What is Schizotypal Personality Disorder?

I'm Kati Morton, a licensed therapist making Mental Health videos!
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Пікірлер: 1 200

  • @StarkRavn
    @StarkRavn5 жыл бұрын

    I'm Schizotypal and I actually really like interacting with people, having friends, I may not be able to have them close to me, but I still want them there. I still want to talk to them, rant to them. Go out drinking with them. And I am not good at talking to people I don't know, so making new friends can be difficult, so I use my eccentricities to my advantage, dressing outlandishly so that interresting people start talking to me. That have worked pretty well so far :D

  • @lucashjelvik1738

    @lucashjelvik1738

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same

  • @faehood7419

    @faehood7419

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same!!!

  • @mahuprabhune9474

    @mahuprabhune9474

    Жыл бұрын

    We're exactly on the same page!!

  • @cashfearmusic

    @cashfearmusic

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m curious about what you mean by “outlandish”. Do you wear something in the realm of an Austin Powers pimp suit from the 70’s night club in Goldmember? Because if not than you’re not dressing outlandishly.

  • @courtneymeyers82

    @courtneymeyers82

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes, we actually start trends lol

  • @BabyZelda
    @BabyZelda7 жыл бұрын

    I'm Schizotypal. Nice to see a good video on it! There aren't many Schizotypal vids on KZread.

  • @guyfromthe80s92

    @guyfromthe80s92

    6 жыл бұрын

    Me too!

  • @Jasminiumusic

    @Jasminiumusic

    6 жыл бұрын

    Same, I thought I was the only one...

  • @crimsonking4757

    @crimsonking4757

    6 жыл бұрын

    So am I, at age 44....it sucks, never had a relationship of any kind in my life....I'm seriously considering suicide the last couple of days.

  • @nathancifuentes2448

    @nathancifuentes2448

    6 жыл бұрын

    Crimson King FOR WHAT?

  • @nathancifuentes2448

    @nathancifuentes2448

    6 жыл бұрын

    Crimson King & No I dont have this so called Schizotypal , I just found this video

  • @ryanmcdarby
    @ryanmcdarby5 жыл бұрын

    I have Schizotypal Personality Disorder & my main issues are with interacting with other people. I very rarely talk to anybody but close family members & even then I feel very suspicious & uncomfortable. I will sometimes force myself to be around other people - I go to a gym to box for an hour once a week for example, but I never really make friends & I feel as though people can see that there's something wrong with me or that they're suspicious of me. It's like I don't know how to behave naturally or ''normally'' & so I have to imagine what a normal person would say & do & try my best to act it out - which is very stressful. I know a lot of people will say "but what is normal" etc etc, but those people really aren't helping. Having a schizotypal illness is VERY different to being an unusual or unconventional person. I wish everyone the best of luck managing their illness. I am currently prescribed pregablin for my anxiety and would like to know about the medications others are prescribed & if they help at all x

  • @andreasn1481

    @andreasn1481

    5 жыл бұрын

    hey man this is how i see it. you gotta work out more often, even if it means boxing more days a week, and you gotta try to eat right. and you gotta read books, and calm yourself down frequently despite medication. you feel people can see something wrong with you or are suspicious about you, because you are suspicious of other people and are looking for something wrong in others. to change that and feel like people can warm up to you and trust you, you need to apply those rules to yourself and how you view others. smart people cant tell exactly whats wrong with someone, but they pick up on someones vibe, their energy, like the hippie types love to say xD and people will generally be cautious around any person who seems suspicious or paranoid about others, because suspicion/paranoia easily turns into aggression in many cases of the population as a whole, such as bipolars, crystal meth psychosis, etc. keep working on yourself and look for positive opportunities, try to trust people that you dont have a concrete reason to not trust.

  • @ryanmcdarby

    @ryanmcdarby

    5 жыл бұрын

    Kurt Andreas Kurt Andreas Thanks for the effort, but I think you're confusing a healthy mind that has become suspicious/paranoid & needs some work with a chemical condition that cannot be altered though effort or insight. Yes, exercise helps - yes many things can help one improve & cope better. But Schizoptypal disorders are incurable & the process occurs automatically. There's no point where you can check yourself & say 'I can see where I'm going wrong here'. It's constant - 24hrs a day. For 15 years I've read self help books, tried diets, exercised like mad - & and above all tried to understand the problem, which is impossible because the tool used to understand that problem is damaged. You can improve or cope better with SPD but you can't fix it. It's a schizophrenic illness.

  • @teve709

    @teve709

    4 жыл бұрын

    I was diagnosed with SPD and here in Danmark they just want you to use Abilify, it is just so sad!

  • @joetaro69

    @joetaro69

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@teve709 did you try this ?

  • @peppapig6466

    @peppapig6466

    3 жыл бұрын

    I feel like this too

  • @thebioexorcists
    @thebioexorcists7 жыл бұрын

    I was recently diagnosed as having Schizotypal Personality Disorder. I am also diagnosed as having Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (Inattentive Type), Panic Disorder w/o Agoraphobia and Generalized Anxiety Disorder from 7 years ago. I found your video to be very interesting, informative and to-the-point. Thank you so much for making this video and please keep up the good work!!!

  • @johnswanson739
    @johnswanson7394 жыл бұрын

    I just today learned that my 38-year-old son was diagnosed some time ago with schizotypal personality disorder. How this diagnosis has come to me so late in our lives has an explanation too Shakespearean to present here. But I write to say thank you for your video. Your characterization of the disorder fits him and helps me understand him and provides some ideas for guidance. And some hope. It also gives me insight into my father. And once my wife finds out, she too will see the propriety of the diagnosis for her stepson, she will recognize my father as well, and then she will no doubt raise an accusatory finger at me and say, “Ah ha! It was you all along!” Perhaps not the time for a joke. That my son may be so afflicted… Then again, perhaps this is just the time for humor. In any case, thank you for your work here.

  • @nadinechen8819
    @nadinechen88192 жыл бұрын

    I was diagnosed 10 years ago and I personally feel this is a very good and nonjudgemental overview. Im actually surprised, I feared the worst because many are looking down on it (even therapists) while they talk about it. I have seen one therapist making a video saying "Being honest, who would want a friend like that" and not gonna lie that hurt a little becuase he said it so matter-of-factly. So Im very grateful seeing a kind and informative video like this, thank you!

  • @bprodu1
    @bprodu15 жыл бұрын

    As a Schizotypal, people don't understand me. They're like: Stop being like that! So, being those things, I always have to walk away from the relationship.

  • @michaelburke4975

    @michaelburke4975

    3 жыл бұрын

    but that's how it goes. Those people can't make room for you.

  • @salomekochalski1947
    @salomekochalski19476 жыл бұрын

    I´ve been misdiagnosed with antisocial personality disorder a few years ago and just got the newer, more fitting diagnosis of schizotypal personality disorder last month. It´s nice to hear that this happened to multiple people.

  • @ashtinpaulet3112
    @ashtinpaulet31127 жыл бұрын

    I love your videos. I'm a 911 operator and I love my job but it can be stressful at times. I wanted to know could you do a video about people who have jobs like me "first responders" and how to deal with the stress and anxiety especially when you're not at liberty to talk about the things that go on with others.

  • @lukehepburn3478
    @lukehepburn34785 жыл бұрын

    "Skizza'tipple"

  • @paargartenhandschuhe8178

    @paargartenhandschuhe8178

    4 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like a cocktail

  • @BeatGURU

    @BeatGURU

    3 жыл бұрын

    Fernando G fo skizzle my typal

  • @insolubletoaster8133

    @insolubletoaster8133

    3 жыл бұрын

    fa shizzle

  • @jaimecoutanche5977

    @jaimecoutanche5977

    3 жыл бұрын

    A crazy liquid that might not be there

  • @vivianst.claire7193

    @vivianst.claire7193

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@paargartenhandschuhe8178 I think this is where "Skittles" came from.🌈

  • @Billybloop
    @Billybloop6 жыл бұрын

    My best friend is diagnosed with this condition. I have known him for over 10 years and we were flatmates for a while. It was difficult living with him at times. He would think that demons were after him and he hit me over the head with a food tray. He wasn't medicated then, either.

  • @fromeveryting29
    @fromeveryting293 жыл бұрын

    I think my former roommate had this, and it was a blast! For some reason I really felt like we spoke the same language. We would speak about life and art for hours. Always in a 'magical' and interpretive way. We would speak about love, astrology, saturn, energies, evil, fate, will. We were both artists and I guess that made me really open for symbolic ways of understanding things. I never really got his paranoya or anxiety though. He came off as very confident and was very popular among women. I on the other hand had strong fears of intimacy and was very passive in social situations.

  • @Pxales
    @Pxales7 жыл бұрын

    Mondays are so much better when you know there's a new Kati Morton video coming. Fantastic vid as always! woo woo ✨

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yay!! Glad you liked it!! Woo Woo!! xoxo

  • @DarkArachnid666
    @DarkArachnid6664 жыл бұрын

    You know, it's funny. I'm not sure if it's some kind of delusion brought on by being schizotypal or what, but I notice that whenever I think that someone is going to screw me over, they usually do. In fact, it's about 90% accurate. I understand that this may sound strange, but I just KNOW. You know what I mean? It's like I can FEEL the vibe that people give off. I guess, as an example, it's like how the feeling of being in a bad neighborhood is different from the feeling of being in a good neighborhood. You just KNOW that something is up, but you don't know WHEN or HOW you are going to get screwed. The strange thing is that a lot of so called "nice" people give off a bad vibe more than people on the bottom rungs of society. It's almost as if people screw each other over to survive. The problem, is that if people are confronted for their selfish behavior, they will simply deny it. And, their friends (if there ever WAS such a thing) may even cover for them. By the way, I noticed throughout the video, you kept saying "we". Why is this? My understanding is that you wanted to provide a more inclusive and comfortable environment for your viewers which is COMPLETELY understandable. But, perhaps, I am wrong. However, have you considered the possibility that it's okay to be (reasonably [as in, you don't make burgers out of ground up people or something like that]) different? Were we created to be mindless drones, slaving away until we die? Or, are we put here for a far greater purpose? A purpose that goes above and beyond anything tangible? The reason I ask is because most people don't really know what they TRULY want out of life. They convince themselves that only a single path is the correct one, but only because others have walked that same path or they have been told that it is, indeed, the correct path. And, up until the curtain draws to a close, they deny how miserable and unhappy they are. I wish people would wake up to the reality that they create for themselves.

  • @anthonykonstantinou5378

    @anthonykonstantinou5378

    4 жыл бұрын

    you confused me at the beginning, you are shcizotypical right?

  • @shakiraalvarez7681

    @shakiraalvarez7681

    3 жыл бұрын

    I know know exactly what you mean. It’s like you can feel the emotions of other people around you like you are very empathetic and can sense the vibe in the room, I know what you mean.

  • @erinowl4407
    @erinowl44077 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the video. I was diagnosed with Schizotypal Personality Disorder as well as Complex PTSD. I switched therapists. WOW - what a difference. My new therapist said she doesn't agree with the term "DISORDER" and likes to use the word "CONSTRUCT" instead. And started off by telling me she believes everyone is already WHOLE INSIDE. This made me feel "BETTER" from the get-go. Instead of looking at a broken MESS of DISORDER, hoping to pick up all these broken pieces and somehow "fit" them into a fragmented, glued together "image" that would somehow and hopefully "FORM A PERSON" someday, she started me right off from a CENTERED place of WHOLENESS with CONSTRUCTS all around me - some maladaptive, some not so much - but all helped ME - the ME inside - to SURVIVE. Schizotypal personality constructs, complex post traumatic stress constructs .... The "WORK" then becomes looking at and dealing with the CONSTRUCTS - keeping / embracing them, modifying them, getting rid of them ...... from a place of STRENGTH, CHOICE and WHOLENESS. I am SO GLAD I found a therapist who can TRULY HELP - and only a few weeks into therapy - I am now reading "THE UNTETHERED SOUL" - who am I? - who is the ME? - who are the "VOICES"? - a very SLOW READ. Your video made me feel OK - I'm different - but it's OK - being alone is OK - I don't have to FIX all this "DISORDER" - all these CONSTRUCTS - I just have to see that I am ME - and decide what is comfortable and productive for ME to BE WHO I AM. Thank you . Thank you. Your videos have been SOOOOOOO helpful !!!!!

  • @TintinMinh

    @TintinMinh

    4 жыл бұрын

    Very self-actualized! Thanks for sharing your story!

  • @triadtelio9858

    @triadtelio9858

    4 жыл бұрын

    My last "therapist" called me a dog and started to point fingers around to see if my head/eyes would follow her hand like a hound/animal would. after that she sent me to the psydoctor with no new appointment . It might be my "magical" thinking but i see some karma equilibrium coming her way.

  • @bigtimefans100

    @bigtimefans100

    4 жыл бұрын

    aw, I'm glad you found a therapist that works for you. sending all my love

  • @god_pharaoh6111
    @god_pharaoh61115 жыл бұрын

    i've always been a suspicious person, especially with my parents, friends, and relationships. couple years ago i had a serious relationship and i couldn't leave the other person alone. i always had to know what they're doing, always had trouble trusting them, what their motives are, etc. never really ever considered i might have something wrong with me till now. the vid was a bit helpfull, ty

  • @austinburns5764
    @austinburns57644 жыл бұрын

    Does anyone else sometimes hear voices calling out your name, when it's really just noise?

  • @princesspersia247

    @princesspersia247

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah

  • @kathrinel.j4382

    @kathrinel.j4382

    3 жыл бұрын

    A lot of people hear things that arent there.

  • @ghostburgers4284

    @ghostburgers4284

    3 жыл бұрын

    I hear my mom call me randomly.

  • @angelus4620

    @angelus4620

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ghostburgers4284 same and so does my mom oddly enough

  • @kylepatrick5252

    @kylepatrick5252

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes, I hear voices

  • @factofthematter3855
    @factofthematter38554 жыл бұрын

    I have been diagnosed as skizotypal, I have always wondered if all psychics, tarot readers and mediums have this label...

  • @ownerofabilliondollar883

    @ownerofabilliondollar883

    3 жыл бұрын

    you are so intellectual.. u must try mensa

  • @alexoswald932

    @alexoswald932

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ownerofabilliondollar883 what

  • @ownerofabilliondollar883

    @ownerofabilliondollar883

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@alexoswald932 mensa is the society of high iq peoples

  • @alexoswald932

    @alexoswald932

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ownerofabilliondollar883 i know what mensa is. your comment just makes no sense to me

  • @ownerofabilliondollar883

    @ownerofabilliondollar883

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@alexoswald932 anyways i wasn't even trying to mean that to you.. Lol

  • @mineola_
    @mineola_7 жыл бұрын

    I think it's great that you're doing a video about this. Even as a medstudent who has done her psych rotation it's still a very elusive disorder I feel. It's hard to explain what it actually is and how it looks like and creating more awareness and spreading more knowledge and counter the spread of misinformation is so important.

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    7 жыл бұрын

    So glad you found it helpful!! It is a tough one to understand :) xoxo

  • @niklattanzio7964

    @niklattanzio7964

    7 жыл бұрын

    Most accurate video I've found so far. As a grad student in clinical psychology who lives with STPD I find my experiences to be largely invalidated within my own professional community. It's somewhat disgraceful to be honest. I was very impressed with this video, especially the sentiments on normalcy. I cannot begin to remember how many times I have tried to explain to someone that while I seem odd to them, it is all normal everyday experience to me. Most don't seem to comprehend that, but I stay strong, 'get over myself' and stay present. Great video, I feel understood after watching this 😎, meaning in a way I feel accepted; and that is HUGE.

  • @CenturianCornelious

    @CenturianCornelious

    6 жыл бұрын

    Elusive because it's not a disorder. It's a rational response to a world full of pointless gibber-jabber.

  • @lullabi3234

    @lullabi3234

    6 жыл бұрын

    ha ha cornelius, an inevitability of post-modernism. as we lose faith in our Ministries of Truth, more and more people begin to rely more upon their own definitions for the world than those of convention, which have been discovered to betray their audience. I really appreciate your matter of fact tone.

  • @JulieHerrick
    @JulieHerrick7 жыл бұрын

    As you were describing this, I kept thinking how familiar this was from my time in a fundamentalist religion. Then you got to the part where you said "it's not part of your religious belief" which left me wondering, why do religions get a pass on these behaviors? I found these behaviors (specifically magical thinking, and thinking everything is part of your destiny) to be just as nonsensical inside the context of religion as they are outside of it. (Signed, a former fundamentalist Christian)

  • @BlueHazyDreams

    @BlueHazyDreams

    6 жыл бұрын

    The majority of the population is religious though. That's called a cultural norm.

  • @Kathrine-sw7tw

    @Kathrine-sw7tw

    6 жыл бұрын

    I have STPD and my magical thinking isn’t conectes to any specific religion or believe. These believes doesn’t really make much sense and you don’t really believe it but at the same time you’re almost certain that it’s true, which creates a lot of doubt and anxiety. I don’t know who I think is watching over me, but a part of me believes that some “God” somewhere keeps an eye on me and my mind. When I was little I was afraid of falling asleep, cause what if I dreamt something nasty and this “god” would read my mind, it would get the impression that that is what I wanted to happen in real life. I was afraid that this “god” would perceive my bad thoughts and nightmares as wishes. I guess you can say the difference is that people with STPD doesn’t choose their own believes. They don’t want to believe it and even though their common sense tells them it’s probably not true, the illness keeps telling you “but what if it was?” You can’t stop it. It’s an illness not a personal choice.

  • @joeycarr1398

    @joeycarr1398

    6 жыл бұрын

    Are you into any type of spiritual or religious beliefs?

  • @Fabian-ev9zu

    @Fabian-ev9zu

    5 жыл бұрын

    Julie Herrick ,religion is basically magical thinking, so easily fueled mentally based disorders.

  • @yorak6793

    @yorak6793

    5 жыл бұрын

    Well I guess both are nonsensical and concerning but religion less so because of the manipulation that goes into it. Nothing is necessarily wrong with you because a society has consistently permeated illogical ideas from childhood.

  • @NASkeywest
    @NASkeywest4 жыл бұрын

    I used to have a shadow that followed me. Always thought i was just crazy. Last month my friend was over at my house and saw the shadow to. Spirits are real

  • @Amelia-pt7fh

    @Amelia-pt7fh

    3 жыл бұрын

    Or it’s just your shadow-

  • @talkingturtle2641

    @talkingturtle2641

    3 жыл бұрын

    The spiritual world is very real, but it’s not normal to regularly experience it

  • @patrickbateman9435
    @patrickbateman94355 жыл бұрын

    I’m Schizotypal btw the reason we get accused of dressing weird is because we don’t know what a good outfit looks like.

  • @nunisthathigh4825

    @nunisthathigh4825

    3 жыл бұрын

    You sure want the attention of loads of people. You suffer from codependency disorder. It's okay, it's not your fault. It's your condition.

  • @michaelburke4975

    @michaelburke4975

    3 жыл бұрын

    You do you. if people don't like it, well there are places they can put that dislike.

  • @g--br1el985

    @g--br1el985

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@nunisthathigh4825 no not true

  • @colliniccutram9892
    @colliniccutram98926 жыл бұрын

    Whoa this is amazing, thank you so much. My therapist diagnosed me schizoaffective with social anxiety and I never agreed with it. I've just now studied this and I finally feel like I have a real diagnosis for the first time.

  • @kriskristofferson8846
    @kriskristofferson88465 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video - first one I've seen on Schizotypal. Personally I think it's a bit of a misconception that schizotypal people are complete loners. The solitude is often felt in the presence of others. For example, a psychiatrist who was researching the disorder theorised that this was what Virginia Woolf had. She could be very sociable and appear to have relationships, but be alone inside. In some senses I feel it's a bit of a Foucaulian disorder - as much a product of cultural structures and power dynamics as chemical imbalances. Maybe :)

  • @victoriakathleen9993
    @victoriakathleen99936 жыл бұрын

    I also recently have been diagnosed with Schizotypal PD. I appreciate your video and organizing the information as you did! Super helpful for me to understand myself a bit. Also, how you portrayed it empathetically is big for me-- you're right in the sense of others critiquing my thoughts. I cannot help but take it personal (although try very hard not to and am still learning) when others try to tell me that what I experience isn't real, to me, and isolate myself, push them away due to paranoia or feeling defeated/not understood. I was also told I have a ton of insight which is unusual. One thing that makes me sad is that there are not a lot of social groups. Although I definitely struggle in social settings, I really do want to connect with others. So badly. But it's very difficult and do not know how to maintain relationships unless they like the weirdness. So, I do prefer to be alone because of the exhausting of feeling that others just don't understand. Tbh, I feel like I've tried everything (to help my social symptoms) before seeing my current therapist

  • @victoriakathleen9993

    @victoriakathleen9993

    6 жыл бұрын

    If anyone has this disorder and would like to reach out to someone else who has it, message me on instagram @victoriakathleenyoga. You're not alone-- I'm here :)

  • @razalasreficul6902
    @razalasreficul69026 жыл бұрын

    You are a piece of art. Thank you

  • @ivanovaverasdejesus3725
    @ivanovaverasdejesus37257 жыл бұрын

    I totally loved this video! Used it to study for my Psychopathology exam. Loved the side note for clinicians. THANK FOR YOUR BEUTIFUL HARDWORK KATI! #youFLAWLESS

  • @bigtimefans100
    @bigtimefans1004 жыл бұрын

    aw I luv u. it's so important for us to be warm and patient and very caring towards our clients; I'm so glad you addressed all of this

  • @MickeyD2012
    @MickeyD20126 жыл бұрын

    I think I'm developing a personality disorder because of people ACTUALLY out to screw me over.

  • @Mbrace818

    @Mbrace818

    5 жыл бұрын

    That's how I feel. I've been screwed over and abused by people I thought I was close to. I feel like I have some of the traits described in the video.

  • @dazzadazzalin6148

    @dazzadazzalin6148

    5 жыл бұрын

    Same here. Big time. I actually have a colourful hit list, just joking, but I have in my mind.

  • @moarroz

    @moarroz

    5 жыл бұрын

    That does happen...but usually you've already had those traits since childhood...these ppl screwing you over just accentuated those traits making them come to the surface...It's when you can't function anymore and it affects you that it becomes personality disorder. On a side note...I feel your pain...It sucks out here lol

  • @Selkie7

    @Selkie7

    5 жыл бұрын

    Lol

  • @moosedrummer1

    @moosedrummer1

    4 жыл бұрын

    Or you may be paranoid. Remove yourself from that situation.

  • @sammy_xxx
    @sammy_xxx7 жыл бұрын

    What is normal though?

  • @ronathebear

    @ronathebear

    7 жыл бұрын

    Sammy agreed

  • @Battleschnodder

    @Battleschnodder

    7 жыл бұрын

    That's why Kati always adds "Considered" normal - meaning the symptom refers to something that would be called unusual by the majority, rather than something that is malformed or wrong so to speak.

  • @nowunzno1209

    @nowunzno1209

    7 жыл бұрын

    exactly!- just because 'normal' society doesn't understand someone- does not mean there is something 'wrong' with a person who's personality is rare or 'unusual' or different!

  • @TenaGordon

    @TenaGordon

    7 жыл бұрын

    hence the term neurotypical is more clear

  • @wholyfrick

    @wholyfrick

    7 жыл бұрын

    Sammy normal has an actual definition... it is what is the norm, the average, or the majority. the its good to be normal is a meaning given after. there are objective norms and averages and this is what makes up 'normal'. i get it, but i cannot stand when people bring up this 'well whats normal' response.

  • @abbiemoss4168
    @abbiemoss41687 жыл бұрын

    You are so positive kati and i love it, I personally suffer from OCD and Anxiety but your videos have helped me have a better understanding of my diagnosis since my therapist type person didnt explain alot, your videos have also made me more aware of mental health issues i never new existed! Thankyou :)!

  • @jillifer02
    @jillifer026 жыл бұрын

    As a first year grad student studying Counseling Psych., I found this so helpful. Thank you!

  • @michaelburke4975
    @michaelburke49757 жыл бұрын

    I have StPD and have had it my whole life. Symptoms were present since 1975 , however in 1987 I got my diagnosis and have been living with it since. I have learned a lot about my condition and how to deal with it, but to be honest, sometimes it comes back and kicks me in the butt. Because of the condition I tend to procrastinate. (yes I use big words, that how this works) I do have friends, though not many close friends. I'm very cynical by nature. Sometimes I get paranoid it's true. But EVERY single times I struggle so hard to beat the condition. I don't always win with that but I do hold my ground well. It stinks trying to be a businessman and having this condition knowing that you can't really share it because people's perception of you would be that of a freak. These is so much about it I could tell you, so much I personally have done . But to look at my life you could see where the condition roughed me up a lot and where and how I have learned to rise above it and not let it be that which defines me. Sure I don't do well with a lot of things, I re-evaluate a lot of things, Trust is something earned with me because I don't like "fake" people . I could share with you so much about the condition and I would do it for free if it could help somebody else to better understand it. I agree that the condition should not be handed out lightly. There is still a lot with it that stigmatizes it , mostly the prefix "schizo" first thing people think when they see that is schizophrenic and that is NOT the person wit StPD. I've done a lot of great and wonderful things . Things that DSM said I'd never do and I did them to spite that book because it said I can't or won't. Most people would think I am perfectly normal to meet me. Nobody would suspect I have anything going on unless I reveal it to them or they pick up on some of the subtleties of it. I've done a lot of research on this condition from the perspective of somebody who has it because I do. StPD is NOT the same as Asperger's syndrome. It shares many commonalities of it. Each condition is on a different spectrum with lots of overlapping. I know things about the condition because I've been up the road and back again a few times with it. IF, I can help anyone gain a better understanding of this condition from a firsthand point of view , let me know. I'm no Doctor or anything, I'm a real person who has StPD.

  • @cattime2044

    @cattime2044

    8 ай бұрын

    Hi, can I email you further please? Went into to a ASD and adhd evaluation and came out with a slew of diagnoses: adhd, bipolar II, schizotypal PD, OCD, SAD + GAD. And this was just told to me yesterday. Feeling a bit overwhelmed.

  • @michaelburke4975

    @michaelburke4975

    8 ай бұрын

    @@cattime2044 sure. I want to help people be real with it and deal with it. I'm not an expert, I have no professional training with it, just the fact that I live with it and deal with it. It's not always easy, but it can be manageable. It's not the end of the world.

  • @promisedove

    @promisedove

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@cattime2044Same with me. Went in for ADHD/ASD and got schizotypal personality disorder but I don't think mine is accurate. I only have a few of the symptoms needed for the criteria and it can be explained away by something else.

  • @kevinthomas9677
    @kevinthomas96776 жыл бұрын

    Was just diagnosed about a week and a half ago, so just learning about this. Glad you'd done a video on it!

  • @MrStevenalorenz
    @MrStevenalorenz6 жыл бұрын

    You have helped me through my breakthrough with this disorder. Thank you very much!

  • @neonnights16
    @neonnights165 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Kati! As a beginning therapist I so appreciate your videos!

  • @user89076
    @user890767 жыл бұрын

    So, the only difference between having anxiety and schitypal pd, is the fact that schizotypals are "weird" or "eccentric"? There's nothing wrong with being different. This diagnosis seems to be flawed, because it's mainly based on current societal norms, so it's unfair for a person to be diagnosed with a full-blown personality disorder just because they don't fit in to those norms. I think that if a person was diagnosed as schizotyal, it may just be a person who has been a free-think their whole lives, and developed severe anxiety as a result of being ostracized and invalidated. Nothing dysfunctional about them, we just live in a dysfunctional society. I'd like to hear your input of this theory.

  • @markkoehr5003

    @markkoehr5003

    7 жыл бұрын

    user89076 I'm pretty sure that psychological disorder are defined by 3 criteria. 1. they deviate from the norm. Be seen as abnormal by quote "mentally healthy people" (however they are defined) 2. it causes the person distress and 3. negatively impacts their ability to function in society. (ie. work, relationships etc.) two people can have the same symptoms but it only bothers person A whereas person B is perfectly okay and their live isn't affected.

  • @wholyfrick

    @wholyfrick

    7 жыл бұрын

    user89076 i would say your theory is wrong and kind of lacks insight/is superficial in nature, and i mean that in the kindest and most objective of ways. it is not just anxiety + weirdness and you are schizotypal, there are certain ways these people act. they have illusions that unconnected things around them are connected to them (i.e. the time is 12:34/3:33/2:22/etc so their last thought is vallidated, or the tv says a word that connects to something they thought and it means something). they also will see amd hear things that are not real - this is again not just eccentricity​. i could go through each thing but i think those two are plenty. i believe your analysis stems from disdain for society, but society does not write the DSM. trained professionals do. this does not mean they can't be wrong or misguided at times but nonetheless your analysis is wrong.

  • @user89076

    @user89076

    7 жыл бұрын

    +holyfuk You're forgetting that to be diagnosed, you only need to fit 5 out of the 9 symptoms of the "disorder". The problem is that we look at the symptoms and not the reason why people think and act certain ways, and people are being diagnosed over the slightest things. Some people are just raised to be superstitious and/or untrusting of people, there's nothing different in brain chemistry. It's just wrong that we're so quick to label anything that's neurodivergent as being a disorder that must be fixed. I don't have a "disdain for society", I have a problem in the increasing lack of diversity in personalities. Also, the DSM is flawed in many ways. It's not written by society, but is based on societal norms. Just a couple decades ago, being trangender was seen as a disorder, but that was taken out of the DSM recently, only due to the increase in gay and trans rights. Being tans became more socially accepted, so it's no longer seen as a disorder. It makes you think about what else the DSM is wrong about based on what it or isn't currently accepted.

  • @wholyfrick

    @wholyfrick

    7 жыл бұрын

    user89076 psychiatrists do not just look at the symptoms and say 'well you have 5/9, your diagnosed !!'. you are thinking about people who diagnose themselves or others by reading about it online. psychiatrists do things in a way to where they get the full scope. you pretend as if they see your parentd raised you to be superstitious or untrusting and then therefore you have this personality disorder.

  • @user89076

    @user89076

    7 жыл бұрын

    holyfuk Yes, it does ignore the complexity and diversity of the human psyche. Everyone is different, and may fit the symptoms of a disorder, but it's actually just normal for them personally. I can think of many examples, but here's one: So many children are being diagnosed with ADD/ADHD. I can guarantee that most of them don't have a flaw in brain chemistry, they just think differently and absorb information differently than most kids. There's nothing wrong with that, but instead we put them on amphetamines to make them easier to deal with. How do you type like a 10-year-old? Lack of proper grammar and capitalization. Also, I take it that you don't have a degree on this. I may not be a psychologist, but graduated college with a degree, took a course on psychology, as well as other electives such as critical thinking courses. I have an interest in people, and have done enough studies on modern psychology to know that something isn't right about it.

  • @AboogieNY85
    @AboogieNY857 жыл бұрын

    As a therapist myself (Registered Clinical Social Worker), I found this video to be very informative for anyone that's willing to know more about this mental health disorder. I've came across many different forms of psychotic disorders, but this one never been one of them and yes as you mentioned Kati, this could very well be hard to diagnosis and to understand. Great Video.

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yay!! So glad you found it helpful :)

  • @harrietthespy2119
    @harrietthespy21193 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this excellent video, Katie! Researchers are starting to do solid research showing support for using EMDR for trauma which may contribute to the suffering and even possibly to some of the cause of anything we would diagnose as personality disorders, including schizotypal! This could dramatically help lessen the stigma, the suffering, and even the need for medication, which could be really wonderful for sufferers with once-adaptive defense mechanisms possibly now causing more problems than they are currently ameliorating. An experienced EMDR therapist would first be very careful to prepare clients for reprocessing trauma so that the sufferer is not re-traumatized and/or triggered into a highly distressed state. Thank you again for your empathic and compassionate warmth in your videos… It makes them so supportive to Suffers and therapists alike!

  • @wearelivingmagic
    @wearelivingmagic6 жыл бұрын

    You covered this in good detail. I like how you added your own explanation instead of just robotically reciting the dsm criteria (as most videos ive seen so far on this topic. Good job.

  • @gentleben7275
    @gentleben72757 жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed your remarks on this subject. And I appreciate you dragging out the DSM-5 and using it for a reference while making this video. I've been diagnosed as having "social anxiety" a long time ago, but it hasn't been until recently that I really figured out exactly what I'm dealing with. I'm glad I don't qualify for schizotypal personality disorder, as it sounds very similar to what I've dealt with, except the SPDs have it a little worse than I do. I still have social anxiety, but the worst side effect of that diagnosis for me is the depression. It used to be debilitating on occasion, but I haven't had a full-blown instance of depression since I started the meds (I've been taking the same meds now for almost 20 years). All the meds do is relieve the worst part of the depression - and that's enough to change my life dramatically. The rest of the social anxiety symptoms and some depression indicators are still there, but I am at a place where I can enjoy my status as a retired person very much. I'm quite pleased to live long enough to be retired and to be able to enjoy it as much as I do. I am moved to post a comment due to some of the remarks regarding "being normal". Well, I am very pleased to say that I am NOT "normal". Normal people apply labels like "conservative" and "liberal" on themselves, and they vote accordingly. As a result, we have not had a reasonably functioning government of the people, for the people and by the people for ages. This needs to stop. I don't have a solution to this problem, but I have a hope that one of us who are considered "not normal" step forward with a solution. For one thing that I have noticed among us "not normal" people is that we seem to have a streak of genius present with the mental disorder. In retrospect, I have seen the streak of genius in myself on rare occasions, and I have also seen it in other members of my immediate family - yes, the mental condition I have is genetic. In summary, being normal sucks. Being normal is not something we should aspire for. It is better to strive for being reasonably happy than to strive for normalcy. If there were more of us who were not normal, I'm certain this world would be a much happier place. At least we would have sense enough to vote for politicians who were serious about practicing democracy the way it was intended back in the days when the founding fathers walked the streets on the East Coast of the United States. OK, back to having social anxiety. I am not going to say that having social anxiety is a gift. It is not. I've had a helluva time in the workplace because of it. Relationships with women would start out OK, but then the relationship would self-destruct. In retrospect, with me, I could not maintain a decent relationship of any sort to save my life. One reason why I am happy now is because I do not have close relationships any more. For retirement purposes, I moved to a town where I did not know anyone, and nobody knows me. Except for a few that I must deal with on regular basis - ie., the landlord, the doctor at the medical center, and the ladies who work the check-outs in supermarkets, I have no relationship. It was not too long ago when I was still trying to do relationships. But I kept screwing these up. Me. It was not the other person, it was me. As part of my "social anxiety", I had no clue what I was doing to screw these up. Finally, after I retired, for crying out loud, I was able to figure out that I was somehow causing "unintended consequences" with my actions. When I figured that out, I quit trying to create relationships altogether and thus the "unintended consequences" stopped. Yes, this makes me a bit of a loner, but for the peace in my world it is well worth it. As far as the necessary relationships go - none of them are close relationships in this town - I get by with a smile and get right to the purpose of the visit. Sometimes, I try making jokes. When this happens, I end up just being silly most of the time because I don't do well with making jokes. My sense of humor is not easily understood. Hell, I don't understand it. The biggest problem with my having social anxiety - it's not just about the depression that goes with it - is not understanding what's happening from an objective point of view. If I knew back in the day what I know now, I could have chosen a more suitable line of work. Oh, well. I eat well, I sleep well, and I don't have to go out and "relate" with people anymore. Life is good, if not great. Final note: I think I also have ADHD. I have trouble with understanding what people are saying when they talk fast. So seeing the words at the bottom of the screen as you were talking helped very much. This is not a criticism, its a statement that implies that you may have arranged for the words to appear to accommodate those of us with ADHD. If so, then it worked for me. Thank you.

  • @primetimedurkheim2717
    @primetimedurkheim27174 жыл бұрын

    Schizotypals seem like boundless geniuses who are unfortunately tethered by reality.

  • @philipsong4246

    @philipsong4246

    3 жыл бұрын

    Oh fuck

  • @burnmydust

    @burnmydust

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks 😂😂😂

  • @kyliemaysa3240

    @kyliemaysa3240

    3 жыл бұрын

    exactly you guessed it so right

  • @itsamunyall

    @itsamunyall

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @dragonsforbreakfast3572

    @dragonsforbreakfast3572

    3 жыл бұрын

    *blushes*

  • @NiKi-jk4od
    @NiKi-jk4od2 жыл бұрын

    i got diagnosed about a year ago and never understood what it was, but this kinda gave me an inside of it. thank you so much

  • @princeofb7383
    @princeofb73833 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Kati my Dad has this diagnosis after being misdiagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia when he was in his 20s. When I tell people about this they often say they’ve never heard of this ever before. Thanks for raising awareness!

  • @emera9151
    @emera91517 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for addressing this, Kati. Although I have an ASD diagnosis, some traits I have are common to Schizotypal Personality Disorder, so I've read a lot about it. I think that it's important to note whenever talking about developmental or personality disorders and medications (and lots of other things too), that there is *no medication for these disorders*. Medication can help with symptoms, but that's going to vary. Also, I'm really interested in learning more about RO-DBT (Radically Open), which is a newish therapy for overcontrol disorders like ASD and Schizotypal because they (along with anorexia and OCD) are "overcontrol disorders" as opposed to undercontrol disorders like BPD (which regular DBT was designed for).

  • @stevexie2705

    @stevexie2705

    Жыл бұрын

    What do you mean by overcontrol? There is actually quite the overlap between ASD and bpd.

  • @everyoneswireddifferent1712
    @everyoneswireddifferent17127 жыл бұрын

    When kids hear voices in Tibet they recruit them and train them to become shamans.Its interesting because Robert Sapolsky had a lecture on the relationship of schizotypal personality disorder and OCD which Winston Churchill and Martin Luther had can correlate to religion.

  • @Hadrada.

    @Hadrada.

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hi I’d be so happy if you could find the link for me please

  • @tompalmer5986
    @tompalmer59867 жыл бұрын

    This diagnosis fits me perfectly.

  • @beepboopily6285

    @beepboopily6285

    7 жыл бұрын

    same...

  • @beepboopily6285

    @beepboopily6285

    7 жыл бұрын

    And I hear voices that aren't there and I sometimes hallucinate..

  • @Cherry-qx6rk

    @Cherry-qx6rk

    5 жыл бұрын

    Go see a therapist

  • @CJM-rg5rt

    @CJM-rg5rt

    5 жыл бұрын

    If you aren't schizophrenic or bipolar make it a point to the therapists. They love to diagnose people with schizoaffective disorder. It happened to me and kinda pissed me off. Schizotypal is specific and unique but they'll fuck it up if you aren't very open.

  • @dazzadazzalin6148

    @dazzadazzalin6148

    4 жыл бұрын

    Same here.

  • @DiamanteInfernalis
    @DiamanteInfernalis4 жыл бұрын

    Holy cow! Thanks for this. My hubby was diagnosed with this by the va, but their explanation of it was completely different. This video makes alot of sense. Thank you.

  • @calebbean3658
    @calebbean36585 жыл бұрын

    People tend to get suspicious of eccentricities, I think we just react to the way we are treated to be honest.

  • @Trisholday

    @Trisholday

    4 жыл бұрын

    RIGHTTTTTTTTTT

  • @lononjdl

    @lononjdl

    4 жыл бұрын

    Caleb Bean no you don’t, you just think people are treating you badly cos you’re paranoid and delusional

  • @glitter_bomb7260

    @glitter_bomb7260

    3 жыл бұрын

    I agree and I want to say I feel like this disorder is a reaction to how we were treated as younger, or how we were affected by our environment.

  • @oooo1743

    @oooo1743

    Жыл бұрын

    @@glitter_bomb7260 if our reactions to the environment are natural,so why then this is considered a disorder

  • @sbaltor
    @sbaltor2 жыл бұрын

    I’m schizotypical and I enjoy people as well. I also use my eccentricities and compulsion to act odd and randomly to my advantage. I am an actor and stage performer, and can often times work and amp up the energy of a room or a party better than anyone else there. This has taking decades at work, but it all revolves around not changing the parts of yourself you can’t change but rather finding ways to adapt them into a more productive and positive life.

  • @courtneymeyers82

    @courtneymeyers82

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you, yes, we can be really entertaining, and we like to draw other people in and invite them to join the "party" we like a lot of laughter, and light, good time vibes - we can bring the energy up when needed, and we are very good at also helping in healing others when they are down

  • @sylviagray6692
    @sylviagray66927 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for making this video! My dad had schizotypal personality disorder and it helped me understand it a little more!

  • @armfart890
    @armfart8906 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. This is much more helpful than the other videos I watched.

  • @mariewilliams194
    @mariewilliams1945 жыл бұрын

    I have a little bit of this disorder . Think everyone acts superior and lacks empathy . Even know I know people are too focused on themselves. It's not all about me . It's just how I was treated when i was younger . I have bad social anxiety . I have a lot of empathy for people. But can't socialise with people .

  • @josuethemagician8249

    @josuethemagician8249

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hi, if you don't mind. How old are you? And are you still struggling with social anxiety?

  • @jeyomcnugget9584
    @jeyomcnugget95847 жыл бұрын

    Hello kati, can you do another video on Aspergers disorder? The one you did before was alright but it was aimed towards children. Could you do another one based on teens and adults? Thanks xo

  • @beat4224

    @beat4224

    7 жыл бұрын

    Oh yes! I would TOTALLY LOVE to see her do a video on that!!!! Great suggestion!

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    7 жыл бұрын

    I definitely can!! I would prefer to get a professional who specializes in it.. because I have only worked with children myself.. but I can definitely do some research on it too & do it myself :) xoxo

  • @beat4224

    @beat4224

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Katie

  • @jeyomcnugget9584

    @jeyomcnugget9584

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ooohhh i shall look forward to it 💫

  • @Brynwyn123

    @Brynwyn123

    7 жыл бұрын

    Kati Morton If you do, might you also talk about how the female symptoms/traits can be very different from the male ones?

  • @Misc935
    @Misc9354 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this video! I started exploring videos like yours to better understand my mother. She's in her 60s and very anti-psychology and thinks she doesn't need help even though she's had auditory hallucinations, paranoia, isolating tendencies, and odd New Age beliefs for as long as I can remember. She'll never get diagnosed and though it's not ideal for me to try and understand her through KZread videos, it's been a big help.

  • @alyb3366
    @alyb33667 жыл бұрын

    I love these videos Kati, I am going to studying for my LSW and LCSW and am totally going to use your DSM videos to help me study! they are soo through!

  • @raymckegney
    @raymckegney7 жыл бұрын

    I feel the poet Emily Dickinson might have been schizotypal. I'm very much looking forward to seeing the new movie just made about her life called "A Quiet Passion". Although from the trailer, I highly doubt she could have been so verbally defensive and offensive.

  • @joeycarr1398

    @joeycarr1398

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, I'll look it up in NetfliX

  • @destructtheconstruct919
    @destructtheconstruct9193 жыл бұрын

    It literally sounds like these people are just so intelligent that they are just on a whole other level than "normal people"

  • @oooo1743

    @oooo1743

    Жыл бұрын

    You got it right.The normies hate everything that they don't understand(because they don't want to but mostly because they are incapable and never will)so they label ppl as broken.

  • @MegaAslan10
    @MegaAslan105 жыл бұрын

    I have shizotypal. I have good friends around me, which surprises me when i read about the symptons. I do have difficulty forming close intimate relationships. Magical thinking is hard for me. You dont know that some of your thoughts are actually not normal. Its hard to get over that hurdle, because you dont know its a problem. thanks for the video

  • @Shemustbetheone
    @Shemustbetheone5 жыл бұрын

    This just sounds like someone who is really spiritual and poetic lol

  • @sryburn4234

    @sryburn4234

    5 жыл бұрын

    I was kind of thinking that too. You have a nice attitude.

  • @peterwacey8646

    @peterwacey8646

    5 жыл бұрын

    I understand why someone would say this but it's not good to romanticize illness where a lot of things become very difficult. You wouldn't say someone with a broken leg only has a different perspective on running. I'm just speaking from my experience and not for anyone else and I appreciate the message you have that it's good to look for the positives.

  • @mrmax434

    @mrmax434

    5 жыл бұрын

    I was diagnosed with schizotypal disorder and yes I am spiritually active and write a lot of poems, I don't like large groups and get paranoid when alone for longer periods of time. But rather than that it is also for me a fun way to see the world in a way that not many people can see. But I have a few close friends though and can be socially active, I just need to recharge when I'm by myself. I feel comfortable alone and in small groups, just not too many strangers and I'll be totally fine

  • @sarahmckinley2436

    @sarahmckinley2436

    4 жыл бұрын

    A lot of shamans they say had this disorder. Maybe we actually experiencing these things 😂

  • @Justyn219

    @Justyn219

    4 жыл бұрын

    Nah lol

  • @kennethpetroni3375
    @kennethpetroni33753 жыл бұрын

    I have Schizotypal personality disorder and I love it. I see the Universe in ways that people can only dream of. We have taken the “Blue Pill”. Positive Energy! You Got It!

  • @Yaya-kn5zx

    @Yaya-kn5zx

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup it’s a Gift !!

  • @nikicarrie4071

    @nikicarrie4071

    Жыл бұрын

  • @chevy2thelevy56

    @chevy2thelevy56

    Жыл бұрын

    This isn’t a good take for everyone. Not everyone with schizotypal will thrive living inside their delusions, believing whatever they want to believe, as is indicated with “taking the blue pill”

  • @laracroftvideos
    @laracroftvideos3 жыл бұрын

    What I have a problem with / have a hard time grasping is where you draw the line between a “disorder” and difference in personality type. Since I’m an introvert living in their own bubble with next to no friends and I’m quite cautious around people I don’t know, I often find that many of these disorders’ symptoms describe things I experience in my life better than I ever could. I just find it curious how, say, avoidant/social anxiety/generalized anxiety or schizotypal personality disorders basically describe introspective people who don’t socialize well and probably think too much (I know that’s extreme generalization that doesn’t include a LOT of stuff but bare with me). You never have a personality disorder that would have symptoms like: highly extroverted nature, makes friends easily, extremely communicative, exhibitionist, you know - the kind of people modern society tends to value the most, and what is by many considered to be the ideal and “normal.” Since the DSM was written by people (albeit highly educated and skilled), there are certain things that are extremely subjective (like “eccentricity” is a dumb criterion if you ask me).

  • @DiabloDelMer1

    @DiabloDelMer1

    3 жыл бұрын

    From what I remember, what differentiates a disorder from simple differences in personality is that these disordered personality traits cause distinct and adverse effects for either the individual in question, or for those who live with or around the said individual. This is to say that a person can have a personality that includes having increased relative social anxiety, but so long as this anxiety isn't causing them to do things like refuse to leave the house out of fear of being judged, they don't have a disorder. (This being an extreme example). All in all, disorders are just a jumble of defined personality traits that can be identified in a person that can cause more harm than good even in optimal circumstances. We generalize and apply labels exactly because people are hyperbolic sacks of emotional meat, and if we are to help the ones that believe they're having mental issues, we need to cut away all the nuance that is irrelevant, so we can start working on a solution. "Normal" serves as the model for what we shouldn't cut away when diagnosing the problem, and determining the disorder tells us in which ways we can cut the excess. If you don't, you're left with thousands of possible problems to solves, and millions of solutions.

  • @chevy2thelevy56

    @chevy2thelevy56

    Жыл бұрын

    actually you largely described histrionic personality disorder

  • @18wolfe17
    @18wolfe174 жыл бұрын

    thank you for tacking the time and doing this Happy New year

  • @kayseagrey81
    @kayseagrey817 жыл бұрын

    Whoop whoop - So interesting learning about the many Mental Health realities, diagnoses and therapies to aid recovery. Awesome Video Kati :-)

  • @astroranger5528
    @astroranger55287 жыл бұрын

    Could you please do a video on personality disorder trait specified - it's an official DSM-5 diagnosis. I was diagnosed with this personality disorder last year, and have yet to find anyone talking about it.

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    7 жыл бұрын

    I will have to look into it.. I don't know much about it, but am happy to learn!! xoxo

  • @DJiMike1

    @DJiMike1

    6 жыл бұрын

    Plopp R Have you found an answer to your diagnosis?

  • @AngelSouls
    @AngelSouls7 жыл бұрын

    This pretty much describes everyone in a spiritual or metaphysical community. Is that the same thing?

  • @joeycarr1398

    @joeycarr1398

    6 жыл бұрын

    I was told by a priest sometime ago that he won't doubt if some of the proclaimed saints of the catholic church have had some of these disorders.

  • @edenracquel9404

    @edenracquel9404

    5 жыл бұрын

    Angel Souls its drs way of saying spiritual ppl are crazy so they can medicate and dull our light.

  • @edenracquel9404

    @edenracquel9404

    5 жыл бұрын

    They misdiagnosed me put me on antipsychotics and i became hallucinating when i took the fucking pills ... i was misdiagnosed and i have anxiety but not this... its sad how messed up the drugs are.. gave me heart palpitations and seizures too

  • @codismith1903

    @codismith1903

    5 жыл бұрын

    Right?! I have studied the law of attraction, spirituality and metaphysics.

  • @annastarr2043

    @annastarr2043

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@joeycarr1398 I've thought that for years

  • @isabelpena2621
    @isabelpena26217 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Katy, this video this video help me to undestand how can they feel. Thank you

  • @enjoyingmyvodka1013
    @enjoyingmyvodka10134 жыл бұрын

    Great video I’m showing my family so they can understand me better

  • @bqgin
    @bqgin4 жыл бұрын

    I think this diagnosis is farfetched. Just because I decided to interpret the world based on my own experiences, thoughts and analysis and not of a certain religious doctrine doesn't mean I have a disorder. Why a Christian thinking that everything he is doing is watched by all present Father God, but a person without any particular religion thinking that a deck of cards can give them hint into the future a looney? And maybe people perceive them as odd, because they have completely different set of experiences, so no wonder they may seem "a bit off", compared to societal norms. Maybe they didn't ride bikes with friends when young, maybe they where reading works of philosophers from ancient Greece?

  • @HiSofia
    @HiSofia7 жыл бұрын

    I have SPD. I have a hard time staying connected to the friends that I actually have. I feel like I'm pressuring them to spend time with me, but I often times have nothing else to do since I don't study nor work and most of my friends has either a job or study (or both). I'm in a social group for young adults where we meet once a week, and it has honestly helped me a lot to talk to likeminded people. Often we even go to an amusement park near by or to a café after the group meeting. I will say though, that it works the best for most of us if there's less than 10 in the group. I don't have social anxiety though, so for me it's not a problem if we're many, even though it's less stressful. Oh, and I live in Denmark. We have free treatment for this disorder, but I pay for my own medicine. I talk with a therapist 2-3 times a month, and of course have the group thing once a week.

  • @sonomacalendar9949

    @sonomacalendar9949

    4 жыл бұрын

    Sofia Hust I heard that life is tough in Denmark 🇩🇰 and many people do commit duicide

  • @teve709

    @teve709

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hey Sofia, Im also living in Danmark and I've been diagnosed with SPD in Aarhus and I've heard about those groups and it is sad that they have those requirements of max 8 people joining together as now I'm on the waiting list to be part of it and get any kind od treatment. On the other they just want me to start using Abilify and that's about it. It is very sad situation - no real help whats so ever.

  • @xpmark1
    @xpmark14 жыл бұрын

    I really enjoy your presentations on youtube.About 20 years ago I got some great help from a Clinical Pyschologist Phd who used verbal therapy and bioenergetics.The bioenergetics helps free the feelings and associated repressed thoughts, due to releasing what Wilhelm Reich called muscular armoring. These are muscular tensions that are generated by the defenses going on in the psyche. Schizoid or Schizotypal definitely sounds like the zone I was in and when my therapy ended the therapist confirmed as much using one of those terms.Grounding exercises through my legs and feet were a big part of my bioenergetics, helped me get in touch with reality better, and my physical body.I grew up with a feeling like my mother really didn't like my ways that much, didn't approve of me, also the feeling that the world was not a safe place.She was "damaged goods" from her childhood and did her best.

  • @peaceatlast8286
    @peaceatlast82867 жыл бұрын

    Wow.....You really know your stuff Katie! Thank you...🌹

  • @shaggedfaggedfashed
    @shaggedfaggedfashed4 жыл бұрын

    I’m schizotypal and I know my hallucinations aren’t real; yes they feel real and seem real but just reality checking makes it easier. the paranoia is a whole other issue though - it feels rational and logical and I usually have to ask someone to talk things through with me

  • @courtneymeyers82

    @courtneymeyers82

    7 ай бұрын

    Same, having someone talk you down helps a lot

  • @AnnaLeyland
    @AnnaLeyland7 жыл бұрын

    Can you do one for schizoid personality disorder?

  • @alexjeffers5407

    @alexjeffers5407

    7 жыл бұрын

    Anna Leyland agreed!

  • @awbrxii

    @awbrxii

    7 жыл бұрын

    yes!

  • @holiboys

    @holiboys

    7 жыл бұрын

    Sarah Yup. The schizoid diagnosis has poor validity. Those who were once diagnosed as Schizoid will now likely be diagnosed as Schizotypal or as ASD.

  • @alexjeffers5407

    @alexjeffers5407

    7 жыл бұрын

    I have no idea what they are doing in the dsm, but i feel like I don't fit under schizotypal as I have no delusions

  • @AnnaLeyland

    @AnnaLeyland

    7 жыл бұрын

    holiboys I'm in England, is it the same here? I was only diagnosed as schizoid a few months back. If it's the same here I'll talk to my CPN or psychiatrist about getting a "correct" diagnosis

  • @dasclone
    @dasclone7 жыл бұрын

    I was recently diagnosed with schizophrenia and it took a bit to get the diagnosis and a lot of fighting. I went through the mental health unit and I mentioned getting reassessed by a psychiatrist as I was continuing to struggle more and more. My counsellor said no so I got my GP to refer me to a man who runs his own counselling psychiatric practise. I was very adamant about getting a proper diagnosis and one thing that really helped me, and I hope will help others too, is I wrote before hand a lot of my troubles I have experienced and still do. It was very helpful to my psychiatrist and it was an easier way to express myself without chickening out or simply forgetting what I wanted to say anyways. I still write things out for him to help preface our appointments twice a week, and it does help me remember things that bother me and I would like to work out. Hope this helps others on their journeys to diagnosis.

  • @habibflaha702
    @habibflaha7023 жыл бұрын

    I have learnt so much from your videos. Thank you very much and by the way you have a very comfortable voice 😇

  • @notwittymcwittyface2474
    @notwittymcwittyface24747 жыл бұрын

    Sounds terrifying and something I'd never heard of, thank you for video. Mental health seems to be a minefield of cross over symptoms, I have Complex PTSD (amongst others 🙄😉) but it's taken most of my life (and I'm older than Kati 😂) to get the correct diagnosis but I understand why. When you do tho? Everything falls into place. You know all those 'little' things you think are just you happen to others. For me that's a lot of the battle, understanding my behaviour. My Drs were a little resistant to deliver my diagnosis a few years ago but I was pleased 'it' had a name. (Tho this does sound like the name is derived from a Harry Potter creature 😉) XD

  • @beat4224

    @beat4224

    7 жыл бұрын

    Not Witty Mc WittyFace Haha it kind of does huh? I wish you well in your journey to recovery.

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for sharing your experience! And I agree.. it can be so validating to know that all you are experiencing has a name and a reason behind it. xoxo Oh and it does sound like a harry potter creature :) hah! xoxo

  • @notwittymcwittyface2474

    @notwittymcwittyface2474

    7 жыл бұрын

    Beat Treat Thank you, appreciate that XD

  • @marsmarz
    @marsmarz7 жыл бұрын

    Luna Lovegood, anyone?

  • @wyrdwitch13

    @wyrdwitch13

    7 жыл бұрын

    She immediately came to mind :) She functions quite well within that world & her special gifts are respected.

  • @BlueHazyDreams

    @BlueHazyDreams

    6 жыл бұрын

    I think she gets excused from this diagnosis on the basis of culture. Her father's quite out-there too and probably had a lot to do with her beliefs and behavior. He could be a pretty good example though, and also definitely has the paranoia unlike Luna.

  • @THFC23

    @THFC23

    6 жыл бұрын

    Maryssa I think she was just intended to be a bit odd

  • @henkdevries7634

    @henkdevries7634

    6 жыл бұрын

    Syvelocin well, he doesn't have paranoia for no reason. The death eaters were chasing him and using him, and eventually they killed him. So.

  • @eichhorn6873

    @eichhorn6873

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thought of her, too!!

  • @camryn5709
    @camryn57097 жыл бұрын

    I've been waiting for this!! :)

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yay!! I hope you liked it :) xoxo

  • @chaneykane3828
    @chaneykane38289 ай бұрын

    I have this. The creative side is a blast, the anxiety, not so much.

  • @roseroyce_
    @roseroyce_5 жыл бұрын

    Am I the only one who “feels” a presence in mannequins at the mall...one time I bumped into one and said excuse me lol...I hope that doesn’t make me sound too crazy 😜

  • @tonyg5132

    @tonyg5132

    4 жыл бұрын

    At least you acknowledged that it does sound "crazy"

  • @jeezluis1779

    @jeezluis1779

    4 жыл бұрын

    No I get exactly what you mean, like I obviously obviously know they’re not real, but I still just don’t like looking directly at them for some reason idk.

  • @xyzonox9876

    @xyzonox9876

    4 жыл бұрын

    It feels weird standing next to one, it’s like standing really close to a real person, awkward

  • @undeadpresident

    @undeadpresident

    4 жыл бұрын

    I like the ones you can punch. And how about those sex robot ones they are developing? Would be interesting to try sometime.

  • @rustyscrapper

    @rustyscrapper

    4 жыл бұрын

    In my opinion all that happened is a very old reptilian circuit in your brain fired off. The shape of a human will definitely trigger instinctual responses. You instinctually reacted the way you would if you bumped into a real person. You fooled your brain is all.

  • @MrForestExplorer
    @MrForestExplorer4 жыл бұрын

    Some would say cultural "norms" are sick. Others might point to the fact that there is statistically significant scientific evidence that para-psychological effects are real. If you depend on the DSM-V to describe what's real and what isn't, you're going to run into contradictory and paradoxical phenomena.

  • @scorpiondeath-lock4238
    @scorpiondeath-lock42384 жыл бұрын

    I think this is me, I need a doctor. Thanks for sharing!

  • @mtmnynj8071
    @mtmnynj80716 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Kati Morton for sharing this.

  • @tonyp8159
    @tonyp81597 жыл бұрын

    How is this different than a highly intuitive, highly sensitive, introverted people with anxiety? Sure anxiety treatment could be helpful but just because people are a little eccentric doesn't mean they have a debilitating disorder.

  • @JulietteZephyr

    @JulietteZephyr

    7 жыл бұрын

    Hey Tony, I recommend taking valerian and St. John's Wort for anxiety, maybe some skullcap too (icky taste, just a warning). Are you getting 7.5 hours of sleep each night and eating non-fried foods like raw fruits and vegetables? Are you avoiding added sugars in beverages & foods, which are processed and cause a slew of problems? Also: recommend keeping a grounding stone like tourmaline close by in your home or office/place of employment. It also never hurts to have a little Xanax handy for really godawful days even though it's best not to become totally dependent on pharmaceuticals. That is my personal advice to you and I know it helps me.

  • @veeherreraJanecka

    @veeherreraJanecka

    7 жыл бұрын

    Tony P if they have anxiety and unhappy is a sign

  • @BlueHazyDreams

    @BlueHazyDreams

    6 жыл бұрын

    A. You're oversimplifying the disorder, B. then there's no problem because whatever symptoms they have are having no impact on them outside the anxiety. The whole point of psychiatric treatment is to help people cope with difficult symptoms/circumstances. If they don't have any trouble coping, there's no point to treating them in the first place. That's why every entry in the dsm will include something along the lines of "causing significant distress over a period of at least 6 months" or whatever as one of the first requirements of diagnosis.

  • @pinosan1374
    @pinosan13745 жыл бұрын

    So, All of magical thinking has been thought at some point. Greek, nordic, egyptian, eastern asian pantheism believed in these concepts of "magical thinking" which in itself is the base and fundament of in modern terms societal belief systems. In the concept of linguistics terms can be readapted amongst different languages as such morphological and phonetically I've never met a human being demonstrating an ideal form of speech or modulation of language. Because, that in itself would be "wierd" normatively speaking. An example of the structural form it would take could be sort of philosophical leaning towards an aspect of communication not thoroughly understood today "metacognition" so, the priming base of the lexicon often used is in and of relating to incite another to "think deeply" otherwise, which often not many are willing to do. An example would be the disproportion between an environmental cue which leads someone to think how do animals find themselves around their environment while humans need a gps... vs. An open discussion of metaphysics same paradigm different context. So, if the interest in itself is telepathy now there is the concept on quantum physics about a fourth state of matter relating to its relative time. Otherwise, what is normative for thought proccess to be segmented in one aspect of life it is not optimal for it to be in another. For example, when I think of groceries i can say fruits, vegetables, meat produce. Whereas, in another cultural background it could be inordinary to our reference form. In contrast, when It is neccesary to discriminate between important information. In terms, the capacity of attention to take different formats of itself ei. Sustained, focused, selective. So, its kinda like saying a yogi who lived all his life as a yogi suddenly has a change of faith and becomes a normal person, and a normal person who was always atheist has a change of faith and becomes a yogi. In that proccess a promising social engineer seeking to change the world dies. The atheist now yogi realizes that life is continuous though it fit into a pardigm of a pre-existing non evidential opinion about it. Then, he is considered faithful not schizotypal, but anyone can call it a form of insanity or a "phase."

  • @Trisholday

    @Trisholday

    4 жыл бұрын

    Factssssssss !!! Where you came from ?? Soo true

  • @pinosan1374

    @pinosan1374

    3 жыл бұрын

    Everyone else... they and everyone else

  • @frubblegump
    @frubblegump3 жыл бұрын

    Have just been diagnosed as Schizotypal. It feels good to kind of know why I am the way I am. But same time hate labels. My main problem has been my work. Work in country town and people here like things to fit in a nice little comfortable box. Which led to the diagnosis. Due to severe bullying and harassment I went from feeling like an oddball (which I am okay with) to having suicidal thoughts as it seems I just don't fit in this world. The work side of things continues to support that feeling (now I sound definitely schizotypal). This video really is great. Makes me realise that maybe things are okay.

  • @erictheroman851
    @erictheroman8517 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely loved this video! you earned a subscriber! AM i able to use this in my Dahmer essay as a basis and discussion for his diagnosis?

  • @TaiganTundra
    @TaiganTundra7 жыл бұрын

    I've been diagnosed with both SPD and schizophrenia and years of psychotherapy has done nothing to me. The only thing that had any kind of impact was anti-psychotics.

  • @Jess-nz7be

    @Jess-nz7be

    7 жыл бұрын

    Geanos Uron Yep the therapy is really just to check and maintain that you are safe for people to be around, anti-psychotics are the only real solution

  • @lullabi3234

    @lullabi3234

    6 жыл бұрын

    I didn't take anti psychotics upon my schizoeffective diagnosis, and genuinely believe it was my therapist's treatment of me that lured me into a place where I decided to challenge the objectivity of the voices I was hearing, which sort of spiraled into a decades un-broken remission

  • @forgetgangstalking8646

    @forgetgangstalking8646

    6 жыл бұрын

    Psygnostic pointless diagnosis. Schizophrenia already insinuates you were schizoid at some earlier point.

  • @Lizik

    @Lizik

    5 жыл бұрын

    I thought it’s impossible to have them at the same time

  • @calebbean3658

    @calebbean3658

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@Lizik People with schizotypal often have psychotic breaks in late adolescence similar to schizophrenics, the difference being we tend to get quite a bit better in terms of psychoticism.

  • @jackheltzel2804
    @jackheltzel28045 жыл бұрын

    Could be a psychic...

  • @jesusfreak9597

    @jesusfreak9597

    4 жыл бұрын

    I think the people who wrote the dsm dont believe in that kind of thing

  • @helenarichard

    @helenarichard

    4 жыл бұрын

    I have predicted some very creepy stuff and I am an HSP so I can also sense everything in the room, I can read people before they even know what's up. I also have GAS, depression, had agnosia after a flu, had globus hysteria, mild manic depression. Not all that bad seeing the state of humanity these days. What helps me a lot is to stay away from modernity and stay in a bit of a neo-ludite, classic romantic world I fantasise.

  • @luisXale

    @luisXale

    3 жыл бұрын

    That was a joke right?

  • @haraldbredholt9402
    @haraldbredholt94025 жыл бұрын

    I've been wronly diagnosed with STPD, I believe. About two years back I went to a preschool to artschool but I felt severely depressed. My doctor send me to a program at a psychiatric hospital that in the end (after several tests) gave me this diagnosis. Today I see that the therapists and doctors were perhaps jumping to conclusions, and that I don't have any of the symptoms defining STPD. At least I don't have them anymore. And it is supposed to be a lasting diagnosis. I have many friends and a girlfriend for three years now, and I enjoy the closeness and comfort of friends and family. I started artschool last year, and this among other helped me a lot in terms of getting through the rough times I have experienced earlier. I don't have hallucinations, I do not I think in a magical way, and my thoughts do not bother me anymore as they used to do. I try my very best every time to speak clearly and to the point, and I can tell from others that I succed in doing so. Meditation and positive thinking has helped me through, and my own concious decision to get better! The human mind is a powerful thing, both in a good and bad way, but all in all I think it is there to help us!

  • @eq5193
    @eq51936 жыл бұрын

    Hi, thanks for the video :) Just curious, how should I have communicated with someone I suspected had schizotypal if he accused me of something really bizarre and then was so angry about it he alluded to hurting me? I got super scared and did what you said not to - I challenged his perception by explaining my perception (though I apologized for getting him angry first). I also told him it wasn't ok to threaten me and called him out on his logical inconsistency (he accused me of being a sadist amongst other things but his threats were pretty morbid and it seemed like he was projecting @.@). At first, I was weirded out and confused and upset, but now I just feel bad for not realizing he might have had some kind of condition. It was online, he didn't respond, but I wish I knew how I could have handled it better...

  • @wtfhowbizarre1946
    @wtfhowbizarre19465 жыл бұрын

    i don't prefer being alone. i do like being in groups of two. Usually, with my wife.

  • @Trisholday

    @Trisholday

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @Trisholday

    @Trisholday

    4 жыл бұрын

    I feeel the same way

  • @elizabethgrey6040

    @elizabethgrey6040

    3 жыл бұрын

    This is so me! Lmao

  • @ihartevil
    @ihartevil7 жыл бұрын

    for me i just sent my brain into a fucked up mess when i was 19-23 i was pretty much trying to push myself into this breaking point but didnt know i was so now i have caused myself when i am sick to have a version of split personality disorder i am pretty sure because i was sick all of feb and i can barely remember anything that happened but my sister didnt even know i was sick (i just wasnt sleeping and had a stuffed up nose) my little bit noticed outside i was having a mild anxiety attack so he licked my ankle but i dont have day time anxiety attacks so that was also something that was odd but i cant remember any comments or any vids i watched for the most part and i have a photographic memory i know i had BPD at one point in my life from your vids it was me pushing myself to a breaking point and i was aware of what i was doing at a point and thats when i knew i had to stop and be a realist so since that point i have just been an atheist and a realist and atheist being before the sam harris idiotic cult i mean a real atheist dictionary definition not agnostic is it possible for split personality disorder to only come out when somebody is sick or to just have missing days like this because of sleep deprivation and having a stuffy nose (its just all of the other times in my life when i had those things i remember everything) all the times i went to high school like that every summer when i would just stay up until 5am because i could and then would only get 2 hours of sleep everyday for a week i know i am not a teen anymore but i never forgotten those days and i cant remember the month of feb except for a few tiny details here and there no matter how much i try i am also going to disclose somebody in my family has split personality as well but its like they arent even there with their split personality for me it was like i was there but i wasnt and i cant remember shit

  • @andreasn1481

    @andreasn1481

    5 жыл бұрын

    hey. you absolutely can have memory loss from sleep deprivation, try to set up an exercise routine and eat the right foods, avoid scaring yourself or researching symptoms too deeply

  • @paper-dreamsandwanderlust7209
    @paper-dreamsandwanderlust72097 жыл бұрын

    Hi Kati, thanks for your videos! I've been trying to get a question answered on live stream for a while .. ... what are your thoughts on transactional analysis for trauma therapy .. I'm in therapy for childhood s abuse. my counsellor has been trying this .. but I'm not sure I like it .. she's always talking about my 'inner child ' which makes me dissociate so quickly ...:( I dont know what you think? she is trained in the rewind technique but says that I'm not safe enough for this yet .. because I don't know how to relax !? Please Help I'm so confused!?Thanks for all you do!!

  • @katemaris
    @katemaris4 жыл бұрын

    Where did you buy your DSM 5 book? I’ve look everywhere and they either have missing pages or are really expensive.

  • @hw9943
    @hw99436 жыл бұрын

    aren't these also symptoms of exessive early childhood trauma and abusive within the family through out the upbringing that has not stopped even into adulthood...?

  • @kathrinjohnson2582

    @kathrinjohnson2582

    4 жыл бұрын

    No 🙄🤨🤨

  • @saranox7319

    @saranox7319

    3 жыл бұрын

    Exactly.

  • @Lastrevio
    @Lastrevio7 жыл бұрын

    So this is the kind of thing that people labeled as "crazy" have?

  • @acondon5644

    @acondon5644

    7 жыл бұрын

    KZread Binge Triggered

  • @BlueHazyDreams

    @BlueHazyDreams

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yare Yare Daze When any respectable person who has studied psychology wouldn't be caught dead calling someone crazy, I'd say they probably have a good reason for avoiding it other than propagating PC culture.

  • @christierella
    @christierella3 жыл бұрын

    I don’t want to “get better”, people suck for the most part. From time to time, I feel upset I’ve been disowned. But mostly, it ain’t what it ain’t. I enjoy peace. I have a loving husband, almost 25 years. We have our fur babies, they don’t leave. I met a barefoot man in Walmart, I asked him what that was all about. He said, “My connection to earth.” I was going to buy him shoes, but that made perfect sense. My husband & I were happy to have asked. I don’t usually speak to anyone, but I was glad I did. We are all connected, but mostly can’t be bothered. Face masks & sunglasses make it easier to be around others, when you need supplies. Be well, all good things to you and yours.

  • @TheFluffyWendigo
    @TheFluffyWendigo6 жыл бұрын

    it explains everything...my almost hatred torwards other people...my desire to remain alone the fact that I abstain from human interaction. That my co-workers are my only true friends. And how I prefer to remain alone despite my desire to be around people. I want to be around other people but I want to have some form of interaction. I can't fully explain it but I want to be accepted. You explained my suffering exactly

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