You Need To Stop Taking Things Personally

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HealthyGamerGG

HealthyGamerGG

Күн бұрын

In this video we explore the advantages of not taking things personally and why it's a crucial skill in today's world.
Check out Dr. K's Guide To Mental Health: bit.ly/3UWJyDq
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▼ Timestamps ▼
────────────
00:00 - Introduction
01:33 - Narcissism
06:32 - Identity defect
09:16 - Taking responsibility
13:22 - What a narcissist doesn’t do
────────────
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DISCLAIMER
Healthy Gamer is an online community and resource platform for gamers and their families. It does not provide medical services or professional counselling, and it is not a substitute for professional medical care. Our coaches are peer supporters, not professionally trained experts, and they cannot provide medical service. If you or a loved one are experiencing an emergency, please call your nation's emergency telephone number.
All guests of Healthy Gamer are informed of the public, non-medical nature of the content and have expressly agreed to share their story.

Пікірлер: 1 200
@aryanhamza3112
@aryanhamza3112 11 күн бұрын
I am taking this video personally
@Sarah-with-an-H
@Sarah-with-an-H 11 күн бұрын
That's the best attitude. Take this video personally so you don't take everything else personally
@MenisXTO
@MenisXTO 11 күн бұрын
*_Don’t_*
@JoePAcalaughs
@JoePAcalaughs 11 күн бұрын
Stop it! 😂
@gamerprime3912
@gamerprime3912 11 күн бұрын
This guy's got jokes
@MadonnaGrogan
@MadonnaGrogan 11 күн бұрын
Me too 🤭
@papucsallatka7527
@papucsallatka7527 11 күн бұрын
"You Need To Stop Taking Things Personally" And I took that personally.
@mqosu
@mqosu 10 күн бұрын
*proceeds to drop 60 points on the Celtics the night after*
@kennynelson3189
@kennynelson3189 10 күн бұрын
“I was like ‘okay…’ that’s really when it got personal with me.”
@legzfalloffgirl5148
@legzfalloffgirl5148 10 күн бұрын
I'm taking your comment personally 😂
@TheRedValue
@TheRedValue 10 күн бұрын
I was about to say the same exact thing 🤣
@tabby842
@tabby842 10 күн бұрын
that's kind of the concerning thing about all this, is that there were people like Michael Jordan who were immensely insecure but used it as motivation
@Kurayamiblack
@Kurayamiblack 10 күн бұрын
So a big part of what I'm hearing is "Stop identifying as your behaviors so you can start changing them" 🤔
@sumeet.
@sumeet. 8 күн бұрын
More so when you do identify with them, step back, see what brought that thought upon you and figure out a plan of action which you will work on the inner thoughts that connect to the trigger/bad habit
@sumeet.
@sumeet. 8 күн бұрын
Example would easily be like getting triggered that someone isn't replying to you as fast as you wanted, now you're thinking they're with someone else or doing something sneaky. Now step back and see why you would think that, don't identify with it, and even if you do, try to separate yourself from it with questions like, "where did these thoughts come from? Did they happen to come up because I am just taking this personally or am I assuming the worst?" And say you are taking it personally or assuming the worse, now you know. From then you look more inner and see what deficiency's are making you think that. Are you not getting enough reassurance that you may need? Maybe your s/o is busy and now you're getting overthinking thoughts from being not as busy.
@tommychappell6359
@tommychappell6359 8 күн бұрын
Everything you feel say and do is a reflection of you. Stop blaming other individual for how you internally feel. How it nudging own emotions (that were there to begin with. How you take something is a personal decision. You could see it as mishap and give benefit of doubt and learn reasoning behind it or could judge and not find out the reasons for thing happening.
@trappart9209
@trappart9209 3 күн бұрын
Good take 👍
@amarok5048
@amarok5048 11 күн бұрын
When I stopped drinking five years ago, 90% of my problems disappeared. My happiness and friendships have increased exponentially.
@malachitestorm
@malachitestorm 11 күн бұрын
great!! happy for you, friend
@igoresque
@igoresque 11 күн бұрын
I should start drinking then, cause I've got nothing like that to lose.
@bones642
@bones642 11 күн бұрын
Congrats :)
@blairdurward4324
@blairdurward4324 10 күн бұрын
I wish I had something so singular to work on, but very happy for you, keep doing good
@smtandearthboundsuck8400
@smtandearthboundsuck8400 10 күн бұрын
And I have these problems without drinking
@xKumei
@xKumei 10 күн бұрын
"Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; courage to change the things I can; and wisdom to know the difference."
@munkeefinkelbeen5395
@munkeefinkelbeen5395 9 күн бұрын
Me telling a friend this actually ended our friendship (was the last straw on my end). She blew TF up after I sent that to her because I had hoped it would give some solace in a difficult moment, and boy did I make the wrong assumption 😅
@joshuabuchanan1141
@joshuabuchanan1141 7 күн бұрын
You don't need to listen that to bs sentence
@joelRmontfort
@joelRmontfort 6 күн бұрын
What is this, an AA meeting? 😂
@xKumei
@xKumei 6 күн бұрын
@@joelRmontfort HG shares some similar principles sometimes so....kinda 😂
@dhay3982
@dhay3982 6 күн бұрын
You don't know the line. Might as well try anyway.
@loganblackwood2922
@loganblackwood2922 10 күн бұрын
I stopped taking things personally at around 25, when I realised whatever I said in earnest was intentionally distorted and misconstrued by people motivated to have me painted a certain way in the eyes of others. At that point I realised there was no point trying to have people see you positively who work extra hard to justify disliking you.
@yurisei6732
@yurisei6732 10 күн бұрын
Yeah but it's still really annoying that so many people try so hard to cast other people as villains. You stop taking things personally, but end up pretty misanthropic.
@nicky592
@nicky592 10 күн бұрын
​@@yurisei6732i agree, thats one of the things I've been trying to figure out how to remedy in my own life. I'd say acceptance that people will do so is the strat, but its not the easiest to accept perceived injustice.
@eightsprites
@eightsprites 10 күн бұрын
I didn’t figured that out until much later.
@Stickmantoon
@Stickmantoon 10 күн бұрын
the thing is, I don't believe most people intentionnaly distort other people's responses. I think it has more to do with people not being self aware of their own behavior and responses to certain things. Because thinking that people do this intentionnaly is pretty much bringing it back to taking it personally.
@loganblackwood2922
@loganblackwood2922 10 күн бұрын
@@Stickmantoon It is a fine line. But the more people emote at you as they supposedly "reason" and "debate" the more you can tell, they're motivated to make it personal, because they see descent to your world view as personal.
@hummingbird1375
@hummingbird1375 11 күн бұрын
Would it be too far-fetched to say that people who take things personally most probably have a past of people attacking their identity when they made mistakes? I think it also has a lot to do with shame. If you have a shame identity, every criticism feels personal, like a confirmation that you are bad, worthless person. I have been degraded and called childish by my mother a lot of times because I didn't do something. To give a specific example, my mother used to yell at me frequently for not keeping my bedroom tidy. She would say things like "You are such a child, you're acting like a 5-year old. Aren't you ashamed? A normal x-year old would clean their room." Now every time she simply says "Go clean your room", what I hear is all the things above. Because in a way I know that this is what she believes about me. And then I get triggered and refuse to do what she wants.
@GreyException
@GreyException 10 күн бұрын
Maybe. I got into a lot of extreme verbal disputes with my mom (single parent) and she definitely used humiliation or shame. But I stopped taking things as personally when I hit my 20s. It took a lot of time to realize my own character flaws, and also that I always knew people/myself are still primitive animals. We get caught up in our own suffering, almost like we are the spotlight of our own movie. We may be sensitive to our feelings, but such sensitivity is draining and leads to insensitivity/lack of perspective towards other people's lives and daily struggles. Also, reading a lot of comments online, I see a common string among most of us. We tend to pay most attention to the issues that affect us, and there is an addictive quality to having our sufferings validated. It sort of frames my feeling of "why me" into a "oh right, other people face their own struggles".
@Aywusgod
@Aywusgod 10 күн бұрын
I can relate a lot to your theory at the very least. I'm fairly sure I grew up with ADHD and I made a lot of mistakes/errors doing various things and people would laugh and point them out in a negative manner.
@instantpug7036
@instantpug7036 10 күн бұрын
Yes, thank you. This was focused very much on narcissists. Not people who were actually shamed as children or teens for being incapable of doing certain things as part of their identity. I have a bad memory (because of year-long insomnia and trauma) and my partner always gets upset when I don’t remember vocabulary in our target language that we are studying together. I have accepted not moving forward as quickly because of said issues, but he can‘t, and he always has to get emotional about it or remind me "we've learned this before". He can absolutely say that, but be nice about it. He never is. I'd have to become an insanely strong person to not take this personally on a daily basis, on top of all the other things I have to already accept.
@sergnio
@sergnio 10 күн бұрын
I relate a ton to this
@lfleia
@lfleia 9 күн бұрын
Doesn't it let you ask yourself the question though "Are THEY wrong? Is their assumption of my character something I need to be concerned about? Is my taking this personally a trauma response, and if so, where is that coming from?" My mother still critiques my clothing even though I'm almost 40, she's always been highly critical and is the main voice I used to hear regarding my inner critic. But now as an adult, going through trauma therapy, I can separate myself and hear her going on and on about something, and instead of it raising my anxiety levels and wondering what she says or thinks about me, I can hear myself saying 'she has NO empathy for the people she's judging.' Ask yourself if your mother's insistence on everything being clean and tidy is actually even making her happy. You're not adding to her unhappiness by being untidy, she would just find something else to be unhappy about. How she's acting about your tidiness is a reflection on her, not you. You can choose if there are actually things that need to change.
@poelogan
@poelogan 10 күн бұрын
This actually helps ALOOOOT with shame. Realizing a lot of factors or obstacles are outside of you and they AREN’T YOU makes facing the obstacles much easier
@Apathetic-desperation
@Apathetic-desperation 8 күн бұрын
I’ve also taken heed that I am not my thoughts. (Ex. When I have bad thoughts, it’s ok. It doesn’t make me a bad person because I am not my thoughts.) So, what even am I?
@poelogan
@poelogan 8 күн бұрын
@@Apathetic-desperation Consult Jung.
@Temporary784
@Temporary784 6 күн бұрын
Indeed
@jokku9016
@jokku9016 10 күн бұрын
The way I understood this video is that you should look at yourself as a complex system with many components, and instead of thinking "I'm dysfunctional from the core", what you should do is think "What components within me are not working as intended to allow this bad thing or criticism to happen?" and then "isolate" those components to start fixing them
@peterbradshaw5272
@peterbradshaw5272 10 күн бұрын
Great way of looking at this. In software development we call this Decoupling and then Refactoring that part. In Buddhism this is called Untangle and Free. In modern western terms the colloquialism we use is Divide and Conquer. All this is the same technique.
@Hexanitrobenzene
@Hexanitrobenzene 4 күн бұрын
I smell an engineer in you :)
@depresso___espresso
@depresso___espresso 9 күн бұрын
I need to re-learn this because my mantra of 'dont take things personally' also led me to keep a lot of mean spirited ppl in my life, who, funny enough, used the excuse of "dont take things personally" to justify their behavior. Because of this, it's muddled the lines for me
@SpasticJ0K3R
@SpasticJ0K3R 8 күн бұрын
absolutely. the kinds of people who's 'sense of humor' is just making fun of people and poking at insecurities until somebody calls them out then its 'don't take it personally its just a joke'. jokes make people laugh, they don't belittle people and talk down to them. Even if its going for a roast its supposed to be something most of the people involved are comfortable laughing at. just remember real friends care if what they say is hurting or upsetting you and want to avoid that when possible.
@depresso___espresso
@depresso___espresso 8 күн бұрын
@@SpasticJ0K3R Damn, you're absolutely right because I realized I never cracked a joke where it concerned someone's insecurity or something where I knew they felt uncomfortable about. Sometimes I wish I would, but I just can't willingly bring myself to hurt someone like that. Anyway, thanks for your insight, kind stranger.
@grindsauce3017
@grindsauce3017 8 күн бұрын
@@SpasticJ0K3R Some people just can't take a racial jokes. Generation of snowflakes this lot.
@hellequinm
@hellequinm 8 күн бұрын
Boundaries. Not taking things personally doesn't equals to not having boundaries. Maybe that's a reason you think it's muddled?
@depresso___espresso
@depresso___espresso 7 күн бұрын
@@grindsauce3017 I never referred to racial jokes specifically. The social examples I was referring to were things like if you know someone’s struggling with a weight problem one makes a joke about it. Or if someone opens up about a bad break up and they start to say off hand shit later.
@jungletroll3844
@jungletroll3844 10 күн бұрын
makes a lot of sense to me. Taking responsibility makes you feel like you can do something about your situation while simultaneously improving yourself and your life
@chichchichovsky118
@chichchichovsky118 10 күн бұрын
And in the video it is emphasized that the first thing that you need to do is to see your problems from the outside perspective, to separate it from your identity\personality to make it actually solvable. Then you can take the responsibility, because you can actually do something about the problem: work on your skills, behavior, mentality etc.
@NickGreiner1988
@NickGreiner1988 10 күн бұрын
We reacher for an outside point of view But it's out of touch with me and you I feel I'm walking into suicide And you'll be right there by my side To beam my message into space As I die
@paulv2348
@paulv2348 10 күн бұрын
@@NickGreiner1988 it's different. You seem in pain from the situation. What helped me in this situation is: at one point, you were fine before. Then a situation happened and it hurt. Shame, embarrassment, whatever you feel is taking over and you have pain. But think about how you were before the situation. You were not in pain. Focus on that. Then everyday, it's gonna get better. Focus on taking care of yourself. Make yourself food, etc. Treat yourself like you would be treating a loved one that depends on you and need love and attention. Once you feel better, make actions to become a better yourself. For me for instance, I feel satisfied with my life overall. So I'm learning a new language. It will open a world to me: meet new people, new culture, songs, books, and ideas for travel. But it could be going to the gym, starting a new way to cook, whatever you want to feel you're gonna be a better yourself. Because that's how you're gonna make it
@SpitGoblin
@SpitGoblin 10 күн бұрын
i think the issue a lot of us have with "don't take it personal" is that people tend to not feel validated in their feelings and that obviously stems from SO much more than the situation that was taken personally. it's sooo difficult but the ultimate truth is that once you truly start to heal you DONT take things personally! it just takes time and work.. a lot of hard, personal, difficult work!
@marissahicks3529
@marissahicks3529 10 күн бұрын
This really gives me something to reflect on and research about when I get bored at work. Thank you!
@TheSaintBigFoot
@TheSaintBigFoot 9 күн бұрын
We need to take OURSELVES seriously
@mickdavies5647
@mickdavies5647 10 күн бұрын
I think a big problem today is that the vast majority of people won't speak up when they think there is a problem because they want to 'be nice'. There are also a lot of gaslighters who will say whatever gets them what they want. So people grow up with neither a sufficiently callibrated compass of how they should be or an understanding of how to find people that can set them straight. Coaches can help, but there is an issue, in that many (not all and I'm not referrimg to any particular company either) of them will either (intentionally or not) say whatever is neccessary to keep their clients payimg them. Its just human nature to act in a way to follow the incentive structure
@marissahicks3529
@marissahicks3529 10 күн бұрын
This explains SO much of what I went through. Ages 7-9 I experienced childhood trauma related to me being punished for lashing out for my parents for favoring my sister over me. I don’t know if I even knew how to communicate my needs back then. Ages 13-17 I was exactly how you described. Thanks for helping me understand a forgotten part of me ;)
@mickdavies5647
@mickdavies5647 10 күн бұрын
@@marissahicks3529 I'm sorry to hear that you went through this. It really sucks when someone is at a time when they most need good direction and it is withheld. Or worse, they are deliberately set down the wrong path. It sounds like you may have gotten through it now though. Great to hear!
@nalijapetek6271
@nalijapetek6271 10 күн бұрын
Or they know that they will be belittled or the other person will get hurt or they are so mentally exhausted that they have no energy to speak up and get in a quarrel over it or that they are gonna get yelled at. So they do the math and realised that it is better to zone out or distance themselves rather than speaking up.
@mickdavies5647
@mickdavies5647 10 күн бұрын
@nalijapetek6271 absolutely. It's perfectly possible, if not extremely likely, that people who take things personally will intermingle with each other and so create a destructive cycle of non-cooperation
@MiamiChica
@MiamiChica 3 күн бұрын
I’m tired of people acting like they’re nice in front of people, then defaming others behind their back. People should be taught how to have conversations to understand one another instead of wearing a mask and being angry all the time.
@meganquinn5747
@meganquinn5747 9 күн бұрын
I have some of this narcissistic flea. My mother would always throw guilt and blame when something went wrong, so it's difficult for me to not take things personally. I'm working on my self-compassion, though.
@flooglewarp1567
@flooglewarp1567 9 күн бұрын
guys, my girlfriend called me autistic and I could’ve taken it personally but now I’m going to make it a goal to stop being autistic. turning a negative into a positive fellas. Let’s see you on the other side.
@AzadC
@AzadC 3 күн бұрын
Look dude autism just exists sadly the truth. I have it too. Im borderline intelligence type disorder type of person
@11luga
@11luga 10 күн бұрын
It ist just incredible how taking things personally happens so fast in the brain. When I try to think rationaly and try to take responsibility i am already overwhelmed by those bad feelings.
@bloodymares
@bloodymares 10 күн бұрын
Try to reflect on those feelings, and think where they're coming from if you find yourself feeling them again. Without judging yourself for how you feel. I've been in a much better space once I started noticing when my brain has negative thoughts, provoking me to feel certain emotions. When you catch your brain doing it and focus on your feelings and emotions, a very interesting thing happens: negative thoughts stop coming for a while and you feel better about yourself.
@jacobw.6744
@jacobw.6744 10 күн бұрын
@@bloodymares I was with you right up until the untruth at the end. Focusing on my feelings and emotions does not make negative thoughts stop. It, in fact, often amplifies them.
@bloodymares
@bloodymares 10 күн бұрын
@@jacobw.6744 are you judging yourself for feeling those emotions?
@jacobw.6744
@jacobw.6744 10 күн бұрын
@@bloodymares Of course. Judgements are automatic. Processing them and putting them to rest after they tell you what they are trying to say is a hard part and learned skill. But having no judgements at all is not a goal I believe is attainable.
@bloodymares
@bloodymares 10 күн бұрын
@@jacobw.6744 It makes sense. I guess it works differently for everyone. I notice that my mind simply gets distracted easily from negative thoughts if I go into analyzing mode and reflect on my feelings.
@aawillma
@aawillma 10 күн бұрын
This is such an important topic with respect to rejection. Most people who take rejection personally are not narcissists, but the act of taking rejection personally IS, in fact, a narcissistic response.
@yu_kon9393
@yu_kon9393 10 күн бұрын
Well if someone rejected you, this is between you and them. That is literally personally
@lowtech42
@lowtech42 10 күн бұрын
This is where we have to be mindful of our language on this topic, because I do agree with your overall point however it would be more accurate to label it, if anything, an ego response because a narcissist can't be reduced to one single behavior in isolation (especially a very common one like taking a rejection personally). a diagnosed narcissist is someone who exhibits multiple egotistical behaviors which are often extreme. when you are ego-maxxing it is narcissism (even according to Dr K's definition) but at a minimum everyone has some ego behavior. it's about the quality and severity of a constellation of things, rather than one thing.
@tiagow95
@tiagow95 10 күн бұрын
@yu_kon9393 from the rejection, you can take that: 1. You're bad and unwantable by other people 2. You're casting these x and y negative characteristics, which can be improved 3. The other person is not interested due to their own factors, or to something else not related to you 2 and 3 are not taking it personally, 1 is.
@BlueMoonlight777
@BlueMoonlight777 10 күн бұрын
You're right. I have to read this multiple times so my brain can internalize it and stop making everything bad about me😅
@Nicole-vx9ep
@Nicole-vx9ep 10 күн бұрын
​@tiagow95 thank you for this comment. Impacted me big and im using it to improve and better myself ♡
@c_rem6101
@c_rem6101 11 күн бұрын
One of my friends said it best when i asked him for advice while i was struggling in a problem in my previous relationship "You're not fighting each other, you're fighting the problem"
@bones642
@bones642 11 күн бұрын
That’s so good.
@Zeepjeliefs
@Zeepjeliefs 6 күн бұрын
Wow that's really good advice to share, wise friend🌸
@purplc6824
@purplc6824 5 күн бұрын
I definitely see this behavior in myself, im diagnosed with ADHD and Bipolar and i sometimes act really impulsive and i realize i did something wrong but always like 2 minutes later. I often get mad at myself for failing to control my actions in emotional moments and its really shamefull, its a real pain in the chest, and if someone points that behaviour out i feel exposed and then i feel even more angry because i just got validation to be angry at myself. I often feel like i judge myself 24/7 because i fail again and again to controll myself, this leads to low self esteem and when someone points it out i know they are right but i just get overwhelmed with anxiety and get even more emotional its a constant loop.
@Trevan2412
@Trevan2412 10 күн бұрын
It's not me, it's you
@bigbadlara5304
@bigbadlara5304 11 күн бұрын
The fact you are uploading this now. When I'm struggling immensely with a situation regarding exactly this topic proves karma is real😂. This is not the first time. Really timing is uncanny. Thank you healthy gamer.
@mckenziejohnson1520
@mckenziejohnson1520 11 күн бұрын
Me too, dude.
@beepboop7041
@beepboop7041 11 күн бұрын
Same LMAOOO like this video came out an hour after my incident .-.
@BeautyMarkRush
@BeautyMarkRush 11 күн бұрын
"This is not the first time" That sounds really worrysome lol. Little do you know dr. K is actually spying on you
@trevorbacon1280
@trevorbacon1280 11 күн бұрын
algorithms know you better than you do
@bones642
@bones642 11 күн бұрын
Same. I think it was a rough week for a lot of us. Hope you’re okay. 🖤
@hummingbird1375
@hummingbird1375 11 күн бұрын
I think we as a society should start separating our actions from our identity. There are so many underlying mechanisms happening within us that influence how we feel and act, a lot of them unconscious, and we can't blame ourselves or define ourselves based on these things. All we can do is take responsibility, acknowledge the consequences of our actions and try to do better.
@jacobw.6744
@jacobw.6744 10 күн бұрын
What am I if not a sum of my actions and thoughts? The things I do are part of who I am. A major part. Maybe not all of it, but to detach myself from my actions leaves me ungrounded from the world around me.
@treeforged9097
@treeforged9097 9 күн бұрын
Why would someone have to take responsibility for something that is not them? If I am not my actions then why would I ever take responsibility for them? How can I do better when I did not do anything in the first place?
@hummingbird1375
@hummingbird1375 9 күн бұрын
@@treeforged9097 You are responsible for your actions because you committed them. But those actions don't need to be forever your identity. You can always change and improve. Many people stay stuck on their past actions and because of shame don't believe that they can ever change. They think who they are is fixed.
@hummingbird1375
@hummingbird1375 9 күн бұрын
@@jacobw.6744 I think to some extent we are the sum of our actions and beliefs. What I meant is that our actions and beliefs always have a reason (our bodies have a reason to feel, think and behave a certain way), although they are not always justifiable. As people on the outside, we tend to make judgements about a person based on their actions, but those judgements aren't always accurate. To give an example, a bully might be called hateful, malicious and sadistic by other people. But the reality is much more complex. Maybe their parents beat them and so the bully thinks it's normal and right to beat others when they annoy you, or maybe the bully is afraid of being bullied themselves so they choose to be the bully instead, etc. There are many cognitive, biological, or emotional mechanisms within us that influence our behaviour, that we don't even understand ourselves, that we aren't always aware of. So my philosophy is that we cannot blame people for their actions but we can judge their actions separate from the person. Actions on their own still have consequences and so we still need to set boundaries. And we should try to make people understand their mistakes so that they can take responsibility for their actions but without blaming themselves, without making it their identity. And then they can try to change their behaviour.
@Temporary784
@Temporary784 6 күн бұрын
How are we supposed to classify criminals then help them based on their profile. Have you ever thought about that?
@azryasyrani5178
@azryasyrani5178 10 күн бұрын
Does makes sense to me. Alot of the time I feel like "I'm annoying my friends", "I'm a bother for always being negative", "I shouldn't be hanging out with them right now cause my head space isn't at the right place" despite them always trying to get me out. I was scared to be vulnerable but one day I took a step and told my friends how I felt, and they were really kind to me. Then I started opening up to my family and they were kind too. To my aunt's and cousins and then to friends and old friends. I just took the first step and be vulnerable. It turns out most people like to listen, and are kinder than you think. So I was projecting this image of them antagonising me for my success and failures, which wasn't fair at all because knowing them all, I knew they weren't like that. But in addition, if you have someone who does antagonise you after you told them how you're doing and feeling. Maybe they weren't your friends/family all along and just cut them off. Thats what I did. That's what healed me and made me look forward in life
@dead_nn5293
@dead_nn5293 11 күн бұрын
One of the best and most important things I've seen on the internet. It's strange that most people who struggle with this are the most empathetic people I know, and yet it's a narcissistic mechanism. For me it's bizzare and i will also use it for myself
@christinegivens9048
@christinegivens9048 10 күн бұрын
Was thinking the same. Maybe learned behaviour from a narcissist? I feel like I had to defend every move I made growing up in a high demand high control Christian home. Ugh. Religion seems to mess up so many ppl. 😩
@prospero2405
@prospero2405 10 күн бұрын
I think it happens because your desire to be a good/better person is tied to your identity, so if you fail at something it feels like a threat to who you are. I have seen very good people recoil when someone tells them they are doing something wrong and then get defensive about it instead of, you know, listening and see if it's worth changing.
@syndra7757
@syndra7757 10 күн бұрын
@@prospero2405 this is pretty good insight, I take things very personally when I believe that other people see me in a negative light, especially when I do something that causes other people to criticize me, but I think this stems from my ego--that being the inflated importance of my perception of 'self', which causes me to belittle myself when I 'fail' and everything becomes my fault and I'm a terrible person. Of course, this is a terrible pattern of behavior that I'm working on. I wonder if someone else can relate
@Giffandaman
@Giffandaman 10 күн бұрын
@@syndra7757 I can relate your not alone. All we can do is practice not taking things personal but just say you know what maybe I should correct this behavior
@nalijapetek6271
@nalijapetek6271 10 күн бұрын
Especially when people say that you (not your action) hurt them by doing something.
@user-df5oq2nw3i
@user-df5oq2nw3i 10 күн бұрын
This is very helpful. I haven't heard people identify me as a narcissist, but it is often pointed out that I get defensive too easily. I have come to realize how much of my behavior and thinking has been shaped by wanting 'others to like me' . Looking through the eyes of others helps, but now I understand to take myself out of the picture and see the issues and behaviors. THANK YOU for the insight.
@yu_kon9393
@yu_kon9393 10 күн бұрын
You can't see through eyes of others that is truly egotistic thing to say
@SynergySource
@SynergySource 10 күн бұрын
​@@yu_kon9393 11:25 at least watch the video you're trolling on so you can properly attempt to drag someone down to whatever depths you feel yourself to be in, so weird
@jacobw.6744
@jacobw.6744 10 күн бұрын
@@SynergySource Well you can't speak to someone else's internal experience. You both literally and figuratively cannot see through the eyes of someone else. You can guess, you can interpret, you can project, but to assume you "know" what someone else is thinking or feeling is extremely egotistical and dangerous. It's a central tenant of a handful of types of therapy. I know it's big in DBT, for example.
@SynergySource
@SynergySource 10 күн бұрын
@@jacobw.6744 appreciate your nuanced perspective, but I'm just checking this dude who's trying to morally grandstand and make someone else feel bad because they feel bad about themselves, who I'm responding to clearly did not watch the video and are just here to be a combative brat, check their other comments
@jacobw.6744
@jacobw.6744 10 күн бұрын
@@SynergySource Ah, I didn't see their other comments. I get your point. I guess I will HOPE that they were being more nuanced and understand than they let on. It's an interesting topic, "walking in someone's shoes", just because it's a fine line between empathy and projection. At least in my experience. Regardless of the other commenter, I figured it appropriate to voice my take. Hopefully it came off as respectful.
@bertjeeuh569
@bertjeeuh569 10 күн бұрын
I've often called myself a loser, that other people think that I'm a loser. Until at 14:00 ish you started breaking down "okay so what is a loser?" and I tried to come up with this myself and I came up blank. I don't relate myself at all to what I define to be a loser nor do I think people around me think so. I've internalized so much self doubt and pressure from expectations that I never really looked at it from a point of factually being a loser instead of feeling like one. By typing this out I realize what my next action point is, defining what makes me feel like a loser. And one of the biggest ones is the expectations other people have of me/other people. It's hard to put in words but it's almost like feeling content won't ever feel good enough because it feels like there's always something else you HAVE to do or you're a loser.
@5thgrdrz
@5thgrdrz 10 күн бұрын
as someone who takes things personally this makes so much sense and makes me feel better. when people tell me things i'm doing wrong i think there's something wrong with me or that people don't like me, and i always feel so helpless because i don't know how i can change myself and pretend not to be anxious and depressed. but choosing observable behaviors that are fixable makes it feel like there's actually a solution. it's not "i'm too anxious and miserable" but "i should work on talking and smiling more". dr K is out here changing worldviews once again
@matthewland6234
@matthewland6234 10 күн бұрын
"It's not you, it's me" - sitcom soundtrack. Beautiful
@AnonYmous-mw5lc
@AnonYmous-mw5lc 9 күн бұрын
George Costanza invented 'it's not you, it's me'
@ismbks
@ismbks 7 күн бұрын
seinfeld is timeless
@HaikesXO
@HaikesXO 10 күн бұрын
At 31 years old, this has only begun to make sense to me the past couple years. I spent my 20s constantly taking any advice or recommendations from my partners as criticism. Extremely defensive about everything. Mainly out of fear of being inadequate. The issues really become worse when you realize shortly after how you were acting and then expect the other person to embrace you as this loving person when you were just a complete asshole. Idk if it makes sense but this video really provides a lot of knowledge
@elijahaa
@elijahaa 10 күн бұрын
You arent alone man. Im sure this is a big reason ive been single my whole life and the one relationship i did find was a mess for what i am assuming is this reason. I never quite understood what women ment when they called me sensitive. I thought it was an attack on my masculinity and calling me soft but this video makes it make sense.
@Ghostfaceluv
@Ghostfaceluv 2 күн бұрын
I did this and it screwed up my relationship with my family members. I feel so bad for them because of what i did in the past. They say its ok they forgive me they were waiting for me to mature im 14 and i realized im not narcissistic i just picked up narcissistic traits from my mom and bullies as a defensive mechanism. And now i realize that it wasnt me it was my actions and i feel like my family doesnt truly forgive me
@Ghostfaceluv
@Ghostfaceluv 2 күн бұрын
And now i cant seem to feel any empathy for myself because i realized my empathy for myself is what fucked things up
@Tiasung
@Tiasung 11 күн бұрын
Just here to inform you that I too, took that personal.
@dreaejrns6281
@dreaejrns6281 10 күн бұрын
wanting to send this to my dad, not wanting to deal with him feeling guilty over it and being like "I'm sorry this is just who I am"
@theguy9067
@theguy9067 10 күн бұрын
On the subject of of internalizing "youre not emotionally available". If you hear that once, maybe you won't take it personally but if you hear it enough times and you don't really know exactly what that means, it's hard not to take it personally. Or worse, if you get rejected a lot the you never really get specific feedback but get things like "no spark" etc. The first time, okay, but the tenth time starts to effect you. It's a lot easier not to take rejection personally if you have a lot of options and you know that not everyone will reject you. But when it becomes a pattern and you can't figure out what is wrong with you... Yes, if you're not getting hurt, you're not human. You're simplifying this into a single one time event when it's likely the reason people take things personally is within the context of upbringing and past experiences that have negative emotional anchors
@user-ex5pg3oy9c
@user-ex5pg3oy9c 10 күн бұрын
"No spark" means the person is wrong for you, so the corrective behavior can start now
@aarongeorge347
@aarongeorge347 9 күн бұрын
A few people have commented saying taking things personally may be tied to shame, and I can see that in myself. I've been taking things personally lately, and when I look back at these moments, they always stem from anger. Specifically, I get angered by the perception that I'm being treated unfairly - because I NEVER tell people when they're doing something that bothers me. I've always taken things on the chin, fixed things myself, and pushed through in order to save face - instead of (in my view and in my words) "offloading my problems onto others." It's always been my way of treating others as I would want to be treated. But I'm starting to see that I only want to be treated this way - never being bothered with criticisms - because I grew up being pushed by my parents via criticisms (eg. "Stop being so lazy" "Live up to your potential") and I've been echoing these criticisms to push myself all throughout my life. This video has helped me to see that I can be imperfect, it's ok for people to point out my imperfections, and in doing so, they are giving me the opportunity to accept or fix them. Either that, or I'm just a raging narsassistic fuck
@das_evoli
@das_evoli 11 күн бұрын
a very important video for me. I was diagnosed with avpd (Avoidant Personality Disorder) and this is one of the main symptoms. I hate this disorder because I can't find a lot about it compared to other disorders. And the community is also rather small. Literally no one in my area knows what it even is.
@Em91s
@Em91s 11 күн бұрын
I hope you find your people. big hug
@killerb255
@killerb255 8 күн бұрын
@das_evoli The reason for the lack of info may have to do with the saying "the squeaky wheel gets the grease." The Cluster B Personality Disorders (Antisocial, Borderline, Narcissistic, and to a lesser degree Histrionic) tend to cause more problems for others than the other six. Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder can be a problem in society if that person is in a position of power or authority. Dependent Personality Disorder can be a problem for caregivers. Paranoid PD can be a problem if that person reacts to their paranoia with aggression or violence. Schizotypal PD can be a prelude to schizophrenia or other psychotic disorders. So that pretty much leaves Schizoid and Avoidant. Both PDs lead to people that are more passive and tend not to cause too many social problems for others. Of course this is for different reasons (Schizoid is indifferent to social interactions while Avoidant's fears keep them away from social contact that they otherwise want).
@Horsewrangler780
@Horsewrangler780 10 күн бұрын
Everyone does something that someone else doesn't like. If it is a real problem cut ties, you actually don't need to change for anyone but a significant other or your children. Random people do not matter in this context.
@me0101001000
@me0101001000 10 күн бұрын
I come from a culture where criticism is the highest form of care. If you care enough to say something, I'll take the time to analyze the statement and act on it in a manner which is beneficial to me. Even if it is in bad faith, it can still be used for the better. There is always room for improvement. Even if the criticism comes from an unqualified individual, it can still be valuable.
@monkiesbanana321
@monkiesbanana321 10 күн бұрын
Interesting, what area of this world is this culture from?
@oakuvalentine7734
@oakuvalentine7734 10 күн бұрын
Id like to know aswell
@me0101001000
@me0101001000 10 күн бұрын
@@monkiesbanana321 mine specifically is Northwest Indian. Where my family comes from, it's considered standard to seek mastery in whatever you do. But you aren't meant to conflate your identity with your trades/crafts. Almost everyone has some kind of art form that they practice alongside their career, usually linked to music, dance, acting, or maybe visual art. Everyone is seeking mastery in some way, shape, or form. On a more extreme note, if you aren't classically trained, you aren't allowed to have an opinion. So if a non-practitioner makes a comment, it is usually discarded immediately, unless there is some substance to the statement. But besides the culture I grew up with, I grew up alongside lots of Southern Chinese, who grew up with an incredibly similar environment, down to the artistry and separation of identity and trade/craft. There, too, you see the idea of not being allowed to even have an opinion if you aren't trained. I don't agree with that idea, since art is ultimately subjective, but it's a paradigm that has its purpose in the pursuit of classical mastery.
@me0101001000
@me0101001000 10 күн бұрын
@@oakuvalentine7734 answered.
@michaeltran4382
@michaeltran4382 10 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for this video. I have been following Dr.K for almost two years now, and this video is definitely one of the most eye-opening videos for me! I was recently broken up with and have been trying to figure out what went wrong and learn from those experiences to hopefully be a better partner in the future. Throughout the relationship I was constantly feeling like a PoS and disappointed at myself whenever my GF was disappointed at me and would bring up numerous problems/disagreements. Our relationship always felt stuck. Our problems seemed to always be going in circles and we often would revisit them over and over again, without much progress. And I have now realised maybe a component of this problem was because of my inability to find a corrective course of action to them because I was so stuck in my head. I never thought I would have "narcissistic" tendencies/traits because I have incredibly low self-confidence and self-perceived value. And an incredibly powerful negative dialogue, as noted by my previous therapist. But I now realise narcissism isn't the commonly misguided definition of having excessive admiration for oneself. Thank you for this insight Dr.K. I am grateful for all the effort you put into helping the community. P.S. I have preordered the trauma module ;)
@reboooot
@reboooot 11 күн бұрын
I know people who are narcissistic in the way they present socially, but the way they problem solve is incredibly authentic and to reach those levels of problem solving, you have to check your ego and recognize what you need to improve at. What does that even mean? I wish I could just ask this dude question for hours lmao
@Sammysapphira
@Sammysapphira 10 күн бұрын
Then they're not narcissistic.
@yurisei6732
@yurisei6732 10 күн бұрын
It means that you should try to think less in terms of pathologies and more in terms of individuals. Ironically, as we've become more individualistic as a society, it seems like we've become more willing to replace individuality with categories and labels that allow us to think of people as archetypes instead of as people. In the DSM, there is the label "narcissist", but in the real world there's no such thing as "a narcissist", there are only narcissistic behaviours and people who exhibit them in certain situations.
@hellequinm
@hellequinm 8 күн бұрын
Someone's personality it's like a spectrum. Everyone will show various levels of each trait, even narcissistic traits, this doesn't make them a narcissist. That's the real problem here, people are trying to measure the sea with a school ruler.
@killerb255
@killerb255 8 күн бұрын
Narcissism is on a spectrum. Everyone is narcissistic to some degree. The word literally means "love for oneself." It becomes a problem if you go into the extreme ends of narcissism. The DSM criteria for Narcissistic Personality Disorder describes this end.
@G4RYWithaFour
@G4RYWithaFour 7 күн бұрын
They base their image on their results and are action-oriented in their emotional regulation. They have a lot of incentive to be better in areas they value, decency to others isnt included in that as they see themselves as having put in the work to be better than others, therefore "owing" them less.
@RoktimBhattacharjya811
@RoktimBhattacharjya811 10 күн бұрын
Glad I found this video. The thieving guild is really mad at me for always taking things personally. They think I need to learn how to work as a team.
@Yviechen
@Yviechen 11 күн бұрын
Thank you. I never could explain when people ask me why I want to talk, why I want to know what I did "wrong" . They tell me to "just let go. He/she won't tell you the truth, anyways" Every time I got some of those last talks and felt like it could be true, I was able to question myself (after a good portion of self doubt😅) and work on whatever it was. Sometimes the critique was just hurting and I decided to let go of it anyway, because I was of a different opinion. One time even I decided to work on the exact opposite what someone told me. Because I liked to be myself more like that. But I always have to explain myself... "I want to know what's my responsibility on this" unfortunately the people always tell you "you don't have any. It's like he/she said. It's on them, you don't have anything to do with it" and I just can't believe that.
@ulysses7157
@ulysses7157 10 күн бұрын
I've always known about this with normal regular people. Even I'm guilty of it, simply not vibing with certain people well. I had a date a few months back that rejected me after four months of talking. It was fine and I enjoyed my time with her regardless. Even learned a lot from myself too. Though I can't get around the employer and employee relationship. Idk if I'm taking this really personally or what but fuck the absolute awful time I had years of job searching showed me these employers really really fucking suck. Absolutely absurd standards it's insane. I was only able to get my first job till I was 23 and only got it through very heavy connections too, with the same org literally doing all of the work for me, my resume, the job search, everything. Never lifted a finger and even then those jobs were only temporary. Years of experience required, Years of experience required, Years of experience required, Years of experience required for just the most basic job it's freaking infuriating. The constant intense competition too just adds more to it and then I feel shamed on top of that for not working and not being able to find a job. It's these fucking employers constantly ghosting with ontop of that absolutely unrealistic expectations and the insane competition is what's kept me behind so much in life. I didn't go to college because I had my financial aid assistance taken away and I was trying to find any basic job just to save up and pay my way through. Literally my own education was being stifled because of these assholes. TL;DR I absolutely hate employers and I really feel like I'm not at fault in any of this. The only thing I am at fault was putting myself through their retarded bullshit and should have at least had some self respect. But that's what they want. They want to break you so they can abuse the fuck out of you.
@marissahicks3529
@marissahicks3529 10 күн бұрын
@@ulysses7157I got my 1st (and current) job at 23 (25 now), and while I got really lucky that my coworkers are cool, the dress code is lax, and the work is tedious at its worst; I still regularly have this underlying feeling that corporate & its allies can go fvck themselves because I am NOT about to be manipulated into being your perfect obedient wage slave who comes in 10 minutes pre-shift to do unpaid labor because they want me actively working BY the start of my shift (among other things). I’ve always attributed that way thinking to my autism, but it’s really interesting to see another take on it
@Phoenixofanguish
@Phoenixofanguish 7 күн бұрын
This is one of the main pillars of "The Four Agreements" wisdom book I've read a few times! A thing I've noticed is in the workplace. Managers don't want to take responsibility for their poor leadership and when you express whats wrong they throw it under the rug, restructure the route in such a way that you either sacrifice quality at work(which would result in disciplinary action) or time at home with the family. Ultimately constricting a dismissal so you will see yourself out and not cause any more problems. Happened with at least two coworkers in my same position of account managing.
@jessmelgar219
@jessmelgar219 5 күн бұрын
Ya know, as a manager, most people who say what you have… don’t understand management or how processes work. I also have decisions handed down to me and sometimes those are shit and NOT me. But unlike this narrative, I’m not going to focus on who is messing what up. You deal with it and move on. Your example is exactly taking things too personally. You’re an employee doing a job, so are they. You don’t own the business, usually the manager doesn’t either. You also only have all of the details around decisions, roles, or reasons. So you should assume good intent and seek to understand not blame
@singularbear8656
@singularbear8656 10 күн бұрын
The thing is that that thing i like isn't harmful to me and i see it as part of my being since it's so important to me, hence it hurts be greatly when i have a close friend judge that thing and see me in a bad light because of it
@markigirl2757
@markigirl2757 10 күн бұрын
Definitely is a maturity thing for me. I developed narcissistic tendencies bc I was severally depressed and had low self esteem. I definitely started intexturilize my emotions and tried to calm them before solving any problem. I have adhd and it’s easy to dooms scroll or get self-pity so as soon as I start feeling bad for myself I start trying to empathize and even think sucks knowing I caused stuff bc of how extreme I become I know I need to work communicating more efficiently. I got a lonnnnng way toooo go but it makes sense why people exhaust me and I barely got friends.
@rumo1086
@rumo1086 2 күн бұрын
These are incredibly important dialogues to be having. Thank you sir🙏
@conter888
@conter888 11 күн бұрын
I am happy that you created this video. I struggle with this
@prowess2121
@prowess2121 10 күн бұрын
Honestly one of the most important videos most people need to see; narcissism has placed large amounts of burden on me that I have yet to overcome completely. I grew up being exposed to a narcissistic father where time gradually taught me how to not be like him. His behaviours never really resonated with me, but it's difficult to become aware or have a sense of control as a child to not be influenced in some way. Instead of trying to fully understand what's going on, I would neglect any responsibility of myself and escape reality for many, many years; fears of failure and not meeting my own or others' expectations because I saw myself as the core problem. The detachment of problems to your identity was key to never justify my own or any mistakes in particular to be uncorrectable. Things do get better, but it honestly takes a lot of time to reverse such impacts from your childhood. I hope all of you can learn something to correct, or avoid partaking in this path of misery as my decades of life experiences has been constricted to almost nothing.
@dergtehdergon9241
@dergtehdergon9241 7 күн бұрын
I very much needed to hear this. Thank you for what you do.
@Exemex.0
@Exemex.0 10 күн бұрын
This made perfect sense, thank you! Pretty much everything mentioned is what I see in my past self, current coworkers and family members.
@mot2296
@mot2296 10 күн бұрын
It makes all very much sense to me Dr K. My issue is as follows. I always try to moderate and adjust my behaviour towards others. I am a very agreeable personality mentally speaking. But ot seems to never be, no matter how good or well i behave. That leads to pain ans suffering, as I get overburdened with the constant new critic and the upkeep on the demands that are already placed on me I feel like a small 50hp engine that is tasked to haul more and more load, just because people think I am smart/able enough to do so. So of course I cant stop taking critic personally. I try to do so for many months now. But it still a knife in my heart if you try everything and still get critized, just because people don't want to belive me how I hard I struggle And when I draw borders and boundaries around myself, people seem to not like me either. Seeing as some of them just see a friendly person walled of in their own garden
@mot2296
@mot2296 10 күн бұрын
It's always me that has to do the work in the end. And I am tired
@yu_kon9393
@yu_kon9393 10 күн бұрын
I feel you. Can't say much. You are a good person I believe. You at least trying. Life is suffering anyways.
@hellequinm
@hellequinm 8 күн бұрын
Why do you think you should be liked by everyone out there? Someone disliking you should never have any impact on your own self-perception. That's not about you. If someone doesn't like chocolate is it the chocolate's fault? I know it sounds silly, but it's the same concept, their taste buds don't enjoy the experience of eating chocolate. It's nothing to do with the existence of the chocolate and the many people professions and studies that goes around making chocolate.
@reboooot
@reboooot 11 күн бұрын
This is all making me realize how complex the concept of narcissism is. It seems like for the majority of people its less of a personality trait or disorder and more of a maladaptive defense mechanism that can end up being a full on disorder that is less permanent for some than others. That doesn't sell drugs though, so I don't imagine many people leaning into anything but experimental treatment for that. The DSM needs a massive face lift or else we're all just going to drift along in philosophy land while rich people get more scientific treatment
@jaybee4288
@jaybee4288 11 күн бұрын
I think it’s just one of those words that has been taken by the internet and applied to everyone that they don’t like and it’s kinda lost its meaning. Same with depression. There’s a very small percentage of people that would get diagnosed as a narcissist.
@Xenonia
@Xenonia 10 күн бұрын
It does work out, Dr. K! These are important concepts that you are summarizing in a very easily digestible way. Thank you
@swoopskee
@swoopskee 10 күн бұрын
this might be the best video you've ever made for me specifically, and probably many other people as well. I've been avoiding this a lot, but I clearly see myself in all those negative patterns. Gotta work on this. Thanks Dr K!
@hmmokiguess
@hmmokiguess 7 күн бұрын
I think I need to rewatch this a few times for it to truly click with me lol, but I do think this will help me a lot.
@tr4inwr3ck.d
@tr4inwr3ck.d 11 күн бұрын
Bro this is the exact video that I needed.. everyone says I take things too personally....
@DB-vl9ob
@DB-vl9ob 7 күн бұрын
So now you gonna work on every single point they say? This video is bs. Ppl say shit for thousands of different reason including not liking you.
@dvalee
@dvalee 5 күн бұрын
​@@DB-vl9obyou sound like someone who took the video personally
@dvalee
@dvalee 5 күн бұрын
​@@DB-vl9obyou sound like someone who took the video personally
@anewchapter1336
@anewchapter1336 7 күн бұрын
As an educator I really appreciate this video and your approach in general. Very helpful!
@sandyyuen1314
@sandyyuen1314 21 сағат бұрын
Thank you thank you thank you. This was so helpful and such a breath of relief.
@chrissi.enbyYT
@chrissi.enbyYT 11 күн бұрын
Somebody told me today not to worry about a certain drama and to just be myself. And I took that personally xD
@indiowekograndelbulla
@indiowekograndelbulla 11 күн бұрын
Funny thing is, i cant semd this video to the people in my life who need it the most because they would definitely take it personally
@mickdavies5647
@mickdavies5647 10 күн бұрын
Look at the other person's perspective and ask yourself what are they seeing. Now the other thing you can do is literally ask them, what is it that you are seeing, what are the things I am doing that are bothering you, what are the words I am using that are bothering you? Have you tried this?
@DanteS-119
@DanteS-119 10 күн бұрын
Dr. K you’re doing such a huge service… thanks mate
@jacemenezes6155
@jacemenezes6155 21 сағат бұрын
This is such an incredible video. "It's not you, it's me" was something I could not accept. I spent years destroying my self esteem in the hopes of crafting someone charismatic and chill. Only to end up an anxious wreck. I never entertained the idea that the problem wasn't within me, until now.
@thisisntallowed9560
@thisisntallowed9560 11 күн бұрын
Parent: "Come here baby walk towards me!" Months old baby: "So what are you telling me I can't walk?!"
@matthewgilfus1640
@matthewgilfus1640 10 күн бұрын
I graduated with a BS in Comp Sci in 2017 and graduated FullStack Academy in April 2023. I'm over 3000 job applications with three failed interviews, eight "Thank you but we are looking at many other applicants at this time, good luck" emails, and been ghosted the rest of the time. I'm trying to not take that personally. It's hard to not feel bad when everyone else I know have either dream jobs or are living the life they want. I'm 40, living at home, working a single part-time job, divorced, and my father makes fun of me almost daily because of my education and lack of employment. At this point in my life I'm more like an 18 year old going to their first semester of college without a major in mind. I keep wondering what I need to do and/or what I have to do to make my life work. But I'm 40, not 18. I have very little potential left. It's hard to be living in this world and think "it's all up to me and I just have to be better" rather than "this world is f'ed and therefore so be it". My narcissism, nihilism, and misanthropy is a defense mechanism, "It can't be me, I'm working on improving myself all the time. I'm smart, I should be successful. I know things. Complicated things. I'm a kind, generous person. I haven't failed. I haven't given up. I'm doing a lot of work. Why doesn't it matter to anyone? It must be them." It's a tough pill to swallow to admit I have to do more. I just don't know what "more" is.
@Silencer1337
@Silencer1337 10 күн бұрын
Have you had someone review one of your applications who's opinion is actually worth anything? If there is an oversight in your application then you don't want to risk being too proud to learn about it. Your story sounds similar to that of a family member, who decided after 2000 failed applications that the world doesn't want him to succeed. I then looked at their applications, and they were ass. Used a selfie with no post processing for a picture, eye rings and everything. Writing was needlessly formal, posing no incentives to the employer. CV first-to-last. Off-the-mill fonts and typography. Listless default layout and typesetting. It almost felt like they didn't want a job. Your mileage may vary, but it's something you need to take a look at before chewing on those negative thoughts. Getting basically zero responses with 3000 applications is insane. Something has to be wrong with either the applications or the way you find potential employers.
@timeforamazingchest5271
@timeforamazingchest5271 10 күн бұрын
Try to take a step back and imagine you are looking at your life situation from someone else's point of view, like Dr K explains in this video. If someone you care about were in this situation, what would you think of them? What would you say to them?
@matthewgilfus1640
@matthewgilfus1640 10 күн бұрын
​@@timeforamazingchest5271 "If nothing ever good happens to you I appreciate the effort. You are doing all you can. You may not have a job, money, family, children, a job, or a path in life but you made a decision and you have to live with it. I care about you very much, but there is a chance you might get lucky someday. You work hard but that doesn't guarantee anything. Deserve has nothing to do with it. I love you anyway. Just survive and keep trying. If you want real advice you shouldn't ask me. I've told you what has worked for me and I guess I was lucky. That doesn't mean you will be. You're a smart man and a good man, but that's not valuable anymore I guess. Just do what you need to do. Don't worry about happiness. Life is suffering. Learn to live with that but also keep trying to be the person you want to be. Money isn't everything, just survive."
@matthewgilfus1640
@matthewgilfus1640 10 күн бұрын
@@Silencer1337 I've had my friends in tech look over my resume and did everything they told me to refine. I've gotten lots of advice from them and people from the unemployment office in my city and have been keeping up with their advice. I even quit smoking and started working out so I'm more presentable in Zoom calls. I've gotten compliments doing coding exercises from hiring managers. I reapply to companies after a few months to see if they'd reconsider me. My psychiatrist wants to know what my problem is and I really don't have anything to tell him because they give me good feedback and tell me they'll schedule more interviews but I get squat. At this point I think it's demographic issues and the fact that everyone is laying everyone off and companies want to get those really experienced people. I don't blame them for that. I can't compete with people with real experience no matter how good I am. It's just one of those things.
@divyaniytpremium8743
@divyaniytpremium8743 2 күн бұрын
I also graduated in Dec 2023 and submitted 1000 applications and got 1 failed interview only . This job market is very tough . I'm also almost 30 and it's been very hard on me . We can connect if you want. I'm also a CS major . But don't be too hard on yourself .🫂
@Skipsul
@Skipsul 10 күн бұрын
This is a great one - I catch myself doing the things you warn about, and I've also seen people utterly self destruct with this.
@Naruto-mn1dy
@Naruto-mn1dy 8 күн бұрын
I swear to god i was looking for this video a week ago, i knew dr. K would've talked about it.Glad it's here.
@yelnatsch517
@yelnatsch517 10 күн бұрын
I thought narcissists never take accountability for anything, the exact opposite of what is being described here. I’m so confused. 😥 My experience with narcissists is that they take everything personally, but at the same time never take any self accountability. It’s a very weird combination. I understand it from a psychological point of view in that it’s a self protection mechanism to having low self esteem, but I still find it odd. Low self esteem + not having the tools to fix oneself + low resilience is a bad combination.
@AzadC
@AzadC 3 күн бұрын
Dude sometimes other people is the problem in ones life othertimes its sometimes one that is his own worst enemy. I kinda talk from experience when we talk about living with other kinds of toxic and even provoking types of people living on the same place where taking things personally becomes harder to resist taking personally. Most of the times its alot easier with random people at the streets to not taking it personally but when it becomes something repeatable over time then when it is harder to not taking it personally. The reason it is easier with random people on the street is that the chance to meet them again is very little
@yelnatsch517
@yelnatsch517 3 күн бұрын
@AlRevis-yc2nf except this is a psychology channel so I’m assuming people are using it with the proper definition. Just because people use it incorrectly, doesn’t mean its real definition has changed. People saying anti-social when they mean asocial is just as irritating to me.
@fulicious2991
@fulicious2991 11 күн бұрын
And I took that personally
@Aman-zd6kt
@Aman-zd6kt 10 күн бұрын
I have literally been struggling from the same thing recently and it is mind blowing how I just saw this video all of a sudden. There are no coincidences. I will just get straight into it and start applying these principles in my life from tonight.
@comrademiquella
@comrademiquella 10 күн бұрын
Needed this immensely. I think this could be a much needed perspective shift. Thanks HealthyGamer team ❤️
@TheGodatNothing
@TheGodatNothing 11 күн бұрын
I’m taking that personally
@M.W.2
@M.W.2 11 күн бұрын
Do you have a video about stop comparing yourself to other and how to deal with the unsatisfaction of looking at your age number Vs the accomplishment you did and all those you've lost or still have to do? Advice that is not just "get over it, you can't turn back time"
@neomatt
@neomatt 11 күн бұрын
comparing only sees now not how they got there.
@aawillma
@aawillma 10 күн бұрын
I'm a scientist so I avoid it by realizing I actually don't have enough data to accurately compare. I often don't know where they started vs where I started. I don't understand my own innate talents and potential let alone someone else's. I know that my own success is some combination of luck and skill but I am mostly clueless about that ratio and I'm even more clueless about someone else's. Usually when people compare they are comparing their inner experience to someone else's externally observed experience. Those are already apples and oranges, even disregarding everything I've already mentioned.
@timeforamazingchest5271
@timeforamazingchest5271 10 күн бұрын
Try his "Stop Comparing Yourself to Other People (Here's Why)" video from December 2022.
@crossoverqueen1775
@crossoverqueen1775 10 күн бұрын
It’s amazing how every time I’m struggling with something, you drop a video on it.
@harry6699
@harry6699 3 күн бұрын
This video is really really amazing, and I am so happy you made it! Very helpful for me, just wish I seen it about 4-5 months ago rather than now, just in my own personal life :)
@callmelucid749
@callmelucid749 11 күн бұрын
W vid from the goat as usual
@germantuxedo6397
@germantuxedo6397 11 күн бұрын
I haven't even seen the video yet but I feel like I will heavily agree with Dr K here already. A few weeks ago someone told me to not take a rejection personally and it literally only then clicked for me that I was taking almost every critique personally. After realizing this and why it was wrong I feel like I unlocked some kind of milestone on my way to become healthier.
@micksche83
@micksche83 10 күн бұрын
I totally agree with you. I have the impression, that a lot of people confuse SHAME and GUILD.... Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with us 😊
@justbecause968
@justbecause968 9 күн бұрын
Wow a lot of the years of struggling with my parents stuff makes way more sense now. Trying to unmesh your own issues from the ones that others “normalised” is very difficult. Thank you for helping me to understand
@Leon_Portier
@Leon_Portier 11 күн бұрын
Beating yourself up for something seems always bad
@timeforamazingchest5271
@timeforamazingchest5271 10 күн бұрын
The self-consciousness magnifies the suffering you feel and makes other people around you very uncomfortable. Like nobody wants to have a grown man burst into tears in front of them because he's made a few mistakes in his first week of work lmao.
@BlueDrakk
@BlueDrakk 10 күн бұрын
I think you lost the plot; it's not about shaming the other person, it's about providing constructive feedback so they have the opportunity to grow.
@thisisntallowed9560
@thisisntallowed9560 11 күн бұрын
I think sometimes narcissists use the "taking it personally" teachnique to not have to take responsability. They don't really take it personally, they just don't care.
@constantinotiniacos6192
@constantinotiniacos6192 10 күн бұрын
Well, I believe perhaps you are giving them too much credit. The impression I am getting from what you are saying (and correct me if I am wrong), is that they are in control of their emotions and coldly decide to instill guilt in you to deflect the subject. In my experience with so many family members, they are absolutely so out of control of their emotions that they really believe you hate them whether they do something or not. So I believe the explosion is real, and they get self deflected from the subject to a cesspool of crap inside of them and they tend to take you too to it. That's when empathy is not so great tbh. I believe I am less empathetic because of dealing with people like this so many times in my life but it has improved results enormously in terms of my emotional wellbeing. So when that happens it's like watching a cartoon, and by not let yourself get carried away you can actually help them if they can be helped.
@thisisntallowed9560
@thisisntallowed9560 10 күн бұрын
@@constantinotiniacos6192 I think there are different types of narcissists. I can definitively see there are narcissists like what you are describing who are much more explosive and insecure. What you decribe sound like a mix of narcissism and borderline personality. Both my parents are narcissist and just like a child may lie they also lie to avoid consequences or taking responsability. They're playing dumb but just don't want to be called out. "Oh so now you'll saying I'm a bad mother huh! You're saying this about me you should be ashamed!" and I'm like "No, I said can you knock on the door before opening it." My mother never believed I hated her until I straight up told her I hated her. I think my mother's motivation was more revenge and hatred/disgust towards me than insecurity, even if there probably were insecurities. She even read a book on manipulation so that gives me the feeling she may know what she was doing. I think something common for all narcissists is lack of empathy and lack of self awareness. But I don't dare to dispute Dr K On a side note, it's cool if you can avoid getting caught up into her emotions but make sure you're not dissociating.
@constantinotiniacos6192
@constantinotiniacos6192 7 күн бұрын
@@thisisntallowed9560 I think I can know where you are coming from. I remember finding a book, "The Prince" of Nicolas Maquiavelo (I think is Nicolo Maquiavelli), which has all these tactics of manipulation to secure the kingdom. My father had underline many passages about how to deal with an enemy. So, I wonder if your mother feels you are manipulating her too. That's what an egoic defense mecanism goes to when it's feeling hurt. Many narcicist have great guilt issues, because where also abused by it, so they go like:"Hmmm you made me feel guilty and now I feel bad. Now I'll learn do the same". Instead of taking a step back and reflecting on... "what things I might have done to contribute to this?". So it's definetely a big ego thing. As a narcicist upbringing survivor I sometimes notice I have a big ego, and I am noticing how is making things extra hard, because I have to wrestle: First unsurpress the emotions the ego send to me, and then try to find the truth to it when I get to a calm mind while dealing with all the distracting bs it sends me. It's ridiculous, Haha.
@Jaffa__
@Jaffa__ 10 күн бұрын
Absolutely fantastic video. I was actually able to observe this within me and started to catch the internalising mode when it activated. It mustn't have been an easy task to try to explain this but I think you communicated it very well. Time to practice and take action!
@cet262
@cet262 9 күн бұрын
This video genuinely helped me see that I do this wayyy too much and the desire to not be a narcissist made this video 10 times more impactful
@theboredemoji
@theboredemoji 11 күн бұрын
OK....got it 👍
@MightyElemental
@MightyElemental 11 күн бұрын
7:55 >the problem isn't me >the problem is that I'm not good enough at something How is that not "me" being the problem? Yeah, it's something that can be fixed, but it's still my own lack of knowledge... I can't blame anyone else for it... Maybe I'm not understand what "personal" means in this context.
@neomatt
@neomatt 11 күн бұрын
the problem is not you it's what you dont know and you cant learn things you dont know from yourself
@Gauntlet9001
@Gauntlet9001 11 күн бұрын
You can take steps to fix a lack of knowledge. If you make it personal you tell yourself "im a dummy and can never learn" which 1 isn't true and 2 doesn't fix the actual problem you had.
@dead_nn5293
@dead_nn5293 11 күн бұрын
i think the point is that your skills are not “you”. It’s skill issue, not your identity
@dancole2994
@dancole2994 10 күн бұрын
It's not about blame. It's about accountability. It's about understanding the situation instead of complaining about it. Only then can you get out of being self-centred, zoom out and make changes.
@aawillma
@aawillma 10 күн бұрын
You are more than your abilities.
@Dezzo0721
@Dezzo0721 3 күн бұрын
Just when I thought I found a video by a new creator and was excited. It just doctor K with his reasonable takes and healthy life advice
@speedflying_kid
@speedflying_kid 10 күн бұрын
Man this channel is pure gold. Very helpful, thank you so much!
@progamer-df3be
@progamer-df3be 10 күн бұрын
I am offended. How dare you suggest that I need to stop taking things personally. I can't believe what I just witnessed. I don't take things personally and I am completely fine. I have no problem, you are the problem. I think you should stop taking things so personally.
@IceDelight
@IceDelight 10 күн бұрын
To be honest, I think there's a lot of people who take things personally who aren't narcissists.
@nolandderlugner1351
@nolandderlugner1351 10 күн бұрын
100% I dont say im not narcisstic, but i know om really insecurr and thats why i take things personally
@monkiesbanana321
@monkiesbanana321 10 күн бұрын
There are two different things Narcissistic traits (ANY one can have more or less of this at various times in life) & People Dx w/ NPD (consistent, frequent and troublesome expression of narcissistic traits and behaviors)
@jhlime
@jhlime 10 күн бұрын
It's a narcissistic trait. We all have them (or can have them) to a degree. Having a trait or a tendency it's not equivalent to having narcissistic personality disorder.
@davidgaynor2636
@davidgaynor2636 9 күн бұрын
Hey Dr. K, I love listening to you so much. I've only watched about five videos or so, but I feel like I understand everything you say and it all makes so much sense and is so intelligent, it actually is making me better by hearing it. I know I'm gonna watch the majority of your videos, keep up the great work. PS I am becoming more aware of my conditioning to social situations and am willing to take the risk of possibly being the dumbest person in the room, which likely isn't going to happen and even if it does it's not the end of the world. Thanks for that.
@GODDOG619
@GODDOG619 5 күн бұрын
Dr.K, thank you so much for this video - it has been been a huge help to me since I've watched it
@joshsmith2723
@joshsmith2723 11 күн бұрын
Dr K is pumping out amazing content lately!
@1flower161
@1flower161 10 күн бұрын
hmmm.. you know this might be one of the rare times where I disagree from Dr.K. Even though the step of separating yourself from your actions is essential, i dont think it starts there. Like if I feel like I showed this video to young me, I dont think it would have made me feel better. Speaking as a person who was VERY sensitive as a child/teen, the reason I dont take things personally as an adult now is because I started to show myself A LOT more compassion and talked to myself in a more positive way. Learning to still love myself and be kind to myself even when I made mistakes is what made it easy for me to not take it personally in the future. which is something I really needed because everyone around me was quite harsh when they called me out for an action they didnt like.
@G4RYWithaFour
@G4RYWithaFour 7 күн бұрын
Its 2 solutions for 1 problem IMO. Self compassion reduces the impact and need for shame, externalizing the problem and readjusting what your responsibility actually is reduces the number of sources for shame.
@DanialZh
@DanialZh 5 күн бұрын
This just fixed most of the problems I was having in relationship, I couldn't explain this to her but now I can and we understand this MUCH BETTER! thanks.
@Taib-Atte
@Taib-Atte 10 күн бұрын
This is what I’ve been thinking recently. I’m at my best when I’m not serious. Everything is more sweet and fun when you can laugh it off or stop worrying about changing the minds of other people.
@nectarina3891
@nectarina3891 10 күн бұрын
Dr K, I Can't tell when I have taken something personally vs when someone is being mean to me/not treating me well. How do we figure it out?
@privet671poka
@privet671poka 10 күн бұрын
Dr. K: “Narcissists don’t fix problems in their life.” Also Dr. K: Draws a beer can that looks like a lipstick and continues to do so for the entire video.
@Vindeded
@Vindeded 7 күн бұрын
To me it was very very clear, nice video HG !
@papasnapper24
@papasnapper24 4 күн бұрын
Dr. K. I will literally watch all your videos. You have helped me so much this far. I was the guy that started talking to all the pretty girls so I didn't miss out, and I didn't haha. I'm doing this for me, but thank you SO much!
@08wolfeyes
@08wolfeyes 10 күн бұрын
So are you saying that we should simply accept what others say about the ' action ' as being truth/ factual? Surely, there are times when what another says isn't true, and so you're simply correcting them on that fact. Also, if you're changing some action, then you are, in fact, changing who you are as a person, not through your own choices, though, but simply to please others. It also gives people then the power and ability to manipulate and control you, more so if two or more friends direct such things in your direction. This is why you can often find bullying happening in the workplace, for example. A group of ' Clicky ' friends work together and for some reason, don't like the new guy or someone who already works there and so together they tell that person they need to work faster, focus, stop talking etc. Yet they themselves may, in fact, be the ones who do such things. What you're saying, though, seems to suggest that you should take what they say as fact which would lead to you pushing yourself more and more until it leads to some kind of breaking point, mental breakdown or even burnout.
@neomatt
@neomatt 10 күн бұрын
this is not even the topic of the video
@christopherp.8868
@christopherp.8868 10 күн бұрын
I think that's an interesting point. Because the question becomes... what's the best course of action/best way to take responsibility in this situation/do I take this personally or not etc.
@killerb255
@killerb255 8 күн бұрын
_So are you saying that we should simply accept what others say about the ' action ' as being truth/ factual? Surely, there are times when what another says isn't true, and so you're simply correcting them on that fact._ I think a better idea would be to not put so much weight on what others think. This could be a person that you may never see again--why would their beliefs in truths or falsehoods affect how you live your life? Also tie into that the serenity prayer (you don't have to be religious to learn from this): the essence of it is to: - Have the serenity to accept what you can't change (accept does not mean condone) - Have the courage to change what you can - Have the wisdom to know the difference between the above two things You're not Professor X from X-Men. You can't change a person's thoughts. You can say things to them, but they can choose how to react to it. You can do things (or not do things) in front of them, and they can choose how to react. That's all the influence you have on that other person's worldviews.
@neomatt
@neomatt 7 күн бұрын
@@killerb255 ​there is nothing wrong with fixing yourself without other people the problem comes when you blame yourself for being unable to fix problems like mental health when they are not caused by you most mental health problems are caused by something that happened to you.
@tgraphics9091
@tgraphics9091 6 күн бұрын
Is it possible that you speak about self-destruction, perhaps even compare it to self-improvement
@edwardwhitehead8143
@edwardwhitehead8143 10 күн бұрын
It makes a lot of sense; by internalizing a problem, it ironically removes any ability to solve it objectively. This is a great video that lays out a very simple, but hard to swallow concept
@fyodordostoyevsky9026
@fyodordostoyevsky9026 8 күн бұрын
Eventually you keep not taking things personally and you'll turn into a doormat.
@melodyschmitke8303
@melodyschmitke8303 5 күн бұрын
Actually no. Being a doormat is taking responsibility for other people. My responsibility is my actions. If what someone desires is important to me l will work to do so. Having a friend is important, so I make messaging a priority. Or let them know I struggle with this, can you help me? If it's not important then their feelings won't affect me.
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