4 things people with mental illness do without thinking

I'm exploring four unconscious behaviors that hurt people with mental illness. These things aren't going to serve you in managing your mental health.
I'll show you how to recognize these patterns in hopes that you can reduce their occurrences - it will lead to significantly better outcomes.
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#mentalillness #mentalillnessrecovery #depressionmanagement #ptsd #bipolardisorder

Пікірлер: 686

  • @BlekSheep_1
    @BlekSheep_119 күн бұрын

    1) Obsessively trying to recreate our happiest memories 2) Assume that our feelings are always wrong 3) Attaching to others in unhealthy ways ... real, fictional, celebrities, etc 4) Viewing ourselves as others see us without them knowing our back-story...also,gaslighting ourselves

  • @paulwilson3154

    @paulwilson3154

    19 күн бұрын

    Thanks for that

  • @MinkaSchlossberger4ever

    @MinkaSchlossberger4ever

    18 күн бұрын

    Thank You!!

  • @carlorizzo827

    @carlorizzo827

    18 күн бұрын

    Really appreciate the summation. I heard a video recently that said "Unbrainwash yourself" guffaw

  • @Asdzaan

    @Asdzaan

    16 күн бұрын

    I understand #4 as: Gaslighting ourselves by acting like we don't know our backstory such as how others view their lives through a lens of relative ignorance.

  • @az-qf9ht

    @az-qf9ht

    14 күн бұрын

    “Obsessively” is too accurate 😅

  • @donnamunday6749
    @donnamunday674920 күн бұрын

    Heraclitus said “No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it is not the same river and he’s not the same man.”

  • @DrScottEilers

    @DrScottEilers

    20 күн бұрын

    I love this

  • @FG-ie7cu

    @FG-ie7cu

    20 күн бұрын

    Brilliant.

  • @luzlopez776

    @luzlopez776

    19 күн бұрын

    So you're comparing women to rivers?? Not a smart metaphor

  • @donnamunday6749

    @donnamunday6749

    19 күн бұрын

    @@luzlopez776 I think you missed something here. This is a quote from a famous philosopher who is comparing LIFE to a river and saying that no one can go back and re-live a moment in time because life, like a river, is constantly flowing and changing. To Dr. Eiler’s point: You can never make everything exactly the way it was. And even if you could magically make life/the river be just like it was somehow, YOU as a person are different than you were when you had the original experience and therefore you view it in a different way. So not only is the river different, the person crossing it is different. That is why no one (whether they are man/woman/nonbinary/etc. - gender is irrelevant here) can cross the same “river” (i.e. have the same exact experience) twice.

  • @jinna0512

    @jinna0512

    19 күн бұрын

    @@luzlopez776no one said anything about women

  • @kojikicklighter371
    @kojikicklighter37118 күн бұрын

    I've discovered, not through depression per se, but through health issues that limit me, that if you go a long time without positive memories being formed, your mind does not possess enough healthy references to keep you mentally well.

  • @tnt01

    @tnt01

    17 күн бұрын

    Interesting.

  • @sherrym5556

    @sherrym5556

    17 күн бұрын

    Seems legit

  • @Catfluff521

    @Catfluff521

    16 күн бұрын

    Wow. Thats sobering. And scary.

  • @hummingbird4934

    @hummingbird4934

    16 күн бұрын

    Ok that’s really frightening because that’s going to be me soon!

  • @tonyp.bahama9368

    @tonyp.bahama9368

    15 күн бұрын

    Its true

  • @kendallbr9166
    @kendallbr916620 күн бұрын

    The worst is that I only remember bad things and that stay stuck in my head forever, is really terrible and is exhausting.

  • @Rick40years

    @Rick40years

    20 күн бұрын

    Me too.

  • @ZuTmAa3311

    @ZuTmAa3311

    20 күн бұрын

    You are awesome Dont be hard be Easy. You fully aware of yourself. No matter what things will be better. Dont do anything else then just be you✌🏻 you are a human. You are just a human. It's wonderful that you are nothing more then that. It's simple. this is where you are🌏🌎🌍. You are flying fast. Everything is out of control. But you are still nothing of all that. You are awesome. And you are just you. Let it all go and get an🌈🍀🧁🐰 and then the 🕳️ will fill 🙊🙉🙈

  • @shanlange6331

    @shanlange6331

    20 күн бұрын

    This is for Kendall the hardest part is walking into a business where you’re not familiar meeting new people smiling brightly…… of all people my mother almost forced me to go to a dance yes, I like to wear bright colors, but I know nothing about dancing, except watching Fred Astaire movies….. go to an Elks dance go to a birthday party with Dance go to a Latin salsa class those of the most fun anything Latin is easier than waltz, etc….. Anyone that is Mexican Latin Cuban Puerto Rican the men all know how to dance it’s completely different society, men dance ,,,,,!,,,,,,!! 20 years later, I am competing dancing, and my whole life has changed and so many nice men if you have an attitude against men, the men that dance are all polite.

  • @CheekieCharlie

    @CheekieCharlie

    20 күн бұрын

    You can try having a positivity only journal where you write down the positive things that have happened in the day on your phone and then write them in a journal at the end of your day. Anything as insignificant as a fart making you giggle

  • @FriedRice3519

    @FriedRice3519

    20 күн бұрын

    Fr

  • @kelseymathias3881
    @kelseymathias388120 күн бұрын

    They physical feelings of exhaustion that accompany depression are worse than the mental feelings

  • @susanmercurio1060

    @susanmercurio1060

    20 күн бұрын

    Sometimes I even have physical symptoms: my muscles ache or I feel sick.

  • @longlostwraith5106

    @longlostwraith5106

    20 күн бұрын

    But they are worse because they accompany depression, not on their own. It's the combinations of mental and physical exhaustion that really f*cks you up.

  • @audiolatte

    @audiolatte

    19 күн бұрын

    This is where I'm at mentally & physically,, I feel like I'm drowning in a tar pit and my body is filled with concrete.

  • @kelseymathias3881

    @kelseymathias3881

    19 күн бұрын

    @@audiolatte well said

  • @Thoughtworld1984

    @Thoughtworld1984

    18 күн бұрын

    Exactly 💯

  • @pollyrg97
    @pollyrg9720 күн бұрын

    That second point: "some of your feelings are valid" 😭 As a recently-diagnosed AuDHDer who spent the first 40 years of her life being told she was being over-sensitive, ridiculous, and unreasonable, and who internalised that as invalidating every emotional response ever, THANK YOU.

  • @tiffanylam5026

    @tiffanylam5026

    20 күн бұрын

    it’s really liberating to finally realise the feelings aren’t always wrong🥲 When I was a kid I was somehow diagnosed with depression at 9 year old, and it’s now in my blood that every time I’m unhappy it’s because I’m sick and need to step up anti-depressants. In fact now I look back, the formal psychologist report at that time says I didn’t have a mental illness diagnosis, but my mom and elder sister were indeed depressed and traumatised… so I was told that having sad feelings is a part of brain being sick. As a kid I just absorbed what was taught and it’s affected so much even now…. Only to realise sadness isn’t always sickness and the I had every reason to be unhappy, and it’s okay. Such an important point🥲

  • @sbj89123

    @sbj89123

    19 күн бұрын

    I can absolutely relate! My favorite addition was “If you’d just live up to your potential..” Well, If I had a freaking nickel for every time you said that, I wouldn’t need to, would I? There are a few things (dopamine regulation!! That are a challenge, but honestly, there are many facets of my personality that I value, that are tied in to my ADHD. Your feelings are valid. Most importantly, your positive feelings about who you are? Those are 100% valid. For the record, I love ridiculousness! I don’t know if Marilyn Monroe really said “I’s better to be absolutely ridiculous than absolutely boring”, but someone did and they were absolutely correct.

  • @MinkaSchlossberger4ever

    @MinkaSchlossberger4ever

    18 күн бұрын

    I know, right!???? Nice to hear a specialist encourage us!!!!!!!!❤ I knew this....but I question myself a lot.....😂

  • @user-ws1pp2hg2j

    @user-ws1pp2hg2j

    17 күн бұрын

    Jesus will help you. Surrender your life to Christ by obeying the gospel. Read the Bible it shows you what is sin and what is good so you can know how to go to heaven.

  • @gwillis01
    @gwillis0120 күн бұрын

    I hear you saying. "Go out and make new happy memories. Don't just obsess about some distant time in the past."

  • @vidmantaskvidmantask7134

    @vidmantaskvidmantask7134

    20 күн бұрын

    Don't live in your memories your whole life.

  • @bride0fLORDYESHUA

    @bride0fLORDYESHUA

    20 күн бұрын

    my opinion : LIVE NOW not in a past because past will hold you back . LIVE NOW, and leave the morning for tomorrow to make itself . as LOrd Jesus says : Matthew 6:34 (kjv) Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. that means : LIVE NOW : LIVE MORROW ; LIVE and be present time.

  • @TheManLab7

    @TheManLab7

    20 күн бұрын

    I try my upmost to not think about my past because I was so happy before my life changing bike accident.

  • @edwardenglishonline

    @edwardenglishonline

    19 күн бұрын

    Agreed... and It wouldn't have taken such a lengthy clip. Although I like this chap (and am subscribed & like his clips to help his channel), I find the same "commonalities" with other "online therapists": Long and (sometimes) boring explanations of the obvious ending with the so well-known "come to therapy" and burn 200 dollars per hour, because you must "work" on your "healing" [funny enough, this lad does not tend to do that, or at least he didn't do so in this one]... Ayyyy.... ayyy.... ay...🥱

  • @amymyers5503
    @amymyers550321 күн бұрын

    Can I get a major award for the longest time not dating / not in a relationship? I'm not ace and not aro. I just quit trying. Other than hanging out with a few dudes as friends, I haven't dated / been in a relationship in 14 years. I'm not going to unpack trauma in a public space. Hobbies and intellectual interests are more emotionally fulfilling than boyfriends. My gut instinct has s*** for brains. I'm really bad at relationships. That makes me the winner of not dating! I'm the best at something! Woohoo!

  • @gusferrana2281

    @gusferrana2281

    21 күн бұрын

    I got out ofvan abusive relationship after years of trying. I was single for 8 years and blissfully happy. An old boyfriend from 29 years ago kept coming to my mind. Eventually I found him & we went through HELL for 6 years but now we're finally on the same page. Never say never like i did.

  • @HeyPattiana

    @HeyPattiana

    20 күн бұрын

    The end of next month will mark 13 for me since I've been involved in a serious relationship. Being single was new for me - I'd had a few consecutive long term relationships since my very first date at 16. After that though, I made the conscious decision to not date for over 2 years in order to work on my own issues. But then thought I'd give it a try. I dated casually quite a bit the next five years.... Regarding that experience, extremely unfulfilling is probably an understatement. I finally gave up. It's now been 5 years since my last date. I don't necessarily believe that I'm bad at relationships - I've just come to the conclusion that my picker is broken. I do agree with you, there are so many more fulfilling hobbies and activities that can replace the goal of being in an intimate relationship! I am completely comfortable on my own, although I do sometimes have very brief twinges of envy when I see happy couples. The keyword is happy. What other legitimate reason is there to be intimately involved with another person if either of you is miserable? 😞

  • @HeyPattiana

    @HeyPattiana

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@gusferrana2281That is a beautiful story ❤ I wish you so much success! I may have had a similar experience, but as I was searching to reconnect with my sweet high school boyfriend, I came upon his obituary. 😢

  • @michelekurlan2580

    @michelekurlan2580

    20 күн бұрын

    14 years here, by choice. Great minds think alike...lol Nada biggie for me, personally. Prefer guys a touch over chix as friends. Easier. What I have noticed in my own life and many other females...trying to turn our male buddies, because and hubbies into BFFs(best FEMALE friends) LOL

  • @thegoddesswithin8859

    @thegoddesswithin8859

    20 күн бұрын

    I've just started a new relationship after 15 years of being single. I've been busy during that time raising my son on my own as a 24/7 single parent. I left his Dad when I was 16 weeks pregnant. It's been a long hard haul but after a lot of work on myself, I found peace there. Relationships bring up different challenges. Although my current partner is a wonderful man sometimes I think I'd prefer the peace. We'll see. 🕊

  • @nonyabidness5708
    @nonyabidness570820 күн бұрын

    I buy too many children/ young adult books that I read as a kid because I remember feeling safe and happy when I read those...

  • @FG-ie7cu

    @FG-ie7cu

    20 күн бұрын

    I do, too, and I refuse to stop. Because I don't think I'm just trying to recreate a feeling, but to remember true values and that there really were good people who had good thoughts and dreams and who wished them for others.

  • @nickibanks5185

    @nickibanks5185

    17 күн бұрын

    Mine has been TV sitcom's from back n the days when life was just having to go to school come home Maybe homework 🤔 eat sleep rinse & repeat. No responsibilities. It's a short disassociation but it's a mini break from today's reality. Unless I have them on auto play.

  • @elenavanbc

    @elenavanbc

    14 күн бұрын

    This reply, hidden among other makes so much sense to me. Thanks for stating it so clearly, there's a ton of good building blocks when we remember those times, REMINDING ourselves there ARE good, compassionate, caring beings out there all the time. Those memories are lifesavers for me, giving me strength to go ahead. In this case, I don't agree with the therapist the first part of the video.

  • @rosemaryclarke2348

    @rosemaryclarke2348

    12 күн бұрын

    Believe me most of the best books nowadays are children's ones! Who doesn't reread books! I love Alice Through the Looking Glass; I think I've read it about 10 times at the moment.

  • @rosemaryclarke2348

    @rosemaryclarke2348

    12 күн бұрын

    ​@@nickibanks5185I think we all do that; that's why adults buy kids TV from the past.

  • @pam164
    @pam16417 күн бұрын

    I've had slivers of good memories in my life, but mostly bad. I'm finding myself being resentful of people who have had happy lives.

  • @Thoughtworld1984
    @Thoughtworld198418 күн бұрын

    You can know and tell people they have wronged or hurt you. But I'm going to promise that 90% of the time they don't care.

  • @bratanyaroslav3561

    @bratanyaroslav3561

    9 күн бұрын

    Not only do they not care! They don't believe you. No one does. You have a mental illness. It's all in your mind now. So people can wrong you and your reaction will be "crazy" to an "imagined event" anyway. To me this is the absolute worst part of depression (along with fatigue). Ironically, this creates a REALLY vicious cycle, I have observed with myself and other friends, that people know they can treat you badly and since you will not be taken seriously, there are no ramifications. This might lead you to mistrust people (with some actual truth to it), which is yet another mental health system. You tell your therapist and boom! You're on dopamine blockers (like Abilify), which makes absolutely no sense chemically, it's just a modern lobotomy. Now that you've been on the dopamine blockers they are so eager to give to everyone and their dog, you are DEFINITELY crazy in everyone's eyes, and NOTHING you say can be taken seriously. So next time someone hurts you, cycle repeated, only worse. And the sad part is, this will really make your mental illness much much worse, and it doesn't have to be this way. We just need a new healthcare system

  • @maridonis542

    @maridonis542

    8 күн бұрын

    More than 90 ,,,, almost 💯%

  • @lailanitukuafu
    @lailanitukuafu20 күн бұрын

    The one about acting like you don't know your own backstory is a huge one for me. Just last night I was feeling awful about myself because I couldn't stop thinking that I'm a super arrogant, self-absorbed idiot. And like... hating myself... for only caring about myself...?? The sheer irony. How does that make any sense??

  • @susanmercurio1060

    @susanmercurio1060

    20 күн бұрын

    I was beating myself up and I finally realized, "There are plenty of people who want to beat me up. Why help them?" Then I started catching every Automatic Negative Thought and I learned how to contradict them.

  • @FG-ie7cu

    @FG-ie7cu

    20 күн бұрын

    @@susanmercurio1060 I have spent the last two months slowly and carefully dropping off "friends" who take little potshots at me. I think of it as them constantly taking little bites out of me. And my thoughts that led to this break were just what you say: That there are plenty of people out there willing to beat me down--bushel loads of them, they are quite common--I do not need more of them. They only exist to keep me from my goals, which I want to spend my time trying to reach, instead of spending my time and energy having to heal from the wounds of being around them.

  • @FG-ie7cu

    @FG-ie7cu

    20 күн бұрын

    To be fair, it is very hard not to be self-absorbed when nearly every time one reaches out with a smile or kind word, one is rebuffed, sometimes rudely. Other people simply do not WANT kindness and love. But it is good to still lavish it out on something besides self, like pets, plants, nature, God, teddy bears, SOMEthing. I also love the backstory part of this video, and like to think of the positive side of it, too, like remembering all the GOOD people and things that have happened in one's past, especially tiny little things that mattered to one's own heart, though to no one else's, things at which, even if you told them now, other people would still belittle and scoff . . . keep them close to one's heart as a "backstory of love." You know: once a hummingbird hovered right outside the kitchen window to say hi to me; once I was able to release a rabbit from a too-small cage; once someone smiled at me on the metro when I was having my saddest day. . . once I climbed up and got something off the top shelf for a senior in a ridey-cart at the grocery store. Life seems set up to try to erase the quiet good things, but they are really there, and we need to side with them. Sorry, just some morning thoughts that ran away with me. : -)

  • @baloneysaucejohnson8747

    @baloneysaucejohnson8747

    19 күн бұрын

    ​@@FG-ie7cuthanks for finding the beauty in this world. It's ever present, and only takes us to close our eyes and hearts to them and forget all about them. I hope you have a great rest of your day.

  • @MinkaSchlossberger4ever

    @MinkaSchlossberger4ever

    18 күн бұрын

    You may and should Care about Yourself a lot.selflessness is an ideal for Saints!!!

  • @3up3rn0va
    @3up3rn0va14 күн бұрын

    I was working at a place for 4 years. This lady straight up told me “You are too nice” it really set me off. I don’t trust many people anymore. I was only really nice because I have hurt people in my past and I deeply regret it and I can’t take those moments back and fix it that is not how time works. And now I have people being really hostile towards me and I just either take it or leave the situation. I am not good at confronting people at all. I probably should go back to therapy. 🤷‍♂

  • @SSuinn-mg5es

    @SSuinn-mg5es

    10 күн бұрын

    I've bin hurt a lot in my past so I've bin careful in my words not to hurt others..my intent is loving...recently I adopted a new piece of advice..don't take anything personal cuz that's about that person not me..this advice is so freeing to be positive authentic loving..

  • @splosionsmcgee
    @splosionsmcgee19 күн бұрын

    I held my breath waiting for you to say "exaggerated" when speaking about emotions and emotional reactions of people with mental illness(es).....then you said "heightened" and I knew I had been doing exactly as you were saying....calling myself "over-reactive" and invalidating most of what I feel. That and the tears started less than 2mins in......this one really hit home. Some day, eventually, there will be a video of yours I watch and feel passive enough about it to not comment. (JK, I enjoy that you inspire lurker, introvert me to speak out, it's a testament to how well you frame these lessons or skills)

  • @michaelangelo7511
    @michaelangelo751116 күн бұрын

    I am 78 and am still sharp. I understand your first point to the fullest. The old fishing place is now different, the old school is different and all the things I loved are either physically gone or spiritually missing. There is a profound emptiness when I seek what was.

  • @PaigeSquared
    @PaigeSquared21 күн бұрын

    I would like a deeper breakdown on "gaslighting ourselves." There is gaslighting in my family of origin, and I have done a lot of work, but I know this (gaslighting self) is something that I don't fully identify, when it happens. I feel bad when I know I am being scrutinized, even when I know the other person has no clue what they're talking about, even when logically I know the judgement is incorrect, or a cognitive distortion. I think I associate being watched with being punished. There wasn't a way to win, no consistent rules, and that's sort of the vibe I have been feeling again, recently.

  • @laurengrace5747

    @laurengrace5747

    21 күн бұрын

    If it helps at all, one way I have used it in the workplace is understanding that I, as well, don’t know them or what they’ve been through. If you tell your coworkers you are seriously sick, they may worry about you or only worry that your work doesn’t get done. We can’t control what they think or say, and that’s a good thing for us. It is not for us to worry about and serves no purpose. I also in a weird desperate attempt to get myself to do this is by almost acting like I’m doing the day for the first time, and I haven’t worked at this job before, I know no one. That helps me connect that they don’t want to hurt me and don’t trigger anything for me. Unraveling CPTSD is hard and it is very real, so treat it as such and like you’re your own best friend🫂❤️

  • @SueEllenSmith-ju4ot

    @SueEllenSmith-ju4ot

    20 күн бұрын

    @PaigeSquared very insightful. Some don't care and aren't aware lead monitoring spirit. Cruel but no always aware so speak up. Sometimes just respond, don't react if it's worth a lesson learned

  • @cathycannon151

    @cathycannon151

    20 күн бұрын

    @@laurengrace5747

  • @happiness7808

    @happiness7808

    18 күн бұрын

    Sounds like it’s time to reparent your inner child. Look into EMDR and shadow work

  • @SueEllenSmith-ju4ot

    @SueEllenSmith-ju4ot

    18 күн бұрын

    @happiness7808 oh bs ,choose quiet awareness.

  • @letsgocountry1242
    @letsgocountry124220 күн бұрын

    Dr. Scott, I really appreciate your opinions. I am a decade or more older than you but you’re very good at articulating so much of what I have experienced. So this is just a note of encouragement for you to keep it up. You are providing great service here.

  • @marlenelindsey7638

    @marlenelindsey7638

    20 күн бұрын

    He has made a positive impact on my life. I need to take my time and watch the videos a few times.

  • @sanataj
    @sanataj14 күн бұрын

    I just saw a video about low vibrational people and how draining they are and self-destructive. There was another video, which didn't watch. He said stop dwelling on the past - bring your mind back to the present and make the most of it. I have those symptoms. I think that is why I am so alone and so anxious and insecure. Nobody wants a needy person. But not being liked or wanted only makes you more needy. I also saw a video by Paul McKenna, who is a famous UK hypnotist. He said people's brains are occupied with worry about potential catastrophies and it squeezes out creativity.. Hypnosis can reset the brain.

  • @ranc1977

    @ranc1977

    8 күн бұрын

    “Before you diagnose yourself with depression or low self-esteem, first make sure you are not, in fact, surrounded by a$$holes.”

  • @MelModica

    @MelModica

    3 күн бұрын

    Yes anxiety is misuse of energy and imagination. Most of the bad things we imagine don’t happen.

  • @ranc1977

    @ranc1977

    3 күн бұрын

    @@MelModica Too much philosophy. Social anxiety is suppressed anger. Learning how to feel anger and to express anger in healthy manner - is all that we need to do.

  • @Wingedmagician
    @Wingedmagician21 күн бұрын

    great message at the end there. perfectly encapsulated. you know what you went through, it makes sense. sometimes you can be in such a survival mode, isolation, dysregulation that you genuinely cant/don’t remember anything too, making it way worse.

  • @SueEllenSmith-ju4ot

    @SueEllenSmith-ju4ot

    20 күн бұрын

    @Wingedmagician some people intent is to humiliate(humble). Walk away after speaking truth of boundries. Protect inner peace.

  • @FG-ie7cu

    @FG-ie7cu

    20 күн бұрын

    @@SueEllenSmith-ju4ot "Protect your peace" has become one of my favorite sayings.

  • @mattsadovnikoff1457
    @mattsadovnikoff145721 күн бұрын

    Whenever I tune in to watch, I am always so amazed at your brilliance. Where did you come from?! As always, my very best wishes.

  • @72dkg45
    @72dkg4520 күн бұрын

    My introversion has helped mitigate potential sabotage throughout my life.

  • @blackfrost273industries4

    @blackfrost273industries4

    19 күн бұрын

    Same. And to help filter things that help by what I think is moral and truthy of where I want to be or what I find real or genuine.

  • @karlarose536

    @karlarose536

    6 күн бұрын

    I feel that, for sure! It hasn't been 100% effective, but it certainly has come in handy.

  • @stevec404
    @stevec40420 күн бұрын

    Going 'back' to special moments is difficult for me, I have them, but I am usually so very unhinged that they get pushed aside. Your explanation hits home with me. But the thing that pulls me out of the present are not the good memories, it's the hurtful ones. When triggered, those hurtful times loom large. I find some solace in working on today's potential for good times, so I guess we arrive at the same place. "It's not what's happening outside of you..." Yes. Even 'good' memories for me are shadowed by internal anxieties. The confluence of good outside and good inside vibes is so rare with me that I am hard pressed to think of any. You have to feel like you have 'resources' in the first place...feeling 'not good enough' meant I would constantly cleave to those around me who (seemed) good enough! I had no way to get there for myself. It always ended with a boatload of hurt for me. I stopped doing that. I spent nearly 5 decades in the dark as to why I had many severe mental hangups. Had I known the root cause (early childhood trauma) I might have started a healing journey long ago. But my subconscious mind literally blocked all...all memory of the trauma as a causative thing. When the truth finally surfaced, I had my first nervous breakdown.

  • @FG-ie7cu

    @FG-ie7cu

    20 күн бұрын

    God bless you. I found a sign at a thrift store last month that says, "Create the things you wish existed." And it made me think that any and everything good that has ever been in this world has been by someone who did that, and not only did that, but who learned to SPOT the naysayers quickly, even the sly ones who pretend to be kind, but through whose kinds words come little cutdowns, and to get rid of them, protecting, instead, the good they are trying to create, and not wasting time with "destroyers."

  • @sbpriesthood
    @sbpriesthood12 күн бұрын

    oh my gosh. oh my GOSSHSHSSHSHSHSHSH. the beginning pertaining to recreating the past almost made me cry. you hit the nail on the head, i’m gonna change this immediately bcuz of course i want to have special moments more.

  • @FG-ie7cu
    @FG-ie7cu21 күн бұрын

    Thank you, Dr. Scott. We always look forward to seeing your premiers. You are brilliant, insightful, and so very, very articulate, in case no one has told you so today. : -) Striking clarity. ❤

  • @amy52347
    @amy5234720 күн бұрын

    I really love what you say about chronically distrusting our feelings and thinking we are always wrong. Thank you for letting us know we can believe our perceptions of red flags.

  • @bratanyaroslav3561

    @bratanyaroslav3561

    9 күн бұрын

    Don't fall for this, you need to trust your own mind to some degree. Please see my comments above about the healthcare system

  • @elisabetta4571
    @elisabetta457121 күн бұрын

    This is so incredibly insightful. It's exactly as you say. Because I've come to think of all my emotions as out of proportion and not legitimate, I tend to blame myself for everything first, therefore losing touch with reality. I myself and by default invalidate everything that I feel thinking I am the problem. The problem, at times at least, lies also with reality, though, but it seems I never see it this way. It's all about me, all in my head, painfully disconnected from reality. All quite arrogant to think about it,in a way! This is definitely something I need to work on. Thank you so much, Dr. Scott.

  • @firehorse9996

    @firehorse9996

    20 күн бұрын

    Beautifully said. I completely understand. Partly from having a mother who told me, "You're too sensitive" when I said I was hurt by the nasty things she said to me. Having a family who is always finding fault with you even though they do awful things just to provoke an emotional reaction so they can laugh and call you crazy. Wishing you all the best on your journey and that you can surround yourself with safe people and avoid toxic work environments. That's what makes all the difference.

  • @elisabetta4571

    @elisabetta4571

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@firehorse9996 Thank you so much for saying so and for sharing. Yes, "you're too sensitive" is something that most definitely rings a bell here. Something I, too, was told as child. What is that even supposed to mean, I wonder? As if we could choose our emotions! So, little by little but steadily, I learned to suppress my feelings, one way or another. Until I felt no longer and couldn't identify my feelings anymore. I trudged and before I knew it, developed a series of affective disorders. I look back and can barely make sense of life that has passed. A lifetime later almost, not sure how exactly, something shifted in me and I can see it now. If there was just one thing I wish to share with my fellow human beings, it would be : please don't lose yourself, stay in touch with your inner thruth, with your own feelings. You know your story, as Dr. Scott points out. I hope I'm making sense, English is my second language but I don't get to practise it often, I'm Italian, writing from Italy, so also forgive my belated reply. Thanks again for your warm words, sending love your way, hope also I didn't overshare.

  • @sanataj

    @sanataj

    14 күн бұрын

    I think the key is self-esteem and assertiveness. They are essential to believe in yourself and to stand up for yourself, because others will happily bring you down and not support you, otherwise. But I don't know how to get those things. Assertiveness is learnable, apparently.

  • @elisabetta4571

    @elisabetta4571

    14 күн бұрын

    @@sanataj I think you're correct. And assertiness is definitely something we can learn. As to self-esteem, it is most certainly key. But when we get sucked up into this all , I guess we lose touch also with the basic skills we need to function (as some self-esteem is, in my view).

  • @user-km2rz2wc1i
    @user-km2rz2wc1i20 күн бұрын

    Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.

  • @Jerome12222H

    @Jerome12222H

    20 күн бұрын

    Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!

  • @adhamsoliman-ue2kn

    @adhamsoliman-ue2kn

    20 күн бұрын

    Yes, dr.porassss. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.

  • @ThailandLottery-vz3pm

    @ThailandLottery-vz3pm

    20 күн бұрын

    I wish they were readily available in my place. Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He is 59 & has so many mental health issues plus probable 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 know if it is common for an obsession with violence.

  • @Jerome12222H

    @Jerome12222H

    20 күн бұрын

    Is he on instagram?

  • @adhamsoliman-ue2kn

    @adhamsoliman-ue2kn

    20 күн бұрын

    Yes he is dr.porassss.

  • @GingerBiPolarBear
    @GingerBiPolarBear21 күн бұрын

    Thanks doc Scott! I find that figuring out which emotions are extreme given my situation and which aren't as well as addressing my agoraphobia and fear/ lack of relationships is where therapy is still essential to me even though my meds are keeping me fairly functional. Although, I did recently realise that even my therapist didn't understand how severe my agoraphobia has become.

  • @Spadesshovel
    @Spadesshovel20 күн бұрын

    Dude I needed this,thanks. Totally put her on a pedestal and just let myself get absolutely smashed by all the emotional abuse, let myself down big time. Much love everyone ✌️

  • @Kloops
    @Kloops21 күн бұрын

    7:10 I started to gaslight myself saying I’m being overly dramatic and my ex husband ran with that a lot and very rarely did he ever take responsibility for his actions. Like I would get hurt and I was so brainwashed that it was all in my head that I had light myself and he and his mother treated me very badly. Talking down to me calling me names. I was the hurt of jokes. And in their heads it was endearing. UNTIL his sister got married. She got married later in life and so her husband was out of college and a well established police officer. And he is a thick skinned guy right? Well I am not a person to talk behind anyone’s back in their family. So one day I was over with my mother-in-law and she was much happier than usual. She was giggling and I asked what was going on. And she said that she was happy for a date coming up in a month. And I said what’s happening then? And she said “I will be able to joke with Chuck again in a month.” I was so confused and asked what was that about. And she told me that almost a year ago that her daughter spoke with her and said that she wasn’t allowed to “joke” with her son-in-law for a year. And I asked why. And she sort of didn’t want to say why so she just said “Sandra said my jokes weren’t funny to Chuck.” So several things were sake up bells for me that very conversation. 1. I wasn’t the only one who was offended by her joking around. 2. It may not all be in my head. 3. I have a right to be upset and have my feelings. (Because I spent a good amount of years thinking my feelings were not real.) 4. There is something so wrong about her because she had a boundary set in place and she didn’t have any self reflection. 5. She viewed the entire situation as a challenge and joke itself. A game she would win because her daughter said the boundary was for one full year she was not allowed to tell jokes around her son-in-law. 6. I knew right then and there that I was in a losing battle if I ever spoke up to her about her verbal and emotional abuse toward me. And it was time to start going no contact because that conversation made me realize I was her robot. I allowed her to turn me into her little monkey to do with how she pleased. I was comfortable being there but I was not myself. I was a shell of who I was before I got married. It was hard and I tried to just be around her son when I went no contact. My ex husband was sort of happy that I stopped being around his mom too. Then I realized after awhile he was two faced and wanted to be loyal to both sides for his needs to be met. He lied to me many times. He would speak badly of me with his mother. He told me that he didn’t like his mom and o it liked his dad and they were a package deal. I was like wow. That is like so warped and troubling. So yeah I’m struggling still to this day to work through my feelings. And most of all to feel pride in myself and know my self worth to boost my self confidence and esteem. Sorry to ramble but this hits home for me. I hope we all can face and win over our battles.

  • @kc-ku8kq

    @kc-ku8kq

    20 күн бұрын

    💓

  • @user-gy1xc4dx4h

    @user-gy1xc4dx4h

    7 күн бұрын

    I TOTALLY 💯 AGREE AND HEAR YOU HONEY , GOD BLESS 🙌 YOU WITH MUCH STRENGTH AND HAPPINESS AND PEACE ✌️ 🙏

  • @art_out_of_despair
    @art_out_of_despair19 күн бұрын

    thank you, it’s really great to have some guide on how to deal with reality when you HAVE a diagnosis, you are not just sad or short-term depressed, you are not a normal guy struggling on self-development, but you are bipolar / anxious / major depressed or whatever, and you have to keep in mind that life can appear much different from what regular healthy people write in books like “10 skills you need to succeed and be happy”.

  • @stuford
    @stuford20 күн бұрын

    Thanks Scott..always helpful 🙏

  • @duakibbaariyan1042
    @duakibbaariyan104220 күн бұрын

    Dr Scott thank you so much for your videos. Since I discovered your channel I've never missed a single uploaded video from you. I learn a lot from you, doc. Keep educating us. I love you, doc ❤

  • @MidnightMeowMeow
    @MidnightMeowMeow20 күн бұрын

    This was perfect in a really funny way, I watched up to 3:00 minutes and paused, thinking about older times that were happy and I opened a discord message of a song I sent to a friend (he''s always chill and cool) months ago, now we don't really talk that often because he is busy, but I know that when he eventually sees the message he will vibe to the song and it just made me quite happy as well of being able to make music and share it even if it's not super refined yet. It just made me realize I can still be happy now and still have my confidence I use to have, even though I was already in a bad mood due to outside circumstances. Then I came back to the video and you went on to say pretty much the exact same thing.

  • @IndigoMasquerade
    @IndigoMasquerade12 күн бұрын

    I'm glad you said this. I keep returning to places that remind me of when my life was seemingly better...but I don't ever feel that same feeling. This makes sense.

  • @jillannstabley

    @jillannstabley

    12 күн бұрын

    Thank you 🙏 I'm going to try and stop doing these things

  • @user-vz5cq7ey2c
    @user-vz5cq7ey2c19 күн бұрын

    The important thing to remember is something like ruminating on sadness are only feelings and have no genuine power to cause harm if you don't let it.

  • @purenergywellness17
    @purenergywellness1719 күн бұрын

    Thank you for you valuable education and awareness- so appreciated! And I love how genuine you are-well done for staying true to who you are! Look at what a difference you are making!

  • @LetArtsLive
    @LetArtsLive15 күн бұрын

    Having PTSD becoming a Hermit and I sleep all the time there is no happiness

  • @JaquelineGoodspeed

    @JaquelineGoodspeed

    8 күн бұрын

    Learn your triggers.

  • @bac0nknight691
    @bac0nknight69115 күн бұрын

    Its been about a year since i left my toxic job and decided i was going to treat myself with more respect patience and care than i have in the past. And your videos have been great for giving me ways to learn and deal with my chronic anxiety. Its still difficult but the added understanding has really helped me prioritize what I should be focusing on as someone who has this condition instead of doing things the way everyone expects me to. Thank you

  • @MarianneMcVeigh-xz2yv
    @MarianneMcVeigh-xz2yv20 күн бұрын

    Great video, Dr Scott. Thank you for helping me understand myself better.

  • @likesgood
    @likesgood20 күн бұрын

    i am really grateful and gain so much from like alllll your videos and never comment. but even though everyone says it - this video especially rn but just you're so affable and spot on and I'm an MD and can access whatever...it's hard to access authenticity and scientific dissemination and just ...good and virtue in this time/world. Thanks dude. for getting it and being it. helps me.

  • @kimberlyarlene4094
    @kimberlyarlene40947 күн бұрын

    I’ve never heard advice like this. Thank you for providing truly different content.

  • @daveyjones6148
    @daveyjones614820 күн бұрын

    Wow thanks for this. For years ive been mentally stuck in the past. A moment of reflection to my current state snapped me back, for lack of better words. Ive got a lot to look forward to! Cheers

  • @paulidevoss7249
    @paulidevoss724918 күн бұрын

    Wow that feels like about 10 really helpful insights right there. I’d never thought of things in this way and this has helped so much, thank you

  • @paulashufelt6802
    @paulashufelt680220 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much for all your videos! This one really helped and I’m going to share with my sister. Love the book too

  • @MichelleKennedy-sd5yl
    @MichelleKennedy-sd5yl6 күн бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your experience and knowledge,I definitely found it helpful 😊

  • @martiseelye6443
    @martiseelye64438 күн бұрын

    MOST people, with mental health issues or NOT, like to remember those times and revisit happy past places.

  • @dianegilbert3676

    @dianegilbert3676

    6 күн бұрын

    Well, YEAH! Totally NORMAL.

  • @Gelo31415
    @Gelo3141519 күн бұрын

    Thank you, this is very useful. It always fascinates me, how in therapy we talk a lot about the simple or even obvious things and how small action can make a real difference.

  • @101hamilton
    @101hamilton19 күн бұрын

    This is such a great video. Thank you for posting!

  • @susanmercurio1060
    @susanmercurio106020 күн бұрын

    I couldn't remember any happy times. Lately, I had not one but two bursts of happiness. I thought, "Oh, great! I finally know what happiness feels like!"

  • @FG-ie7cu

    @FG-ie7cu

    20 күн бұрын

    That is SO awesome! What a wonderful gift for you!

  • @shanlange6331

    @shanlange6331

    19 күн бұрын

    @@susanmercurio1060 Susan, you hang out with me I’m super fun. I’ve been to Guam Hawaii five different states. I’ve been to Europe in the 70s lived in So California been in Mexico. I’ve been to Vegas 30 times you have to travel. Travel.

  • @susanmercurio1060

    @susanmercurio1060

    19 күн бұрын

    ​@@FG-ie7cuThank you! That's what I thought when it happened!

  • @susanmercurio1060

    @susanmercurio1060

    19 күн бұрын

    ​​@@shanlange6331I traveled all over the lower 48 states when I was young. Those were the days when a woman traveling alone was still kind of looked down on: the early 1960s and 70s. I never could afford to travel to Europe. Now I realize that I have never had a stable home, so I am focusing on providing myself with a safe home. I would love to hang out with you!

  • @bratanyaroslav3561

    @bratanyaroslav3561

    9 күн бұрын

    Not sure if we're supposed to be happy. Most old-school religions certainly did not think so It's more about having a purpose. It can be as simple as volunteering at a soup kitchen. But since depression kills your motivation, it is hard to find the purpose. This is the issue. I genuinely think focusing on happiness is akin to collecting instagram likes and is not the way to go (it is basically a dopamine chasing behaviour). So go for purpose. I have been the most content (not happy, but content) when i have had a purpose.

  • @michelekurlan2580
    @michelekurlan258020 күн бұрын

    Yes,Scott. Living vicariously is like Hotel CA.

  • @InAHollowTree
    @InAHollowTree18 күн бұрын

    Thanks for this; Very helpful! I almost didn’t click on the video because I thought that it was going to be the same round of things that everyone says: getting enough sleep, eating correctly, exercise, etc.

  • @johnykryll
    @johnykryll20 күн бұрын

    Your vids are really helpful . I find allowing memories in unhealthy , stay in the present all your waking hours

  • @purenergywellness17
    @purenergywellness1719 күн бұрын

    Thank you for you valuable education and awareness- so appreciated!

  • @bratanyaroslav3561
    @bratanyaroslav35619 күн бұрын

    Wow third video in a row now, you're a straight hitter my friend. Subscribing!!! Keep going

  • @johnwhite7320
    @johnwhite732020 күн бұрын

    Thanks Scott. This was very insightful.

  • @jerryschultz70
    @jerryschultz703 күн бұрын

    That was amazing. I felt like you were talking to me directly. God bless you sir

  • @punishmesenpai2578
    @punishmesenpai257820 күн бұрын

    Not being on a date in 3 years, must be tough. How about not being on a date, period. Like - ever. And I'm 35.

  • @brendalg4

    @brendalg4

    20 күн бұрын

    I dated for the first time in my 30s. Bad experience. I have not dated since, and I am 60. But the reason isn't because of the bad experience... no one is interested in me

  • @kendallbr9166

    @kendallbr9166

    20 күн бұрын

    @@brendalg4😢

  • @askask7468

    @askask7468

    20 күн бұрын

    Same . No one is interested in me either

  • @shanlange6331

    @shanlange6331

    19 күн бұрын

    @@punishmesenpai2578 i’m divorced 30 years. I pray to Jesus for many things, but never for a new husband……. But I have been dancing ballroom dancing for 20 years and the teachers are ultra polite, ultra sweet ultra giving very for right and there’s so much you can learn just about dancing and just about people in general men and women.

  • @scottfulton267
    @scottfulton26720 күн бұрын

    The first one, obsessively trying to recreate the happiest times of our life, is so true for me. That explains how my Spotify playlist seems to be comprised mostly of songs that are 20-40 years old. I started getting depressed 10 years ago, and 95+% of the songs are from 10+ years ago

  • @useruseruseruseruser790

    @useruseruseruseruser790

    20 күн бұрын

    That is actually quite normal. Most people stay with the music and artists that they listened to / discovered in their late teens and twenties. Serious music people move with new trends and artists, but most don’t.

  • @FG-ie7cu

    @FG-ie7cu

    20 күн бұрын

    I do hear what he says, but, for me, if I hadn't had those old songs to hold onto (Christmas ones, especially) and old books and keepsakes, I could not have made it through some of my hardest times. It must be about keeping balance and perspective in doing so.

  • @mrs.reluctant4095
    @mrs.reluctant409520 күн бұрын

    Great video, you really know your stuff, thank you.

  • @small_dropin_the_big_ocean995
    @small_dropin_the_big_ocean99518 күн бұрын

    "Don't act like you don't know your own backstory. Don't judge yourself from the lens of ignorance." A very good quote, you're right about it. I am writing it down.

  • @DarkLink606
    @DarkLink60620 күн бұрын

    I'm amazed, this video actually addresses relatable symptoms and describes them in a sensible and nuanced way; non-judgmental, condescending or covertly proselytism. I admit every time you started to talk about an issue, I was expecting it to be "the dopamine fiend" or "the physical exercise panacea". I was delighted to be wrong. Have my like, doctor.

  • @DrScottEilers

    @DrScottEilers

    20 күн бұрын

    Thanks, love the username

  • @liveenglish6285
    @liveenglish628520 күн бұрын

    OMG. You are so amazing for real. I Have GAD. and the first mentioned thing you mentioned was so accurate like it made feel you are taking about me personally. Gob bless you sharing these information for free🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰

  • @boris9047
    @boris904720 күн бұрын

    Your advices are golden. Thank you!

  • @Viky.A.V.
    @Viky.A.V.9 күн бұрын

    Thank you, doctor! It's nice to do a reality check now and then =) I sometimes get totally mad, after that I strongly doubt my emotions, but what comforts me is that I tell my relatives that this happens to me, so my Mom, for example, knows she should not take it as smth personal. No matter what I feel (and if it's right or wrong) it's good to Talk to people you love and explain them your feelings. We both have atypical depressive disorder, so, talking helps immensely. She sometimes hides her negative feelings (considering them wrong), and this is one of things I get mad about, so we talk a loooot =)

  • @aayliahhaywood6990
    @aayliahhaywood69906 күн бұрын

    Wow this s deep and just the type of encouragement I needed to go back to sleep ty

  • @jamiejones3309
    @jamiejones330919 күн бұрын

    Although number three does not apply to me, trust me I've done a full soul search, 1, 2 and 4 really applied. Your assessment really opened my eyes. I was kind of aware of them having an effect, but your delivery really hit the nail on the head. Thank you, this will help me to understand and work through my condition.

  • @denise76
    @denise7620 күн бұрын

    Wow! I'm glad I found this channel. Why couldn't I have had you for a therapist?! It's okay. I will keep watching.😊

  • @Uarehere
    @Uarehere14 күн бұрын

    Dr. Scott, you seem like a legitimately good therapist. Why is that so rare??

  • @NatureFreak1127
    @NatureFreak112714 күн бұрын

    Oh my God, nuggets of wisdom, things falling into place. Thank you.

  • @jamiroquai888
    @jamiroquai88819 күн бұрын

    We have had mental health issues in the family, my dad and some of his siblings and my cousins, so I used to wonder if I would be affected by unfortunate genetics in that sense. Thanks for your checklist as I confirm that I have been spared and can now identify the tendencies I should continue to avoid. Appreciate it!

  • @deciduousrex1219
    @deciduousrex121919 күн бұрын

    I dont have much time for another self-apppinted youtube expert. That being said, you make some very good points about these dynamics.

  • @jduggan4129
    @jduggan412919 күн бұрын

    Boy, you hit the nail on the head with this one. Thanks. Love California Joanna

  • @multijanni100
    @multijanni10020 күн бұрын

    totally right, thanks so much !! executing your life through someone else sounds like co-dependency. also. another thing, reflective of the examples, is not catching the moment because of unwarranted doubts, hesitation. and then the ruminitating and regrets follow.

  • @rmwlew
    @rmwlew20 күн бұрын

    Dr Scot you are amazing. Thank you so very very much. May God bless your goodness.

  • @eldante4139
    @eldante413918 күн бұрын

    I can relate to this all too much. I have ADHD, anxiety and depression. I struggle to have enough energy and will power to do anything but then hate myself for doing nothing. It becomes a quickly accelerating cycle that leaves me feel like life is a washing machine that I’m being thrown about by.

  • @adriancook9742
    @adriancook974221 күн бұрын

    Thanks mate much appreciated

  • @jeffandrewstv
    @jeffandrewstv20 күн бұрын

    Dr Scott just addressed things I have felt and are feeling- but I was always told it was “in my head” and I was imagining. Yeah- it is in my F-ing head.

  • @ellen4956
    @ellen495623 сағат бұрын

    There was a time in my life where I had accomplished my goals. And during that time, both of my kids were still living at home, and I was married. So I have this memory of just sitting at the table in my dining room, having a cup of coffee and looking out the window at the hydrangeas, and the apple tree, looking around myself at the house and furniture, and realizing that was the "heart" of my life - right there, right then. I was in my 30s, I owned a house, I had a family. And that's my "happy place" that I go back to in my mind. I don't see anything wrong with that. A lot of bad things happened a few years later, and a few years before. So that was the "eye of the storm". And I treasure that memory and that time. It's not bad to have places you save in your mind where you can go to a very safe and familiar place.

  • @SpockMonroe
    @SpockMonroe21 күн бұрын

    Regarding the good times being seen as special because of the person's mindset as opposed to the things one was doing is a tough one to get around. Yet it was exactly doing things that pleased me that made me happy. In my case, as this sort of trauma person typifies, when I was playing music, socializing, attending school, etc. that made me happy. They make me happy when I do them in the present, which is nothing like college age. So why do I appreciate the '"state of mind" over activity perspective, all the same, I am happy when being a student, unhappy being a worker bee. My state of mind being a worker bee, again being an example, is to be frustrated due to boredom and inane ignorant people that might surround me. And yes, we talk ourselves out of everything!

  • @1chumley1
    @1chumley120 күн бұрын

    Wow. These are keen insights that resonate with me.

  • @elgracko
    @elgracko18 күн бұрын

    Thanks man, very awesome emapathetic insigthts, definetly apply to me!

  • @phillipsmith7759
    @phillipsmith775919 күн бұрын

    This is amazing. I have done this so much..let other people push me around..second guessing myself, complying to others. Got me into a weird martiage frim a religious setting

  • @user-em3np4vr8c
    @user-em3np4vr8c20 күн бұрын

    Very pertinent points, I have ongoing cptsd and depression and it is hard to do dating or anything but I talk as if I should be like everyone else and I have let my npd sisters gaslight me in the past, I have gone no contact now, finally realising how horribly abusive they are, so now I am obsessing about getting a ragdoll again because it was so wonderful to have that animal there to be a companion but I couldn't keep him, he soiled the carpet in my apartment complex, so I lost everyone at same time; really struggling with depression now and loneliness🎉 I don't like to label myself, when I look out and see how messed up other people are too!

  • @Jazzyleogirl1
    @Jazzyleogirl113 күн бұрын

    I have tears streaming down my face rewatching the part where you said I need to minimize this attachment I have with an actor / performer. I have spent so much money and time on this attachment. I have tried to minimize it but as soon as this person starts a new project, the attachment grows again. I honestly feel that if I were to “detach” , I would have a breakdown and that scares me. I have had other attachments throughout many years of my life with certain books or movies. When those attachments subsided and gradually ended, it was because a particular film or book was not mainstream anymore or a particular person took on a project that wasn’t as appealing to me. Reflecting now, those times when I didn’t have an attachment were periods of sadness that only ended when I discovered a new thing or person who brought me joy again. This current attachment will continue their career and with social media and other fans who’ve become friends providing the new content that comes out about this person, the attachment will stay the same. I am also extremely attached to one of my family members. I really need the content you are planning. I want to let you know I’ve been seeing mental health professionals for my disorder since 2008 and they have helped me…but I know I should not go on like this. I have to choose to stop and it’s very hard despite their help.

  • @along9971
    @along997121 күн бұрын

    This is good, definitely needs a follow up

  • @Chill3lue
    @Chill3lue12 сағат бұрын

    Good advice it starts with your mind set always , this channel is good stuff to listen to when feeling lost thank you ❤😊

  • @NYDaughter1972
    @NYDaughter197220 күн бұрын

    These explanations are spot on.

  • @carlorizzo827
    @carlorizzo82718 күн бұрын

    Doc!! Pretty great! Thank you. It's ok you didn't "...offer solutions...", most of us learn the hard way, trial & error. I'm old, parents are long gone. Here’s a twist: yeah I hated my mother, violent, I'm living with damage, physical & emotional. Then reaching empty nest phase, she threw herself into therapy, really lightened up, mellowed out. Humbled herself, apologized, became a friend. Who am I to not forgive. Yet now, in therapy, I still gotta deal with that. It is said that we use what we have. Splitting is how I coped. Now I split my mother. There's the good mother she became, likewise the dark mother that inflicted pain. I maintain both

  • @cocobololocoloco
    @cocobololocoloco21 күн бұрын

    GREAT info....Thanks.

  • @rebeccaschanlaub2863
    @rebeccaschanlaub286317 күн бұрын

    Thank you, Scott you make a difference

  • @housecreeper
    @housecreeper20 сағат бұрын

    I turned 30 last week. I only play one computer game, and its the same game I played in 2004 before a series of terrible traumas began. These points are spot on.

  • @PatrickWallNeo
    @PatrickWallNeo20 күн бұрын

    #4--This is why I always want to know the "why" behind people's behaviors and actions before I conjure up an assessment.

  • @HeidiRobinson-ft7vl
    @HeidiRobinson-ft7vl20 күн бұрын

    Thank you for this video. 🎉

  • @emilycaballero6052
    @emilycaballero605213 күн бұрын

    The thing about acting like you don't know your own backstory hit hard. I've been gaslighting myself for years

  • @chidinmachristian5531
    @chidinmachristian55317 күн бұрын

    My most sustained, cherished and efficient relationships are those I have with people who I told my back story and they didn’t disdain me or bully me, rather offered me help in the direction I desired. One of them, I call him ‘Heart of Gold’. I believe there are more of him.

  • @Darren-sn4ki
    @Darren-sn4ki18 күн бұрын

    I was raised in narcissistic family system and scapegoat in my family I have schizophrenia and PTSD and chronic pain and emotional abuse and I’m a introvert and not support from family and neglected

  • @ShelbyArtist
    @ShelbyArtist5 күн бұрын

    Thank you for doing this! ❤ Namaste. 🙏

  • @Rick40years
    @Rick40years20 күн бұрын

    Excellent video. Thanks

  • @eglantinelicorne9535
    @eglantinelicorne953520 күн бұрын

    THE FOURTH ONE IS INCREDIBLEEEEEEE

  • @happiness7808

    @happiness7808

    18 күн бұрын

    Agreed!