell apart in several months. I'm 36 now and I'm alone for most part of my life and embraced the fact that marriage or even long-term relationship is not a thing for me. I don't have necessary skills to make first-time good impressions, and even less qualified to maintain existing relationship. So the only substitue for non-existing partner is memory of times, when I had some chances with girl that was my first unrequited love (at least I hope that there were some chances and it wasn't futile from the beginning).
@embrace70522 жыл бұрын
Funnily enough I wish this video existed back when I really needed it.
@DeadlyCyanide12 жыл бұрын
I'm 30 years old and married I have two kids but I also have PTSD and I was in a funk for a little bit then I was doing really good I had a whole year where everything was great then I got really nostalgic recently and I was thinking wow this is good this feels like I could be getting progress like really good progress cuz I'm thinking about the past in good way and then all of a sudden it kind of triggered my PTSD in such a harsh way more harsh than I've ever experienced it in my life to the point where I had to hurt myself by holding a ice pack and going to bed that night because it was the only way that I could stay in the present and not slip back and forth into the past. That entire night was so foggy to the point where all I remember is things that did happen in the past and waking up not really like sleeping but like fading in and out so I would snap back to reality while just laying in bed with my husband next to me sleeping and everything was great we had a wonderful day that day. Nostalgia is wonderful until it isn't especially for someone who has PTSD. I had PTSD due to a trauma I experienced from 10 years old until I was 14 and multiple other traumas that happened after and before that as well. I think I really did learn my lesson by being nostalgic for too long it's a good thing until it isn't so trying to stay present is important and grabbing at things that are good during that time of your life is important but try not to be too nostalgic or you'll start to remember the bad stuff and it can seriously trigger you. I did not realize that PTSD could go from having a normal baseline to horrendously bad. I had no idea and I'm talking to my therapist tomorrow so maybe she'll have a good idea on what to do but yeah that was a pretty interesting night and I never want to experience that again but at least I learned thanks to Reddit that you can use an ice pack to keep yourself in the present during a severe PTSD attack. If you didn't know that and you have PTSD make sure you have a nice pack in your freezer just in case. Lol . I love this video I'm halfway through and I can't wait to finish it it's really insightful and so true.
@bobobsen2 жыл бұрын
Maybe a bit harsh but without punctuation this is nearly impossible to read
@ante1439 Жыл бұрын
I'm the opposite, I keep running from my past and grown more and more into who I want to be. But I keep running into nostalgic people, and I never understood why they seem stuck in time. I'm just like I don't remember you or care about this time and I don't like having my old self projected.
@latteARCH2 жыл бұрын
The topic of nostalgia is super interesting to me because I don't seem to experience it. I don't know why. You know how sometimes when people talk about how music brings back memories of childhood or reminds them of love or the calmness of a swan at a lake? Or how people get attached to older genres of music or periods of time. Like I often hear people say that Studio Ghibli songs invokes a lot of nostalgic vibes, or the movie Midnight in Paris is based on nostalgia. I don't feel those things. I know I have a lot of great memories and experiences through life, and I can bring up memories or historic time periods in my brain, sure, but there is barely any strong sense of reminiscing/fondness/cherishing attached to those memories. I don't get concepts like "the good old days" or replay old games or movies I used to love. In a lot of cases a one-and-done. Not sure if my brain is broken in some way, or if I'm interpreting nostalgia differently.
@freddydurbin67782 жыл бұрын
ur lucky
@sippeas2 жыл бұрын
This is literally what he hell I need right now oh my god
@joelstazFTW2 жыл бұрын
how this dude always posting stuff that’s relevant to me holy
@Show_Love_Serina8 ай бұрын
"Innocence means living in the present." This MOVED me. 🙏
@LyriczBeast2 жыл бұрын
I miss the past
@Yoshimitsu8822 жыл бұрын
i think it’s interesting that dr. k said 8 to 12 year olds don’t think about the past because in that time frame that’s almost exclusively what i thought about and i didn’t know that that’s unusual
@Cclovercollectiive6 ай бұрын
Isn’t it funny how our minds really just love to play with us…? When we start doing well, or something sparks a traumatic memory it likes to send us spiraling out and just so stuck on this horrible experience & feeling. And it seems as though trauma is so deeply engraved in our psyche that it appears more than we would like. But when we’re down, nostalgia pops up & we begin to ruminate on GOOD past times somehow making us feel worse… when things are good though, rarely do you think back like “oh I’ve had such a good life- remember when this this & this happened?” Or when things are bad do you think back like “gosh I’ve been in so many rough situation and they were sooo tough to get through, but I did make it, many times I’ve made it.”
@Eminent_wolf2 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@donaghb73072 жыл бұрын
For me nostalgia is 2 years ago, not 20
@eideticex2 жыл бұрын
Give it time ;p
@bobobsen2 жыл бұрын
About 6-10 years for me
@sc3ku Жыл бұрын
25:25 sounds like our D&D group- we did grapes and cheese last meet and played basketball during our break 😄
@TooGumbica2 жыл бұрын
This hit like a truck. Is so bizarre that one liners "live in the present", "things are simpler when your a kid" are so much miss represented and miss understood.
@baxmrackney75832 жыл бұрын
I really struggle with this thinking back on high school when I was part of a team now being 24 and being a loner is rough but meditation is helping
@r.9158 Жыл бұрын
Hilarious for me hearing the grilled cheese butter vs olive oil analogy. I switched to mayonnaise - the objectively least healthy of those 3 options. BUT I eat grilled cheese less frequently and boy do I savor it more than I ever have. Try it I'd you haven't by the way. Also use real bread and actual cheese - chop up some crispy bacon and/or fried turkey with some finely chopped spinach, mix that all in with the grated cheese.
@IWillBeSaved Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video
@bar0nger2 жыл бұрын
I briefly achieved mindfulness while vomiting. But mostly because I was really overwhelmed and shocked by the distance I achieved. Then my thoughts of course went to the future cleanup.
@bobobsen2 жыл бұрын
If you're watching this several years from now: there is nothing magical about today. Take it from past me. Enjoy whatever great year 20XX you're watching this in.
@Torkmastaflex2 жыл бұрын
Why does every video make me tear up?
@tankfire202 жыл бұрын
This community has some special formula that knows our problems.
@andrewsaunders79662 жыл бұрын
Any success in life, no matter the definition, requires energy to do so. The more energy you have the higher your ceiling.
@Darkloid212 жыл бұрын
Not always, ability matters too. If you don’t have the talent you energy doesn’t matter much
@possibleproblem4792 жыл бұрын
its more then less grit. energy and motivation comes and goes, its your ability to push through things and keep going that matters. the problem is grit is developed early on and its not easy to come by.
@andrewsaunders79662 жыл бұрын
@@Darkloid21 I agree. I guess I just mean energy must be present nonetheless. With talent and no energy = nothing happening.
@andrewsaunders79662 жыл бұрын
@@possibleproblem479 I see what you mean. I think grit in a sense requires energy of its own.
@BadButterfly652 жыл бұрын
Thats why im at the bottom to catch others. My batterie is like a to often overcharged phone with only 10% max charge and increased discharge in idle.