Trevor Noah on Depression, ADHD & Ketamine Therapy

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Neal Brennan

Neal Brennan

15 күн бұрын

Trevor Noah tells Neal Brennan about his depression, ADHD, and ketamine therapy. From the Blocks Podcast w/ Neal Brennan.
Full Episode: • Trevor Noah | Blocks P...
Watch Neal Brennan: Crazy Good on Netflix:
www.netflix.com/title/81728557
Theme music by Electric Guest (unreleased).
#podcast #standup #comedy #mentalhealth

Пікірлер: 710
@AnneWilkynson
@AnneWilkynson 12 күн бұрын
I'm a Woman diagnosed with ADHD at 61 .. (the daydreamer) explains my entire life!! Sister always called me a flake. Didn't finish school. Lost jobs, for always being late or not completing tasks. Lost friends for always being late making them think I didn't care. Self loathing because although I'm extremely intelligent, I just failed at life, procrastinating etc. After saying all of this, if I'm working on my hobbies, I can go 12 hours without thinking of food or what I was probably supposed to be doing. So bitter sweet, now I know and can begin to heal and now I know, what my life could have been.
@forlisac1
@forlisac1 12 күн бұрын
Women and girls are much less likely to be diagnosed for ADHD because they often present differently. It’s such a shame but it is getting better. And people with few resources are also less likely to be properly diagnosed. And there are treatments for ADHD that help a lot! Wishing you the support you deserve.
@lindaward3156
@lindaward3156 12 күн бұрын
are you my younger sister -the one I never got and still miffed a bit about it at 68 (3 bros no sis)? i didn't realize mine until my 60's but it finally clicked the tiles into place. I think my biggest problem figuring it out was because of my perceived intelligence,
@user-po3ir2tx5z
@user-po3ir2tx5z 11 күн бұрын
Also important to note that the two hallmarks of ADHD-executive dysfunction and emotional disregulation-can be a result of early trauma, CPTSD.
@jannettehogan9958
@jannettehogan9958 11 күн бұрын
I feel you. I'm 67 and finally diagnosed in 2009 already aware this was my problem however I still can't get proper help. The so call professionals only know the base line of ADHD information which I now know so much more but they just don't care. I'm female so ADHD present differently than Male and they only focused on male. Now I'm totally disregarded and not worth the help or it's too expensive to get to correct help. Doomed
@wordzmyth
@wordzmyth 11 күн бұрын
52 and waiting for my official diagnosis. In my country the public health psychiatrist can't diagnose you, you have to pay private. Because there is an avalanche of (mostly) women like us. But the grief of all the opportunities. Also I flew to mybold coty, went sightseeing and missed my friends wedding because I misremembered the time.
@juanderuano8969
@juanderuano8969 Күн бұрын
Interesting video content. My relationship of 5 years ended a month ago. The love of my life decided to leave me, I really love her so much I can’t stop thinking about her, I’ve tried my very best to get her back in my life, but to no avail, I’m frustrated, I don’t see my life with anyone else. I’ve done my best to get rid of the thoughts of her, but I can’t, I don’t know why I’m saying this here, I really miss her and just can’t stop thinking about her.
@elladonaldson-lh6nc
@elladonaldson-lh6nc Күн бұрын
its difficult to let go of someone you love, i was in a similar situation, my relationship of 12 years ended, but i couldnt just let him go i did all i could to get him back, i had to seek the help of a spiritual counselor who helped me bring him back
@juanderuano8969
@juanderuano8969 Күн бұрын
Amazing, how did you get a spiritual counselor, and how do i reach her?
@elladonaldson-lh6nc
@elladonaldson-lh6nc Күн бұрын
Her name is Shelly renee white , and she is a great spiritual counselor who can bring back your ex.
@juanderuano8969
@juanderuano8969 Күн бұрын
Thank you for this valuable information, i just looked her up now online. impressive
@denisesalles7248
@denisesalles7248 13 сағат бұрын
@@elladonaldson-lh6nc Don't give people false hope - it's cruel.
@jennifermorton1456
@jennifermorton1456 10 күн бұрын
Trevor described that Adhd checking out moment so perfectly
@cocomaire
@cocomaire 9 күн бұрын
I even do it when I’m reading or watching a movie. I’ll get distracted by one point and go on a mental tangent
@julianaherrera308
@julianaherrera308 7 күн бұрын
He really did. I was like wow now I know how to perfectly describe it to other people
@lynnebucher6537
@lynnebucher6537 5 күн бұрын
I've done this exact same thing over a crusty showerhead in my house! This could explain why I have such trouble staying on task with house projects.
@VicBerger
@VicBerger 4 күн бұрын
It could also come from childhood trauma. From what I understand, it's more likely there's something triggering you from your upbringing that might cause you to mildly dissociate. Inner child work helped me greatly on this type of thing.
@MsCeegee3
@MsCeegee3 3 күн бұрын
@@cocomaire I remember being so excited when I first got to watch a movie I could pause and finish whatever tangent my brain went on so I didn’t miss what was going on in the movie. (I don’t know if I have ADHD but I am a little something!)
@ellenfallon2581
@ellenfallon2581 11 күн бұрын
I work in the therapy field and what he says about the comedy field being a good field for ADHD is exactly the reason why people who have ADHD can be excellent trauma therapists, trauma nurses/doctors, paramedics, etc. some of the best in the field are those with ADHD, because of their brain’s way of taking in information & track in the midst of chaos! He’s so right!
@dianeatpeace337
@dianeatpeace337 10 күн бұрын
Other exciting & appropriate career choices for ADHD folks is LIVE tv/radio/performing or the like. As Trevor essentially said, like comedy, the work occupies all parts of your brain yet demands you stay in the moment being aware of a ton of other inputs at the same time.
@Ch-yz4yt
@Ch-yz4yt 7 күн бұрын
It's funny you say this.... I was a medic for nearly 20 years before burn out hit (Which 20 years of EMS is its own trauma). I was a very good medic. I switched to a different career in healthcare and I feel like I've struggled with it the ENTIRE TIME. And it's so frustrating because I was a good medic, so why can't I do this? But I think it's exactly what you said... the chaos forces focus. Whereas the controlled environment of what I do now does not. I hadn't thought of it this way before.
@fionaanderson5796
@fionaanderson5796 4 күн бұрын
And another piece of the puzzle falls in place... At this point I'm in my 50s and self diagnosed (and as several friends who are diagnosed have said, I'm peer reviewed). It has been something I've been aware of all my adult life that in an emergency, or just when things have gone chaotic, I'm the one who can look around, assess the problem and do something/give instructions while most people are frozen or turning in circles. My partner is a workplace first aider and does that. I'd never realised that that was a function of an adhd brain, but that makes total sense.
@northernfox6420
@northernfox6420 3 күн бұрын
Totally, dopamine hits galore for being the funny kid!
@itsrohangeet
@itsrohangeet 2 күн бұрын
I have always felt comfortable in chaos, never knew what to do when I have time to do something. Does this also happen to people with ADHD?
@mariannacsinger788
@mariannacsinger788 11 күн бұрын
Trevor Noah is a breath of fresh air. Helped me survive lockdown, I miss his daily show so much.
@mayaedwards31
@mayaedwards31 10 күн бұрын
I’m still hurt he left😢 He was a breath of fresh air
@jenniferbenorden
@jenniferbenorden 9 күн бұрын
@@mayaedwards31 he was a breath of fresh air but also just absolutely wise and so skillful at tying things together for us. i miss him greatly and it's so healing just to hear his voice, and speaking on something that i am struggling with every single day means even more. trevor noah is such a gift to our world
@rosemarymceathron4037
@rosemarymceathron4037 8 күн бұрын
I always looked forward to Trevor's show.
@user-yd9di3kg2j
@user-yd9di3kg2j 8 күн бұрын
Yah, he's got to do what's right for him and I wish him luck in whatever he does, but he was brilliant on the Daily Show. Miss his voice, his point of view, on that show.
@yourmomsaccount69
@yourmomsaccount69 7 күн бұрын
I loved Trevor too. Watched almost everyday, but he was NOT Jon Stewart. I learned a lot from Trevor, but during this time Jon's voice is our loudest hope. 😂 I just wish he would work more than 1 day a week. 😂😂
@rooyoo0623
@rooyoo0623 8 күн бұрын
Thank you, Trevor Noah, for sharing this and Neal Brennan for posting it. I'm a therapist who specializes in working with adults with ADHD; later-in-life diagnoses of ADHD; women with ADHD; and the 2e population. This estimate is on the conservative side, but in school alone, a child with ADHD receives 20,000 corrections or negative comments by the time he or she is 10 years old. It is no wonder that depression and anxiety are common co-morbidities of ADHD. I focus on the emotional components of living with an invisible brain-based difference. Whether this is said by adults outright to a child with ADHD or their actions and efforts to treat a child's ADHD nonverbally relay the same message, children with ADHD (diagnosed or undiagnosed) tend to hold the negative core belief that they are somehow inherently broken and need to be fixed. Many of the adults who come to see me expect that I'll be like a certified watchmaker there to fix them like a broken clock. Shame is often at the heart of what adults with ADHD have been carrying with them for most of their lives. There is so much misinformation out there - even the nomenclature of the diagnosis is a misnomer. You're absolutely right- we don't have a deficit of attention - we have too much attention and an inability to filter out stimuli that are unimportant to the task at hand that we're trying desperately to focus on. Dr. Dodson described it well when he said that neurotypicals have a priority-based, or importance-based, nervous system and those with ADHD have an interest-based nervous system, except that we don't get to choose what we pay attention to. When it's a subject that highly interests us or there is some kind of variable that involves fear, our amygdala gets activated and we suddenly gain the ability to not only focus but hyperfocus. This is why so many of us with ADHD follow career paths in the performing arts or the ICU/ER - when the stakes get high, we get clear-headed, calm, and focused, and we can perform with ease. Those of us with ADHD (especially the inattentive type) often experience brain fog and activation issues partly due to insufficient dopamine levels, so stimulants help lift the fog so we can gain full access to our thoughts and it helps us get activated to start on tasks that do not inherently generate high levels of interest. Covid long-haulers with brain fog are getting medically treated with the medication we take for the brain fog we've been experiencing and dealing with our entire lives. When neurotypicals take a stimulant like Adderall, they have a vastly different experience from how it affects those of us with ADHD because they don't actually need the medication. It helps us feel like we can do the things that neurotypicals take for granted that they can do that require executive functioning skills - it doesn't put us into hyperfocus mode. There are still so many myths being perpetuated about ADHD that appear in places one might least expect, like in classrooms and doctor's offices; and the general misunderstanding often leads to the mistreatment of children, teens, and adults with ADHD. They are often on the receiving end of neurobigotry that further fuels the shame they're carrying and their desire to hide and not get help.
@alady09
@alady09 3 күн бұрын
In which state do you practice?
@DawnDavidson
@DawnDavidson 3 күн бұрын
Late-diagnosed ADHD, here, finally going back to school to become a therapist. You are spot on with all of this.
@harrisone79
@harrisone79 18 сағат бұрын
Gay
@BrownGeorge-pw2xo
@BrownGeorge-pw2xo 5 күн бұрын
Psychedelics in general are amazing. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder years ago. Got diagnosed with ADHD. Not until my mom recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 6 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.
@SharonFalcon-fj7nb
@SharonFalcon-fj7nb 5 күн бұрын
Can you help me with the reliable source 🙏. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in Australia. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them.
@Raymo64106
@Raymo64106 5 күн бұрын
YES very sure of Dr.benfungi. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
@SandraJulia-lw3kd
@SandraJulia-lw3kd 5 күн бұрын
100% agree I used to have Psychosis and paranoid thoughts like "people thinking about me talking about me etc. Very odd behavior after getting off Adderall from 7-16. Antidepressants at 18-29. 31 now. I took way to much, but took about 20g of Gold caps (Psilocybin containing mushroom) I analyzed my entire life. The emotions that came out helped me understand behavior etc more. Wont ever need to do it again because I'm happy and contempt forever, but I wish more people did this to alter their perception of reality. Would help with healing much trauma
@FredaMartins
@FredaMartins 5 күн бұрын
How do I reach out to him? Is he on Instagram
@mattjeffery09
@mattjeffery09 5 күн бұрын
Yes he's Dr.benfungi. Shrooms to me is a natrual healer. I know a guy who has used mushrooms in the same way and they have really helped him. mah dudes have safe trips all.
@Alloktty
@Alloktty 10 күн бұрын
Yes! I was diagnosed with major depression at 12. I could never "get over it". Then, I was diagnosed at 44 with neurodivergent: ADHD (inattentive, impulsive) and on the autistic spectrum. It was enlightening. Then I was diagnosed with CPTSD and told my depression diagnosis was incorrect. My world opened up! Thank goodness the clarity came. I love myself now, at 46. I have hated myself for over 30 years. labels and understanding is so helpful. No more dismissive language. There are people with true depression--it is a valid diagnosis for some. But, it can be a dismissive diagnosis that doesn't get to the heart of the issue.
@JDMimeTHEFIRST
@JDMimeTHEFIRST 8 күн бұрын
I have those as well! Panic attacks aren’t fun. And the CPTSD is from being autistic (actually from the way I’ve been treated by neurotypicals my whole life). Diagnosed ASD at 35, ADHD at 39, and the CPTSD was actually suspected before those two. But even though I tell people I need to know some things ahead of time, they purposely ignore it and it results in panic attacks. 🙄. If neurotypicals don’t change or at least try, we won’t heal.
@rahbeeuh
@rahbeeuh Күн бұрын
Just wanted to let y'know that depression and anxiety as well as trauma fall under the neurodivergent umbrella. It's a pretty broad umbrella that also includes neurodegenerative conditions like dementia, Parkinson's, Huntington's, as well as MS and conditions such as CP, OCD, epilepsy, schizophrenia, Tourette's, personality disorders, eating disorders, substance abuse disorder, learning disabilities like dysgraphia, dyscalculia, dyslexia, intellectual disability, and so many more conditions.
@veritysmart
@veritysmart 11 күн бұрын
Trauma is its own muscle memory. Your body is still trying to keep you safe long after the threat is gone.
@bluecollarmenproductions
@bluecollarmenproductions 6 күн бұрын
It sucks I get shakes
@theeviloverlord7168
@theeviloverlord7168 5 күн бұрын
That happened to me in getting into a relationship… major panics at first, the response was trying to make me disengage
@lillianbarker4292
@lillianbarker4292 11 күн бұрын
My husband with ADHD was a fabulous kindergarten teacher. He hated school himself but created a research based, hands on learning environment that he managed beautifully. He loves comedy and could be a comedian. All the memoirs I’ve read about comedians support Noah’s idea that many have ADHD.
@vickigreen9545
@vickigreen9545 8 күн бұрын
Your husband would have enriched so many kids’ lives with that inclusive approach wow!
@Stoudy2
@Stoudy2 Күн бұрын
I'm so happy to hear you say that! I'm training to be an Early Childhood Educator!
@GaiaCarney
@GaiaCarney 10 күн бұрын
Trevor’s comment about focusing on the ‘wrong’ thing is true! I CAN NOT multitask, and if there is music playing it’s the _ONLY_ thing I can hear.
@empireoflightz
@empireoflightz 7 күн бұрын
lol christ, exact same here. I can't for the life of me understand sometimes how people can hear each other talk and have real conversations in loud bars and clubs, can't they fucking hear the 100 different noises of music and other people talking all around us? And then I end up looking like the unsociable twat because after a while I just give up trying to understand what they're saying 🤦
@dayegilharno4988
@dayegilharno4988 6 күн бұрын
:) I can't even eat and listen to somebody at the same time... Dating's a b*** with that preset!
@lynnebucher6537
@lynnebucher6537 5 күн бұрын
​@@empireoflightzI find it impossible to filter out distracting sounds and hear, much less follow a conversation.
@renenowicki
@renenowicki 4 күн бұрын
I used to think i could multitask. Turns out, i can’t juggle.
@fionaanderson5796
@fionaanderson5796 3 күн бұрын
@@empireoflightz oh my goodness, yes! I hate social gatherings, especially in pubs and other loud places. I cannot hear to have a conversation, and end up sitting there feeling excluded. I've always thought I had a hearing problem but when I've had it checked I've been told my hearing is fine and it must be a processing problem.
@jakedill2468
@jakedill2468 13 күн бұрын
We have a society in America that prioritizes productivity and the maintenance of the status quo above all else. That’s where a lot of the self shaming comes in. When you’re rich you can afford to really step away and analyze your situation but if you’re poor everything becomes several extra steps just to meet your basic needs. These things go beyond what an individual can do to help themselves. There always needs to be accountability for behavior but have to look at it through a broader context of the way our system creates these conditions.
@AnneWilkynson
@AnneWilkynson 12 күн бұрын
Well said!!
@InfiniteSoulRoots
@InfiniteSoulRoots 12 күн бұрын
Well said!
@julianabercot224
@julianabercot224 11 күн бұрын
🎯
@lookingupwithwonder
@lookingupwithwonder 11 күн бұрын
Spot on in Jake!!! It's the Social Model of Disability.
@bd-pl7oo
@bd-pl7oo 10 күн бұрын
💯
@dorolicious
@dorolicious 9 күн бұрын
I didn't know I could love Trevor more than I already did. But as he talks about PTSD, ADHD and Depression I'm just nodding and feel more connected to him than ever. ❤
@kellyj.azania4371
@kellyj.azania4371 13 күн бұрын
I'm so grateful this popped up on my algorithm.
@Malisti04
@Malisti04 9 күн бұрын
Me too
@psicriatividade
@psicriatividade 9 күн бұрын
Me too❤
@holmesrg
@holmesrg 8 күн бұрын
It’s honestly so good to hear people coming to terms with their adhd and their friends doing the same. I wish my friends old click their fingers to bring me back
@toriahennesey
@toriahennesey 5 күн бұрын
I'm really really grateful for people who talk about their ADHD or Autism experience. I'm very late to learning this about myself, so listening to others is so enlightening/comforting.
@NellieKAdaba
@NellieKAdaba 5 күн бұрын
Me too, because I have both the ADDHD and autism, for now, until I'm a lot better. I'm in my 40s.
@toriahennesey
@toriahennesey 4 күн бұрын
@@NellieKAdaba We are in the same boat - AuDHD and I'm in my 40s also. Lots of luck
@barbarapouw-vandevelde3080
@barbarapouw-vandevelde3080 12 күн бұрын
Thank you for explaining the story of my life. Got diagnosed with ADHD yesterday, age 51. Until two months ago I had no idea why I have been such a failure. Now I know that I am not crazy, I can try to build my life from scratch. Luckily I have good personal relationships to help me.
@julietchristen
@julietchristen 10 күн бұрын
I was diagnosed 4 years ago at 51...Trevor nailed the description! Luck to you....
@juliasteinmetz1662
@juliasteinmetz1662 7 күн бұрын
You are already not a failure! If you have good personal relationships in your life then that says hugely positive things about you. Now with new knowledge about yourself you can work to improve the other stuff 😊
@tamareiford58
@tamareiford58 10 күн бұрын
Diagnosed with ADHD at 39, this is such a perfect example of what I went through & how I think/process. Getting a diagnosis 100% helps just knowing "you're not crazy." Hearing others talk about it & their experiences is very helpful in not feeling crazy, but feeling seen & better understanding
@akalui007
@akalui007 8 күн бұрын
did you find medication helpful?
@rhakka
@rhakka 7 күн бұрын
At a more foundational level, I’ve come to really believe that naming a thing, being able to point to an issue and say “that’s this understood thing” is very powerful in making progress getting to a place you’re happier with.
@tonyatthebeach
@tonyatthebeach Күн бұрын
We know we're not crazy, it's just hard work trying to do all the shit we need to do with it getting in the way
@vSalmon
@vSalmon 9 күн бұрын
I am 31 and it’s been a month since I’ve been diagnosed with ADHD. He’s right about how just knowing changes almost everything. I’ve been living on survival mode, despite having a good paying job; there’s always something simple, a 30 minutes task I will procrastinate doing for weeks; I’ve put myself in many toxic relationships that I hyper focused on the other, and therefore lost touch with myself or was emotionally abused; I never completed any studies besides high school. I always thought I lacked some meaning in life, or that it was on me to be more determined and motivated… now I now it’s only a matter of time until I relearn how to play the game, because I’m that special character with special moves and tricks. Until then, I’m learning to be gentle with myself.
@laughteraddict1003
@laughteraddict1003 9 күн бұрын
I'm 55 with ADHD. Surfing is the best thing for me. It causes me to be hyper focused and definitely puts me in a flow state.
@Rikirie
@Rikirie 4 күн бұрын
Ha. Flow state.
@WooliestPuma
@WooliestPuma 3 күн бұрын
I feel this with playing roller derby
@juliacuellar3684
@juliacuellar3684 4 күн бұрын
"It's in my body, I can't talk this out" that is the most relatable feeling I think I've ever heard
@peggyliu8381
@peggyliu8381 9 күн бұрын
Love that celebrities like Trevor are talking about neurodivergence. I was late-diagnosed with autism and adhd as an adult, and the diagnosis has brought so much clarity to my life.
@monicaena7857
@monicaena7857 13 күн бұрын
It's so rare to find people who speak genuinly, as you do, about some deseases...respect for you man. Trevor great human being❤
@ntamny
@ntamny 12 күн бұрын
I had Ketamine infusion therapy for neuropathy. Now I can walk without my feet killing me. It was $300per session. I had 6 sessions 3 years ago. Gave me a new lease on life.
@hardcoreherbivore4730
@hardcoreherbivore4730 11 күн бұрын
You know how much Ketamine you can buy for $300!? That’d be enough for multiple K-holes. My experience was as a sedative after all night raves. We called it breakfast, as the street name was Special K.
@jonpilgrim7820
@jonpilgrim7820 11 күн бұрын
I did a half dozen sessions at a clinic in San Antonio called Klarisana. Not a permanent fix, but one session every two months is better than a daily medication
@hardcoreherbivore4730
@hardcoreherbivore4730 11 күн бұрын
@@jonpilgrim7820 Ya know, people criticize Elon Musk for utilizing Ketamine therapy. Seems they feel like they’re punching up.
@cocoknows
@cocoknows 10 күн бұрын
@@hardcoreherbivore4730 Doing K on it's own isn't going to work. There is a method they use in ketamine therapy. You need professional assistance. It changed my life.
@ntamny
@ntamny 10 күн бұрын
@@hardcoreherbivore4730 the cost was for the doctor administering the infusions. But I have wondered about possible benefits from other forms of Ketamine.
@G3n3vaL3st3r
@G3n3vaL3st3r 10 күн бұрын
I was an addict half my life. I tried every antidepressant/ anti anxiety med there was. I finally got diagnosed with ADHD & autism at 35 and since being on adderal I feel in control of my life for the first time ever. I’m not constantly craving something or waiting for the next exciting thing to happen. I hadn’t realized most peoples brains don’t go so fast you have a dozen thoughts at a time. I can actually sit and enjoy playing with my kids or watching the birds for the first time. I quit smoking a decade ago but still craved a smoke every freaking day until I got on adhd meds. It is so great not to have to dopamine seek all the time anymore. I don’t feel like an alien anymore. I understand myself now.
@JDMimeTHEFIRST
@JDMimeTHEFIRST 8 күн бұрын
Anti-depressants never worked for me. I feel like they were prescribed for the neurotypicals around me to feel more comfortable . They just numbed me. I hated it.
@empresssk
@empresssk 8 күн бұрын
Happy for you ✨
@JenniferKastelic
@JenniferKastelic 13 күн бұрын
Recently got an autism diagnosis at 55. Also dealing with CPTSD. We nurodivergents(autism/adhd/cptsd) are the new Mutants. I am here for it!!!
@parkedawn
@parkedawn 12 күн бұрын
I've struggled with C-PTSD for decades, and was diagnosed autistic in my 40s. It's amazing how often & long we struggle before getting the necessary tools.
@troiscaniche4937
@troiscaniche4937 12 күн бұрын
♥️
@bumblebee5990
@bumblebee5990 12 күн бұрын
We need costumes!
@Johnnyiswhere
@Johnnyiswhere 12 күн бұрын
I suspect I also have autism. How do I find out?
@graciousgrace7509
@graciousgrace7509 12 күн бұрын
What's the treatment for Cptsd
@Trendspottify
@Trendspottify 7 күн бұрын
Trevor is one of the most attractive men in the entertainment industry. Inside and outside. Him being so candid about therapy makes me respect him even more. I wholeheartedly wish him all the best.
@LauraPL256
@LauraPL256 12 күн бұрын
What he did with ketamine therapy, I did with hypnotherapy. My therapist literally told me, you can do the talk therapy yourself, you know how it works, you can do it all, but there’s this pain still left in your body that words can’t reach. The hypnotherapy got rid of that and I’m so, so grateful 🙏
@lranieri1
@lranieri1 10 күн бұрын
Amazing!!
@MF-xp9tq
@MF-xp9tq 10 күн бұрын
Fantastic! How were you able to find a hynotherpist?
@LauraPL256
@LauraPL256 10 күн бұрын
@@MF-xp9tq I just googled one and found an online one who didn’t have a waiting list. I’m in the Netherlands tho but I know someone in Tennessee who’s really good, if you’re looking for someone. I think she does online sessions too and for me that was just as helpful as in person!
@rite2anitha
@rite2anitha 9 күн бұрын
What you did with Hypnotherapy, i did with EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique).. Chronic pain, gone!! Been 6 yrs now.
@lranieri1
@lranieri1 9 күн бұрын
@@rite2anitha wow!! Fascinating!!
@noragarcia252
@noragarcia252 9 күн бұрын
I just received therapy by listening to Trevor Noah😊
@musikluver
@musikluver 11 күн бұрын
My husband was home schooled for most of elementary school. He has never been diagnosed for ADHD but because of the space homeschooling gives kids to learn however he found out how he worked best, learned best, functioned best and never really needed treatments. He's able to explain to people, he knows how to buckle down and get er done when life requires that. It's so cool to see
@NiaLaLa_V
@NiaLaLa_V 10 күн бұрын
That's pretty much what it is to have executive function disordered. When there are consquences staring us right in the face (when life requires it, as you said) we can get it done. When there are not life threatening consequences we sit here watching videos about other shit instead of doing any of the things I am supposed to be doing right now.
@asenethparker8561
@asenethparker8561 8 күн бұрын
First time listening to your show, however I am beyond excited that I got a chance to hear it. OMG!!!!! As recently as 2yrs ago I asked to be evaluated. Finding out that the struggles I've lived with all my life were due to PTSD & ADHD was more than enlightening. FINALLY everything started making sense. Primary, secondary, college education, relationships... It all makes sense. I even found out that I am extremely bright... above average, but throughout my academic career I always thought I was stupid. I got right answers but never the way they wanted me to get them. The evaluation was the first tool in helping me to know me. THANK YOU for airing and thank you Trevor for being so transparent.
@holygroove2
@holygroove2 9 күн бұрын
This kind of interview makes him even bigger than the Daily Show. His superpower is how he brings you into his world.
@acslater017
@acslater017 8 күн бұрын
Noah’s description of the shower head train of thought was pretty much me struggling 5 years to get my degree and barely making it
@housevisand
@housevisand 13 күн бұрын
this spoke to my soul.
@AlexisPierce
@AlexisPierce 8 күн бұрын
Woman with ADHD who wasn't diagnosed until mid 30s. (Misdiagnosed with anxiety for years) once you know, you start to see it in others. I think Trevor's spot on here. Thank you so much for sharing
@ADHDResourceSpecialist
@ADHDResourceSpecialist 10 күн бұрын
Thank you Trevor!! It's so so so great to see celebrities really understand ADHD as an executive function developmental disorders. It's a disorder of self regulation, and often comorbid with other disorders (depression, etc)
@RockyRoad17
@RockyRoad17 11 күн бұрын
I am grateful for Trevor genuinely, he has a special talent for finding words to explain what I go through as an autistic ADHD, I have that autism flavor where there's no connexion between my brain and my mouth 😂 so I cannot express myself to people. But hearing it from someone who CAN say things actually helps. Thank you 🙏
@TheBexi
@TheBexi 12 күн бұрын
Well said! I like to think of us (ADHDers) as philosophers. One little random comment about anything and our, at least mine, train of thought has taken us to thinking of the universe and what it all means 😂
@melissapetty1294
@melissapetty1294 8 күн бұрын
I’ve treated adhd for 30 years and that is one of the best explanations I’ve heard. Thank you, Noah.
@ThehellgoingonBlog
@ThehellgoingonBlog 8 күн бұрын
Love this. I had this exact experience. Got tested and diagnosed with ADHD at 41 after years of feeling depressed because I thought I was a failure.
@rubberdog8763
@rubberdog8763 12 күн бұрын
Re: autism I can relate, plus I have hemi-sync, & dyslexia. I'm 75; I was put in a "retarded class". As an adult, I tried counseling -- claimed I was depressed. No I'm not, not lonely, not sad. I was on the Dean's list in college. Trevor explained what goes on in the brain very well -- thank you Trevor. Maybe you could be a spokesman, even for elders, like me.
@steffnic13
@steffnic13 12 күн бұрын
Interviewer should let Trevor speak uninterrupted. Anyone who aligns with this should watch Brene Brown’s Netflix special on shame and vulnerability. (As well as her Ted Talks, of course.) Love that Trevor is so in touch with his brain and emotions and overall patterns, and then shares.
@forestpark73
@forestpark73 12 күн бұрын
Thank you for that recommendation!
@phatmonkey11
@phatmonkey11 11 күн бұрын
I didn't notice the interruptions so much.
@ojozarco
@ojozarco 11 күн бұрын
“The interviewer” ?? that’s Neil fucking Brennan!
@wordzmyth
@wordzmyth 11 күн бұрын
Yes I noticed the interjections. Trevor has practiced holding on to his point calmly.
@VuotoPneumaNN
@VuotoPneumaNN 10 күн бұрын
He lets him speak, just does a few quick comments and questions. You want a monologue, watch his standup.
@rbdub
@rbdub 12 күн бұрын
Somatic therapy also changes stuff on a deep, cellular level - breaking the connection. Ketamine is also good for some. But Somatic Therapy can also change your life.
@monicahope3615
@monicahope3615 5 күн бұрын
I was only recently diagnosed with ADHD at the age of 62. It freaked me out as my brain went back to so many times in my life adults and other people would ask me what was wrong with me. I could see the destructive impulsive things that I did. And also, the hyper-focus abilities that I have when people tell me to focus on one thing at a time when I'm focusing on 3 and 4. I wish I had known decades ago. And I also have been diagnosed with anxiety and depressive disorder and PTSD following a severe car accident in September 2018. SUCKS. Because nobody can see it like a broken leg or arm. Just one day at a time working through things.
@NellieKAdaba
@NellieKAdaba 5 күн бұрын
I diagnosed myself with it, because I feel my attention is not right, and then they properly diagnosed me with it when I was my 30s, and I'm in my 40s.
@jakekessler2344
@jakekessler2344 5 күн бұрын
I'm so glad Trevor's famous and gets to share his well articulated perspectives
@NellieKAdaba
@NellieKAdaba 5 күн бұрын
Me too.
@cricket1301
@cricket1301 12 күн бұрын
TREVOR!!! Trea-vr...which in my head I hear spoken in your delightful grandmother's voice. Yes-yes-yes, and thank you times- a-zillion--when you said comedy "forces focus to the state of flow". I have never heard what I sooooo seek in the day to day minutes to hours to days of my life, described like that. It is that. Focus to the state of flow. I have had it, I love it, I thrive and excel in it; I can feel and experience it, know when I am in it, but couldn't explain it. I seek it but until I heard you say those words, that description, I have not been able to explain what I'm after, what I struggle for, and most important, what works. To myself or others. Thank you Trevor. That phrase is a gift I will use. It is a tool, an explanation, a direction, an answer. I have always loved you but now I love you even more. Thank god/God, one and or every single one of them. And God and Gods, all of them, bless your grandmother (is it Coco, or Gogo or something else?) She is a queen, now with That Queen. Thank you for sharing her as well.
@chitownforever
@chitownforever 10 күн бұрын
Trevor has such a good, concise way of explaining ADHD. I highly recommend the channel "How to ADHD". I've reorganized my living space, and it's helped so much.
@kathykelley7273
@kathykelley7273 12 күн бұрын
My cognitive therapist recommended I read The Body Keeps the Score. I haven’t gotten past chapter one. thank you Trevor my brothers and I all have issue where we tune out. I used to think that it was from my family history of alcohol and drug use. Now As I remember things and situations from growing up; the way you explained, it make a lot of sense. I will share this with my family.
@karimajor1165
@karimajor1165 10 күн бұрын
Children with a difficult childhood often end up with ADHD
@sassysunflower
@sassysunflower 10 күн бұрын
It's a hard book. It gets easier though, the first chapter is the worst. I had to switch to an audio book to get through it lol
@grayrachelle
@grayrachelle 4 күн бұрын
Good luck to you❤
@Em_Elle_Ess
@Em_Elle_Ess 4 сағат бұрын
Trevor, your description of sitting there thinking about "green... copper... is it something in the pipes?" is spot on!
@zergbong
@zergbong 12 күн бұрын
Diagnosed with ADHD at 40. Developed sense of humour and was always the class clown as a way to fit in and not appear super weird to everyone. Things doesn't make sense for ADHD folks in today's world.
@inairby4freedom
@inairby4freedom 11 күн бұрын
I had no idea Trevor had ADHD!!!! I have never been diagnosed but am so grateful he shared this.
@karimajor1165
@karimajor1165 10 күн бұрын
Just knowing is also a game changer. Yes, telling people is so important.
@rainbowtropolis
@rainbowtropolis 7 күн бұрын
This was awesome, thank you both! I'm on a list to get tested for ADHD and autism, all I know so far is I don't think the way other people think. The world baffles me. I'm slowly figuring it out though 👍 It's never too late to try to figure yourself out.
@skyebocage5314
@skyebocage5314 8 күн бұрын
I love how Trevor explained this! I don’t feel alone or crazy for thinking this way. Living like this makes you think something is wrong with you but there isn’t.
@mariavictor4324
@mariavictor4324 12 күн бұрын
Communicated so beautifully. A true gift. Shine on.
@lindagruber2232
@lindagruber2232 8 күн бұрын
Wonderful to hear someone describe ADHD so clearly
@jenniferbenorden
@jenniferbenorden 9 күн бұрын
i could not love trevor anymore than i love him right now. having only recently been diagnosed with ADHD, as well as early childhood trauma (CPTSD), i just feel so seen, and by someone who I respect and admire so much. thank you thank you thankypu
@user-ep1tg8jr6o
@user-ep1tg8jr6o 9 күн бұрын
I’m so so grateful for to you for doing this interview. I got to watch your show on internet when I was a freshman in medical school and you’ve help me develop as a person to think , to speak and form intelligent thought processes. You’re an important person in my character development arc 😂 , now I’m graduating in a month and I can’t believe you once again have helped me figure out things😊
@triplare
@triplare 13 күн бұрын
I really needed to hear this discussion; thank you.
@user-gt3yz4tb8g
@user-gt3yz4tb8g 8 сағат бұрын
I love Trevor soooooooo much. What he brings to the table is always so pure and what just NEEDS TO BE SAID. Miss his voice on the daily show. Or at least his perspective on the national moment. TRRRRREEEEEEVVVVOOOORRRRRR. !!!!!!
@fluffyclouds555
@fluffyclouds555 Күн бұрын
As a fellow ADHDer, I’m pleased to learn Trevor is one of us. But also - how did he stay so present in interviewing people? He is so great at it
@terany.geiger
@terany.geiger 12 күн бұрын
Thank you for this clip 👏👏👏 you're a wonderful host, and Trevor Noah is a hot ADHD advocate!!!! 🔥 😂❤
@DrPatriceBerry
@DrPatriceBerry 8 күн бұрын
Trevor is describing how our brains are wired and how the amygdala will automatically respond. I love the way he describes things 🙌🏾 I have so people people in the 40s plus coming to get assessed for possible ADHD.
@Marie-TheresKurz
@Marie-TheresKurz 7 минут бұрын
Great to see a new interview with Trever Noah! I'm really a fan of him. He has some really impressive ideas of life and his way to live! I'm "late" diagnosed AD(H)D women and I really appreciate him talking about his experiences. Right now I'm studying again to offer training and coaching for grownups with ADHD, because here in Austria it's still very hard to get a serious diagnose and help! Best wishes to you all, MarieTheres
@sassylass9305
@sassylass9305 11 күн бұрын
Hi Neal and Trevor, great discussion. Really made me think about what Trevor was saying. I'm glad that knowing the diagnoses of ADHD made Trevor feel better. I don't think it does for most people. Insight is good, but it's not necessarily a catalyst for change. I've been to many therapists over the years, and have found talk therapy mostly useless. Maybe because I've always been very insightful and intuitive myself. I can totally relate to Trevor going off in his mind during conversations. I've done this all my life. I just tell people that sometimes I space out and ask them to repeat what they were saying. I'm not convinced that this is a symptom of ADHD. It maybe a combination of things. At around 50, I realized that I'm a Highly Sensitive Person, and learned that HSPs are DEEP PROCESSORS. So, spacing out, like in Trevor's example about the shower patina, I think that's exactly what he's doing. I don't know if Trevor is an HSP, but he's definitely a deep processor, a deep thinker. He wouldn't be able to get to the root of most issues in the world, as well as he does. He's able to break through the noise, and present any event, personality, or issue in it's plain stripped down components in a way that everyone can understand. And from a simplified perspective that people never realized was there. It takes a highly analytical and perceptive mind to do that. To be able to do that, you have to take the time to process things on a deep level. It's not a bad thing. It's not a personality defect. It's a feature! When I space out like that, I apologize, but then sometimes I share what I was thinking about. So go ahead and share your musings about copper and green patina on the shower head. :o) After all that's why the Statue of Liberty is green. See now, I'm going to think about that, and wonder what she looked like in the beginning. Then I'll probably go and look up images online. Enjoy your streams of consciousness. I was never diagnosed with ADHD, since hyperactivity was never my issue, but I can relate to many ADD symptoms such as being easily distracted if bored or hyper-focused on a task I find interesting or totally absorbing. Many people don't realize that hyper-focus is also a symptom of ADHD. Maybe that's why playing video games is so gratifying. When an activity demands your complete attention, you do enter a state of flow. I don't play video games because after my first game of PacMan at age 10, when 4 hours felt like 4 minutes, I realized that I would become an addict. But as a creative person, I have experienced this flow state while drawing or painting, dancing or singing. I absolutely love internet research - talk about being completely focused and distracted at the same time. No depression, no anxiety, just total absorption. People are amazed at my patience and tenacity to research things online. That's that ADD hyperfocus coming into play. In the right job, it can be very useful. Unfortunately, after struggling for 20 years in the corporate world, in a semi-creative industry, I never did find the right replacement career. Shame definitely plays into this too. Depression, Anxiety, PTSD or cPTSD, are not mutually exclusive to shame, betrayal, or abuse. There's usually more than one cause to any problem. I developed psychogenic myoclonus after trying to wean myself off antidepressants. Psychiatrists and Big Pharma deny that long term use of these drugs can cause debilitating withdrawal that is akin to torture that completely dysregulates your entire nervous system. I went to five neurologists, and they said that nothing can be done cause it's a psychosomatic issue. All they suggested was CBT.
@piquantement
@piquantement 11 күн бұрын
I don't think "having insight" or not is a binary. We're complex creatures, and there are sometimes key points I see "insightful" people missing about themselves, which is what stops them from being able to really progress. Sometimes when you have too much faith in your self-insight, it stops you from being able to consider alternative perspectives and change your mind about yourself. (And we're all at least a little wrong about ourselves.)
@Peachy-KeenJewelsOptional
@Peachy-KeenJewelsOptional 11 күн бұрын
@@piquantement True indeed, we all have biases and prejudices that have become inherent in our lives and experiences. It sounds like you're explaining a "Can't see the wood for the trees" symptom ;) Sometimes one is too close to a topic (which particularly happens with one's own personality/self) to be able to pull back to take an objective look at it. The insightful should always be questioning themselves, and willing to take on other perspectives, be flexible in the mind, and have the ability to admit to being wrong multiple times, and learn from mistakes. Just like scientists, there is no 100% certainty for anything because we are always viewing it through our own flawed, biased lens of our own personal experiences.
@lorol5224
@lorol5224 10 күн бұрын
hyper activity is not necessary for a ADD diagnosis.
@dianeatpeace337
@dianeatpeace337 10 күн бұрын
Somatic practices can help. If you cringe at the idea of yoga or breathwork, try fake laughter or forced humming ( with your mouth closed) several times daily for a week or so. Forcing somatic changes into your body will likely make a difference.
@sassylass9305
@sassylass9305 8 күн бұрын
What I'm saying is that I don't believe that knowing the diagnosis is 80% of the cure, for most people with mental health issues. Perhaps for Trevor, finding out that HIS depression is a symptom of ADHD (which carries less stigma); But for a lot of us depression is a symptom of multiple causes that are not so simple to treat or unravel.
@audreydupuy2628
@audreydupuy2628 11 күн бұрын
Super conversation! Thanks for sharing!
@JasTavares
@JasTavares 11 күн бұрын
This was so informative and he is such a cool gentleman. Thank you for explaining it the way you did.
@GoalDigger969
@GoalDigger969 6 күн бұрын
Trevor's ADHD insights are like my brain on a good day-fascinating and all over the place! 00:00 - Trevor loves solving puzzles, especially if they're gorgeous. 00:38 - Discussing ADHD with Gerard Carmichael and wild therapy insights. 02:41 - Comedy is a perfect environment for ADHD; comedians thrive on it. 03:40 - Misinterpreting ADHD as just being an [expletive]; it's really executive dysfunction. 05:07 - The body remembers trauma, like a black person reacting to a police siren. 07:01 - Trevor's journey with ketamine therapy to treat trauma.
@dunmatta2670
@dunmatta2670 10 сағат бұрын
Thank you YT algo. And thank you for this conversation Trevor and Neal. Keep it real. With a flood of information readily accessible, I feel the human mind has been exposed to a lot more than it can handle.
@lindaredwood-kahn8143
@lindaredwood-kahn8143 8 күн бұрын
This is brilliant! Thank you Trevor, for your insight, understanding and compassion. This gave me hope for what I've been living with for 65 years, childhood trauma, ADHD, etc. Saying a prayer of gratitude at the start and end to my days, has been a game changer. Peace
@DjangoVonShaft
@DjangoVonShaft 12 күн бұрын
This man is a national treasure and the world won't realize it until later. It's been a joy Mr. Noah to watch you grow... Never thought you were funny, but an emerging intellectual nonetheless.
@Brandon-os3qr
@Brandon-os3qr 8 күн бұрын
I love Trevor, and I think there's value in this conversation even if I (note: therapist) disagree with some parts of what he says and how he presents it. But to that extent, I really do have to say that he misunderstands or misrepresents how diagnosis works, focuses of treatment, differentiating factors for the diagnoses he mentions, etc. An example: he mentions (in other words) how he thinks many people are referring to depressive symptoms as depression when it can often be attributable to something else, which is absolutely true. However even MORE common is how depression can present with symptoms that look like other things (including ADHD, his focus). Which is why the DSM criteria always include reference to not being attributable to more specific diagnoses. And why his gripe is with over-generalizing conversations like these (though some parts are spot on, for sure) rather than clinical approaches, though I don't know the individual case of Carmichael + am not denying that lazy and or less efficient professionals exist like in any profession
@originalsackheim
@originalsackheim 16 сағат бұрын
Trevor Noah’s insights are so on point and refreshing.
@focusedeye
@focusedeye 7 күн бұрын
When I was diagnosed as a "Textbook example of high functioning ADHD" by one of Western Canada's top specialist in the field at age 57, my life finally started to make sense. Procrastination is my worst enemy.
@sluglife9785
@sluglife9785 6 күн бұрын
"It's in my body." That is something I realised about my 'mental illness' really late in the day. I had always interpreted it through my thoughts and my hyper-analysis of my personal history. Which is obviously totally relevant. But then I had a period where my life got a bit better, my thoughts seemed to mellow, and I had a bit more fluctuation in my 'mood'. At which point I re-oriented my attention towards how I felt in my body, and realised the extent to which I was always physically exhausted and in a kind of elementary chronic pain. When I fully realised that the people around me who are functional and cheerful don't merely have a different 'attitude', they feel different in their body, I was able to ease up on myself more and accept that I have a legit physical disability, rather than merely an 'attitude problem' - which I'm sure I have too.
@user-ez9eq9em2y
@user-ez9eq9em2y 10 күн бұрын
This is me expressing gratitude to you, Neal. For the candor of Three Mics and what it meant to me, for offering up your evolution for me to learn from, for sharing so many insights from so many stars, for being an ambassador of sorts for black men and our experience, and of course, for the laughs. “Crazy Good”, as a title, sold it short.
@kimberknutson831
@kimberknutson831 8 күн бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed watching this and liked and subscribed. Thank you. : )
@sarakatharina2928
@sarakatharina2928 7 күн бұрын
Trevor is brilliant. He stunnes me everytime.
@goldengoddess825
@goldengoddess825 4 күн бұрын
True!!! The way Trevor explains what happens when he gets distracted in conversation, is spot on. My family's term for me when this happens in conversation is "She's off with the fairies again". LOL! Then they have to shout my name to get me back to focus on what they are saying. I then have to get them to go back a few steps in conversation where I got side tracked ... Every little thing in a conversation makes me go off track to something else. I have numerous unfinished projects all around. I will move from one unfinished project in the day to another one that I pass by to pick something up and then work on that one and not go back to the original one I started on in the day. Everybody hates watching movies with me because I will pause every step of the way to talk about something in the movie and give my theory or opinion about what will happen next (and I'm most of the time correct). Now I'm not allowed to have the remote control lol.
@yoni-in-BHAM
@yoni-in-BHAM 3 сағат бұрын
As a veteran suffering with chronic depression and anxiety, and as a late diagnosed AuDHDer, I completely understand the struggle because I and my family live it everyday! Life for me is being in survival mode every second of everyday, literally! Now, thanks to my diagnosis in my late fifties, I understand the 'why' life has been a series of constant struggles and failures! Plus I see now that one of my defense mechanisms was being the 'clown' has been my way of engaging with people. The old, "I'd rather that you'd laugh with me than have you laugh at me!" With my current knowledge and tools, I hope to have a better life within my capabilities going forward! 🖖 Because my spirit animal - Godzilla - demands it! 😆
@dharmakaurkhalsa3923
@dharmakaurkhalsa3923 10 күн бұрын
Trevor is so REAL, conscious and smart. Love him for that. ❤
@lady4recovery
@lady4recovery 10 күн бұрын
So true I was diagnosed as an adult in my 40’s changed my life and helped me understand my life in childhood and addiction in early adulthood
@salentipy
@salentipy 9 күн бұрын
This was a great little snippet with Trevor Noah!
@jeffreyramsaur796
@jeffreyramsaur796 6 күн бұрын
ITS CRAZY U LEFT THE DAILY SHOW AND JOHN IS BACK!! YOU WERE GREAT THO!
@Xubono
@Xubono 4 күн бұрын
Trevor is a very intelligent and effective communicator. I now understand more about ADHD that I’ve picked up from dozens of other sources. His spin on the condition goes a long way to describing the sort of comedy that has become popular in the last few decades, and how “a momentary distraction” can turn into a lifelong research with the right triggers. It underscores just how deeply and carefully some people process information, and why we need to appreciate this special ability.
@Joffhope
@Joffhope 7 күн бұрын
This is brilliant, this holds so much weight also coming from someone like Trevor.
@ipekkutlu78
@ipekkutlu78 Күн бұрын
Thank you for initing this genius. I love how he articulates human condition beautifully. My hubby has ADHD and I have so much empathy for ADHD. I have childhood trauma so I relate to Trevor's story. Thank you for having him over.
@teresagarcia3495
@teresagarcia3495 3 күн бұрын
Trevor Noah got me to watch your channel for the first time. Thank you. Very well done
@FairlyOddMumma
@FairlyOddMumma 4 күн бұрын
The gift of communication. This just put into words what so many ppl havent been able to find the words to convey. Thanks gentlemen 👏🏽 👏🏽 👏🏽
@CreativeInspireP380
@CreativeInspireP380 6 күн бұрын
First time I see one of your interviews - I've appreciated Trevor Noah for a while now, and he's such a candid and open interviewee, but I gotta say you are an impressive interviewer yourself :)
@kathleenvaughan3709
@kathleenvaughan3709 8 күн бұрын
Perfect description of my adhd with the shower head green stuff. Thank you for sharing this I am not alone.
@leslieortenzi8875
@leslieortenzi8875 4 күн бұрын
I need more of this! I loved Trevor Noah before, but this is next level!
@TheGoddessInUs
@TheGoddessInUs 4 күн бұрын
Bless you Trevor Noah for your courage, authenticity, and transparency. I was through grad school before I was diagnosed. I am so with you on having a framework truly helping our understanding and acceptance of ourselves. Thank you Neal Brennan for sharing Noah’s journey 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
@klomax7089
@klomax7089 11 күн бұрын
Thank you Trevor for breaking this down. I don’t yet have a diagnosis but this is so me. ❤️👍🏾🙏🏾
@TheGlobal1212
@TheGlobal1212 10 күн бұрын
Needed this
@benjaminmiller3075
@benjaminmiller3075 4 күн бұрын
Quickly becoming my favorite youtube channel
@BinocularRivalry
@BinocularRivalry 5 күн бұрын
10:23 😂 Amazing post-production.
@wanderwildes
@wanderwildes 9 күн бұрын
Great interview! This information is so important to get out there. Kudos to Tim Ferriss and Michel Pollan also on this issue. The more the merrier.
@kristinn3367
@kristinn3367 5 күн бұрын
He’s so right. I spent 14 years being diagnosed with depression and put on medications that only made things worse, but no one ever took the time to discuss why I was depressed. Wasn’t correctly diagnosed until my 30’s.
@NellieKAdaba
@NellieKAdaba 5 күн бұрын
I hate meds, they're drugs and poison. It's when I was in my 20s that they diagnosed me, and I'm currently in my 40s.
@joeofoysterbay7197
@joeofoysterbay7197 13 күн бұрын
For me, depression is an opportunist looking for a vacuum to fill. Knowing that, I can control it now.
@ohhhhgeorge
@ohhhhgeorge 10 күн бұрын
That's exactly what I'm seeing in comedians. Never in my life considered it, and when I found out. The puzzle finally made sense, i was so relieved. And now I see similarities with other people and all the symptoms are the same. No matter where in the word you are. 🥰🙌🏼
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Охрана года 😎 #кино #фильмы #сериалы
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