the Unusual & Rare Mental Disorder Iceberg

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SIRIUS

SIRIUS

Күн бұрын

my Disturing (and unusual) Mental Illness / Mental Disorder explained. This Iceberg chart covers: some of the most common and misunderstood mental disorders, some disturbing (and very rare) disorders as well as anything else I found interesting enough I found whilst writing to put into my iceberg chart.
Timecodes
0:00・Introduction
0:12・(1) ASPD
2:20・(1) bipolar disorder
4:05・(1) NPD
5:59・(1) MDD
7:16・(1) PTSD
8:44・(2) schizophrenia
11:07・(2) OCD
12:05・(2) body dysmorphia
13:39・(2) dementia
14:39・(2) agoraphobia
15:34・(3) witzelsucht
16:38・(3) scrupulosity
17:50・(3) DID
18:40・(3) kleptomania
19:52・(3) alice in wonderland
20:37・(4) prosopagnosia
21:44・(4) DPDR
22:46・(4) capgras syndrome
24:42・(4) walking corpse syndrome
26:05・(4) mirror-self
26:59・(5) dissociative fugue
28:34・(5) doppelganger syndrome
29:17・(5) (clinical) lycanthropy
30:12・(5) truman show delusion
31:21・(5) munchausen syndrome
32:55・(5) stendhal syndrome
34:07・(5) fregoli delusion
34:50・(6) stockholm syndrome
37:11・(6) ekbom’s syndrome
38:00・(6) alien-hand syndrome
39:03・(7) body IID
Music:
various tracks from Silent Hill 1, 2 & 3, DDLC, Manhunt, Yume Nikki and Watchdogs 2 (ask me for specifics).

Пікірлер: 861
@redSIRIUS
@redSIRIUS 22 күн бұрын
100K! - thank you all! As always, what did you like / dislike / hate / love about this video?
@jimmyneutron3986
@jimmyneutron3986 22 күн бұрын
yooo love the music from your other videos and this one. where can i find them?
@gaugea
@gaugea 22 күн бұрын
congrats on preserving your blowup bro
@loveline119
@loveline119 22 күн бұрын
during the Capgras syndrome part, there is some voice distortion. I startled me a bit, ngl.
@wizard0691
@wizard0691 22 күн бұрын
This video is amazing there so much detail i just didn't like the fact about the narcisistique part were you say it's word origin is Roman and wich is supposed to be Greek but if i'm being honest it's not that import i just want to say keep up the good work👍
@Fyreshield
@Fyreshield 22 күн бұрын
I’m a big fan of the emphasis on crediting footage used (I’ve struggled to find full clips/contexts from other videos that before) also putting all the iceberg entries and timestamps in the description is a huge quality boost
@isaiahvanmourik5651
@isaiahvanmourik5651 15 күн бұрын
where is british?
@sadsnaildad
@sadsnaildad 14 күн бұрын
I was wondering that too
@danyak1034
@danyak1034 9 күн бұрын
😂
@AionAmbient
@AionAmbient 9 күн бұрын
Too common of a disease
@xoslox3977
@xoslox3977 8 күн бұрын
Disorder *
@fanservo
@fanservo 8 күн бұрын
Where is french?
@masonthecoyote
@masonthecoyote 22 күн бұрын
i love how the schizophrenia footage is one of those simulations that nothing is like the illness - coming from an schizophrenic person.
@elise7650
@elise7650 21 күн бұрын
yeah, I think I recognize the footage from a migraine aura simulator, not a schizophrenia simulator
@_lostclub
@_lostclub 21 күн бұрын
"coming from an schizophrenic person" wow, a preteen furry with fake disorder cringe, who would of thought.
@6nomemory6
@6nomemory6 20 күн бұрын
@@elise7650 i knew it looked familiar! (i have migraines with aura)
@sentranslates
@sentranslates 20 күн бұрын
You're so right. My psychotic outbreaks were effing horrible when I wasn't being treated. All the cockroaches, holes, and puke everywhere, everywhere, everywhere... I picked and scratched at my skin because I felt the roaches under it... And the smell... I'm so lucky I only have paranoia episodes now. Modern medicine is a godsend.
@mleszzor6866
@mleszzor6866 19 күн бұрын
@@sentranslates From one to another. Though back then, without modern medicine, our psychosis would have likely differed wildly. Think of all the shamans and such, they were psychotic in different ways, they thought they were gods messengers (though some do still have delusions that they are a messenger of a god), from my understanding, the ones who were, like in my example, shamans, they had less negative or more positive delusions than people do now. But who knows? It was such long ago, and we have no idea what they experienced. Cheers!
@Corilo91
@Corilo91 21 күн бұрын
A little correction: Narcissus doesn't come from a "story in Roman poetry". It comes from Greek mythology.
@Raisenator
@Raisenator 21 күн бұрын
Then again, the Roman’s copied basically all of the Greeks culture lol
@Corilo91
@Corilo91 21 күн бұрын
@@Raisenator Oh, yes! 😂
@user-ym4sn2oz8r
@user-ym4sn2oz8r 15 күн бұрын
it comes from the guy who was obsessed with himself and stared at himself in the reflection of water until he turned into a flower right
@canklecouture4050
@canklecouture4050 15 күн бұрын
basically saying its greek lol!
@Cyntaria
@Cyntaria 15 күн бұрын
​​@@user-ym4sn2oz8r the GREEK myth is that Narcissus saw himself in a pond and loved his reflection so much that he was immobilised and could do nothing but stare at it. He refused to eat or drink and eventually died staring at his reflection. The flower takes its name from narcissus because it grows on riverbanks, next to the water. Roman mythology is Greek mythology with all the names changed. Frustrating as I'm Greek/Aussie so I would read a lot if Greek mythology books as a kid because I loved it, yet now as an adult I see the Roman myths referenced more and I don't know who any of these planet people are.
@imlikekindatired
@imlikekindatired 20 күн бұрын
I have sociopathy and we do not purposely manipulate people, it’s a mental disorder just like OCD and social anxiety. I have been in therapy for a while and I think I’ve improved. Also no not all of us are serial killers, r*pists, or animal abusers. We are people, so yeah. Treat us like it.
@null6353
@null6353 18 күн бұрын
absolutely. i hate the scorn in which people speak of people with a cluster b disorder(s). it is particularly frustrating when people with bpd pretend to be 'activists' about the disorder, then turn around and spew their ableism against other disorders of the same cluster; they share a cluster for a reason. i hope your therapy continues to go well for you, though.
@DIAN4-721
@DIAN4-721 17 күн бұрын
​@@null6353 exactly !! Especially with NPD it's such a shame that most of the channels talking about mental health and more specifically about survivors of abuse demonize these disorders so much
@avaklein9145
@avaklein9145 17 күн бұрын
the way he talked about aspd was disgusting
@imlikekindatired
@imlikekindatired 17 күн бұрын
@@avaklein9145 I just want people to talk about ASPD like any other mental disorder.
@jsthaut
@jsthaut 17 күн бұрын
You don't tho
@I_Exist_.
@I_Exist_. 17 күн бұрын
I hate how misunderstood OCD is. I’ve been struggling with it for many years and it truly is a painful mental disorder. Especially when untreated, it can make you question your morality or even sanity, especially in my case. I urge people to learn more about OCD and support people you know with it.
@ghostplayz9971
@ghostplayz9971 15 күн бұрын
Yeah a bunch of people thinks it means you need to be organized (i have the messiest school bag known to man)
@user-bv8fr4to8k
@user-bv8fr4to8k 11 күн бұрын
I luckily only had a year long episode of it due to an abusive household. Weird rituals were the only way to get any sembelance of control over my life. Once I moved away from the situation the symptoms subsided. I can't imagine a whole lifetime of that serious condition
@minkoil00
@minkoil00 9 күн бұрын
If you would not mind me asking what do you do? I have a hand washing issue but it’s not out of hand. no pun intended 😅 how does it affect your morality more specifically?
@maasikalama
@maasikalama 6 күн бұрын
​@@minkoil00in my case it was that my obsessive thoughts were about harming other people and since they were nonstop, i would always be questioning whether i was actually a good person and one of my compulsions for example was googling symptoms of insanity to make sure i hadn't lost my mind. it was HELL
@itz_violet21
@itz_violet21 5 күн бұрын
fr I hate how a lot of people think ocd is just like "i Do ThIs In OnE cErTaIn WaY i HaVe OcD uWu" like no it's a lot more, just because you flip the pages of a book in a certain way does not mean you have OCD 😭
@irontsubaki
@irontsubaki 22 күн бұрын
I have OCD and can tell you that environment can play a massive part. When I was younger my little sister (a baby at the time) caught RSV really bad and had to be admitted to the ER. It scared the life out of me seeing how she went from happy and healthy one day to being on a ventilator the next, and I started obsessing over cleanliness to the point where I was formally diagnosed. It also isn't always about cleanliness or locking doors, either. It can also cause intrusive thoughts about the most horrible shit you can imagine which are COMPLETELY involuntary but can still make you feel disgusted by yourself. OCD is some bullshit man
@wlther
@wlther 22 күн бұрын
i have it too, im so sorry you have to live w this shit. youre strong. sending love
@jigshawpuzzle
@jigshawpuzzle 21 күн бұрын
OCD person here, you're strong
@hatetheusername
@hatetheusername 21 күн бұрын
i’ve had ocd since i was a kid and environment plays a HUGE part in mine. there are some of my past ocd themes that were developed due to life experiences. like for example when i was 11ish we had a lesson about fire prevention which included leaving plugs switched on overnight (i’m scottish and our outlets have switches on them). i couldn’t go to bed until i checked if everything was switched off but i had to do it over and over again in a specific way because i thought the house would burn down.
@_lostclub
@_lostclub 21 күн бұрын
I don't have OCD, I have CDO. It's the same as OCD but the letters are in order, AS THEY SHOULD BE.
@6nomemory6
@6nomemory6 20 күн бұрын
the intrusive thoughts! every damn time i feel like i fell in shit and think "what the fuck is wrong with myself"
@wlther
@wlther 22 күн бұрын
thank you for including OCD. it's a disorder that's been ruining my life since i was about 10 years old and people tend to not take it seriously. it really sucks to see ppl not even recognize it as a real mental illness and going ''i'm so ocd'' or saying they have intrusive thoughts when they're just impulsive thoughts. then when they hear about the unwanted, disturbing thoughts we are forced to live with they think we are terrible people. but we don't WANT to think these things, that's why they're called INTRUSIVE and cause us such distress and anxiety. ocd attacks your morals and biggest fears. there are so many types of intrusive thoughts and compulsions you can have and it's absolute hell on earth. it's constant, all day every day.
@_lostclub
@_lostclub 21 күн бұрын
omg I have OCD, too. I hate when things are aligned properly or something isn't straight. It's such a struggle. Normal people will never understand.
@HoggySklump
@HoggySklump 21 күн бұрын
@@_lostclub same
@BariLopesh
@BariLopesh 20 күн бұрын
You don't have ocd, abbreviations would drive you mad if you did...
@wlther
@wlther 20 күн бұрын
@@BariLopesh you clearly don’t know what ocd is lmao
@BariLopesh
@BariLopesh 20 күн бұрын
@@wlther You clearly didn't get the joke ✌🏻
@CelticVampireQueen
@CelticVampireQueen 15 күн бұрын
I love how you don't demonize ASPD. You just address it like it's just another disorder.
@illiatiia
@illiatiia Күн бұрын
I heard recently that a theory that ASPD is possibly high-masking autism. They have a really high overlap of traits an behaviors. It's funny because people already treat "high functioning" autism very similarly.
@MaxHoffmann-dv1qi
@MaxHoffmann-dv1qi 12 күн бұрын
Psychedelics saved me from years of uncontrollable depression, anxiety, smoking, and illicit pills addiction. Imagine carving heavy chains for over a decade and then all of a sudden that burden is gone. Believe it or not, in a couple of years they'll be all over for treatment of mental health related issues.
@AlfonsoGavilanes
@AlfonsoGavilanes 12 күн бұрын
Congrats on your recovery. Most people don't realize that psilocybin can be used as a miracle medication to save lives.
@PantawanMangkan
@PantawanMangkan 12 күн бұрын
To be honest, mushrooms are one of the most amazing things on the planet and it is natural, they serve in many ways not only for mental related issues.
@AnteroKinnunen
@AnteroKinnunen 12 күн бұрын
Can you help me with a reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. It is very hard to get a reliable source here in Switzerland. Really need!
@AlfonsoGavilanes
@AlfonsoGavilanes 12 күн бұрын
Yes, Sporeville. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD, and addiction... Mushrooms definitely made a huge difference to why I'm clean today.
@MariaFallu
@MariaFallu 12 күн бұрын
I wish they were readily available in my place. Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He's 59 & has many mental health issues plus probably CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac. He's constantly talking about killing someone. He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD knows if it is common for an obsession with violence.
@ronzeffir5139
@ronzeffir5139 16 күн бұрын
not to be the "um actually" guy but I think Stockholm Syndrome has recently been disregarded as diagnosis? I mean it's still a thing, but it's not a disorder, rather a word for understanding the emotional turmoil a person's going through in a case being kidnapped or sth
@Happenstance_music
@Happenstance_music 16 күн бұрын
Yeah, the authorities failed to protect them and the hostages were quite nice to them. I believe the syndrome was then made up to explain this "irrational" behaviour...
@luk4aaaa
@luk4aaaa 4 сағат бұрын
The syndrome was made up to explain away rational survival strategies because the psychologist couldn’t understand why the women didn’t just resist against the armed attackers.
@trashfire1025
@trashfire1025 22 күн бұрын
DPDR is always a strange experience to try and describe to people, but I feel you do a good job of describing it. Im sure others experience it differently, but for me when I have episodes that last for a long while, after I come out of them it often feels like waking up from a dream, and suddenly a month has gone by and I can hardly remember any of it.
@Touchingkidles
@Touchingkidles 15 күн бұрын
For me it's at its strongest when I 'wake up' frequently throughout the day rather than when I'm not 'waking up'. I believe it's due to the realisation of existence being more frequent than the usual 'auto pilot'
@puppppppppppuuuuu6205
@puppppppppppuuuuu6205 14 күн бұрын
I can remember things alright it’s just the actual memory of them is so hazy, I struggle remembering things continuously happening and the memories are very chopped up with little bits.
@Computergirl567
@Computergirl567 22 күн бұрын
I have dpdr. I was diagnosed at about 12 years old. Anxiety medication and age has helped it a bit. As a child I would become genuinely terrified because I didn't know if I was real or not. I spent a long time feeling like I was dreaming and that my whole world was fake. even now the world does feel a little less clear than I feel like it should, i guess? but things are much better. The 5 things you can see, 4 things you can hear, 3 things you can touch, 2 things you can smell, and one things you can taste is a good method to calm down. It distracts me. However, it feels like watching tv and focusing on that rather than reality.
@SetariM
@SetariM 22 күн бұрын
I commonly feel like this, then I snap out of it because I have shit to do. But it happens to me multiple times a day
@Computergirl567
@Computergirl567 22 күн бұрын
@@SetariM for me it kind of feels like trying to move around in a pool, when you can't quite balance or latch on to anything. I get the zoning out thing, people always think I'm sad and I'm like "no, I just mentally disappeared from the planet lol"
@mustajalal-ajal1946
@mustajalal-ajal1946 22 күн бұрын
I have experienced something like this when I was immensely stressed, must be bummer dealing with it your whole life. Hope you're better now
@metapuns9004
@metapuns9004 22 күн бұрын
Sometimes I get episodes of it. It makes me panic at first. The longest episode I had was a few months. Sometimes talking to people can ground me really quickly because being able to see people respond to me gives me back control
@Computergirl567
@Computergirl567 22 күн бұрын
@@metapuns9004 oddly enough, talking to people would make me worse. I would always try to look for little inconsistencies in what they said to prove they weren't real. But it's great to find a way to ground yourself, for me unfortunately i couldn't trigger it myself.
@lyddan1223
@lyddan1223 16 күн бұрын
No selective mutism mentioned, really shows how rare and unusual it is. Not even teachers at school know about it or doctors themselves lmao.
@Durandio
@Durandio 16 күн бұрын
what is it, im assuming its where u only talk when noones around or to certain people or refuse to say certain phrases
@fungustheclown666
@fungustheclown666 16 күн бұрын
Honestly it's not actually that uncommon. I think people think it's a fake thing or just soneone being stubborn. But it's more of a result of a mental condition than other conditions. Selective mutism almost always is associated with autism, anxiety, trauma, and many other things. Though im sure it can happen without anything else, and it isnt present in all of those things as a symptom so thats why its recognized as a seperate condition. I was friends with a few selectively mute people, one girl from my small elementary school, one girl from my college. I myself go mute when overstimulated as I have autism, which can be considered selective mutism.
@fungustheclown666
@fungustheclown666 16 күн бұрын
​@Durandio Its when certain situations or circumstances cause you to stop speaking. You can often speak at other times. But in these situations, You can't choose to speak and when you're pushed to speak it's extremely distressing and almost painful. For me It feels like you want to talk but you can't move your mouth, and the words are filling up your brain and making it feel like it's going to explode. Some people only have it in certain places like schools or when they're asked about certain things.
@Synth466
@Synth466 16 күн бұрын
Because it's not a mental disorder
@ibxxx3461
@ibxxx3461 15 күн бұрын
holy shit i experienced that from when i was born till i was almost in high school and most doctors would say i'm just shy but i just found the disorder i had
@Avaa-vanilla995
@Avaa-vanilla995 22 күн бұрын
Not Kayne being the face of bipolar disorder. Sir, noooo. Please.
@gamingnoodles3095
@gamingnoodles3095 14 күн бұрын
he's the goat tho
@angel_cake9451
@angel_cake9451 4 күн бұрын
@@gamingnoodles3095he's a Nazi
@indydd
@indydd 4 күн бұрын
my goat
@angel_cake9451
@angel_cake9451 4 күн бұрын
@@indydd corny asf he's a nazi
@gn0my
@gn0my Күн бұрын
Its a clear case of BPD. Just because you dont like him wont magically heal him. Most people with BPD are unlikable.
@babymaaaan
@babymaaaan 22 күн бұрын
I highly recommend Will Wood and The Tapeworms to anyone interested in songs based on psychiatric conditions-the album SELF-iSH features a song called Cotard’s Solution based on Cotard’s syndrome and Mr. Capgras based on the Capgras Delusion
@klamichi
@klamichi 20 күн бұрын
IM SO GLAD SOMEONE IS TALKING ABOUT WILL WOOD HERE OMG
@Eazy_Peazy
@Eazy_Peazy 16 күн бұрын
WILL WOOD MENTIONED
@iamthestoat
@iamthestoat 12 күн бұрын
WILLIAM WOODEN
@SoraIkari
@SoraIkari 7 күн бұрын
Everything Is A Lot is probably his best album.
@SoraIkari
@SoraIkari 7 күн бұрын
He also made a song name Mr. Fregoli. Less of a song, though. The title makes sense when you give it a listen, I do recommend
@algorerhythm2751
@algorerhythm2751 22 күн бұрын
I firmly believe the DSM-V classification for OCD will change in future iterations. OCD is currently classified as an anxiety disorder, but anyone who suffers from it can tell you it's a whole lot more. The fantastical thinking that's inherent to the obsessions and compulsions puts it more in line with delusional and psychotic disorders. Things like... "I didn't check the door x times, so now the house will burn down." or "I saw the number 6 too many times today, so now the people I love are in danger." As more research is done on neuroanatomy, I have full faith that treatments for OCD are going to become more sophisticated and available. People are becoming more and more aware of how the condition actually works and presents itself, both in the medical field and in popular culture (thanks to videos like this one). The more people know, the easier it is to have real honest conversations about it and recognize errors in previous ways of thinking.
@KATinBLACK
@KATinBLACK 21 күн бұрын
⁠@@eepinwillow they sometimes add antipsychotics for people with anxiety so why not try it for OCD patients? I mean, if they need it of course. Just as some people do fine with one anti-anxiety or anti-depressant, some need something more or something different.
@billyboberto
@billyboberto 22 күн бұрын
Loved the content so far but I need to preface that some of these disorders, like dementia, are not onset mental disorders but are classifications of specific types of mental disorders like alzheimers, and fall under the umbrella of neurological degeneration. I think it's important you highlight the disorders or issues discussed in videos with more care as to likely root causes rather than characteristics of the disorder, given a lot of these issues are unpreventable for some persons and its important that others who don't suffer from it realize that some disorders are linked to brain atrophy or physical harm
@BziumMq
@BziumMq 22 күн бұрын
Holy shit, I experienced Alice in Wonderland when I was a child. I can remember laying on my bed, focusing my sight on the wall in front of me and feeling that my room turns huge and I'm hundreds of metres away from the wall. Then my hand got enormous, like It was barely enought space in the room for it. I had those syndroms from time to time, mostly in the evenings. I dont have it now as an adult.
@vinberg6
@vinberg6 22 күн бұрын
youre not alone
@cristiangabrieltirca
@cristiangabrieltirca 21 күн бұрын
I also have experienced once in a really extreme hot climate I was 11
@memethornislowkeysad8987
@memethornislowkeysad8987 17 күн бұрын
It's definitely crazy. I've had them since I was about 9 or so, associated with chronic migraine. It becomes a huge issue when one moment you're trying to focus on schoolwork, and the next you feel like the arm you're writing with all of a sudden is shrinking and you're ten meters in the air. I haven't actually met anyone yet who has had more than just a couple of episodes (which I guess is lucky for them lol) and have it persist into adulthood like me without having had some sort of brain damage, like a stroke or TIA or something similar, which kinda sucks. I swear it's not a super rare thing like these videos make it out to be-maybe to have recurrent episodes of, sure-but I feel like most people have experienced something like it at least once.
@jayessemar
@jayessemar 16 күн бұрын
did you talk to other people about it asking why things look this way, or did you accept this is reality and tried to hide your fear or confusion when your perception was weird? personally i have memories of asking my mum about it and feeling embarrassed bc she would say its bc im only 4 or smth, and then not asking again and pretending things looked normal. i dont know if i had alice in wonderland syndrome; im just wondering if my experience was similar to yours since you had it
@BziumMq
@BziumMq 16 күн бұрын
@@jayessemar I genuinely thought that everybody experience it when they focus their sight at one point while laying on bed. I believed it's 100% normal.
@SlimeyJade
@SlimeyJade 22 күн бұрын
Usually a big fan of your stuff, previous iceberg vids were fantastic. This was sloppy though. Video being used for different disorders than what's actually being portrayed. Not sure why Plank was used for alien hand syndrome. And was disappointing that Stockholm was really even mentioned, especially as far down as it was. And that you didn't mention how the 'origin' was because in that hostage situation, the police were incompetent and not taking hostage safety into account with their actions, whereas the actual criminals were more open to negotiation with the hostages and quite possibly were the less risky of the two sides to deal with.
@spidaPK
@spidaPK 9 күн бұрын
I went into a somewhat severe depression after a couple anxiety attacks and instead of dealing with the issue (like I had in the past) my mind began to depersonalize. It’s genuinely the weirdest I’ve ever felt and sometimes I still worry that it’s happening. It takes forever to recover from as well
@D.x.-1974
@D.x.-1974 19 күн бұрын
4:20 The story of Narcissus originates from ancient Greek mythology, not ancient Rome. In Greek mythology, Narcissus was a beautiful youth who fell in love with his own reflection in a pool of water and became so enamored with it that he could not bear to leave. Eventually, he wasted away and died, and in some versions of the myth, he was transformed into the narcissus flower. This is just an anime, not the real story
@lainiwakura1776
@lainiwakura1776 13 күн бұрын
What? I thought in one version he tries to hug his own reflection but drowns?
@D.x.-1974
@D.x.-1974 12 күн бұрын
@@lainiwakura1776 well locally in Greece from what I've learned is that Narcissus looked his reflection on a fountain drowned and died since ancient Greeks never knew how to swim and so that's the end of the story and possibly how the story got spread across ancient storytelling but I still think to myself ''How he died? like how deep is that fountain?''
@patricklewis9787
@patricklewis9787 7 күн бұрын
A flower?
@D.x.-1974
@D.x.-1974 7 күн бұрын
@@patricklewis9787 Yeah, something like that
@Donatti
@Donatti 22 күн бұрын
No borderline personality disorder? It's fairly "common", more than a lot of these other ones anyway. Good video though, was fun to watch
@crimsonvexations
@crimsonvexations 21 күн бұрын
Yeah, like Bipolar was on here but that wasn't.
@little2526
@little2526 21 күн бұрын
I suffer from BPD and Bipolar 2. I only clicked this video in an attempt to upset myself with the BPD entry. I think I'm more upset it wasn't included. I won't be finishing the video now. Kinda happy I didn't get to continue my ew feeling, as I'll call it
@crimsonvexations
@crimsonvexations 21 күн бұрын
@@little2526 Yeah, it really feels like it's not recognized when it should be. Need more education on it.
@TravellerZasha
@TravellerZasha 20 күн бұрын
@@little2526 The fact you only came here to upset yourself with BPD is such a BPD trait at least for me i call it a self-triggering/self harm urge personally as i was doing the same, i think they clumped it with Bipolar or Antisocial personality disorder which would make me upset as i dislike the stigma very much.
@little2526
@little2526 20 күн бұрын
@TravellerZasha That's definitely what it is for me too. Just said ew because it's ew. Best for me sometimes. I'm sorry you experience the same
@MR.CONTROVERSIAL.
@MR.CONTROVERSIAL. 21 күн бұрын
Never in my life I thought I would see an iceberg video on mental disorders.
@lyrics_m_sic
@lyrics_m_sic 5 сағат бұрын
Icebergs are a popular format, I think this is a good thing tho because psychological disorders become more known and people can educate themselves
@sorasoraaaa
@sorasoraaaa 16 күн бұрын
I apologize if it seems like I'm venting in this comment, but my dad, mum, and my sister all have depression, and they've told me about things that have happened when their condition were worse then they were today. They are okay now, but they still sometimes have those moments where they dont feel the best, but they try their best. They think I show signs of it as well but I havent gotten it checked out. I remember a few months ago that I would barely leave my room, but I believe that I am a little better. Thank you for talking about it and showing that it isn't that simple.
@BYAMLICTDTYCMH_fyolai_brainrot
@BYAMLICTDTYCMH_fyolai_brainrot 14 күн бұрын
You don't have to apologise ! Most if not all of the comments are related to other people's experience with illnesses mentioned in the video so it's not "inapprioprate". That aside I think people should be more sensitive when it comes to their approach to seeing others share their struggles, the most important thing is to support the person in need and making them and their struggles feel little is cruel, unfortunately this topic is not talked about often but still - putting yourself in the 2nd person's shoes before commenting something rude can save a lot of burden for the receiver I wish the best for both your mum, dad, sister and you, depression is an awful disorder but with the mutual support of your loved ones and most importantly - help of psychologist you can win, no matter how long it will take ❤️
@adyn1826
@adyn1826 17 күн бұрын
An artist named Will Wood made two songs about Capgras syndrome and Cotard syndrome
@SoraIkari
@SoraIkari 7 күн бұрын
pretty sure he also wrote a song with prosopagnosia in it, can't remember which one I was also looking for this comment
@Thatcher-Davis
@Thatcher-Davis Күн бұрын
first thing i thought seeing the thumbnail
@cablesalty
@cablesalty 15 сағат бұрын
Wait so depersonalization is a mental health disorder? Lot of times I just feel like I’m watching my life as a movie
@Sheamusownscena10
@Sheamusownscena10 22 күн бұрын
The goat of iceberg videos is back!
@SwaggyG_2102
@SwaggyG_2102 22 күн бұрын
Suggestion for an upcoming video idea: Think you could do an iceberg on disturbing and banned animations?
@andreserra6356
@andreserra6356 22 күн бұрын
The man is back, keep the good work.
@lulu1997master
@lulu1997master 22 күн бұрын
Mate is already at 100k subs, wow. I swear, they came running out of the gate and never stopped.
@JDoe001
@JDoe001 13 күн бұрын
I used to live next to schizophrenic. He was the nicest guy… the third nicest guy I’ve ever ever met my whole life (that is saying a lot!). He saved my daughter from freezing to death by letting her in the apartment he shared with his girlfriend, she wasn’t home at the time. He was so kind to her. (Something happened… I wasn’t able to get home on time to let her in from school. I think he was actually worried about his schizophrenia in regard to her. He needn’t had worried so! More a sign of his caring for another person above himself! I feel bad for him about that part). After this happened is when he told me he had schizophrenia. His girlfriend was super sweet too, being their neighbor: sometimes they liked to throw parties for their young friends (they were in their early 20’s). She would offer me a beer and come over to visit during those parties. I wish I had taken her up on her invitation. I wasn’t sure if she was just being kind. For my age, I would’ve been a little awkward I think. Well, that and my social anxiety… 😬😄
@fartvdz
@fartvdz 22 күн бұрын
one of the best channels
@papadyl2180
@papadyl2180 22 күн бұрын
As someone with MDD and OCD you can make videos just as long as this one about either individually. Anyways, congrats on 100k! I've been very hooked to your channel recently!
@mvp9
@mvp9 20 күн бұрын
I have a DPDR disorder, and to explain it better it feels like in the movies when they hear and see everything very far, you feel like you are not yourself, out of your body as if it you were playing a game in first person but not actually there. For me it became a coping mechanism as mentioned in the video during childhood. Now days i'm doing much better i've found other ways to cope but sometimes under a lot of stress I disconnect myself again unconciously days or weeks go by on autopilot and I'm unable to remember things during those periods of time.
@User-vq4jl
@User-vq4jl 18 күн бұрын
Could you tell me some ways to cope? I had been having this for about a year now. It's the worst feeling, whenever I'm with my friends or having a good time, the feeling hits me like a truck and makes everything around me so fake that I can't enjoy the moment.
@mvp9
@mvp9 18 күн бұрын
@@User-vq4jl I've been on therapy and meds for about two years now. That's mainly what's been my key to get better but my therapist tought me some ways to calm down before it happens. 1. Pressing softly on your fingers they will go white and slowly turn back to red. To remind you are real and your body is one with your mind. 2. Smelling strong essences like alcohol will help you to come back to yourself. And there's one thing I like to do that is putting my ear in the chest of a loved one and hear their heartbeat. It helps me to silence my thoughts for a moment.
@satirical_snake
@satirical_snake 21 күн бұрын
Bro your content is so good. Please upload more!
@ceciliakirisaki4743
@ceciliakirisaki4743 21 күн бұрын
YAYY new sirius video!! congrats on 100k too💜
@militarydeviltube5014
@militarydeviltube5014 13 күн бұрын
This is the most respectful "Mental Disorder Iceberg" video I've watched. I like it
@coolguymcswag667
@coolguymcswag667 Күн бұрын
thank you so much for how you handled OCD. we get misunderstood and trivialized so often
@beaaggressive
@beaaggressive 22 күн бұрын
Congrats on 100k dude!!
@Cluefemboi
@Cluefemboi 20 күн бұрын
Damn you really just made me realize I have body dysmorphia. Getting validation from men online has drove me crazy. And I keep looking at different procedures and what not. And I keep flip flopping on if that’s something I want. I know the the validation from men does play a big role tho.
@Alex_Warlock1121
@Alex_Warlock1121 22 күн бұрын
Damn Brother!!! Congrats for 100K!! Just upload more!!🔥🔥
@Liam.Johnston_
@Liam.Johnston_ 11 күн бұрын
I’ve experienced derealization before and your description of it was actually pretty accurate. It’s almost like you’re in a dream, or like your body is just doing things and you are sat there watching it.
@RussiaOnTopP
@RussiaOnTopP 22 күн бұрын
The best Iceberg Channel. Thank you for this masterpiece❤😊
@CodesFR
@CodesFR 17 күн бұрын
Thank you sm for sharing. This helps me to know myself better.💗💓
@harryxiro
@harryxiro 10 күн бұрын
Hey we have similar pfps!
@CodesFR
@CodesFR 10 күн бұрын
@@harryxiro yoooooo fr! Cheers bro 😎
@GoaEnjoyer
@GoaEnjoyer 22 күн бұрын
My father is someone who suffers from mirror self syndrome, he can recognize me but when he sees himself he gets very upset and is wondering why there 's this man inside his house. He is in middle-late stage Alzheimer's
@meoowlody
@meoowlody 21 күн бұрын
I'm sorry 😢
@salc4
@salc4 22 күн бұрын
grats on 100k brother, im sure your channel will grow bigger sooner or later❤!!
@zstamb
@zstamb 7 сағат бұрын
i have Alice in Wonderland Disorder and you covered it excellently. one interesting part about it is that everyone experiences it differently! i dont get any visual effects, its all auditory, sensory and temporal warping. quiet environments are most often the trigger, but i typically only get an episode once a month. the episodes also go away during periods of low stress. very little is known about it, and many people will have it without knowing it. some estimates say that as many as 5% of the population may experience at least one episode at some point in their life. thanks for including it!
@SwaggyG_2102
@SwaggyG_2102 22 күн бұрын
Hey buddy, I'm so glad to see that you're at 100k subscribers already! I remember coming across you back when you were only at 2k subscribers earlier this year. I'm looking forward to seeing more of your videos!
@zoeledwards6617
@zoeledwards6617 22 күн бұрын
It’s insane I see comments like “goat of iceberg” and “best iceberg channel” and “one of the best channels.” Keep in mind this guy only just started making 4 months ago and we got comments like those. Congrats on 100k subscribers and keep the good work.
@Aadimonm
@Aadimonm 17 күн бұрын
Here’s a simple exercise to bring some change to your personality and calm your senses down. Whenever a manic or depressive episode hits, you need to do nothing. Absolutely nothing. The more you give into those urges, the more you will make them last long. Try to just accept the mood as it is, this requires a lot of control and will power. But since you are bigger than your mood, no matter how strong your feelings are, they are inside you for a reason, they are yours and yours to accept or reject. Always accept. Acceptance is the key to solving any issue. Then noting down your issues, factors affecting them, number of episodes, this can help you.
@Poketix
@Poketix 17 күн бұрын
Oh my god, DPDR sound like something I told my therapist looong ago and they shrugged it off. I never knew it was a thing. That everything feels fuzzy and I feel like "I" am on autopilot. In the worst moments it feels like a feverdream.
@Domwyn
@Domwyn 20 күн бұрын
GEm youtuber, most iceberg videos suck and dont show me something new or just something unknown which is not interesting. But SIRIUS always puts out bangers.
@Aqzw
@Aqzw 22 күн бұрын
Congratulation on 100k
@rllybigguy
@rllybigguy 20 күн бұрын
youre my favorite channel
@OneBoredCatbug
@OneBoredCatbug 21 күн бұрын
I haven't been diagnosed with anything but after seeing that you can scan someone's brain and see differences between a healthy and unhealthy brain I think that's how I'd want to find out, I'm a little too scared and untrusting to get help after all I've been unhealthy for almost a decade now I think, for a long time I thought it was MDD but more recently I started thinking it might be PTSD when I had a panic attack just talking to someone online once, the conversation reminded me of a past experience. Why would I freak out so much over it? Well when all of your conversations with people have managed to end poorly, and you manage to lose every friend you make no matter what suddenly you lose sight of how to actually speak to people or how to be friends with someone. And yes you can get PTSD from things other than warfare, in my case endless abandonment and betrayal has killed me, my brain always looks for something to blame I don't want to blame other people so it's me who has to take the hit but when you believe you have no value why would you bother trying to make friends? Why would anyone care about someone who has no value? This is the loophole I find myself in.
@letssleep1648
@letssleep1648 20 күн бұрын
It's normal to not trust all that much especially nowadays, but nothing is going to change if you don't decide to make some changes. Seek help, if you don't click with one therapist go to a different one. You deserve better than going through panic attacks regardless of how a potential conversation with someone would go. It's secondary. I think you blame yourself but really, objectively was it your fault that those convos didn't end as you would want to?! Maybe it was actually the person on the other side who was the boring one. Maybe they just had a bad day. I once confronted someone when they were very sloppy to answer because I started having intrusive thoughts that I am boring to them, and I was ready to get offended but they replied "Sorry love, I am cooking and my dish was burning, I had to change the pots".. that was a long time ago but it changed my perspective. The worst scenarios are playing in your head, but you don't know till you know. So give yourself the chance to have what you want. I'm sorry you felt abandoned and betrayed, nobody deserves that. Also you wrote "I don't know how to speak to people" of course you do. Look at your comment again. Everything put well and very clear, you communicated exactly what you wanted. You don't have communication issues in my opinion. It's probably that creeping, awkward feeling that if you would be to say this or that you wouldn't be accepted, or perceived a certain way. But do you want to have a genuine friend or be a people pleaser and end up even more alone in a group. Only people who have an honest idea of who you are and like you as you are - really deserve you. Maybe you haven't found your "tribe" yet. It's not about the blame at all, rather understand that things don't work sometimes and it's ok. Unexpectedly they might work in the future. Don't be afraid to be blunt with others. What causes you to believe you have no value? How do you perceive value?! Through family dynamics, career achievements, friendships, romantic relationships? What in your head stands behind I have no value? If how you were treated in the past then it's a cardinal mistake to look at yourself through the lens of what others did because they would sway you and decide about you in your own life. You might have the wrong idea that 'they would treat me right if I were worthy', and you forget that people don't treat you through you but through themselves. Trust me, an a**hole would treat the most talented, beautiful and good person like trash and how does that pertain to that person?! You are no different. Divide that self worth from 'what others do' and you'll see how great you are. You'll meet your people, in the meantime seek help and more comfort for yourself as if you would try to help someone else, which I'm sure you would cause you would think they deserve it (so do you!)
@user-yw8sr3uj1w
@user-yw8sr3uj1w 22 күн бұрын
Thank you for this video. Like others who have said, I'd personally put DID on a lower tier
@sonofthunder-fb3cm
@sonofthunder-fb3cm 17 күн бұрын
Love the silent hill 2 music in the background 👍very nice. Suits the subject matter perfectly lol
@anthonykuglov1417
@anthonykuglov1417 22 күн бұрын
Commenting on this video before I watch it cuz new Sirius video dropped and that deserves its own praise.
@KeroseneSkies
@KeroseneSkies 16 күн бұрын
My grandmother had dementia with mirror-self. She frequently thought her reflection was her sister.
@efe_aydal
@efe_aydal 19 күн бұрын
Thanks! That's a very interesting topic.
@EvaGrammer
@EvaGrammer 14 күн бұрын
I subscribed. Fascinating stuff.
@xaepzon6974
@xaepzon6974 16 күн бұрын
i remember when i was younger and my apartment was infested with roaches, i was absolutely convinced one crawled in my ear. because i could hear my pulse through ear ( i didnt know it was possible) , i was absolutely terrified that i had a bug in my ear , and when i went to an ear doctor, they didn't find anything, but even after that i was convinced it was there. i sometimes nowadays have this belief too but its rare now because i moved, but still very rarely i feel like i have a bug in my ear. I don't think it counts as Ekbom's syndrome, but it really reminded me of that upon watching. :)
@bigrabbit420
@bigrabbit420 9 күн бұрын
I liked the video. The thumbnail next to body iid kept me hesitant from starting it, but I'm glad I checked it out. Also glad to see Truman show on there. I had it from when I was seven to like sixteen and didn't tell anyone. Weed helped with it.
@ventaliq
@ventaliq 20 күн бұрын
congrats on 100k
@idontknow3305
@idontknow3305 15 күн бұрын
the dimentia one broke my heart,his face looking at her while helping her eat :(
@ecocodex4431
@ecocodex4431 21 күн бұрын
There are some mental disorders I am shocked are not on this list, such as Panic Disorder, GAD, and Gender Dysphoria. I am happy you did not include Autism or ADHD tho, as those are neurological, not mental.
@isleofdre108
@isleofdre108 15 күн бұрын
gender dysphoria is on here tho
@naughtyducky6325
@naughtyducky6325 15 күн бұрын
Although dementia was on the list which isn’t a mental disorder
@patrickmclaughlin6516
@patrickmclaughlin6516 13 күн бұрын
IID was on the list, it's not somehow magically different when the body part you wish wasn't yours happens to be a healthy, functioning penis or breasts
@Frames36063
@Frames36063 22 күн бұрын
Another banger video😊
@Seizm1c_go_BOOM
@Seizm1c_go_BOOM 22 күн бұрын
ITS MY BIRTHDAY TODAY AND SIRIUS UPLOADS??? Ok guys where are the cameras
@skyepilot4074
@skyepilot4074 20 күн бұрын
I just got a bipolar ad before this
@anotherone4669
@anotherone4669 11 сағат бұрын
Very good and accurate video
@Paranoid_Intellectual
@Paranoid_Intellectual 14 күн бұрын
First of all, I appreciate how the comment's section has a diverse range of perspectives from people with lived experiences of mental illness. I especially appreciate @imlikekindatired's comment on how his ASPD does not make him any less human despite his diagnosis, bravo! I have considered the possibility of ASPD being more akin to a learning disability than just a personality deficit, i.e. an inability to learn empathy. This is not a moral condemnation of such people, but a mere description of their difficulties. Anyway, as someone with a relatively mild case and diagnosis of schizophrenia, I should let you know that schizophrenia is much like autism in terms of its symptomatology; it follows a spectrum with a diverse range of experiences, challenges and means of treating it. For my case, paranoia and delusional ideation are my core positive symptoms with mild instances of visual hallucinations. My negative symptoms include alogia, avolition (nasty), ahnedonia, etc. But then again, you will likely come across another schizophrenic with wildly different experiences from me. If you've met one schizophrenic, you've met one schizophrenic. I've said it to several people before, but schizophrenia I like to often consider a full-package in terms of neurological deficits, i.e. executive functioning, reality testing, social cognition, willpower, language disruption, etc. It's a wicked condition and it's a sound argument for the absence of a benevolent creator, but to be perfectly honest, it's made my life far more interesting and engaging. It certainly does help my mind has a penchant for the needlessly complex and intricate, so studying my condition and experience is a stimulating pursuit before I legible for disability benefits. Thank you for reading my excessive yapping. Stay safe, healthy and wise!
@ecocodex4431
@ecocodex4431 21 күн бұрын
I have CPTSD from mental abuse I suffered throughout my childhood. Medication helped me to no longer wake up in a panic or suffer from anxiety attacks.
@uwulord7458
@uwulord7458 6 сағат бұрын
Doppelganger is tricky considering there is a statistical chance that, not having a double, is lower than having one
@RedstonekPL
@RedstonekPL 22 күн бұрын
15:20 he said the thing!!!!!!
@CrownsOfSilence
@CrownsOfSilence 16 күн бұрын
cbt >:)
@AGirlWhoseNameI4got
@AGirlWhoseNameI4got 21 күн бұрын
I only learned about and realized my faceblindness in college, but looking back, it's obvious now that I'd developed plenty of coping mechanisms for it since childhood. The way I've come to describe it is that it's like having a friend who has two dogs - same breed, same coloration, roughly the same size. If you only go over to that friend's house once a month, you won't be able to tell them apart, but of course your friend immediately knows which one is which. If you go over every day, you'll learn to see the little details that differentiate them, but it doesn't come naturally. That's what faceblindness is like - if I see someone in the same context day after day and pay conscious attention to them, and they don't make wild changes to their hairstyle or cover up their faces, then I'll be able to start recognizing them. But it's not always foolproof...my sister visited my workplace once, wearing a style she doesn't usually go for. I didn't recognize her for a good minute.
@orionsbelt25
@orionsbelt25 18 күн бұрын
I always feel sympathy for people that have mental disorders that are viewed negatively. Most of them come from childhood trauma or just from how they were born, and they're just trying to navigate through life like we all are but with these added challenges. And people tend to see them as bad people just because of the disorder
@averitiamiku
@averitiamiku 6 күн бұрын
I am physically handicapped and i am disgusted by ppl that want to be handicapped
@aiixles
@aiixles 22 күн бұрын
lets goooo new sirius post finna be lit
@VladMan97
@VladMan97 19 күн бұрын
I want to convince myself that Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is the only definition of the acronym CBT.
@oriannafray3101
@oriannafray3101 9 күн бұрын
The fact that this dude put DID higher than DPDR is funny, to not write a whole book, DPDR is experienced in almost every DID and DID is more complicated and rare, so in my opinion, DID should be deeper in this iceberg
@ashed_cerebrum
@ashed_cerebrum 11 күн бұрын
The day of night is such an appropriate song for this video
@spbart
@spbart 22 күн бұрын
best channel fr
@bipolarbeinganddoing8070
@bipolarbeinganddoing8070 8 сағат бұрын
I know people keep asking why BPD isn't here but in terms of psychiatric diagnosis, it's extremely prevalent. When I've been in psych wards, I've been in the minority of patients without BPD, same as in prison, same as in the community, same as when I was in rehab. This of course points to it being a deeply distressing and misunderstood illness, I agree, but in the world of psychiatry and recovery spaces, you find that BPD is the whole conversation.
@adelinechan9222
@adelinechan9222 20 күн бұрын
Would personally love to see Borderline Personality Disorder being covered too one day :) on the misunderstood tier
@meowmeowmeowmeowcatoncomputer
@meowmeowmeowmeowcatoncomputer 21 күн бұрын
I have a mild form of facial blindness due to my PTSD from childhood (it gave me memory issues due to the fact it happened when I was 5 to around 12 years old). It's very hard to explain to people because I can remember certain features of people but if you asked me to describe a person I wouldn't be able to. Even my parents. Like for my mom, I remember her hair and general face shape but not her eyes or nose. It gets worse the longer I haven't seen a photo or a person in person. For myself, it's sometimes like my face changes everyday, although I also have BDD. I can recognize that it's me in the mirror. Glasses and hair help. One time in my Senior year of College, a girl sat next to me in the beginning of the semester. She was pretty friendly and said hello so I thought she was just being nice. It turns out we had a class together in our Junior year and I didn't recognize her because she dyed her hair.
@RaymondTheCat853
@RaymondTheCat853 18 күн бұрын
22:46 and 24:43 will wood reference
@SutekhTheDestroyer
@SutekhTheDestroyer 13 күн бұрын
It cannot tell you how sick it makes me, knowing that some people on social media think it’s cool to pretend to have some mental illness, when they ruin the lives of people who genuinely suffer with them.
@globuspallidus2457
@globuspallidus2457 22 күн бұрын
I'm a physician and I must say that this video is very scientifically accurate!
@ansleedoyal
@ansleedoyal 10 күн бұрын
from someone with DPDR and DID my whole life feels like a movie that i have no control of and im forced to watch and even then some things i cant remember
@sinned556
@sinned556 19 күн бұрын
sorry i know this is a serious topic but when you said "Cognitive Behaviour Therapy or short CBT" i had to laugh abit
@Flameytastic
@Flameytastic 5 күн бұрын
Hey I have did and I think your description of it was pretty good. I wish it was a bit higher up because it’s not as obscure as people realize. 1% of people have did and recent research suggesting even more people do which doesn’t sound like a lot but 1.5% of people have red hair. Also did isn’t the only dissociative disorder that causes multiple identities in one body there is also osdd (otherwise specific dissociative identity disorder) and ddons (dissociative disorder otherwise not specific) p-did (partial dissociative identity disorder which is actually usually put under the osdd category) and c-did (complex dissociative identity disorder which causes upwards of 300-thousands of different personalities) Please remember that despite the fact that some people fake the disorder that fake claiming hurts even people who’re diagnosed with the disorder, thank you for reading
@liberatio8703
@liberatio8703 Күн бұрын
For as broken as one may seem, as long as their body fights for what is needed to be done. Their mind shall align towards it and viceversa. What a cruel world; Not only are there physical diseases, but also psychological disease.
@user-cd4bx6uq1y
@user-cd4bx6uq1y 6 күн бұрын
The thing isn't that media is evil but that it shows things in a "relevant" light which is always incomplete and doesn't have the appropriate tone, then that becomes the only thing people know and the cycle repeats but related to things more serious then just 80s horror films or whatever
@user-cd4bx6uq1y
@user-cd4bx6uq1y 6 күн бұрын
Well saying munchausen by proxy is full on a real disorder is just not something you do
@_g0r3c0r3
@_g0r3c0r3 21 күн бұрын
me whenever i see a 40 mins long disturbing iceberg video *clicks instantly*
@yanismonville6070
@yanismonville6070 21 күн бұрын
I am autist and it's still disturbing to realise I have symptoms of multiple disorders, but less violent.
@SpongebobGaming3
@SpongebobGaming3 17 күн бұрын
go to a doctor and don't selfdiagnose
@stfubtw1337
@stfubtw1337 17 күн бұрын
dont u love a good self diagnosis
@almondthefurret6818
@almondthefurret6818 17 күн бұрын
Especially with witzelsucht for me…
@GreenshirtMr1023
@GreenshirtMr1023 8 күн бұрын
I'm officially diagnosed with bipolar disorder, schzioaffective disorder, and general depression, can tell you that bipolar is way more common than 0.5% of the population. As for BIID, there is some research that shows a correlation (not necessarily causation) between BIID and gender dysphoria, which makes sense to me as a gender dysphoric person with acrotomophilia (attraction to amputees) and occasional BIID fantasies. There are a lot of different factors that go into mental health, but most of mine are hereditary, as my paternal grandmother had a stroke and developed schizophrenia while dealing with the strain of raising her siblings while my great-grandfather was dealing with alcoholism and post-World War I PTSD. She ended up marrying my paternal grandfather, who was undiagnosed bipolar. I won't try to diagnose my dad and my aunts, as they are still living, but two of the three show signs of mental disorders. I also strongly suspect that my first cousin has the same disorder that my aunt has. Don’t judge someone unless you've walked a day in their shoes (and in their head) because life is hard, odds are most people you know have a mild psychological condition
@MrXHCx
@MrXHCx 12 күн бұрын
I like the "invitation to love" clip for DPDR... I feel like if i was convinced i was already dead I'd be like "cool, I'm a zombie, I'm gonna write a song about it. "
@piteu3411
@piteu3411 22 күн бұрын
I have alice in wonderland, when I was a child I used to have this from time to time when I was trying to sleep specially (also when I was watching TV for example, but not as common), but I just ignored it and coped with it thinking everyone was like this. Now I'm an adult and it still happens from time to time but very less frequently and only when I'm trying to sleep.
@C0TT0N_C4NDY
@C0TT0N_C4NDY Күн бұрын
As someone with OCD even seeing someone talk about it makes me feel a bit more validated, I can't stand people thinking it's just "being a cleaning freak"
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