People like her should be our celebrities. Why do we admire people that do nothing to make this world a better place . I hope she gets the love and respect she deserves in the future.
@Toonces666Ай бұрын
I agree! Nurses, firefighters, and school teachers are my heroes. And Mark! Definitely Mark.
@julianna8638Ай бұрын
We are the true celebrities!! 🙏❤️
@adamluther5836Ай бұрын
I think people too easily dismiss celebrities as useless and unhelpful to a society. For so many, they help people escape from their lives for a time. They provide a narrative, and characters to relate to and admire or aspire to be; they show us who we could be, who we don't want to be, and become the friends and families we wish we had. It's important to understand and distinguish the fantasy from reality, but still be able to use it to cope with your day to day life and its challenges.
@zvezdaw-no9ykАй бұрын
Amen 🙏 🤩
@akright97Ай бұрын
Exactly!!!
@paulamery507Ай бұрын
"I am the panic button for most people in my life" - speaks volumes of her compassion and concern for others.
@wit7777Ай бұрын
She doesn't want to hear the bullshit so...
@veroboro4035Ай бұрын
As someone in thr field... Often people who we met 2 s ago expect free therapy and a diagnosis after 5 minutes 🙃
@chrismair8161Ай бұрын
I would have seen that coming. After 2 years of Service. They were looking at me and not the support people. Medics Doctors Nurses. Not Medical Staff.
@cjaneAlaska29 күн бұрын
And her co-dependency
@wanderlustpilgrim28 күн бұрын
that was well put
@JamieBoss-t2yАй бұрын
The children that she’s talking about are the adults that Mark ends up interviewing years later. It’s a sad cycle. 😢💔
@ripraluphesao47Ай бұрын
Exactly and very sad reality.
@aarondavid5866Ай бұрын
what exactly is the cycle? you think all patients or addicts etc are abused blah blah?
@viderevero1338Ай бұрын
@@aarondavid5866 No. But many are, or at least, have some sort of experience or background that puts them there. Not all people of course. Some have great fulfilling lives before falling apart in rock bottom for various reasons, some entirely their fault, some not. That's life.
@aarondavid5866Ай бұрын
@@viderevero1338 an experience lmao
@nefelibata4190Ай бұрын
Fuck is that gonna do? Those are torture chambers. @FLBeautyQueen
@WeAgreeToDisagree127 күн бұрын
She is SOOOoo much smarter than she is letting on. Incredibly accessible and lucid description of the system and it's current state. Thank you for all you do Clarisse
@sleepwell48918 күн бұрын
Yea when she said she didn’t think she was smart enough to be a doctor I thought well you have to be pretty dang smart to be a nurse
@derekstaroba2 күн бұрын
She's f.o.s. and so are you. You in for a rude awakening
@ms.sleeper19022 күн бұрын
It all comes down to we have a sin problem..and the answer is Jesus!
@strawberryshortcake276513 сағат бұрын
When she mentioned it all went down after Kennedy got shot I knew she knew her shit lol
@DN-fs2kbАй бұрын
I was admitted to the psych ward at 15 following a suicide attempt. I am forever grateful for the amazing psych team and nurses on my ward. They really genuinely saved my life and gave me the support i needed. I am now 17 and in a really good place. To any nurses or mental health workers out there, thank you so much. You impact peoples lives every day.
@lisarodriguez8681Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing and thank you for being grateful … it’s the only way through
@1320passАй бұрын
Thanks for sharing your story. Stay well and stay awesome!
@lulumoon6942Ай бұрын
Well done you for taking the chance to trust and make changes to support your mental health! Had a dear friend who spent several stays at a world famous facility for issues as a teen, and is now a popular, successful therapist helping others! 👍🙏🕊️
@davinxi5926Ай бұрын
Some are terrible .. it depends on the team you get.
@DN-fs2kbАй бұрын
@@1320pass thank you
@bkbland1626Ай бұрын
This is why care is NOT a business. We should take care of all of our people because they matter and they are us.
@joetatoesniff9525Ай бұрын
Care definitely IS a business
@sanyopoweraid1Ай бұрын
@@joetatoesniff9525 i think the point is that care should not be turned into a business
@joetatoesniff9525Ай бұрын
@@sanyopoweraid1 it is a business. No free lunches bro
@cjbrown1979Ай бұрын
In the USA it IS a business, but it should not be. Call me socialist, but I believe everyone should be entitled to quality medical care, regardless of their socioeconomic status. Other countries do it. There's no reason the USA can't. It's the few in positions of power, with all the authority and wealth, and all the special interests and lobbies, that ultimately maintain the status quo.
@plainlakeАй бұрын
It also makes sense in a purely utilitarian way. These people could be functional members of society, instead they become burdens and a risk.
@JuniperHillFarm92Ай бұрын
My boyfriends aunt was murdered trying to bring medication to a patient in a halfway house, they found her body in the basement. Rest in peace Joyce Grayson. Nurses should NEVER be sent to these places alone.
@laurfiascoАй бұрын
i think about her so often. the things he did to her were so cruel. i hope she is resting in peace 💔 she deserves justice. we need some serious changes to our healthcare systems
@alcoholyaАй бұрын
man, just googled her name and read the article.. that man should have been in prison for life based on stuff he did before murdering your boyfriend's aunt.
@m.htruth8880Ай бұрын
Clients should never be sent alone to "hospitals". The heatwave house thing is kind of a different story though. But these doctors are nothing but human traffickers and k1llers themselves.
@sandarahcatmom9897Ай бұрын
Probably a cost-savings move on the part of the agency; money over people always. It's terrible. Why did greed become so ok?
@Myster-Man-ChannelАй бұрын
Was she home health? I work home health and I think I read about this. So scary.
@Desmond1724 күн бұрын
Start of video : "Wow, she's really cute ! I like her style !" End of video : "Oh.. Ok, that's one of the most special human beings i've ever heard talking on KZbin. The world needs more compassionate people like her" Thank for everything Clarisse.
@mnelson196021 күн бұрын
Right??? I mean her style.
@khalidf113 күн бұрын
Yes!! She has such a beautiful personality. I can listen to her talk for hours. I am so happy she found her talent in life and giving the world the "good" from her heart. She is so cute and such a bubbly personality. I wish her nothing but good luck, health and success.
@BlackCatsXVII10 күн бұрын
I love her double chin
@WesleyGravolet6 күн бұрын
She has a very east coast vibe going on...in a great way!
@frankdrakman27055 күн бұрын
@Desmond17 Great comment and so true!
@powthekicker8765Ай бұрын
I am also a RN. Despite all the good she radiates, behind her smile and laughs at the anecdotes she shares, I recognize the struggle within ourselves to maintain a semblance of compassion and dignity to fulfill our role as caregivers while tending to our own, and often neglected, needs. ❤ Bless you, dear. Take care of yourself. ❤
@magpiesmith971Ай бұрын
Amen ❤❤❤
@PatriciaGodboutArtАй бұрын
@@magpiesmith971you are so kind, nurses are some of my very favourite people. God bless them all and thank you so much for all you do.
@cliffelliott9331Ай бұрын
The person I project is the person I become
@PRosendo0101Ай бұрын
Thank you to the angels that care for us in some of the hardest days of our lives. Love you stranger ❤
@michaelbannan9972Ай бұрын
As a DSP, this could not be more true. ❤
@ThymeWithCherryАй бұрын
Oh man, I just got home from my overnight shift in the ED as a psych RN, heated up some food, and threw on SWU like I usually do to unwind. Then boom-this reflective interview pops up in my feed, so close to home! I think we might have worked at the same facility because I too have worked in a public hospital in NYC with a coworker who was an ex-detective turned nurse! But truly- she is absolutely correct. We are in desperate need of more resources, more hands that are willing to help and most importantly- more compassion for our population. Thanks for this, Mark and Clarisse!
@annaelisavettavonnedozza9607Ай бұрын
Thank YOU for what you do!
@mariesandiego5291Ай бұрын
Yes! Thank you for what you do!!
@ginaverdi6101Ай бұрын
God bless you for what you do!
@jannetourunen1778Ай бұрын
Could we get at round of applause...from the balcony...if thats not too much to ask. 🥲
@josephlynch1853Ай бұрын
You watch this to unwind? Yikes
@NinaCaballeroLCPCCCMHCАй бұрын
“Genetics loads the gun, the environment pulls the trigger”.
@SmooveBee1Ай бұрын
Damn, I have heard it, but this is so concise. Thank You.
@JunoBeachGirl_Ай бұрын
What a great summation! It's so true! But why do some people have more ability to resist allowing the environment to dictate a negative outcome than others do?
@virtue_signal_Ай бұрын
The million-dollar question.@@JunoBeachGirl_
@insertmyidentityhereАй бұрын
Congrats on regurgitating trite aphorisms, like a parrot...👌
@virtue_signal_Ай бұрын
@@insertmyidentityhere that's not very light...
@geechee938524 күн бұрын
Speaking as a surgeon in practice for over thirty years, who loved his psych rotation in medical school, I think this woman is 1000% credible. She defines the problem very well, which is basically a lack of resources. Society is FULL of crazy-to-seriously maladjusted people. What are we to do with them all? God bless her for trying, she needs more help.
@TyasiajacobsАй бұрын
As a psychiatric RN myself and a long time viewer, I am delighted to see this! She did an amazing job representing the career and our wonderful patient population ! So many people have questioned my decision to become a psych nurse , and even belittled the career stating “it’s not real nursing “. This interview did a great job explaining all the reasons I absolutely love doing what I do , thank you for this!
@LeilaLanthornАй бұрын
How did you get over the fear of working with the patients that came in homicidal or in full-blown psychosis? I have often thought about working with children mental health issues. However, working with the adults that come in and are as she described homicidal, was that something you had to prepare yourself for? I don’t know why we ever got rid of institutions and just didn’t make them better? Then again look at nursing homes how bad those are? Maybe private institutions are better because government ran anything is pretty bad. They should definitely be nonprofit.
@colorfulchrista231Ай бұрын
I'm lvn psych nurse.. she did great explaining it. Working on my RN and will continue with psych nursing.
@FusRoTEAPot29 күн бұрын
@@LeilaLanthorn It is a risk but you're generally more at risk from the general public in day to day life, and if stuff does happen on the ward you're surrounded by a team of people highly trained in deescalation and safe management skills. Often times just showing compassion and understanding that even if someone is delusional and aggressive, it often comes from a place of fear or sense of powerlessness, goes a long way.
@Tyasiajacobs29 күн бұрын
@@FusRoTEAPot perfect answer , I agree! I work with an awesome team which in the event a patient gets really agitated to the point we can’t deescalate the situation with therapeutic communication , we have a effective system in place with onsite security , and of course as needed medications , and restraints (last resort , ofc ) Siruations like that are rarer than people assume though.
@therealistkong903127 күн бұрын
I work in law enforcement and have interaction almost daily with psych staff at several facilities. I’ve seen more good psych staff than on the ER side and it really makes a huge difference for the patient and everyone else!
@rewtho8113Ай бұрын
i wish this interview was longer, she is so informative
@d3AdLyf3Ай бұрын
Dude isn't she ! I'm curiously smitten with her stories, she seems lovely and intelligent with a humility to her. We could use alot more of this.
@rewtho8113Ай бұрын
@@d3AdLyf3 well said!
@jennyferguson5583Ай бұрын
❤️ Her! Thank You for Sharing ! 💯wish Change would Come for Mental Health System. I Love her Heart of Compassion and Wisdom! I Couldn’t do her job. She Knows the Truth!
@veerkarАй бұрын
Really? I learnt nothing from her video.
@jamiedean5900Ай бұрын
@@veerkar cool...
@s-man9528Ай бұрын
More nurse interviews please !!!
@sixfourtyfiveАй бұрын
Yes! Starting nursing school this month and have never clicked on a video so fast!
@s-man9528Ай бұрын
@@sixfourtyfive congratulations!!! I’m in my last semester.
@donaldcedar7574Ай бұрын
Nurses see things every: week, month, year that most people only experience once or twice in their lifetime.
@stephaniecahill5174Ай бұрын
Yes
@s-man9528Ай бұрын
@@donaldcedar7574 I want to see that experience nurse that has been through it all!
@goinallin223 күн бұрын
its heartbreaking and beautiful to see how pure and smart this woman is. Every patient that has been her orbit has benefited from her pure love.
@lj9524Ай бұрын
As an RN with 45 years experience- thank you for telling the truth for the world to hear. You are telling the truth. Our mental health services in the US are so under funded and valued. Healthcare is so profit oriented and nurses are viewed simply as a labor expense on the financial statement. I have worked in hospital nursing and as healthcare insurance. It is all about profit.
@chicofrijolesАй бұрын
So true
@bethkovar6990Ай бұрын
EVERY LITTLE THING THAT EXISTS REVOLVES AROUND MONEY. IT IS TRULY THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL.
@snuff2023Ай бұрын
Agree fully. I was never a nurse but I was a cna. I worked at assisted living, nursing homes and home health. There were plenty of times the nurse at the assisted living did not call an ambulance for someone when they should have as soon as they should have due to knowing the person would not come back, as they were not fit to be there anymore and needed nursing home care.
@Toodle.Pipp001Ай бұрын
It's the true measure of a very sick society. Profit driven "healthcare" is modern slavery to medicine and grotesquely immoral.
@vickichristensen422Ай бұрын
@@bethkovar6990it is not money but the LOVE of money. We have plenty of money in this country but the stinking Biden Administration prefers to spend it on illegal criminals and sending billions to other countries all for their own power now that's evil. No $ does great things n the hands of morally conscious ppl. Not evil men and women.
@mikeknowles8017Ай бұрын
They should play this video to the US Congress.
@KellyOGrady-jm9hrАй бұрын
Why? The government already controls everything. It subsidizes family breakdown, allows criminal behavior and then pays for all the lawyers, social workers and doctors who pick up the pieces. They won't change anything.
@rosiedixon98Ай бұрын
None of them would care. We are what they feed off of, not what they care about.
@mikeknowles8017Ай бұрын
@@rosiedixon98 Sad but true. I just think she articulates a vision of a much better system.
@breecameron1134Ай бұрын
@@rosiedixon98 Well said. Like yeah, someone shows them this video for what?? It's not going to become the response that would be hoped for. It would be very depressing actually to see that in some imaginary scenario.
@DarkMother233226 күн бұрын
Yes, we nurses should be more involved in legislature-and we are here in Colorado. Imagine if we banded together with a unified voice nationally. More nurses in politics please!
@sharonshingleАй бұрын
Hello, Clarisse.
@dhodges1911Ай бұрын
😂
@ebalberАй бұрын
Well, Clarice… have the lambs stopped screaming?
@atomcraft4067Ай бұрын
Quid pro quo Clarisse.
@2bit2strokes38Ай бұрын
😂
@TyDanieАй бұрын
Mandela Effect 😂
@jackieocean351122 күн бұрын
This is by far, the best interview I have seen on SWU. She describes accurately what happens behind the scenes of what are the underlying issues in mental health in the U.S. Please do a part 2 interview with her, Mark! Thank you , Clarisse.
@mergatroidlouАй бұрын
As a mother of a schizophrenic and as an RN, THANK YOU, Clarice.
@beckycantrell5547Ай бұрын
Mom of a schizophrenic here, as well as a,disabled RN. My son was an adult when his symptoms appeared and it has been hell. My son finally assaulted his dad, my ex. I tried to tell the “experts” that would happen or worse. His dad is ok now. Now, guess where my son has been for 3 yrs and counting . County jail. Awaiting a psychiatric bed in a state ran facility.
@loveinthematrixАй бұрын
@@beckycantrell5547I’d recommend watching the documentary “take these broken wings” by former therapist Daniel Mackler. God bless
@gwenythp.7040Ай бұрын
I don’t think referring to your child only as their illness and not indicating their humanity in any way is very indicative of something deeper going on. I wouldn’t trust you to be a nurse.
@wholeshebang128 күн бұрын
@@gwenythp.7040-Perhaps it's a _short-form_ she regularly uses with familiars. It might be better if she wrote instead, "My son has/suffers from/lives with schizophrenia." Any of those 3 ways of defining his psychiatric diagnoses/illness are far less stigmatizing than, _"Mom of a schizophrenic here,"_ which *_dehumanizes him_* - the last thing he needs, or that she needs to habituate readers that it's somehow "okay" o refer to people living and often struggling with mental health issues. The emergence of schizophrenia in (mostly) males in their late-teens to late-twenties isn't something that that can be pre-diagnosed, and can be "activated" by a traumatic event. My late uncle began showing signs of schizophrenia after a tragic house fire in which an entire family he was friends with perished, when he was in his early twenties. He was devastated by their loss. He struggled with his mental illness for as long as I knew him - or at least _once I knew_ he had schizophrenia. My mom, a psych nurse and his sister, explained it to me when I was a teen. He was the "fun uncle" who joked around, made funny faces and voices, tickled us, and entertained us by playing guitar, accordion and singing songs with us. My mom always made him feel welcome in our home. He was misunderstood by so many - mind you, it was during the 1960s-1990s, when there was still _significant stigma_ against those living with mental health issues, and psychiatric treatment often meant locking people up in "asylums," i.e. _"jails"_ for people who needed psychotherapy and autonomy. *I miss him.* He had a generous nature. He gave me a vintage guitar in my twenties (I'm a professional singer & musician) and later, an accordion, but I couldn't get the hang of playing the accordion, so I gave it back to him. I, myself, have a few mental health diagnoses and though in Canada, with universal healthcare, it is extremely challenging to find psychotherapy that is covered by the province, unless the psychiatrist or counsellor's practice is in a hospital. There are months- or years-long _wait lists,_ but it's improving and many _community health centres_ *employ social workers as therapists,* so the services are free to those in need.
@vickymcmahon81214 күн бұрын
@@beckycantrell5547😢so sorry system is failing you.
@RaequazaaaАй бұрын
You should interview some social workers… psychiatric social workers, CPS workers, etc.
@victoriaanderson863Ай бұрын
💯
@hilarythome3283Ай бұрын
Agreed! As a SW working in transitional housing in Canada, I align so much with what she said.
@SonjaBlade608Ай бұрын
CPS failed me, I was left to be abused in a "safe" home. I received a copy of the intake visit, and home visit. The home visit was a joke, they said they'd come check again and never did. Leaving me to see horrible things & be abused by more "family" members. 😢 The PTSD & pain this caused had a really negative effect on my life. 43 years and I'm still in therapy, been in & out of psych wards and detox/AODA units. I was put with adults as a 16 yr old. it was really scary.
@grimvanderАй бұрын
The biggest problem with getting the people to interview is that the ones actively working don't want to talk to anyone about the things that need changing. As she mentioned, it's a fight for staff along with insurance and governmental regulations that have to be followed that make it so hard for people to get proper treatment. Hardly anyone who works in the field will speak about it for fear of losing their jobs over it. I can say that the insurance companies have entirely too much power over mental health treatment, and the government isn't doing nearly enough to help.
@m.htruth8880Ай бұрын
@@SonjaBlade608They didn't fail you they did what they are made to do. CPS along with the mental health system are branches of the cash for kids system. Cps is literally a s3x tr@ff1cking organization.
@amandab905Ай бұрын
As a nurse, I would like to express appreciation for a few things about this interview: Thank you Clarisse for being a voice for the patients you serve, your compassion and clinical skill shines here. Thank you, Mark, for seeing/capturing/sharing the value in highlighting this area of the world (med field/mental health on a systemic level). Thank you, Clarisse, for speaking on the truth about how nurses are needed, truly essential, and how we are actually treated while working. This is valuable information and I hope it sparks conversation and plants a seed for positive change. Proud to share the field and the love of nursing, science, and helping others with such a bright light. Thank you.
@TingTingalingyАй бұрын
Nurses are the mean girls from high school. You must be a nurse with all this smarmy praise
@JeffBostick222Ай бұрын
Doctor's can not always be close and connected to their patients. Nurses are the glue.
@TingTingalingyАй бұрын
@@JeffBostick222 nurses were the mean girls in high school, they're usually awful women that chest on their husband's. Source: I'm a hospital employee in physical therapy
@doloresparra4604Ай бұрын
Fellow RN and appreciate your words!
@GrizzmakesАй бұрын
@@amandab905 What you say and what I saw prompted me to post a rare reply. Here in England where I live and have worked since 2002 inside of the health system, I saw a fair amount of staff abused when I worked in schizophrenia for 9 years. Shining lights indeed.
@weena199018 күн бұрын
I’m less than one minute in and can hear how gentle she is as a person. Her voice and mannerisms. Beautiful person to be gentle and choose a not gentle career-to help others. To help those who never knew or know what gentleness is.
@joeyumansky2189Ай бұрын
man this might be one of the most emotional interviews ive seen on the channel. clarisse is truly a bright light and so inspiring, wow.
@IrvinBohac-y3qАй бұрын
I deeply deeply admire her. Her emotional maturity and empathy is incredible. God bless her and thank you for all you do!
@Jeremy-th5pt16 күн бұрын
Maturity? Really? I see a new york hipster covered in tattoos and swears like a sailor. She seems more like a patient than a nurse. Lol
@IrvinBohac-y3q16 күн бұрын
@ tattoos or a lack of measures maturity? When were you born? 1938? lol grow up.
@VHunt-hi3slАй бұрын
ER RN here-I don’t see going back. Worked through Covid. Nurse of 35 years. Just understaffed, underpaid, don’t have safe mandatory pt/nurse ratios. I loved helping people but she’s right-you get bitter from the broken system.
@SCcowgirlАй бұрын
100%. Burnout
@tonyhoffman3309Ай бұрын
A recipe for turning the caregivers, into patients themselves, in need of care.
@KristenK1970Ай бұрын
@@tonyhoffman3309true story
@urpreposterous682Ай бұрын
@@tonyhoffman3309 I'm grateful that my mother, a dedicated nurse for over 50 years, passed away before the COVID-19 pandemic hit. Much like Clarisse, she often only heard from old friends when they needed medical advice. When she was diagnosed with metastatic cancer, the people we once thought of as friends were nowhere to be found. It was just my sister and me by her side. I felt so much anger, especially knowing how she had always been there for her "friends," even after our father-her husband-took his own life, leaving her deeply depressed and anxious.
@Sso.SilverАй бұрын
So get in there in administration, grass roots local politics and FIX IT! NO COMPLAINING, ACTION PLEASE.
@tillysanders25933 күн бұрын
Clarrise is an unsung hero, one of the human angels in life that walk amongst us. Nurses have always been the backbone of healthcare.It's time, more than ever, we cared for them as they deserve, because without them, there is no health care. Please do another interview, her knowledge and experience. is invaluable. Heartfelt gratitude Clarisse for ALL you do,. The immense caring in such a challenging field requires exhaustive giving, please take care of you also. You are a phenomenal person 🩷
@teriwhite4151Ай бұрын
I’m a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner with my own clinic. It’s a heartbreaking field, period. Yet when you make a difference for someone, it’s the fuel that can sustain you. I’m all about preventive care, treating the whole person and not a diagnosis, and keeping my patient volume reasonable so I can provide great care for the long term without burning out. Touch is underrated and important in health care and I both receive and give hugs when appropriate. She is correct, you have to be SO careful with boundaries though both for the good of the patient and yourself. I hope wonderful Clarisse stays in this field and finds a path where she can keep being phenomenal.
@ettiandbuddy167Ай бұрын
your life is my dream. I just started my PMHNP program with the goal of starting my own practice!
@karencarney7595Ай бұрын
Wish you could connect w me. I own a Reiki, Somatic healing & Energy Medicine business that is quite effective as a Complement psychiatric services. Life Path Reiki & Healing Arts, NJ
@crystal4348Ай бұрын
I’m 3 months away from my PMHNP. You are my inspiration!
@911callyamom5Ай бұрын
Thank you for everything you do for people 🙏🙏 truly an angel on earth!!!!
@TheMentalmalist25 күн бұрын
Be humble
@JADEINFINITO1Ай бұрын
I am a 60 year old Psych travel nurse (since COVID). Thank you for sharing the iceberg tip of your story. So glad you are writing a book. I am always joking, nurse humor, that the only way I can retire is to write a novel, because you can’t make this shit up. Rock on… you’ve got this.
@jeffmaggard3694Ай бұрын
You must be rich
@raetwice4346Ай бұрын
Yes, humor was very necessary for me to keep from getting super stressed out, ty for what you do💐💛!
@Fellow_Traveller1985Ай бұрын
You're an evil witch working for a satanic cabal and you load sick people full of poison. You have zero sympathy from me.
@JaidahKenneyАй бұрын
@@jeffmaggard3694😭😭😭😭
@pharmdiddy51205 күн бұрын
That's something it seems like you hear every day in the biz - "You can't make this shit up"
@xaviaespinosa333Ай бұрын
I was in kids peace a long time ago In my late teens. This nurse lady took me aside and told my before I left “ don’t come back here. You don’t belong here, you’re not like them. You have a light about you. Just promise you won’t come back, please.” I never went back and I still think about her. If I become rich from my businesses I’m going to find her and bless her. If you ever read this, thank you. It absolutely mattered what you said to me.
@jessica-bookslit4953Ай бұрын
I had a nurse that said the same thing about me. I went to get admitted. Spoke to her for a few hours and she told me she would not admit me because there is still hope for me and I would come out worse than I went in. I’m grateful for her, she had a big part in saving me in many ways.
@xaviaespinosa333Ай бұрын
@@jessica-bookslit4953 I’m so glad she told you that bc it’s really not the place to be!! I’m glad you’re still here🫶🏼✨
@matchpoint14Ай бұрын
xaviaespinosa, I will tell you how to be blessed in your business so you can bless her back, one thing is to be honest in all areas of your business. Secondly, give back to others. The measure in which you give is the measure in which it will be given back to you.
@arkhitek225127 күн бұрын
Not if, but when… For ALL is MIND!
@jessica-bookslit495325 күн бұрын
@@xaviaespinosa333 thank you, I’m also glad you are still. Always be strong you are worth it everyday.
@natnatalie151712 күн бұрын
I have been a nurse for 13 years. I used to be an inpatient psych nurse for four years and I moved onto critical care icu. People would always say, "I can't believe you did pysch, or how did you put up with those people?" People always forget that mental illness can affect anyone at anytime. I tried to be the best at it, and empathize with everyone. I'm in a season where I'm working on my own traumas, and I just ask people to be kind. You never know what people are going through, even if it looks like their life is together.
@Pigsandpies1984Ай бұрын
And now everyone is in love with Clarisse. Seeing a woman who is so much herself and so passionate about her advocacy of vulnerable people, it just gets me right in my feelings. I don’t think I’m alone in that.
@Tally-visionАй бұрын
She seems a bit drunk and I don't blame her one bit.
@constanterratic4252Ай бұрын
@@Tally-vision She seems anxious, and full of a range of emotions due to being vulnerable about her extremely challenging job. She is compassionate and angry (frustrated) and she deserves more respect than accusations that she’s drunk.
@aliceschriver3727Ай бұрын
@@Tally-vision not drunk love
@Lcshy6Ай бұрын
❤ yes, she's a real one.
@ArabianConjure10 күн бұрын
@@Tally-visionnot slurring, can articulate her point extremely well, is well spoken, yep seems drunk to me! 🙄 (sarcasm)
@jameshurth2233Ай бұрын
Retired emergency psychiatrist here. Thank you sister. It is terrible how we treat the mentally Ill in this country. I’ve referred to homeless camps as psych hospitals Al fresco except instead of nurses and psychiatrists we have drug dealers.
@ThisStoryMattersАй бұрын
I’ve worked in the mental health field for over 12 years. She is so on point!
@grimvanderАй бұрын
Why is it so hard to get people in the field to talk about changes that need to be made? In my area, no one will talk to me about it. I was told that everyone is scared of the repercussions of speaking out.
@zoecoote3746Ай бұрын
She is. I’m in Australia and everything she is describing is the way it is here too. They sold up all of the long term and most short term care facilities as they were valuable real estate. They promised to start an intensive program to facilitate recovery and integration into the community. Instead they did nothing. We could have done better and modeled our system on something better. But we didn’t.
@sheeryx418Ай бұрын
Same! I worked for many years in home-based and community-based counseling/therapy. I was often sent into very volatile and dangerous settings all alone without any support or back-up. I remember calling me husband at the time and I told him that if I don’t call him in 45 minutes, he should contact my supervisor/agency so that someone could check on me.
@aiyanam0324 күн бұрын
I'm a therapist who has worked in hospitals and psychiatric residential facilities (for kids age 6-18), ACT teams, Intensive family intervention, etc. and I completely agree. Therapist are also leaving the field for the same reasons and seeing how broken the system is if you work in hospitals and community care. Also, a lot of people think therapist are paid so much because they see the way it is portrayed in media and movies, but that is only a small part of the field. It can be heartbreaking work.
@sryxafraidofmonstersxАй бұрын
im a psychiatric patient and live a regular life because people like you make helping others your work, thank you and all the others like you✝️❤️
@kirkmbutterfieldАй бұрын
Unless your disfigured. I don't give a fUdck
@kirkmbutterfieldАй бұрын
Also. Who gave you a cell phone and internet?
@sryxafraidofmonstersxАй бұрын
@@kirkmbutterfield dude i live at home u fuckin dick not all psychiatric patients live in a hospital for life
@jessickalush3305Ай бұрын
@@kirkmbutterfieldSome places allow it now. Nowhere I've been to, but I know it to be true.
@TanyaDavis954Ай бұрын
they give it for time frames@@kirkmbutterfield
@miriamalvidrez1409Ай бұрын
I have a grandma who is a retired psychiatric nurse who has a terrible hoarding problem but even with her lack of self awareness and dementia, she's still on top of helping people around her. ❤
@EphemeralProductionsАй бұрын
Great. 🥰🥰❤️❤️
@trishag.971Ай бұрын
Ohmigod...🥺🥰blessings and healing to her. The true character of compassion never leaves you
@loveinthematrixАй бұрын
Honestly as long as she’s trying. I’m one of those people that is severely messed up but I can help people heal lol. I know it’s a little weird but hey it works. God bless her
@kengoachАй бұрын
Nurses and teachers are the most underpaid and under-appreciated people in America.
@Lisa-s5v7hАй бұрын
All of healthcare and education fields… it takes a village, not just made of teachers and nurses. Just sayin.
@MattMurddockАй бұрын
Yeah, 'cause us RTs are severely underpaid at most places.
@jdebell7068Ай бұрын
Teachers are making more than plenty, all school systems are so dumbed down its ridiculous. The latest is kids no longer need to write cursaf. It's a fact also every other Wednesday is start late day,kids start at 10.00a.m.
@KateCarewАй бұрын
Social workers are in dire need of better pay too.
@KateCarewАй бұрын
@@jdebell7068okay Omg Please…please take a moment and think about what you just wrote. I mean Wow, teachers don’t devise the curriculum for one. They do get paid “well” but not for what they do and what’s expected of them. They have to pay for a lot of things out-of-pocket. They also don’t get to leave their work at work. You might look at their schedule and think how nice they work Monday through Friday they get the summer off… But in reality they’re still working when they go home because they have to come up with their plans and they have to grade papers and then when summer comes, they have to stay and finish things up and then they have to go back early to get things set up. they don’t really get paid over the summer unless they choose to get paid less during the school year. The only good thing about being a teacher is the retirement package. If you make it that far.
@morriganlefeye24 күн бұрын
I am a former psych nurse for a reason. My heart was in adolescent psych, but I left because it was killing me. I relate to this so much. Thank you Clarisse.
@BeastmodenolaАй бұрын
As a psychiatric nurse myself, I salute you and understand all of the frustration. All we can do is hope and pray that every tiny intervention that we have done will make a difference in the lives of these patients. I once cared for an alcoholic homeless man who stated, “You are the first person who has been kind to me in months.” We ARE making a difference. We have to believe it.
@princessaxelАй бұрын
thank you
@theprodigalson4003Ай бұрын
Everything has always started with one.
@BlitzerkidSixАй бұрын
Don't look at the literature on ketogenic diets. That would be too simple to be true, right?
@tablefortwo881Күн бұрын
Who cut the onions damn it
@jacquelinehillson9589Ай бұрын
Special kind of Lady, in a world full of shit she’s a real diamond ❤who needs angels with wings when Clarice’s in the room. Fantastic understanding of the human condition, she genuinely cares , unlike some .
@larrybecker9565Ай бұрын
I wish she was my therapist and that's on the real
@earth2sakaАй бұрын
Why is it that people mostly gravitate towards the extremes? You either despise and judge someone thoroughly or you idolize them beyond rationality. What happened to spectrums? Balance?
@Dreamskater100Ай бұрын
@@larrybecker9565 What does 'and that's on the real' mean?
@MindyJackson-id1ujАй бұрын
Amen Girley
@billpimentel-vm6cuАй бұрын
Can’t give them a hug? Sometimes a hug is more powerful than any words can be.
@sldg4659Ай бұрын
@billpimentel-vm6cu boundary violation that can easily be misperceived and used against the clinician.
@billpimentel-vm6cuАй бұрын
@@sldg4659 that’s unfortunate, my daughter is a guidance counselor in high school, which is nothing like a clinician, but she has her masters in child psychology and loves helping kids. She says many of these kids come from loveless homes were they exist like a piece of furniture. She says a simple hug makes these kids just completely break and cry saying I wish I could get a hug from my mom or dad. So sad.
@tonyhoffman3309Ай бұрын
Which is why true healing can not occur in an institution. Be it childcare, Elder care, disability or psychiatric care. It comes from a culture which values individual needs and community.
@Sso.SilverАй бұрын
Exactly. Boundaries so important.
@Sso.SilverАй бұрын
@@tonyhoffman3309ignorant of the many many issues incumbent in psych... can be dangerous in a millisecond, and so many borderline personalities who are just looking to use anything against others, even those trying to help.
@conormalagraph356924 күн бұрын
This story touched me, thank you Clarisse. People like you continue to motivate my passion for healthcare. My dad was a retired detective turned ER nurse in NY, and however unlikely it is that he was your mentor, he was most certainly mine. My dad took his life during the months when COVID encompassed all of our lives, and died a hero. There was no funeral, and I had no other way to process my grief than to begin working in the same ER he spent his last day. I experienced the impact of his passing through my coworkers, and now I want to live in his memory and your support. While I reorient my education to become more than a PCA, I can only hope to be like you someday. If you look beyond the tragedy of patients that have been failed, I hope you notice more people like me. We are coming to help, hoping to share your burden, and determined to make injustice impossible to ignore. We CAN fix this across generations, and what makes us heroes is the fact that we may not live to experience any eventual glory. Please persevere, and remember that the beauty of your service inspires far beyond the walls of the ward. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
@afterthestorm221Ай бұрын
Become the person you needed in your darkest hour. The emotional aspects with no supports is why I had to divert from nursing into therapy. I couldn't just push people out with fingers crossed.
@ttopbugatti9430Ай бұрын
Right 🫡
@prismavАй бұрын
Same reason why I am currently in school to become a psych NP.
@troytreeguyАй бұрын
These are great words “become the person you needed in your darkest hour” it’s almost like that’s the point, because you know what was needed and now your in the situation to make the difference and you know you are aware. Very difficult very difficult. ❤❤❤
@rebeccareardon3775Ай бұрын
when she talked about nursing abuse and the fact that we arent protected and the fact that no one cares and that if nurses left the hospital it would crumble it resonated sooo deep with me. i have been thinking this and feeling this for so long
@nokatenoАй бұрын
it’s true. if you all walked out they’d be in your pocket.
@XafornАй бұрын
As a caregiver of physically and mentally challenged adults, I can never thank people like this enough.
@mooshakes2.041Күн бұрын
Psych nurse here, Your fighting the good fight girl! Your amazing, loved this interview.
@lionheartmerrill1069Күн бұрын
I became a "Psych nurse" taking care of my late wife. 1st diagnosed with bipolar & schizoaffective disorders, 8 months later Alzheimer's. I took care of her 24/7 for 5 years until she passed away. Diaper changes, feedings, hallucinations & delusions, etc. You have a tough job.
@kaitlinyaconis7545Ай бұрын
I’m a juvenile detention worker. We have very similar experiences
@anastasiamay2852Ай бұрын
Same on my residential
@lesaanngaddessАй бұрын
I also work at one in NY State. Vast majority of boys have mental/emotional/physical trauma and behave accordingly. Tragic. Lots of recidivism.
@heatherhall3452Ай бұрын
@@lesaanngaddessThe Truth is it’s Demons! Ephesians 6:12 📖✝️ 🙏🏽 For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this world’s darkness, and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.
@tallulahdavis6984Ай бұрын
When I was 15 I was hospitalized for several weeks in a medical eating disorder unit. It wasn’t really psych care oriented, more targeted towards physical health stabilization, but obviously the psychiatric aspect was present and unavoidable. I remember going into it scared, feeling like the nurses were going to be unkind to me because there can be an idea that eating disorder patients are “doing it to themselves” and wasting the time of hospital staff, but I ended up being cared for by some of the kindest, most wonderful people that I have met. I will never forget the support and light they brought to an extremely upsetting, dehumanizing time for a teenage girl. Asking me about my life, talking about tv shows, telling me about their lives, sitting with me for hours as I struggled to eat. There are people who do their jobs because it’s their job and there are people who do their jobs because they want someone to feel less alone, and those nurses made me feel less alone. Thank you Clarissa for doing what you do, and thank you Mark for providing the platform.
@thinkerbella29 күн бұрын
Td
@watcher373328 күн бұрын
Are you better? I sure hope so
@tallulahdavis698428 күн бұрын
@@watcher3733 I am, thank you for asking. Sometimes it’s still a struggle, I’m definitely of the belief that once an eating disorder has made its way into your brain it’s kind of impossible to fully undo the damage around unhealthy thought patterns and body image, but I’ve worked though it to a point where I am happy in a healthy body :)
@still_becomingАй бұрын
So grounded, compassionate and caring such a cool vibe ❤
@colby8104Ай бұрын
She's heavily medicated.
@still_becomingАй бұрын
@@colby8104 she's doing something great with her life unlike you
@pseudokowskiАй бұрын
@Colby Don't throw your shade on this woman. Doctors, nurses etc go through a whole process of education that sets up their minds to work at a high functioning level.
@still_becomingАй бұрын
@@colby8104 she's doing something great with her life unlike you
@osvaldomedina173Ай бұрын
@@colby8104 why?
@Eremon19 күн бұрын
My mom suffered from mental health issues her whole life. She eventually ended up working in a crisis unit in my city, where she found her calling. She's gone now, but this lady reminds me of her in a lot of ways. This world desperately needs more people like Clarisse. Cheers.
@johnthefinnАй бұрын
What a woman! The world needs more people like her.
@waynesmith3318Ай бұрын
This is the best interview and the the most worthy person you have ever interviewed. I am 80 still in good health,Vietnam Vet, bronze star, retired LEO, 50 jobs before becoming a LEO. Thought I had seen pretty much everything until you interviewed Clarisse. She has been through the shit and it did not break her. She is strong enough to carry that load and help others especially kids. I couldn't do it. Clarisse, darlin, I love you, not in a sexual or romantic way. Never let anyone take your strength. I got up this morning and met you. Wish every day would start this way. You are are our compassion and our strength. Good morning Clarisse.
@Edwrd9294Ай бұрын
That means a lot to me to read. I very much appreciate your kindness
@wholeshebang128 күн бұрын
I like how you've expressed your appreciation and recognition of Clarisse's contribution to the welfare of many people's lives.
@Freemen0069Ай бұрын
She is a hero. Please do updates with her.
@lorigbasmajian3843Ай бұрын
No she isn't. She is a nurse in the system
@trina46N2Ай бұрын
@@lorigbasmajian3843did you watch the interview? 🤦♀️ SHE WORKS WITH CHILDREN. OUR COUNTRY DOES NOT HAVE ENOUGH BESS AVAILABLE FOR CHILDREN , EVER! Our healthcare system is not set up to properly care for adults, let alone children.
@madsxg22 күн бұрын
@@lorigbasmajian3843same thing bud.
@peterkapinos277Күн бұрын
I recently left nursing after 15 years, mostly dialysis. It was time to move on because of the bitterness. This woman is so violently intelligent. She is now one of my heroes.
@rebeccamorgan3885Ай бұрын
As a former psych tech,thank you for this video. She is 100% right on about everything
@db16548Ай бұрын
Retired psych tech here too! I hear you!
@misscyberiaАй бұрын
The timing of this interview is IMPECCABLE. I am wrapping up my first Bachelors in Human Bio, and immediately after graduation I'm entering a second accelerated BS Nursing program. This entire time I've wanted to do ER, but I've always been curious about Psych but had no idea who to talk to or where to hear some perspective. Then BOOM - Soft White Underbelly with the assist. Thank you so much from a current student, future nurse.
@lulumoon6942Ай бұрын
Make self care a priority, always! Best to you! 🙏🕊️
@mcgo3595Ай бұрын
Good luck finding your path. Thank you for choosing to take care of people. I’m proud of you. 🫶
@marisab2Ай бұрын
Thank you for joining the work force - we need you!!!
@aylan.6212Ай бұрын
If you do ER, you will still get a hefty dose of psych intake and holds. You will learn so much. It's hard, but also a privilege to care for these patients. From an ER nurse!
@themiddlekathАй бұрын
I got chills repeatedly during this video. Clarisse’s story about the veteran who talked her through a crisis moment, giving her the support she had given to so many others, was profound. She demonstrates deep compassion for all the people she treated in both psychiatric bedside nursing AND community care. The latter meant walking the streets of NYC with injectable meds to find psychiatric patients. She treated them where they were, including in a laundromat. Five years ago, I was diagnosed “bipolar unspecified.” YES to Clarisse’s point about the importance of preventative care. YES to her point on the barriers to getting care: stigma, lack of resources / staff, lack of access / money to get care. Can’t wait to read her book.
@danielescobar761820 сағат бұрын
Shes is a 10/10 in EVERY aspect. She is incredibly strong.. i hope she's careful, they really hang the strong ones out in dangerous situations sometimes mistaking their inner strength for an ability to defend themselves from someone in a fit
@alexanderwilliams6377Ай бұрын
As someone whose been in a ward several times and have had horrible and amazing experiences with nurses, thank you Clarisse. What you do matters so much. Thank you.
@lapetitevenusАй бұрын
“You made me want to live again” got me 😭 you are a beautiful soul clarisse
@katw366229 күн бұрын
I just finished my psych clinical rotation for nursing school today. Thank you for interviewing a psych nurse because what she is explaining is spot on. There is not enough mental health care in this country, unfortunately, and there aren’t enough psych nurses to help these patients. If anyone is going to give ANY help to help these patients, you bet it’s gonna be a nurse!
@wholeshebang128 күн бұрын
By your comment, I think you'll be a _great nurse._
@misfitmolly83085 күн бұрын
This woman is amazing! You are a true hero. Thank you for doing what you do for those struggling to survive. You have found your gift of healing and helping.
@ChiTownGuerrillaАй бұрын
That 70s era looking clothes style is awesome- ☺
@mars7612Ай бұрын
It's so depressing that out of all the things she said in this video, her clothes is what people are commenting on. Like yeah her clothes are nice but it's disheartening that this comment is so high up in the feed.
@tamsolo1584Ай бұрын
I very much admire her style... reminds me of a younger me.
@izdotcarterАй бұрын
@@mars7612she’s fashioning quite unusually
@bayoubabe6698Ай бұрын
@@mars7612 I agree!! Even if she dresses cool or mod, that’s the least notable part of her interview.
@russmodeАй бұрын
80s I think, mother would have worn back then in her 30s as well.
@LaszlomediaАй бұрын
Clarisse, you are an amazing being! Your sustained strength and compassion are inspiring. All power to you!
@jayg6138Ай бұрын
She doesn’t seem mentally stable
@siobhanjordan4405Ай бұрын
As an RN of 40 years in Ireland....our systems are broken and so are we. Thank you both
@egonzalez12155 күн бұрын
Thank you Clarisse, I needed to hear this!!!
@elliecorrell8580Ай бұрын
Def would have liked to have heard her personal story. Bring her back for that
@QuincyhkАй бұрын
She might not want to tell her story to everybody I could be wrong though
@nokatenoАй бұрын
@@Quincyhki bet she doesn’t. she has that mystery vibe. i am the same. i would not be surprised if she was a carer for a parent as a child.
@kafka6892Ай бұрын
im 21 and i’ve been to the psych ward 3 times in my life, twice this year, the last time i stayed for 40+ days for an attempt. not all nurses are nice or good people unfortunately. many didn’t choose to be psych nurses. it’s nice to know there are people who care, they are the ones that make a difference. sending lots of love to everyone who is suffering right now. i hope it gets better for all of us
@krobroАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing this sad fact. I supported my mother through around 20 involuntary hospitalizations and we rarely met nurses with the level of professionalism and compassion that Clarisse demonstrates. Most saw people as second class humans, and mostly unrelatable, even making jokes at their expense, leading to coercive vs cooperative care. Granted, sometimes an authoritarian approach is required, however, the opportunity for healing through a default approach of kindness was mostly not entertained, at times even discouraged. Terms like "belligerent" and "combative" created an environment of escalation where if patients failed to act "appropriately" they were simply physically restrained, sedated, and ignored. Poorly trained or authoritarian nurses and doctors expected patients experiencing acute psychosis to simply "know better". This was always astounding to me given that the research clearly demonstrates diminished insight in people who struggle with schizophrenia. Training needs to improve, as does treatment, to be more holistic, and to offer psychological services and other extended opportunities and supports to outpatients, especially during and after first episodes because the initial experience of hospitalization sets the stage for the future. People like Clarisse becoming professors will lead to a further improvement in the general culture of care. For sure there have been improvements over time, we just need to be better, because deep down, we all know it's always possible to improve.
@ktwidwellАй бұрын
The burnout for nursing is deep. Better funding and bettercare and safety for the nurses is needed to really see a change in nursing attitude. So sad for everyone involved. @krobro
@wholeshebang128 күн бұрын
@@krobro- What great insight and suggestions to improve treatment and care.
@Iliketurtlezz2 күн бұрын
Especially the black ones are bad. Super racist.
@DeniseH-jw3fuАй бұрын
She is on target. Thank you Clarisse. As a nurse I worked psych in a dangerous state hospital. And I completely agree with you.
@jennifermeeker7861Ай бұрын
Its ridiculous the risks that are norms in nursing and social services you are expected to take.
@magalin14894 күн бұрын
As a nurse who works in inpatient psych, this interview resonates with me to the core. I am now so much more determined to try to make a difference in the lives of others! Thank you for sharing your perspective of the problems surrounding mental health, Clarisse. You are a rockstar!
@MrDaigoRikiАй бұрын
She’s the kind of the person who is fully aware of what’s going on and what’s wrong with the mental health system in the us. Very educational interview. That must be a nerve wrecking job but people need her. She’s a super cool person.
@alexisg1028Ай бұрын
I love her. She's educated, engaged, passionate, insightful, confident, grounded, & humble. You can tell she's an amazing nurse. Thank you for all you do, Clarisse ❤🎉
@alisonlorenzo9284Ай бұрын
"Takes one to know one" absolutely agree with this! I went to a PHP treatment program for an eating disorder and the therapists/dietitians/DC's who had experienced an ED personally were the ones who helped the most. Mental illness is so intricate. It's tough to study it and understand what that person is going through and how to help them best. Those who have mental illness and have learned how to manage it with healthy coping skills and then share their knowledge and experience with others who are struggling are the real MVPs!
@bcgoldminer3 күн бұрын
Clarisse is a priceless spark of hope and compassion.
@katiemiller6256Ай бұрын
Mental health nurse here and I literally have never said “yup, yup,yup” in one interview so much! Your awesome! I’m so proud of you and your compassion! Never let your light dim! My motto is always “be the change you want to see in the world!!” I wanna be that change! Be safe and keep your head up. You’re doing a great job!
@oliviaraifstangerАй бұрын
She is so beautiful and intelligent and amazingly empathetic and well spoken
@420GanG_chanАй бұрын
I just want to give my respect to this woman because I'm a 35 yo mother of one 12 yo girl and was in and out of many psychiatric hospitals in my lifetime due to suicidal attempts and self harm and it's really nice to see somebody that actually cares because imo more often than not u deal with people that prob shouldn't be working in a hospital setting much less round people that already struggling internally with themselves while fighting to live/survive mentally. I've been hyped up and egged on by least a couple workin in hospitals and a special school that was on one of the psych hosptals campus that literally talked crap n laughed n more with their face all in the little window on the quiet room I was locked in. So much trauma, illnesses and things kids and people go thru everyday that can just be too much and push one to do things that they may never have done but when there's still people who think that mental health isn't serious or is a joke when it should be something never taken lightly and should be resources, hospitals and psychiatrists and community's all working together to try and help anybody that is struggling before it ends up being too late. People need to realize that mental health definitely is not a joke and anybody struggling shouldnt be taken lightly...Stop the stigma!!!
@wholeshebang128 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing your personal experiences with mental health treatment, including the unhelpful ways you were treated. I'm _glad you made it through_ and are now a mother - a good one, with awareness, I'm sure. Take good care of yourself and your daughter - you both deserve a great life.
@ms4fКүн бұрын
You do make a difference. This is impactful
@reneegonzalez8560Ай бұрын
Great informative interview!! Thanks for all you do, Clarece!!
@Cbow3977Ай бұрын
People forget that the therapists need mental help after absorbing everything they do. Theyre should be. Cops even talk about needing it but theres a stigma of not wanting to reach out and say I need help, because authority gets looked down at if they say, Hey I need help. This Ive heard from a detective.
@cadavherАй бұрын
Its the same across all First Responders. The S rate among Firefighters and paramedics is at an all time high, and the "man up" mentality is killing so many. People cant seem to grasp that seeing all the horrors they do is no different than those who fought wars, the mental toll is the same. It builds and builds and theres no safe net for them to release. It breaks my heart.
@lisarodriguez8681Ай бұрын
Doctor my eyes have seen the years And their slow parade of tears So many of us have eyes that look like they are holding back tears.. remember this world is temporary and our eternal home is peace and love
@kimberlysewell4710Ай бұрын
A nurse for 14 years in mental health/corrections and THANK YOU for sharing your story!! Thank you Mark for taking time to interview nurses we are our own breed of people!!
@leonidaslantz52494 күн бұрын
God bless you, Clarisse. You are a wonderful, caring,thoughtful,professional nurse.
@somenamelessdude8095Ай бұрын
Finally somebody gets the link between the closing of the asylumns, and homelessness. Edit: Soft White Censorship, never commenting again
@NorthernGuy-v1xАй бұрын
They call it cruel - "incarceration" and "forced rehab" and a "humans rights violation". So, instead, these people slowly die injecting deadly drugs in tent cities. Yeah, not cruel at all.
@willyb7755Ай бұрын
Hoping not to come off like an asshole, but it's been a known link for a long time. Unfortunately, even when money is set aside to address the issue, that money is misused or flat out stolen ( see ThriveNYC---$850 million with no accountability)
@kerrypickens8594Ай бұрын
It started with budget cuts for public health during the Reagan administration. There have been budget cuts every year since then and now we have homelessness, a pandemic and all these food recalls.
@nicolecomfort-mcdermott4743Ай бұрын
A lot of us do, the system is just so broken.
@mars7612Ай бұрын
That link is not new lol It's very well established and recognized, we just haven't fixed it
@kadiebreaux8122Ай бұрын
I appreciate her realness. She is a gem.
@patrickmoore1727Ай бұрын
What a morning, just heard an Angel amongst us, speak.
@lettierenak5213Ай бұрын
Like the way you talk
@kiwihame22 күн бұрын
Wow. Powerful. So much intelligence and empathy. This was my most "favourite" SWU interview. What a gorgeous, truly amazing person. Respect.
@Daydreamer89Ай бұрын
A psych nurse gave me a hug once and it made my day. I gave a psych nurse a hug once and she broke down crying. That was the only useful thing that happened in there. So being useful was illegal.
@TanyaDavis954Ай бұрын
❤
@BusinessBox13Ай бұрын
On deployment an RN gave me a hug in the middle of me ranting & raving & it changed my life. To this day I know when I’m reaching or have gone past my limit bc it’s the feeling I had when “I needed a hug”.
@blodknut5595Ай бұрын
Clarisse, that bitterness is compassion fatigue. I see it because I have lived it Please be careful as it is a big indicator if burn out. I worked nearly 20 years through homeless support, child protection, lastly community mental health. The vicarious trauma you mention weighs heavy until you can't work at what you are good at. A few times I heard myself in your words. Thanks for sharing.
@HughCorbyCruickАй бұрын
I’ve worked 43 years in behavioral health in NYC. Everything she said is spot on. If anyone wants to make mental health care better, listen to frontline workers like this.
@josephgriffin2388Ай бұрын
It'll just scare 99% of people away if they learn the reality.
@vickymcmahon81214 күн бұрын
Clarisse, take care of YOU sweetheart. You are a treasure🙏🏻❤️
@dwade6322Ай бұрын
This poor woman,the things she must have seen. 🙏
@misanthrophexАй бұрын
It's not just seeing, it's experience as well. I am a man and I would be scared to do such a job, as a woman, I can only imagine the shit she experienced there... people out of their mind tend to do crazy, CRAZY things, sometimes to other people, like nurses...
@EphemeralProductionsАй бұрын
Yep. ANYONE in psychiatric, really.
@amnesicturtles4145Ай бұрын
A shame I can’t like this video multiple times. Clarisse seems like a wonderful person and I hope for both of you to keep the strength and the light in your hearts to endure this difficult life. You are inspiring
@JoqxerАй бұрын
People like Clarisse are so important and unfortunately undervalued. Thx for paying attention to this essential professional group.
@Nursekym42Күн бұрын
Wow girl from one nurse to another, so proud of you! Please don’t stop helping people, you have an amazing gift.❤
@mekichey129Ай бұрын
As a nurse that left Bedside this is the interview that i never knew i needed.
@ContraryMaryАй бұрын
Totally impressed with this girl. You've made the world a better place.
@SteffaatАй бұрын
Not being allowed to give a child in desperate need a hug says everything about this system that needs to be said.
@chriscostanzo2630Ай бұрын
Exactly. World leader? I think not.
@sdm1568Ай бұрын
That's a rule for a reason - molestation is a prevalent reality - just know there has to be order in society to prevent tragedies.
@soeren72Ай бұрын
Not just the system, its the new world, everyone feels violated.
@sldg4659Ай бұрын
@Steffaat children and adults misperceive behavior and can turn a hug in to something sinister. It truly is inappropriate and a boundary crossing.
@esacore3053Ай бұрын
Not the take you think it is
@hollygray00Күн бұрын
I think this is one of my favorite interviews this channel has done. She is so incredibly smart and expresses so clearly how all of the other people you interview end up how they end up. Had me in tears and inspired.