Just so you know, Autism is a developmental disorder, not a mental illness. I have high functioning autism, while also having anxiety and depression. Unfortunately depression is becoming more and more common in people with autism.
@helixxia9320 Жыл бұрын
is there a difference between a mental disorder or mental illness. i cant find any distinction when searching it
@toximan2008 Жыл бұрын
@@helixxia9320 Disorder is an old term that was thought to affect just the mind. The term illness is more favored nowadays because it considers a holistic approach that concerns the mind's interaction with the body and the environment. Plus, it's a "friendlier" way of describing a condition.
@helixxia9320 Жыл бұрын
@@toximan2008 yes that is what i have heard too but seems this person doesnt see it that way. they prefer the word disorder over illness, so i'm confused. i have used both disorder and illness interchangeably if someone is asking about my adhd or ocd because i dont mind either word, but now that im trying to search around on what is most used it looks like disorder is the word that is used most when im looking at mental health stuff and the dsm-5, the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. and like 90% of sites i went into used disorder in the title and on only one site i saw it written as the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental illnesses. i dont think it is wrong to call autism and adhd for either illness/disorder but seems actually that disorder is most used and not illness so i was surprised
@ClownNikolaii Жыл бұрын
@toximan2008 Please don't spread misinformation. Autism is a nuerodevelopmental disorder, meaning that literally our neurons are ordered differently than the rest of the population. It's not temporary and there isn't a cure because autism is not a chemical imbalance but literally a different way in which neurons develop, making it part of the person. That's why it's not an illness and is a disorder.
@chimpletcum9349 Жыл бұрын
We know you have autism that’s why the sentence started with just so you know
I knew about autophagia and clinical lycanthropy before this iceberg, and you have no use for this information, but I am happy at myself.
@Pinkirect Жыл бұрын
the first thing i thought when i saw the word cotard was fucking will wood
@taengkwachu Жыл бұрын
thank you!
@Smay2k24 Жыл бұрын
As someone with OCD you nailed it. Thank you for bringing awareness in an accurate way. Its not “being a neat freak” its more like daily chronic hell of unwanted thoughts/feelings and unstoppable urges to do something to get rid of them. If anyone reading this has or knows someone with ocd, please start exposure and response prevention therapy. Its what ocd specialists use to treat ocd and it saved my life. I really mean it and wish you all the very best.
@n2lw Жыл бұрын
im really confused if I actually suffer from OCD or not, I’ve always had unwanted thoughts since I was a child ( around age 7-8 ) and I’m also big perfectionist, and can’t stand when things are mess. and it got pretty intense in 2021, I was so anxious and hopeless every day, I had harm ocd, order ocd, existential OCD, my psychiatrist never diagnosed it and never really cared about it, but he said I have compulsive and obsessive behaviours, but since I’ve started taking antidepressants, I feel like the thoughts are almost completely gone? I also have depression, and my meds don’t help me with that, but are pretty helpful to the obsessive thoughts, do you think I might actually have it?
@Smay2k24 Жыл бұрын
@@n2lw theres a high chance you do. Odds are if you’re seriously questioning it and are suffering then you probably do. I recommend you find an ocd specialist or an anxiety disorder specialized therapist and they can give you a proper diagnosis. Im wishing you the best of luck this shit sucks
@mkdpk3517 Жыл бұрын
@@n2lwJust wanted to say that i got diagnosed a week ago and my psychiatrist prescribed me antidepressants and they do kind of help with my obsessive thoughts so there is a high probability that you do indeed have ocd if they do help.
@unfamiliarkittink11 ай бұрын
My biggest L was thinking I didn’t have OCD anymore before realising it’s because I take SSRIs 🫠 it’s helped a lot but even with a decently high dose I still have urges sometimes. I hate how media portrays it.
@taelorpickel283011 ай бұрын
And OCD doesn't always make you a neat and clean person. It can literally target ANYTHING.
@thea9153 Жыл бұрын
social anxiety and other anxiety disorders are so overlooked. people think social anxiety is just a small fear of talking and being judged but its not that. i feel physically ill when thinking of holding a speech or being the center of attention in a social setting
@j4eki665 Жыл бұрын
anxiety disorders as a whole are truly trivialized by society. they're seen as "mental illness lite" when that isn't the case at all. they can be extremely disabling to the point of being housebound. it truly isn't what people think it is.
@otobustutkusu303 Жыл бұрын
The show, Bocchi The Rock amazingly portrays this disorder. The main character loaths her loneliness and wants to make friends and be accepted & validated. reply if you have watched it.
@dreadpiratelenny1348 Жыл бұрын
Bro, I literally projectile vomit then collapse in public sometimes.
@Rory925 Жыл бұрын
@@dreadpiratelenny1348 i had the same issue with vomiting. still happens sometimes but now i know how to prepare. the biggest step for me was just accepting that i was going to throw up. a big part of the problem with nausea/anxiety is fighting it. if you just accept that it's happening, you're already half way done, and hopefully will end up not throwing up. canned sliced pears also really help with nausea. i hope this helps.
@TrillMurray Жыл бұрын
I think everybody has that lol
@VirtualValentinee3 ай бұрын
As a guy with BPD, it was a breath of fresh air to hear the way you discuss it. This sickness is such an unreal disorder to deal with for everyone involved and usually people stigmatize us as if we are evil and inherently cruel. It’s always so deeply appreciated to hear someone talk about it in a way that’s not demonizing. so thank you ❤
@iliveinadysfunctionalfamily286Ай бұрын
fuck the people who hate you
@Lunalavender83Ай бұрын
People don't understand how painful BPD really is. The stigma is horrible. Hugs to you. ❤❤
@ludwigthestrange Жыл бұрын
Hey, peoples. Just letting you know that if you ever feel like you're alone, you aren't. There are people out there who knows what it feels like to feel extremely hopeless, but there are people willing to help. You are loved and appreciated.
@LrB69 Жыл бұрын
Thanks man I tried killing myself like 3 times
@dystopianfuture1165 Жыл бұрын
Nah lol
@rikublaze Жыл бұрын
Only if you're a female. Dude feelings don't matter...
@williamrogers2168 Жыл бұрын
Starting singing Saosin you're not alone as soon as I started reading this
@BLACK80085 Жыл бұрын
Lying is bad you know.
@thetoebeanlord Жыл бұрын
it can be so hard to explain agoraphobia because how so many shows portrayed it. Im not afraid of the outside, im afraid of encountering a situation where conflict, stress, or any unease could happen. Its so nice hearing someone explain it NOT as a fear of leaving the house.
@pinkzeppelin5949 Жыл бұрын
I dealt with this for MANY years , it got so bad at one point all I would do was literally rot in my bed and watch everyone else grow and have a life , years later I have my own apartment , job and a beautiful life and I no longer have that fear of everything and anything anymore that INTENSE dread is gone , I have confidence and can handle things , yes I still have severe anxiety but not ANYWHERE near how bad it was , it gets better ❤
@hanakikoi Жыл бұрын
I fucking cried the first time I heard the real definition of agoraphobia. I always assumed I was borderline bc I could go outside, but seeing the definition and realizing my fear fit perfectly was demoralizing
@milxisvo Жыл бұрын
REAL 😂😂😂
@bellamango6708 Жыл бұрын
I get physically ill from situations others would be upset over for maybe half an hour, and three days later I'm in bed unable to do anything from how it stresses out my body. But just get over it sure
@thetoebeanlord Жыл бұрын
@@bellamango6708 Relate ;; Sometimes i really hate how long things stick around. I would love to just let it go but idk it just wants to sit there and ignoring it just makes it stay longer.
@michellerhodes5477 Жыл бұрын
My adult son has schizophrenia. It came on in the middle of his senior year of high school. He almost didn't graduate but after getting out of the hospital the first time, he was able to finish his credits online before another episode. It's been 4 years, multiple hospital stays, dozens of meds, side effects he's having trouble tolerating (akathisia), but he's finally accepted he is schizophrenic and needs meds. He's been participating in his care after this last hospital stay where they gave him the 3 month haldol shot via court order as he was aggressive and disruptive in the hospital. Haldol has been so tough on him (it did help his psychotic symptoms) but he's finally realized he needs meds. He's working with his doctor on using seroquel as the haldol leaves his system. I worry about him every single day but all I can do is be there and help him through as best I can. But having a loved one with schizophrenia is awful and I'm sure it's nothing compared to being the one with schizophrenia.
@Aestheticallyalgerian Жыл бұрын
I wish you and your son the best michelle. Stay strong
@dressthekid11 ай бұрын
as someone who is like your son, please pay mind to changes in behaviors or moods in him. medications will change someone completely. for better or worse. i’ve been on seroquel personally, and don’t remember the many many months i was even on the prescription. and the akathisia from different antipsychotics omg it ruined my life. the longer you suffer the side effect the more irritable you will become even if deep down you don’t want to. i wish truly the best and nothing but healing for you and him. i’m sure your love and support means a lot to him. stay strong💓🪽
@eclipse387411 ай бұрын
Poor baby I hope he gets meds that work for him with no shitty side effects
@hannahjoy267511 ай бұрын
Seroquel has been a life changing medication for me. I really hope it helps him the same
@xoxogirija_10 ай бұрын
this is so true man. my uncle had it. truly shit. he passed away last year. I still miss him sm
@tacticalbondsh Жыл бұрын
With Depression in Tier 1, you know you're in for some bad shit
@piperjaycie9 ай бұрын
That just means it more common that the others and more people know about it.
@jaind12643 ай бұрын
9999989⁹
@Arirezz3 ай бұрын
Depression is one of if not the most common mental illness
@treymoment3 ай бұрын
Its because depression isnt a niche uncommon disorder
@DebonedAbsol3 ай бұрын
Although it can be horrible, depression is fairly common, one of the most common mental illnesses
@ajlucky0076 Жыл бұрын
OCD is probably the scariest thing I've ever went through. You are constantly arguing with your own mind until you become so mentally exhausted that forming thoughts becomes difficult and you feel completely numb. Eventually, you'll feel like a walking corpse. I didn't get on medication until after it caused irreversible trauma to my brain. Now the medication works but it only temporarily blocks it. Without it, I will return to the same state of mind
@yasminate.9 ай бұрын
when your on the medication do u still get some intrusive thoughts or like compulsions , i’m not on medication but i had really bad ocd when i was 9 and it has gotten so much better but i still have random moments where i have to blink a certain amount of times or reread stuff till it feels right and other stuff
@ajlucky00769 ай бұрын
@yasminate. I do, but they don't really affect me, and I'm able to shake them off pretty quickly.
@pulvenberg17098 ай бұрын
Fortunately for me I only had a brief episode of intrusive thoughts. It's still there, deep within, scares me sometimes, but I'm pretty great at handling it at this point. I hope you're doing well in your journey.
@Watersedge20237 ай бұрын
As someone was OCD I can speak on this, my ocd put intrusive thoughts into my head, there's some moments with peace, but most is a living nightmare. My ocd will put things in my mind that are not true and I will argue with myself until I resolve or I get to worn out and my mind is exhausted at that point. The ocd will come up almost all the time it's like having a thought that keeps appearing. It's NOT just a cleaning thing.
@DeJect_music4 ай бұрын
In the exact same position, it's hell. Wishing you well
@michael_09437 Жыл бұрын
As someone with STPD and who has battled addiction my whole life I wanna thankyou for this informative and great video. I took me a while to realise how bad my life had gotten but my last psychotic episode that lasted 24+ hours showed me I cant live like this. I'm now just over 9 months sober and happier than ever before
@thatchil Жыл бұрын
9 months is amazing man keep it up
@МилицаС-я6г Жыл бұрын
Idk you but I'm proud of you! Keep it up man 😎
@rock-_-103 ай бұрын
🔥
@adammanneh4692 Жыл бұрын
Anxiety & depression sucks... anyone reading this who deals with it on the daily, be strong & keep fighting your battles.
@Foxiz Жыл бұрын
I sincerely appreciate this reminder. It's really hard to keep the spirit up, when it feels like everything is just towering up on you. Psychiatric problems still have a great stigma, and often makes others think that you're just lazy, rude or the likes, and that sure doesn't help. Thanks for the empathy. 😌
@RexytheRexy Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the encouragement. Hang in there, yourself, and to everyone struggling: please remember that your life *is* worth something, that you absolutely *do* matter, and that the best you can do is enough. Who you are is enough. 💜
@You-Know-Youre-Right Жыл бұрын
honestly ending my life seems alot easier and simpler then trying to "fix" my problems
@RexytheRexy Жыл бұрын
@@You-Know-Youre-Right There's no need to fix them, or fix yourself. Simply doing your best to live is the best way to go - trust me, I'm bipolar schizoaffective. I tried to kill myself in 2021, and learned from that how absolutely devastating it is for your loved ones - they feel extreme guilt for not seeing the signs, experience abandonment PTSD, and Jesus, if you have parents alive. I also learned that more people care about us than we realize, and again, I'm a schizoaffective pariah living in a small town in Alaska where I'm terribly judged and ostracized. Suicide may seem like a preferable option - up to 84% of people with schizophrenia and its related disorders attempt it at some point - but it truly, genuinely isn't. Each one of us who dies decreases the diversity of the world, and is a heartbreaking loss. You don't need to be fixed. Just live as best you can. It's all anyone can do. 💜
@MM-pv5tp Жыл бұрын
People with mental illnesses get all the sympathy, but I have never seen someone with a physical illness get that much sympathy. Would you say that about someone who has a physical condition? (Diabetes, heart disease, COPD, etc)
@simplyalex3719 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad that anorexia was added to this iceburg. I've suffered with it pretty much my whole life starting from age 10. People dont realize that it's a mental disorder because its seen more physically than mentally. It's hard to deal with from day to day life. I honestly feel ashamed when I explain that I wont eat something because of the anxiety trying new foods gives me. I've been getting better with it, but it's still a daily struggle personally. It's hard to explain the mental aspect because people just think it's just "being a picky eater". But you explained it perfectly
@Foxiz Жыл бұрын
Stay strong. You're not alone.
@moth_9 Жыл бұрын
you got this homie
@Boglim Жыл бұрын
Eating disorders like anorexia are in the DSM IV and V so just tell people that if they don’t believe you
@ACE.707 Жыл бұрын
hey, I used to struggle w anorexia for 5 years, had gone through treatment but it gets easier everyday, that I can promise. I know it can be hard to even look at some foods sometimes but you got this! stay strong and I'm proud of you for every bite you take my friend 🙏🏽
@SewMyHeartTogether11 ай бұрын
exactly! Lots of people forget that it's a mental disorder so they tend to dismiss people who don't 'look' like they have anorexia. there's no rush for recovery, but it is a shame that some people only intervene until they're too far gone.
@gojirawrrr Жыл бұрын
hey, great video!! I noticed a lot of people mentioned that Autism is not a mental illness, but I wanted to also note that many autistic people don't like being represented by autism speaks. there's a lot of videos and articles out there that go over the various ways autism speaks has caused us harm.
@RemindMeToCheck Жыл бұрын
As someone who's been struggling with major depressive disorder for 20 years, who's been on the edge of suicide many times and who has staid at mental health hospitals many times, also as someone who's been prescribed pretty much every medication on the market and even antipsychotics (despite having no psychotic symptoms), I can say my life has been hell, but I've learned a lot through my journey and I believe I emerge stronger every time I survive a relapse. You always learn a bit about yourself as you struggle. Depression is no joke. Thank you for spreading awareness about mental health. We need to get rid of all mental health stigmata ASAP.
@pulvenberg17098 ай бұрын
I don't know the ins and outs of antipsychotics for treating depression, but I've heard it is being used.
@cupboarddinosaur2 ай бұрын
😊😊
@marcom2382 ай бұрын
Again Jesus spoke to them, saying, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” John 8:12
@RemindMeToCheck2 ай бұрын
@@marcom238 This is not quite what happened. I'm here and now thanks to the psychiatrists and psychologists who have helped me as well as my family and my close ones.
Thank you so much for this video. I suffer from OCD, ADHD, PTSD, Generalized Anxiety Disorder and Bipolar Depression. My day to day life for the last 10 years has consisted of feeling like a never ending nightmare. This lead to substance abuse that got to the point of using fentanyl. Two years clean now! I’m only 20, but I’ve just recently gotten the courage to be my own advocate and that’s lead me down a path that so far has been very successful. I can only thank myself and few close family members who have gotten me this far with love, compassion, support and open minded guidance. ❤ So grateful for the opportunities I’ve been given
@Snook_YT Жыл бұрын
That’s great to hear ❤️ I hope things keep doing great for you!
@juliuscubing Жыл бұрын
the feds abused you so hard
@froggyspond1133 Жыл бұрын
Congratulations friend. I was young when I started using heroin (18-20y.o) I was sober for 8 years and recently relapsed & these days real heroin doesn’t even exist so I ended up hooked on fent. I’m working on it, and recently started to receive suboxone. I guess what I’m saying is hold on to your sobriety and never think you’ve conquered addiction - it’s very very sneaky and I should’ve kept a better eye on it. Stay safe and blessed! We’ll all make it :)
@PBI45 Жыл бұрын
shame that tiktok 12 year old edgelords have kind of tried to monopolise things like autism and depression. Makes people more sceptical when someone who really has those problems tells them
did he skip exploding head disorder? cant find him mentioning it
@DUTCH_WITH_PTSD Жыл бұрын
@@guajuthe vid or me?
@guaju Жыл бұрын
@@DUTCH_WITH_PTSD the vid, but by that you too
@DUTCH_WITH_PTSD Жыл бұрын
@@guaju I didn’t see him talk ablout it in the video at all
@BIG_CHEESE_MAKE_ME Жыл бұрын
@@DUTCH_WITH_PTSDit’s a joke
@lunea-0 Жыл бұрын
00:04 Many people suffer from mental illnesses globally. 02:20 Autism is a multifaceted neurodevelopment condition that affects social interactions, communication, and behavior. 06:58 Anorexia is a restrictive eating behavior leading to malnutrition and serious physical health problems. 09:21 Sleep paralysis can cause hallucinations and intense fear and anxiety. 14:03 Specific phobias and PTSD involve avoidance and negative emotions, significantly impacting daily life. 16:31 Internet gaming disorder is a condition involving excessive and compulsive use of online video games. 20:38 Social anxiety disorder can significantly interfere with a person's daily life 22:43 Social anxiety disorder, perfectionism, and generalized anxiety disorder are common mental health conditions that can significantly impact a person's life. 26:52 Body dysmorphic disorder is a mental health condition characterized by an excessive preoccupation with perceived flaws in one's physical appearance. 29:11 OCD is a mental health condition characterized by obsessions and compulsions that disrupt daily life. 33:27 Schizotypic personality disorder involves preference for solitude, paranoid symptoms, and cognitive disturbances. 35:35 Brief psychotic disorder is characterized by symptoms such as hallucinations, delusions, and disorganized thinking. 39:50 Gambling disorder can lead to financial and emotional turmoil. 41:54 Individuals with HPD have intense emotional expression and struggle to establish deep connections. 46:06 Alice and Wonderland syndrome causes perceptual distortions related to size, spatial relationships, time, and body perception. 48:12 Anti-social personality disorder (ASPD) is characterized by a lack of empathy and disregard for others 52:33 Schizophrenia is a complex mental disorder that affects thoughts, emotions, perceptions, and behavior. 54:40 Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) is a complex and controversial mental health condition characterized by the presence of two or more distinct identity states within an individual's consciousness. 59:01 Parental alienation is a damaging phenomenon that influences a child to have negative feelings towards one parent. 1:01:05 Dependent Personality Disorder (DPD) explained 1:05:19 Bipolar disorder involves episodes of mania, hypomania, and depression 1:07:21 Kleptomania is characterized by impulsive stealing behavior and feelings of guilt or regret. 1:11:38 Diogen Syndrome and Foli Syndrome explained 1:13:46 Foli syndrome is a delusional belief that someone is continuously changing their identity or appearance to deceive them. 1:17:49 Boanthropy is a delusional self-perception associated with psychiatric conditions. 1:19:48 Shared psychotic disorder is a rare condition characterized by the transmission of delusional beliefs from one person to another. 1:23:55 Clinical lycanthropy is a rare delusional disorder associated with animal behaviors and social isolation. 1:25:50 Alien Hand Syndrome and Hysterical Blindness 1:29:57 Body Integrity Identity Disorder (BIID) is a psychological condition where individuals have a strong desire to amputate a fully functional limb or body part. 1:32:02 Cotard syndrome is a condition where individuals have delusions of death or non-existence. 1:36:08 Mental illness and mental health Iceberg explained.
@blackflameprod14559 ай бұрын
As someone who suffers from Borderline Personality Disorder, its very hard to keep my relationships and emotions stable. I think you explained it perfectly and didnt come from a place of judgement of stigma which most people do, so thank you for that. And for any other BPDers, people with persnality disorders, or anyone suffering from any mental illness, youre not alone. ❤
@RavenIsAnArtist Жыл бұрын
Adding to the PTSD part of the iceberg: I suffer with PTSD. The flashbacks, intrusive memories, nightmares that present extreme fear, and feeling some sort of constant "background" anxiety on a normal basis that keeps you on edge, are certainly part of it, but it's not all of what I experience. After the event, I now have a really hard time with concentration, and keeping focused on anything. Even watching youtube videos is difficult without slipping into my thoughts and only realizing minutes later. I frequently get distracted while trying to do specific tasks, and it's made it difficult to do anything, or enjoy anything. My memory is also really bad. I can barely recall anything that's happened in my day, only fuzzy snippets of the major parts that I have to piece together. And I tend to have conversations that I do not remember even upon reminder. I have a lot of gaps in my memory and it's frustrating. Before everything, my memory and concentration was amazing. And on top of all that, I derealize a lot, to the point my family feels like strangers I have to play along with. A lot of the time I am derealizing to some extent, and feeling happy is difficult. Crying is hard, and when I stop derealizing it's like everything hits me at once and I remember what happened actually happened and I get in a really bad state mentally. When I completely stop derealizing because I am put in a good, comfortable, safe mood, like when my partner comes over, it feels like I suddenly spawned into existence. It's a weird feeling because I will be talking and the feeling of being real hits me. It's made me feel like I'm completely worthless, and there's a lot of stuff I personally don't want to get into. And only recently did I finally find a therapist who will do my counciling. My anxiety medication works, not a whole lot, but it's better than nothing. If I'm being honest, the panicking is worse now than the first month after the event. And the first month is when I was temporarily put on valium, but I got off of it because it made me really tired all day and was making my pain medication not work (I have chronic pain), and I'd go back on it for panic situations if I could even if it made me tired. But anyways, I hope that gives a better perspective to anyone who is curious! I think it's better to hear it come from people who have it and might be able to provide better detail, with accuracy.
@idrinkpaintwater2501 Жыл бұрын
autism isn't a mental illness though? it's a neurotype, though it may put you at a higher risk for developing a mental illness due to how autistic people are treated, or other related things like genetics.
@bluenothing_666 Жыл бұрын
Exactly this. Same for ADHD and Dyslexia
@yuritarted9890 Жыл бұрын
It’s still a developmental disorder thus is a illness
@himynameis3138 Жыл бұрын
I think he’s just saying it in an umbrella term
@Infelious Жыл бұрын
@@himynameis3138 cognitive and mental dysfunctions would of been a better way of describing it.
@sister_sinister Жыл бұрын
Neurodivergency, but yes, not a disorder or illnesses. Same for ADHD, etc.
@rubycube1506 Жыл бұрын
As a person dealing with PTSD and BPD thank you for being so considerate in your choice of words ❤
@jamesk5541 Жыл бұрын
I suffer from the same it's overwhelming I just lost my girlfriend from it and that sent me to the ER where I was diagnosed
@Ladiescodelavely Жыл бұрын
@@jamesk5541same man. That was me almost two years ago. It gets better. Hard work is hard, but it pays off. You’ve got this.
@J3nJ3nl0llip0p Жыл бұрын
RE: PTSD I'm a combat vet. I was diagnosed by a professional with CPTSD at 13 years old due to a rough upbringing. Joined up at 30. While I genuinely appreciate the picture of the sad soldier, let's remember that PTSD can come from anything, at any time, for anyone. One doesn't need to have been to a specified place at a specified time to have their world rocked. Please have a wonderful day & let's normalize therapy!
@Acro_YT Жыл бұрын
When did you start to take therapy?
@J3nJ3nl0llip0p Жыл бұрын
@@Acro_YT 13, in 1988. His name was David and he stared wildly at the blinking light on his office phone every time it rang. Like, he would hone in on the light flashing as if he were deciphering Morse code nuclear missile launch information for the duration of it ringing, then nonchalantly snap back to me as of nothing had happened. Next, was an actual psychiatrist, who fell asleep on me a few times and blamed it on being hungry.
@Ohmyadeline Жыл бұрын
Do it yourself then. Christ there's always someone to whine and complain
@ploopydiper Жыл бұрын
I always see people saying that you can’t have ptsd unless you’re a veteran. Thank you for making those people look dumb haha
@ponponpatapon9670 Жыл бұрын
@@Ohmyadeline maybe you're that certain "someone".
@Vietexa9 ай бұрын
I'm glad this guy got the OCD right, i've been suffering from OCD for more than 3 years, and i've also been asked what's up with me and i really find it frustrating that the people from my country (Romania) don't have a lot of documentation on this subject and they always expect me to act differently then i do, in fact i met some people that hadn't heard of it and that straight up didn't know how i was gonna react and in most of the cases after getting to meet me they saw that i am not "such a big deal" as they had previously thought. I'm really glad that people like you get the explanation of the disorder right, and i really hope at a people will be more documented over these types of things, at least the people from schools, normal hostpitals (not the psychiatric ones) and any other institute which is essential for people to interact with
@DanderDude9 ай бұрын
as someone that is officially diagnosed by a professional with ADHD, one common trend i see is people self diagnosing themselves with ADHD when usually they display a part of a single symptom when they clearly arent truly diagnosed or have the disorder
@kylewebster100Ай бұрын
Its a joke isnt it, as alot of people seem to see it as a trend yet fail to realise that ADHD can come with other illnesses.. I was diagnosed as a child and also suspected with BPD.. we all just want to be normal 😂
@adamjacobrogers9155 Жыл бұрын
Went 10+ years without a clue that i have major depressive, OCD, schizophrenia, Generalized Anxiety, social phobia.. it was only after a severe psychotic break that i sought help. Im 36 now, at 30 I found myself hospitalized. Thats only the mental part. Physical disabilities compound the issues.
@EvolutionBG Жыл бұрын
Do you have physical disabilities?
@adamjacobrogers9155 Жыл бұрын
@@EvolutionBG indeed I do.
@user-vl6tq7sb6y Жыл бұрын
I’m medically diagnosed with GAD, MDD, and ADHD, though I’m scared that’s not just it. I wasn’t diagnosed with ADHD until I was 13, so I spend my whole middle school and elementary school experience thinking there was something wrong with me. It’s so crazy how we need to get pushed to the extreme to get help
@RexytheRexy Жыл бұрын
I'm 36 as well, and was just diagnosed with (bipolar) schizoaffective disorder after experiencing a very similar set of circumstances along a slightly different timeline; I was 34 when manic psychosis pushed me over the edge and landed me in the hospital. I'm sorry if this sounds like armchair psychology, but your combo of major depression and schizophrenia aligns perfectly with a subtype of schizoaffective disorder (which I'm only mentioning because, even if there's a small chance, I thought it could end up being of help to you - if that's irritating, unhelpful, or inappropriate, I genuinely apologize). I was born with a congenital spine defect and disabling light sensitivity. The overload and stress that comes from a combination of mental and physical disability, and the ways they synergize, can be truly brutal (not to mention the sociological b.s. of ableism, general stigma, and the severe misperception of psychosis that runs rampant in our culture). Every circumstance is different, but I empathize as best I can. If it's any comfort, you're not alone. I know it may seem trite or like a cliché, but in the case of rare disorders, simply knowing that there are people in the world who understand - even just a bit - without explanation (because god, is the communication barrier a pain) can genuinely make a difference and help. (as an example: I found out yesterday that a friend of mine also has bipolar SZA, and it was a relief I didn't know I needed)
@TheFiendishFive7 ай бұрын
What don't you have?
@ximar0ckstrx Жыл бұрын
I have Borderline Personality Disorder (along PTSD, PDD, and Panic disorder. I also deal with multiple phobias, OCD and body dysmorphia)... It's the result of severe childhood abuse, trauma, and SA... BPD is linked to severe ans persistent trauma that alters the brain chemistry and wiring. According to my therapist and psychologist, there is a push to re-label the disorder as complex-PTSD (c-PTSD). And yes, I do also have Disassociative Disorder, specifically Disassociative Amnesia in partnership with my BPD. As someone with BPD, I reiterate what the narrator has said... please approach us with empathy. We don't want to be this way and most of us are doing real work to do and be better. 💛
@badcaseofstripes Жыл бұрын
Very hopeful that CPTSD will soon become an official diagnosis in the DSM-6
@ximar0ckstrx Жыл бұрын
@magnispora exactly. My official diagnosis is PTSD. but my psychologist and therapist refer to it as c-PTSD when they speak to me because it's as you described, a constant and prolonged exposure to traumatic events and abuse. Borderline is also caused by prolonged and persistent trauma. Borderline isn't a condition that one is born with. I do hope it does get reclassified. Borderline comes with so many negative stigmas that are almost impossible to shake.
@TuneSquad296 Жыл бұрын
Not to be disrespectful, but how you do live with all those conditions? does it hinder your life incredibly?
@SuperDuperSeb9 ай бұрын
Nobody cares btw
@Aubrey2004-j4k2 ай бұрын
I care @@SuperDuperSeb
@ecosmos99 ай бұрын
schizophrenia is truly the worst. my grandma had schizophrenia, and leading up to her eventual su**ide, she was really losing herself. before the episode that led to us losing her, she was kind and gentle. she was almost like a parent to me, but that quickly changed when her symptoms began to worsen. we would have to be near silent in the house (she lived below us) because she would get extremely angry and yell if it was too loud. she became more short-tempered and in the last week of her life, she had a fit where she was trying to hurt herself and other members of my family out of paranoia and distrust. my mom called mental health people but they said they couldnt do anything about it because she hadnt actually hurt anyone. the next week she died. her aunt actually had schizophrenia as well and spent her entire life in a psychiatric hospital, so we never met her. that’s my story with schizophrenia. truly one of the most heartbreaking illnesses out there.
@SuperDuperSeb9 ай бұрын
Lmaooo
@ecosmos99 ай бұрын
@@SuperDuperSeb what about this is funny?? ☠️
@BulletproofKuloodporny8 ай бұрын
Bro, this is not funny. @@SuperDuperSeb
@altokato11113 ай бұрын
@@SuperDuperSeb I usually don't comment in KZbin videos but I have had to think about how asshole you and your comment is. I wish someday you understand how serious and painful can schizophrenia be, instead of taunting people who suffered from it.
@scenecorefairy2 ай бұрын
I dont have schizophrenia but I do suffer from .. hallucinations? paranoia? psychosis? not sure what to call it but the worst examples I have of these are when the image of a man suddenly flashed into my head and I was convinced someone called the bruiser was going to come beat me up (I had never heard the name before, still haven’t, never seen the man before), heard breathing and immediately panicked and had to grip my hair and cry because I was terrified, seen bugs in the corner of my eyes, felt like my thighs should be split open (still do..) if this is anything near what schizophrenic people feel like I can assure you this is actually terrifying, I can’t enjoy anything I used to (horror, mainly analog horror) and I’m scared to do anything at night and I feel like I’m insane because it’s not schizophrenia but I don’t know what it is so I feel isolated and sensitive
@periwinklesky777 Жыл бұрын
i have what people call “quiet bpd”, but i’m lucky enough to have been diagnosed and get treatment early in life. i’ve been in treatment for about 9 years, and i deal with it pretty well for someone my age, but it makes relationships and daily life so hard. i often describe BPD as being a “broken mirror”- most people have a mental ‘mirror’ of their sense of self. it might have a few cracks, but they can see their whole self, undistorted, with cohesive values, likes/dislikes, patterns of speech and movement, etc… while i have a mirror shattered into many pieces. each piece shows some part of me, but they are all vastly different and from different “angles”. each shard has a completely different set of core beliefs and values. for someone with a healthy-ish brain, no matter what emotion they feel, they can look in their “mirror” and see the same person. but when i feel any emotion, i can only look at one of those fragments. i forget all the others. this is why i act like a “completely different person” in day to day life, depending on my mood. i can go from acting childish and giddy, making everyone laugh, having positive values, and believing that i’m socially adept and well-liked- and then 30 minutes later, i might not talk to anyone, speak more coldly, believe that the world is a dangerous place, and want to be left alone. it all depends on which part of the broken mirror i’m looking into. i think that, for me, this is a rather good explanation of what some parts of BPD are like. of course everyone has different experiences with this hellish disorder. i’m learning to accept that i have a more variable sense of self than most people, and trying to work on improving all of my separate “selves” rather than chasing the futile pursuit of a singular sense of identity. if you read all this you’re very kind and thank you for taking time to understand some of my experience. you are loved and needed on this earth and i’m glad you’re here
@LvcifersBaby9 ай бұрын
This is so well-said
@6a75766 ай бұрын
this was an amazing metaphor for it :) thank you, this is really nice to hear someone shares similar experiences to me-- considering it's really hard to find anyone who doesn't demonize bpd
@ChristianClown4 ай бұрын
Thanks. This is so well said. I suffer from this disorder too. What you described is very familiar to me. I hope you are good.
@notenoughyettoomuch4 ай бұрын
I've been given the diagnosis of BPD after spending the last 13 years of mental health issues. I would really like to know what type of treatments you've found helpful as I feel like have come to a dead end road for help.
@periwinklesky7774 ай бұрын
@@notenoughyettoomuch i’ve been in treatment for about 10 years- i use a combination of talk therapy, DBT skills, trauma therapies, and time. it is an incredibly difficult diagnosis, and i’m sorry you have to struggle with it too. it requires a lot of effort and patience, but getting better and managing it is possible. i have only recently noticed improvements after 10 years of working on it- don’t give up!
@ryantron9 Жыл бұрын
I have borderline and you hit the nail on the head. The emotions are beyond controllable, it’s like having emotions guide you. Very often I have clung to 4 or 5 separate personality aspects that are different from each other. It allows the brain and emotions to calm down, to put everything on survival autopilot.
@sims2sirius536 Жыл бұрын
Autism could be at every level of the iceberg. It’s like “I can’t look you in the eyes but otherwise I am a totally typical person” to none verbal violent behavior and such
@actuallyapomergranate Жыл бұрын
but it's not a mental illness so it should be on here at all
@sims2sirius536 Жыл бұрын
@@actuallyapomergranate I didn’t even think about that but you are totally correct. Well maybe it “qualifies” as a mental illness the way tomatoes qualify as a fruit. Sure it’s a fruit but you don’t put it in fruit salad. It’s like ASD maybe be classified as a mental illness but you’d never treat it or diagnose it as such
@SuperShortyuussn10 ай бұрын
@@actuallyapomergranate🤓👆
@ElChipsFiestaBuffet9 ай бұрын
@@SuperShortyuussn he is right though
@SuperShortyuussn9 ай бұрын
@@ElChipsFiestaBuffet I'm but he acts like it's ice burg breaking, he used the term loosely so what? I have autism and I don't see the big deal.
@vanhornish Жыл бұрын
I suffer from a few things on here, but I wanna talk about how great it was to see Cotard’s, Fregoli, and Capgras Syndrome on here. Its really cool to see them represented and spoken about more often.
@vanhornish Жыл бұрын
@i-love-cats75 thank you i-love-cats75 for this transformative response
@Soonray09 Жыл бұрын
your choice to mention those three makes me suspect you might be referencing something
@vanhornish Жыл бұрын
@@Soonray09 HOLY SHIT YOURE RIGHT.
@vanhornish Жыл бұрын
@@Soonray09 the way i was not referencing maybe i just am will wood in a maxvanhorn disguise
@gato_uisce Жыл бұрын
hiii, trumans/cotards sufferer here too. big agree. the list kinda pissed me off a bit, since ranking these things feels uncool, but it was cool to get a shoutout for once. immediate edit: snook themselves was very respectful, so big ups to snook if youre reading this. the thing that bothered me was ranking stuff like anorexia and BPD to *wojaks* in tiers, but thats just me obvs. thank you to the creator of this vid for being cool.
@ayaa__h Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate u just explaining rather than trying to make it all sound scary for making it more “interesting”
@heatherfrank7433 Жыл бұрын
When I was younger, I somewhat struggled with Truman syndrome for years after seeing the movie. I didn’t think I was on a TV show, but I thought there were hidden cameras everywhere. For context, I was also religious at that time so I thought God was watching my every move and monitoring my thoughts. Obviously religion wasn’t for me and my silly brain. With most people it gives them comfort, but for me it just caused me constant paranoia and guilt. Along with leaving religion, I also grew out of the Truman delusions. Funny enough, I’m holding a device that has a camera facing me at this very moment, apps are constantly tracking our data, and pretty much every public space has cameras. However, it doesn’t bother me like it would have when I was younger.
@wolfetteplays8894 Жыл бұрын
That's called desensitization. It's also about consent.
@mariki06 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn't say you were suffering from Truman syndrome, what you described is acute paranoia.
@heatherfrank7433 Жыл бұрын
@@mariki06 I agree. I related it because it was triggered by the movie it’s named after. Either way it was not a fun time 😅
@sirengoddess56449 ай бұрын
Same!!! Except for me, this was around the ages of 6-10 years old and it happened in the 80’s well before the Truman show ever existed and before I was aware of reality shows. It eventually just faded out but to this day I absolutely maintain the delusion that pictures can see me and are aware of everything I’m doing. I don’t have any pictures on display, I’m uncomfortable and self conscious around posters of people or books/movie cases where people are looking at me. I can’t even engage in sexual activity in front of pictures of people who are looking at the camera because I feel like they’re watching me and completely aware of my activities.
@perdelkin Жыл бұрын
I have a feeling that this video is AI generated
@MrM0gus Жыл бұрын
He speaks like chatgpt
@dyzphoriia10 ай бұрын
it definitely is
@gummybeararmstronglol2 ай бұрын
fr the descriptions r literally pulled off google
@Mysticz4013 Жыл бұрын
My favorite youtuber uploaded let's goo🎉
@nega445 Жыл бұрын
I have Tourette’s and yes it’s annoying at times, but it’s really nice to know that I shouldn’t feel weird or bad about something I can’t control
@goldenfreddy647 ай бұрын
you should feel bad about your racist name and pfp though.
@AUTTP-DRAKE6 ай бұрын
@@goldenfreddy64 nuh uh💀
@josephfong2003 Жыл бұрын
As someone with Autism, ADHD, OCD, Social Anxiety, and Major depression disorder(now it’s way better then last time thankfully) I’m really thankful that you’re covering a sensitive using it as a form of an iceberg and it has brought me a lot of information of many mental health conditions that I might have not heard before despite being chronically online searching mental health related topics, you have definitely earned a new subscriber ❤
@vertigooey Жыл бұрын
ayo same illnesses club gang gang lol
@josephfong2003 Жыл бұрын
@@vertigooey 💯
@malia-3-340 Жыл бұрын
Wait... Autism is a mental illness? I thought it was a mental and physical disability?
@tapwaterr2165 Жыл бұрын
Bros got every negative status effect (you’re loved and I’m proud of you getting this far in life
@josephfong2003 Жыл бұрын
@@tapwaterr2165 aww thanks bro I appreciate it! ❤️
@lovevenussАй бұрын
I'm someone who has a list of issues that make life hell, many being mental. It's kind of nice to see some here and hearing you talk about them. So many people make them sound like it's the patients fault or we're monsters because we struggle. I can't describe how thankful I am to hear you talk with such empathy and accurate information!
@Syuurp Жыл бұрын
Went through my whole life dealing with GAD, it’s a struggle to live with but I managed. It was after I lost my dad and got nuked financially when I developed a panic disorder. I was having panic attacks a few times a month atleast. It used to frustrate me why society doesn’t talk about panic attacks much and tries to forget they exist. But after my experience with them I get why, but It would be nice to have more folk who understand and are comfortable talking about it. Been taking 50mg sertraline for almost a year now, haven’t had an attack since and I can think clearly again. In a much better place mentally and financially so im thinking about weaning off the Zoloft so I can move on with my life. But it’s good to know that it’s there if my brain decides it wants to torture itself again.
@talentosa57 Жыл бұрын
41:09 I'm genuinely convinced my ex gf has undiagnosed Histrionic personality disorder. The amount of heinous and horrible things she would lie about just for attention was sickening. Things like being SA'd multiple times, having miscarriages, being a survivor of CSA, lies about having a child, lies about having an abusive ex husband that was also a predator, making fake accounts for family she literally doesn't have, stolen valor, faked suicides, and lies about people threatening a child she didn't have, lies about having cancer, the list truly goes on and on. and then also just the mental abuse she put me through...it just makes me sick. Hopefully she's in a better mental state and has found some help because I would truly hate to go through life exasperating the most traumatic events knowing their untrue just for attention.
@nebe4345 Жыл бұрын
Hope you’re doing well now
@cattymajiv Жыл бұрын
I hope like hell he has stayed as far away from her as he can get! She sounds like a monster! A total twin of Amber Heard.
@bobjary938211 ай бұрын
More like being a total fucking monster disorder. I hope you are alive and well ?
@YurikoKataoka2 ай бұрын
You can't just label someone
@talentosa572 ай бұрын
@@YurikoKataoka I'm not labelling someone I said I'm convinced she has it, that doesn't mean it's confirmed that she has it. But after speaking to a mental health professional, my ex definitely has some type of personality disorder. "Normal" people don't lie about the stuff she lied about. Until you've lived that nightmare, don't tell me I'm falsely labeling someone.
@Acro_YT Жыл бұрын
Bro’s rising the ranks of becoming my favorite iceberg creator
@Snook_YT Жыл бұрын
That means a lot, thank you ❤️. But who I gotta beat out to be #1…
@Acro_YT Жыл бұрын
@@Snook_YT You gotta beat out the man, the legend, Wendigoon
@Snook_YT Жыл бұрын
@@Acro_YT gonna be tough, but I’m coming for Wendi 😈
@williamrogers2168 Жыл бұрын
@@Snook_YTdon't let him forget dantavius. 🤦♀️
@echoseven0568 Жыл бұрын
@@williamrogers2168or dontlookatme
@3TMANEISGUTS Жыл бұрын
As someone who's suffering of a bunch of mental health problems i appreciate you doing not to only entertain but educate people about this stuff
@owenklein19172 ай бұрын
I’m gonna be honest, I don’t want my autism cured. Autism is the reason I have obsessions with certain topics and those topics I became obsessed with led me to meeting so many amazing people and having great memories. One of the topics (aviation) also are leading me to a good paying career. Autism is a 8/10 for me
@xato3796 Жыл бұрын
You kept saying “autophilia” during the autophagia section and I just want to point out how VERY different those two are. -phagia means to eat -philia is to “love” if you get my drift. Now if someone was an autophigiaphile… that would be interesting…🤔
@ChickadeeBoi7 ай бұрын
Autophigiaphile.... is that like when one person is both feeder and feedee? 😅 Not gunna lie the word does sound like it be the niche-est of niche "tastes" (pun intended lol).
@Tarnished-bn5gq Жыл бұрын
The worst thing about schizophrenia is that it’s getting more and more common each day.
@vZanimCC Жыл бұрын
mb
@rockhound3.14 Жыл бұрын
"more and more common each day" . Notice the quotation marks 😂. Schizophrenia can be applied to any and all bodies . Psychology is a pseudo science.. who can determine normal. Only God.
@griftersbones Жыл бұрын
Hate to be that guy but this isn't *entirely* correct. We have better knowledge on what it looks like so more people are getting diagnosed. And we're also keeping a better census on it!
@griftersbones Жыл бұрын
However illnesses and disorders on censuses aren't usually accurate (in the USA) because it requires money to get diagnosed, and the poor are usually the most affected by these things
@TheTiredPirate Жыл бұрын
@@griftersbonesthe poor are usually on state insurance that covers almost everything without a copay
@louiseogden1296 Жыл бұрын
I'm autistic and have issues with depression and you handled them both really well, particularly where you stress the disorder in ASD. I'd also mention that autistic individuals have physiological issues like joint and balance problems. It's a neurological as well as mental disorder, so the whole body is affected in a way that often feels a bit strange.
@JimTheCurator Жыл бұрын
There's a physical component to it that isn't well understood yet. Autism also affects muscle mass and even blood circulation, for instance. There seems to be some connection with the gut microbiome too, autistic people tend to have more stomach and digestive issues in general and there's scientific evidence that healing one's gut microbiome like with probiotics and prebiotics can lessen autism symptoms. (And that's actual hard science, not just some outdated pseudoscientific garbage sponsored by Autism Speaks or whatever.) There's some speculation that it may be an autoimmune disease, as there are some autoimmune illnesses that have neurological symptoms comparable to autism (namely autoimmune encephalitis).
@bored99able Жыл бұрын
Many Autistic(me included) have what is called hypermobility which causes the joints to have better flexibility and has access to bigger movements. Though this also causes various problems like: pain, weaker muscles, weaker joints, muscle tissue not connecting properly with joints. It also increases chances for arthritis, dislocations and certain autoimmune disorders such as rheuma.
@louiseogden1296 Жыл бұрын
@@bored99able Absolutely :).
@ffc1a28c7 Жыл бұрын
imo, he did not at all. The fact that he used Autism speaks as a source is really fucking telling.
@bored99able Жыл бұрын
@@ffc1a28c7 Ye when I saw that he used Autism speaks I knew that he did not do a lot of research into any more than what is on a medical document and the first or second site that popped up about it
@dueler8281 Жыл бұрын
I was diagnosed with Persistent Depressive Disorder and Generalized anxiety disorder. I’d tell my Psychiatrist over and over that my anxiety isn’t just general worries. But it’s about people, it’s social settings and the way I feel toward my personality like I just feel so reserved and not able to be myself. A lot of the time I never really know what to say to people I’m always at a loss for words so I just stay silent all day while at work or in places I don’t feel comfortable. I find it easier to be mute. I smoke a lot of weed, 50+ hits off my vape everyday easy and I’m high all day. It probably isn’t good to do that and I just notice myself feeling more depressed. Despite in this last year I’ve done more for myself career wise and I’ve done a lot of fun things this year. I just feel like I live on the outside it never feels like I can enjoy anything anymore.
@Tirumsa Жыл бұрын
I think people should know that this video isn't for self diagnosis, as having signs doesn't immediately mean you might have a certain mental illness. Though, once diagnosed by a professional that's when you can be worried. It is nice to have videos like this that spread awareness and knowledge on things many just make so many assumptions or guesses on.
@youdontknowme4576 Жыл бұрын
i don't see anyone engaging in self diagnosis you are worried for no reason
@TheActualHelloKitty Жыл бұрын
@@youdontknowme4576self diagnosis can be both bad and good. someone could possibly think they have something and convince themself then tell their doctors and get put on the wrong meds but it can also go the wrong way.
@amycores Жыл бұрын
@@TheActualHelloKitty a good doctor wouldnt do that like come on man. tell me a case of misdiagnosed prescription of wrong meds to a self diagnosed patient
@furriesinouterspaceUnited10 ай бұрын
Yeah not mentioning that a lot of these are just flat out stupid and don't exist like Transvex is the stupidest bullshit ive ever heard no one is dressing like the opposite gender thats some bullshit sexist bullshit. Im tried of this bullshit that ive said bullshit 10 times now. Clothes are fucking clothes god damn 99.99% of people are just trying to live their lives happily without some stupid ass shit denying them that they even exist
@vanhornish Жыл бұрын
I do wanna say the puzzle piece is NOT a good symbol to use! It insinuates there is a piece of us missing, which is not the case. A better symbol to use is a rainbow infinity symbol, or infinity symbol in general. Everyone, please do not get your information from Autism Speaks, they are an awful organization focused on belittling and infantilizing those with autism. Stay safe everybody!
@Snook_YT Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the information! I had no clue but now I know, thanks for letting me know.
@BigDickDavey Жыл бұрын
@@phoxxy2516 god i remember this, i hate them so much, i dont know how they are still running
@tylerbozinovski427 Жыл бұрын
I don't want to be represented by a "rainbow infinity symbol". In fact, I don't want to be represented by anything at all. I want to cure myself of this disgusting disease that some people are deluded enough to think is some sort of superpower.
@tylerbozinovski427 Жыл бұрын
@@phoxxy2516I could imagine myself wanting to do the same thing if I had a difficult child with ASD, even though I have it myself.
@kkthatprofessional30934 ай бұрын
Cry
@adamjacobrogers9155 Жыл бұрын
From an experienced perspective on PTSD, the danger lies in that a person is literally reliving the trauma.. like, you go so far into your head/memory that the external world fades into the background and during this episode there is not really a way to gauge what a person will act out due to their disassociated state. Could harm self or others.. or nothing.. but how would anyone know? 🤷
@valkoroska2369 Жыл бұрын
its fun when youre not even sure where you got the ptsd from
@badcaseofstripes Жыл бұрын
I certainly relive the trauma every flashback episode I have, but my natural response to the abuse was always freezing and dissociating, so that's what happens to me now. I just space out, so from the outside, nothing. But in reality it's extremely difficult to deal with.
@GoofyPeachy67 Жыл бұрын
I'm actually happy to see D.I.D on here, since my lover actually suffers from it, and I'm so sad that its very misunderstood, I'm glad to see it was highlighted here!
@BigDickDavey Жыл бұрын
As a system, people like you seriously make me feel so relieved that not all systems are in a bad spot always via relationships romantic or not. I hope you and your partner/partners are doing well 🙏
@mariki06 Жыл бұрын
@@BigDickDavey I never understood this. what is a 'system'??
@BigDickDavey Жыл бұрын
@@mariki06 A system is the entirety of the alters of someone who has DID, basically they refer to themselves as a system when they are referring to themselves as a whole. Alters are the fragments/people in said system. They can all be extremely different, their genders, species, ages, etc and can even have different disorders themselves. One of the alters in our system for example shows heavy symptoms of PTSD while the others do not show it much or at all. We are diagnosed with DID as well as many other things, so we have figured out a lot over time. Examples of differences is that one of our alters is a cyborg, another is a normal human, one is quite literally a half dragon. DID is caused by very traumatic events normally. Many people think it's not very common, but it actually is quite common, most systems are too afraid to tell most people because it is seen as someone being "crazy" or heavily seen as a bad thing, when really it is just a way of the body protecting itself and most systems want nothing more than to feel safe and live life normally and comfortably.
@mariki06 Жыл бұрын
@@BigDickDavey Well I'm no professional, but comparative to other disorders, it is rare. The influx of it being common nature is because of proxy Munchhausen syndrome. TikTok and Tumblr are the harbingers of disorder fakers. it's a shame. The word is thrown around to a point where it's meaning is non-apparant.
@nebe4345 Жыл бұрын
@@BigDickDaveyhi if you don’t mind me asking, i never understood the pronouns we are supposed to use. Do we address you as a group or do we address the gender the body is?
@ecisk0562 Жыл бұрын
depression's description hit home so much and it was spot on. i've been dealing with depression and s... thoughts for over 5 years now. your description made me feel seen, i often times struggle with my diagnosis and i think that i am entitled/spoiled to be depressed as some people have it worse than me (that's what i think at least, my psychiatrist disagrees with me but anyhow...) it made me feel a bit better to be honest, so thank you @Snook
@c0sm1c-d0ll Жыл бұрын
hi friend, as someone who struggles with very similar thoughts i wanted to share the reassurance i have been given: having depression is not entitled or spoiled. depressed people don't choose to be depressed; if it was a choice nobody would have it. and it really doesn't matter who has it worse, at the end of the day everybody deserves to heal, to feel good about themselves and their lives. you deserve happiness. may you find it again soon. ❤
@ecisk0562 Жыл бұрын
@@c0sm1c-d0ll oh this was great 🥲thank you so much. i also wish you to be healed and to be happy my friend
@marmobeats7805 Жыл бұрын
As someone who suffers from bipolar type 1 disorder, anxiety, adhd, depression, and drug induced psychosis, this is spot on, im much happier in life right now at 22 years old but dealing with all this made me view the world in a different outlook, it ruined my last relationship because me and my ex had similar things as she had agoraphobia and major anxiety with depression. Still getting over the heartbreak but I’m gonna be strong
@laurakate6573 Жыл бұрын
As someone who works in the mental health field I really enjoyed your video, I thought it was really well researched and handled with sensitivity but I think you should have laid out the tiers by most common to least common or by type of disorder (personality disorders, sleep disorders etc) as I don't think it's fair to say that one illness is "more serious" then another. Some of the really rare illnesses are very misunderstood and I think to order them by "seriousness" adds to the negative stigma. However I really like that you covered a wide range of illnesses it really raises awareness of these conditions ❤
@Icegrip12 Жыл бұрын
You might enjoy some of Tales from the trips content.
@capriccio5718 Жыл бұрын
The worst mental illness is the one you're suffering from.
@katherinecolglazier2909 Жыл бұрын
So as a Narcleptic, its not a mental illness but it can cause mental health issues due to being chronically fatigue other then that, good job, narclpesy is really hard to find information about. Also while they do not know what causes the loss of hypocretian cells, they are located in the hypothalamus and are inchrge of both wakefulness and appetite. It is theorized that it is linked to genetics and autoamunity
@WhizPill Жыл бұрын
This is a nice twist on the Iceberg format, thanks for educating people on these topics, it's needed
@ShePassedAway10 ай бұрын
I remember the very first time I encountered anorexia (mind you I’d never heard of it until years later) I was in a psychiatric hospital and one day I got a new roommate. She was a super skinny asian girl. She didn’t know much English so communication was hard. She was a really pretty girl, very quiet and timid. Every time we’re in the room for quiet time (doors cannot be closed all the way) She randomly cracks it as far as allowed and she’d basically hide behind the door where staff can’t see her. She just jogged in place for the longest time every day. To my uninformed mind it was quite bizarre. I eventually discovered anorexia and it all finally made sense. Knowing that anorexia is the most lethal mental illness I always wondered if she had ever recovered or if she is alive. I still think about her to this day
@somewhat-blue3 ай бұрын
The thing so many people don’t understand about Tourettes is that “involuntary” isn’t quite the right word for a tic (or at least, doesn’t clarify the difference between a tic and a tremor). The word “unvoluntary” or “semi-voluntary” is sometimes used instead, because although we don’t WANT to do it and it can become automatic, it’s technically a conscious action that we make. We do it because of a really uncomfortable sensory experience called a premonitory urge. It’s like a building pressure, itch, or pain that only goes away when you do the tic. Even sitting here writing this, I’m getting a building sense of itchy pressure in my sinuses that won’t go away until I do this … almost a reverse snort, that’s quite loud but does briefly give me relief. Having Tourettes and not ticcing feels like a constant internal rash you can’t scratch - it’s the most painful, frustrating part of the disorder by far, and because it’s invisible it’s so rarely talked about.
@celest7548 Жыл бұрын
Just a quick message to tell you that I am glad I have found your channel, I am watching all your videos and I am now into the philosophy icerberg, it contains a lot of hard to grasp notions so I prefer to watch it in few days, 20 minutes by 20 minutes. Thank you for the work you do. An iceberg of moral/cultural taboos around the world would be pretty interesting to watch.
@Chris-ki6ui Жыл бұрын
I had nightmare disorder for several years as a child. I can still recall the sequence in meticulous detail. A silver toyota, looked like a 2010 Yaris but definitely couldn't have been, though it was based on a specific model that the kindergarten employee owned. It was violently pursuing me in an accurately depicted rendition of the road that passed by my home, when we reached the kindergarten where I went at that age, I turned around and it caught on and did so as well. Thinking I had distracted it by having to turn around I jumped into the ditch and watched as it drove nearer when I noticed it had no driver and the dream ended. Needless to say when my grandfather got a silver toyota I was stupefied. It wasn't traumatizing, it was just perplexing. I had another sequence which was much more traumatizing and I still can remember it if I think but I don't want to. That shit was awful.
@dmreddragon6 Жыл бұрын
I had a reoccurring nightmare involving a car as well. Mine lasted into my early 30's, but towards the end I only had it once or twice a year. I came to believe that it was a past life ending. Still very nervous to be on a steep road, where I can't see beyond the top of the incline.
@sirengoddess56449 ай бұрын
I still have this. But it’s not debilitating in any way for me, being that I’m a horror fan as is, I find it kinda exciting and I actually look forward to them.
@sagew1312 Жыл бұрын
Love you all. Whatever you're going through, it'll pass.
@notaberserkfan5995 Жыл бұрын
I'm one of the few with hppd. And sadly it recently got worse so it probably won't go away anytime soon
@notaberserkfan5995 Жыл бұрын
@Alkalez0 I know it gets easier, it just doesn't always become "easy"
@BathingInAcheron Жыл бұрын
I know you mean well, but this is a false statement. For many ppl, things sadly either only stay the same or only get significantly worse. This is because countless ppl with mental illness live in environments where the ppl around them are apathetic to them or actively abuse them. This is why the suicide rate among the mentally ill are so astronomically high. This is why ppl with mental illness are more likely to be killed for being mentally ill. Things don't get better for everyone, that's why this world needs to starting making an actual effort into making things better for the mentally ill.
@mehaplebypotatocalledtaqwa4773 Жыл бұрын
since the last two-fifths are not timestamped, here are they: Tier 3 59:37 Parental Alienation 1:01:50 Dependent Personality Disorder 1:03:00 Bulimia 1:05:02 Bipolar Disorder 1:06:56 Kleptomania 1:08:10 HPPD 1:09:53 Tourette Syndrome Tier 4 1:11:37 Diogenes Syndrome 1:13:24 Fregoli Syndrome 1:15:11 Capgras Syndrome 1:16:36 Boanthropy 1:18:19 Narcolepsia Tier 5 1:20:13 Shared Psychotic Disorder 1:21:47 Truman Syndrome 1:23:26 Clinical Lycanthropy 1:24:54 Alien Hand Syndrome 1:26:21 Hysterical Blindness Tier 6 1:28:01 Klüver-Bucy Syndrome 1:29:48 Apotemnophilia 1:31:43 Cotard Syndrome Tier 7 1:33:30 Pyrophilia 1:34:33 Autophagia 1:36:23 Folie En Famille 1:36:48 Outro
@samuelabela7685 Жыл бұрын
i kind of dislike that these illnesses are ranked here in levels. Both adhd and autism can get so severe that it becomes a living nightmare. Same goes for depression, anorexia, ptsd and GAD. I have GAD and my symptoms can get bad enough to warrant a paranoid schizophrenia diagnosis. EDIT: I am also diagnosed with STPD. Which is also a serious thing which can occur at an early age, and leads to poor adult life. I remember becoming a persistent stalker of one person which i had delusions and "magical thinking" about. Things just got worse from there.
@hec547 Жыл бұрын
Isn’t it just based on peoples general knowledge of topics not some hierarchy of what’s the worse Illness
@TheGlenn8 Жыл бұрын
@@hec547 Lol no. The guys specifically says that this gets worse across the tiers. This videos is very problematic.
@sirengoddess56449 ай бұрын
I agree… as bipolar showed up on a lower tier as compared to ASPD and Narcissistic Personality Disorder. Even Borderline Personality Disorder has been known as more difficult to treat than bipolar disorder.
@lekoopa32199 ай бұрын
Depression should be way lower on the list…I speak in experience…
@marvindiagne237 Жыл бұрын
as someone who has had a drug induced psychosis i can relate to almost all of these conditions as they can manifest for a few moments or days, from the alien hand to hysterical blindness, truman syndrom, hppd and so on. its really important that if a doctor sees that a patient is psychotic they do not make a diagnose until into the recovery of the psychosis as this could easily lead to false diagnosis like bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and so on
@sonjasun6227 Жыл бұрын
yup. been there. disastrous consequences.
@Rowelasparklesofficial7 Жыл бұрын
Watched this happen and im still scarred. I can’t imagine going through it
@robinackermann77118 ай бұрын
I had what i believe drug induced psychosis and i can say it was horrid as well as the depress ion that followed
@attakrel0ad Жыл бұрын
a reminder for everyone and for people who may not know cos some of the wrong images were used during that section, autism is a spectrum and shouldn't be viewed as having different "levels" of it. autistic people range from only a few issues like a lack of or a poor understanding of social skills that will affect the person's life to it being as severe as needing help to do basic activities. all people with autism are different and affected differently by it in different ways. and the puzzle piece isn't the best to use for representation and awareness. it can be interpreted as saying that autistic people "have something missing" and it's commonly associated with autism speaks (which I won't get into here, look them up if you'd like details and you're wondering about it), use a rainbow infinity symbol to represent the spectrum 🌈🫶 ps: I'm trying to be respectful here, so no hate to this video/channel for using puzzle pieces and things in their video, I know some people are unaware of things like this and I know most autistic people (myself included) are not, like, genuinely deeply offended by things like that and most ppl just try to spread awareness the best they can. this video is a good one though! I love icebergs so of course I wanna see all kinds of them 🙏
@catlovingnerd21 Жыл бұрын
as a fellow autist, i think you worded this beautifully and respectfully :) thank you for this comment!
@alexisb3829 Жыл бұрын
I had no idea. Thanks for the info!
@popcornism Жыл бұрын
My thoughts exactly, thank you. I hope he addresses this issue instead of completely ignoring it.
@flintfrommother3gaming Жыл бұрын
It's a disorder.
@XxIfOnlySophiexX2 ай бұрын
I hate having OCD. It makes me worry about things I don't need to, and I end up to tired to worry about the things I do need to worry about.
@MenaceASL2 күн бұрын
As a person with a few (a lot) of mental illness (all diagnosed) this helps a lot understanding which symptoms/actions is caused by what. My psychologist just diagnose something without explanations so I’m usually quite lost unless for the most basic ones (such as depression and anxiety…) I’ve actually put this video as background noise for sleeping as I thought you had a calming voice but these explanations are really useful and interesting so I had to rewatch it today to be really aware of what you were saying. and here I am again using it for background noises…thank you for this video!
@dalbyspook Жыл бұрын
Ive had social anxiety (and anxiety in general) since i was extremely young. i usually isolate myself in my room during family gatherings, and when i am out. what helps (for me) is wearing headphones (preferably with loud music on) and my meds :) Im working on being more social, and not isolating myself as much :DD!!
@peterappelflap4022 Жыл бұрын
As someone with schizoid personality disorder I have to thank you for skipping over it, we dont like attention but maybe it would be nice to be understood
@matthewbolivar9865 Жыл бұрын
Sorry but this made me laugh so hard lmao
@koiko.k4801 Жыл бұрын
@@matthewbolivar9865literally what is funny 💀
@m0usai Жыл бұрын
@@matthewbolivar9865you’re mentally ill
@metaphysicalparadox Жыл бұрын
Cornball
@metaphysicalparadox Жыл бұрын
@matthewbolivar9865 literally bro like wtf is "we acshually don't like the attention 🤓☝️"
@xoradmagical Жыл бұрын
Hey, the first drawing used for the schizophrenia segment is my drawing! Thanks for using it :)
@cringelord4208 Жыл бұрын
ok well im not done watching this video but i really felt like i had to comment on it. I actually was going to quietly drunk hatewatch bc i have npd+aspd which is demonized to hell everywhere and i was expecting this video to do the same (especially considering the memey format) but your summarizing of both was actually pretty considerate and im genuinely surprised. idrk what to say now i had to pause for a sec bc thats so unusual. i guess thank you for talking about people like me as humans despite the symptoms that really can be harmful to others instead of hollywood movie villains and all that stuff. its true that both of em make you do unsavory shit sometimes and ive absolutely been way more hostile to people than i should in a bunch of situations but most of the time they really beat you up internally a lot more than anyone would expect. really made my shitty friday a little better. genuinely thanks a lot
@nyraeАй бұрын
16 years old,diagnosed with OCD,BPD,social anxiety and major depression. I was late for my medication and life was hell for 3 years. People underestimate these circumstances and don't know what it's like to be unable to identify yourself,struggle going through relationships ending with a fight because of you,suddenly feeling hateful for your loved ones, struggle communicating with people irl,always feel foggy and fatigued and always fighting with your own thoughts,wanting them to end. Wanting to end it all by suicide. If you feel like something is wrong,get your treatment before its too late or life will always be hell for you.
@taengkwachu Жыл бұрын
as someone who’s suffering from OCD, thank you for spreading this. this is a very educational video and it described the disorder very well
@KatietheKreator Жыл бұрын
Also some people can have a few symptoms of a disorder without actually having it. For instance I have obsessions/intrusive thoughts from time to time (I find it very hard to stop thinking about disturbing things) but I don't have OCD as far as I know.
@sirengoddess56449 ай бұрын
Agreed! It’s referred to as “tendencies”. I also have intrusive thoughts (I can’t grip a lighter in my pocket without my mind telling me to flick that box in my pocket 🤦🏻♀️) but I’ve been diagnosed as having ASPD tendencies, so I’m not a sociopath, but I do have some symptoms.
@bluenothing_666 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for describing ASD the way you did! Many people describe it so dehumanizing and stereotypical, but your description was really good. I just want to add, that it's nothing that has to be cured. Autistics face some additional challenges, and can - like every person - struggle or do fairly well. Many Autistics are only diagnosed late in life. It's more a matter of how most people treat us that makes our life hard (plus of course sensory issues etc.)
@sixionzear6329 Жыл бұрын
I had avoided the video because I knew personality disorders would be mentioned. I was glad to see he covered them so well. As someone with ODD and then diagnosed with ASPD it’s nice to see people speak about it more neutrally or even kindly. Growing up I was told I belong in a concentration camp or should be dragged behind a truck. And that was just because of rumors I had ASPD because I didn’t have many friends, stole candy, ran away from home (cus my mom was abusive), and had self harm problems. People are so scared of the simple thought of personality disorders they’ll mistreat people who are simply showing signs of SOMETHING wrong. And it’s in my opinion what leads to many of us going into more outright malicious behavior.
@sniedendepoes Жыл бұрын
Are you reading off of Wikipedia??
@phoenixshoma7 ай бұрын
Nah I thought the same thing and looked up the Wikipedia for a couple he is definitely summarising from Wikipedia though
@innerstrengthcheck Жыл бұрын
Mental health social worker who works in outpatient psychiatry. I myself have ADHD, ASD, MDD and GAD. This was really respectfully delivered. Well done.
@SuperDuperSeb9 ай бұрын
Have you heard of “KYS”? Look it up.
@twideslauriers7875 Жыл бұрын
Hey, Not a bad overview! I have a few notes on some things tho. Autism isn’t a mental illness, as many people have pointed out in the comments. Most autistics will also get pretty anxious about “cure” talk, because we don’t want a cure, there is probably never going to be one, and promoting the narrative that it can ever be cured is eugenicist. I don’t think you meant to imply that obviously, but I wanted to mention it. Theres a lot of discourse about the existence of ODD, as it is typically excessively diagnosed in children who better fit symptoms of other conditions, but for whatever reason the adults in their lives find them too difficult to deal with or allow stereotypes to influence their judgement. I know a couple of DID systems, and in the ones I know, the alters are all distinct people who have learned to coexist with each other. While many systems may be interested in reintegration with the host, many are completely fine existing separately and some may not even need treatment for DID specifically aside from therapy. They’re all super interesting and wonderful people, and the best thing you can do for DID systems in your life is to just… get to know them and be nice.
@tyrenprice8496 Жыл бұрын
Bro start putting time stamps
@w1bey Жыл бұрын
real timestamps (will do this when i watch the video so itll be edited a lot) TIER 1 autism 2:12 depression 4:20 anorexia 6:27 sleep paralysis 8:45 nightmare disorder 10:40 insomnia 11:54 specific phobias 13:23 ptsd 14:20 internet gaming disorder 16:35 substance use disorder 18:15 adhd 19:50 social anxiety 21:14 perfectionism 23:01 generalized anxiety disorder 24:24 dyslexia 25:50 body dysmorphia 27:07
@charlesno282 Жыл бұрын
Love watchin ur icebergs while workin, always got some great videos to binge.
@ethank48203 ай бұрын
I’m diagnosed with anxiety, depression, and adhd. I’m on meds now and they help, but the truth is that I’ll never truly feel ok. I’ll never feel at peace or at ease. It’s not easy to deal with and if you have any symptoms please go talk to a doctor and seek help, you deserve it. Nobody deserves to suffer like that it’s truly horrible
@vKross Жыл бұрын
My Boss who is also a good friend to me, sadly (but at the same time luckily and I am happy for him about it) doesn't understand how bad mental problems can affect a person, this has helped me a bit to explain it to him, thank you :)
@sam-fh2nf Жыл бұрын
just so you know, narcolepsy is not in fact a mental illness. it is a chronic neurological sleep disorder and this common misconception feels very ignorant, since narcolepsy is usually misdiagnosed as a mental illness (depression etc.)
@metaphysicalparadox Жыл бұрын
🤓☝️
@cattymajiv Жыл бұрын
I completely agree! This pyramid is garbage, and is completely garbled.
@Valdraya Жыл бұрын
they also missed transgender and everything is misspelled in the chapter titles. feels like this video was made by an AI
@SewMyHeartTogether11 ай бұрын
@@metaphysicalparadox "🤓☝" 🤓☝
@analerma3837 Жыл бұрын
You understand me and everyone else thank you very much ❤️
@kendeadrick Жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t wish anorexia on my worst enemy. It was one of the worst things I’ve ever struggled with and I’m still recovering from it. I was always too scared to reach out because I’m a guy who struggled with it. It’s been about a year, I’ve been going to the gym and I think I’m doing better. The body dysmorphia is still there, I still obsess over calories, but less so, I think.
@LucaHornsby Жыл бұрын
Congratulations man, it's ok to go from anorexic to a bit obsessive. It'd be insane if you just instantly stopped caring about your eating etc. You are doing well man, keep it up.
@SewMyHeartTogether11 ай бұрын
So glad you're doing better. Recovery isn't easy or linear, so don't beat yourself up over progress or plateaus. Please don't be afraid to reach out for help if you need it, though. Screw people who stigmatize men with eating disorders, screw anorexia and screw body dysmorphia. You're doing great, dude, keep it up (also ur art is sick!)
@kendeadrick11 ай бұрын
@@SewMyHeartTogether haha thank you so much man
@karma331529 ай бұрын
I have panic disorder, major depression, bipolar, adhd, and schizotypal. Thank you for making this so others can understand of how mental illness can effect people.
@SkyRunner212 ай бұрын
So I'm 26 and I have these: Depression, nightmare disorder, insomnia, narcolepsy, PTSD, substance use disorder, misanthropy, perfectionism disorder, personality disorder, borderline personality disorder, paranoia, oppositional defiant disorder, histrionic personality disorder, agoraphobia, antisocial personality disorder, bulimia, bipolar disorder, and suicidal thoughts and death wishes. And mind you I've had most of these for over 15 years... I guess I'm just done man. Hopefully I won't be here another year😔
@Chainsaw_gutz9 ай бұрын
0:02 kurt cobain XD
@Snook_YT9 ай бұрын
RIP Kurt
@Chainsaw_gutz9 ай бұрын
@@Snook_YT he will forever be missed
@iAmP0ssessedBySatan4 ай бұрын
For real🙁
@jasonbernard9012 Жыл бұрын
Hey Snook, just wanted to let you know that I’ve been watching your vids for a while now and I can truly notice an improvement in the quality of your content. I would still say this: there are parts where you definitely sound like you’re rushing what you’re saying (and heck, you’re saying a ton of info incredibly fast!) and all of us clicked on the vid cuz we like the material…don’t feel so rushed! Other than that, awesome material, I’m enjoying the evolution of this channel a lot
@Bigwillyice Жыл бұрын
I saw some of his videos a while back and didn’t realize it was the same person, he’s doing a good job
@jasonbernard9012 Жыл бұрын
@@Bigwillyice I completely agree! If growth is noticeable, then you’re doing a hell of a job
@macncheeks537211 ай бұрын
Just a tip, you should start re-recording your takes when you mess up. Almost every sentence has a word you stumble over or mispronounce, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but definitely take the time to reshoot a clip if you need to. It makes the listening experience much smoother and easier to understand.
@fleurdeliseffxiv158011 ай бұрын
its a content mill using AI to write the scripts, he doesn't care. Constant pronunciation errors, poorly researched topics that often aren't even correct, the way of speaking can get very weird, notice he says and alot more often than a normal person. and the fact that he uploads so frequently is a big red flag, if he was actually researching and writing these scripts out himself there's just no way he can do all that and edit to get these videos out so fast. Plus he grabs stuff from wikipedia word for word its pathetic
@macncheeks537211 ай бұрын
@@fleurdeliseffxiv1580 that makes a lot more sense
@-emmathetotaldramafan9 ай бұрын
I got diagnosed with agoraphobia when I was 12 and it’s honestly horrifying every single time I go outside I feel like I might have a panic attack and whenever I feel like I might have a panic attack I begin to feel dizzy and my heart starts beating and it’s horrible
@shawmeowchu17333 ай бұрын
Little reminder to people that if you have any of these disorders/mental illness(es) you are still human and you are not defined by your mental state. You are defined as who you are a person. You will do great things in life I know you will
@distraughtpebble11 ай бұрын
when your disorder is at the bottom of the iceberg 💀
@caitlinjordan3843 Жыл бұрын
Not to sound morbid, but I got excited when I saw this video was posted. I am currently working on my Master’s for social work. I am in the internship phase of the program I am doing, and I am a intern therapist for children and adults who have mental illnesses. Someone’s mental illness does NOT define who they are. However, it is good to learn about the different types of mental illnesses so a person is not misdiagnosed and put through the wrong treatment.
@ConjureNoonSloth Жыл бұрын
If you’re willing to hear constructive criticism, I would recommend taking a second look at pronunciations in your script while recording. I enjoy the video and you presenting it, but using words incorrectly took me out of sections that were meant to be heavy and dealing with a serious topic.
@sirengoddess56449 ай бұрын
Specifically with Pica and he kept forgetting to pronounce the “c” in lycanthropy. I totally picked up on pronunciation too😅
@SewMyHeartTogether11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for being so considerate about these disorders :) im really thankful you didn't generalize! people tend to label OCD as perfectionism and BPD as being 'Bipolar 2'.
@furriesinouterspaceUnited10 ай бұрын
Yeah especially trying to compare what people wear to them trying to impersonate the opposite gender? Like wtf that's just messed up and denying people's identities that they can do whatever they want as who they want. A good portion of these mental disorders are caused by societal norms being forced down your throat
@michiel97531 Жыл бұрын
So yeah its videos like this that make me feel like i'm not alone. I have autism adhd, i am currently depressed with severe insomnia. But i know there is light at the end of the tunnel and i will one day go do what ive always dreamt to do.
@KL4B Жыл бұрын
Is using Twitter on here?
@Mamoswine-s Жыл бұрын
that and tik tok should be at the core of the earth imo