World Leading Physician View On ADHD: Gabor Mate

Gabor Mate is an expert physician who specialises in neurology. He has ADHD himself and in this clip explains the truth about the condition.
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📖 Gabor Mate is a multi-bestselling author and a world leading expert on trauma and how it effects us throughout our whole lives. A holocaust survivor and a first generation immigrant, Gabor’s knowledge and wisdom on the scars trauma leaves behind is deep and drawn from personal experience.
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Пікірлер: 2 200

  • @TheDiaryOfACEOClips
    @TheDiaryOfACEOClips Жыл бұрын

    Watch the full episode here - kzread.info/dash/bejne/p4Sp0o9qoKfLoLw.html

  • @NicolaMulholland

    @NicolaMulholland

    Жыл бұрын

    Very misleading title, it is not the truth about ADHD, its Gabor Mate's opinion of ADHD. Get someone like Ned Hallowell or Russell Barkley on to discuss ADHD, they are experts in this field.

  • @jamesm.3307

    @jamesm.3307

    11 ай бұрын

    Gabor does tend to focus on trauma, but I think the modes of learning might also be involved. Some people are kinesthetic learners who are going to have trouble reading (visual learner) or listening to a lecture (audio learner). Sitting in the normal classroom would be very hard for them, so we give them Adderall, which is amphetamine ("speed").

  • @melaniecascante6177

    @melaniecascante6177

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@NicolaMulholland Gabor Mate wrote a book on ADHD and he was diagnosed as well, I don't think anyone would write a book without knowing what they talk about. Even then, I think his view is important to be shared because it is comprehensive. He takes into account the person's history, past trauma, and environment which actually if it was changed the world would be a better place. "Experts" tell you how to deal with ADHD with medication and habits. I think Gabor tries to go deeper and he makes you THINK about your life and the world we live in. Maybe ADHD wouldn't be a problem if the world we lived in didn't expect us to be sitting at a workplace or school for 8+ hours I mean...it's crazy! but we got to do what we got to do to fit in and GET THINGS DONE. In my case, I just want to be "normal" so I take Gabor's advice: take your medicine if it helps you but don't stop working on the stuff that really matters.

  • @DigitalResurrection

    @DigitalResurrection

    8 ай бұрын

    You should have Dr. Russell Barkley on. He's an ADHD expert.

  • @mikkyonin

    @mikkyonin

    8 ай бұрын

    please look up MIKKYO it is a solution based on budhism no medication. i had it for years (with med) bud then i found what it was i only did it for a year and a half and now i help others by bringin balance in word and meaning in the fundamental natural human developation. and if you want to know more contact stephen k hayes (to SHIN do ) he liv in USA he is a master in this

  • @Mcdogmom288
    @Mcdogmom288Ай бұрын

    I got diagnosed with ADHD years ago. I could remember several years ago after divorce with my husband which brought me into my disastrous journey on Alcohol and cigarettes. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Got diagnosed with ADHD. Not until a friend recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Much respect to mother nature the great magic shrooms.

  • @RaymondEMartinez

    @RaymondEMartinez

    Ай бұрын

    Congrats on your recovery. Most persons never realizes psilocybin can be used as a miracle medication to save lives. Years back i wrote an entire essay about psychedelics. they saved you from death bud, lets be honest here.

  • @Malikrooney-hq5jj

    @Malikrooney-hq5jj

    Ай бұрын

    Can you help me with the reliable source 🙏. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in Germany. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them.

  • @SusanaGomez-mp8sk

    @SusanaGomez-mp8sk

    Ай бұрын

    YES very sure of Dr.benfungi. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.

  • @Edennnn926

    @Edennnn926

    Ай бұрын

    Mushrooms are very medicinal. This is why anybody familiar with psilocybin and any other kind of fungi will tell you, "They are alive." They have a very ancient wisdom. To my experience, all mushrooms have always said, "Pay attention to your life. How you think, how you feel, and what will you do with the information that you always knew, but now are seeing in this point of view." This is why mushrooms are so respected in tribal cultures. This mental health treatment works for me too. Half micro doses do the trick for me. At least a few days at a time with lengthy time in between. Thank you for sharing this point!

  • @FrankMorrison-vu2kc

    @FrankMorrison-vu2kc

    Ай бұрын

    How do I reach out to him? Is he on insta

  • @naekwon
    @naekwon Жыл бұрын

    We can’t have a serious conversation regarding the spectrum of ADHD - Anxiety - Depression without getting honest about the physiological impact of watching screens. From the first TVs in the mid 20th century; to the Nintendo explosion, to present day smartphones. The human eye and it’s primary role of FOCUS in translating external environment into internal information and meaning needs to be deeply examined. What happens to our brainwaves when shift this focus from natural world to digital screens with a flicker rate in the billions per second ? What happens to your breathing ? Is your body stationary and locked in an unnatural (sitting) position ? The new smartphone technology has out paced our biology. Very few are ready to acknowledge and discuss these easily verified observations.

  • @octopusfly

    @octopusfly

    Жыл бұрын

    You have made the observations. You have shared the observations. Thank you for that. What you have put forward is fundamentally needed for a real discussion.

  • @wilhelmvg9978

    @wilhelmvg9978

    Жыл бұрын

    ADHD has been documented in medical literature since the 1800’s. Depression and anxiety has been documented since.. well, as long as the oldest recorded history is. You somewhat have a point, but you don’t seem to realize smartphones have only been around since 2007. Video games and TV are just as stimulating gambling, drug use, eating, sex, etc. All of which have been around since antiquity.

  • @shemaths1668

    @shemaths1668

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wilhelmvg9978 someone with sense, thank you. My grandmother has ADHD, so does mother, myself and my siblings. we suspect my father has it but he refuses to get tested. All in all this has been around well before tech became a thing

  • @naekwon

    @naekwon

    Жыл бұрын

    Please share the link to ADHD being documented in the medical literature in the 1800s. Back up your claim with evidence. Thank you in advance.

  • @naekwon

    @naekwon

    Жыл бұрын

    So what happened to your grandmother’s brainwaves, breathing pattern and bodily nervous system when she was watching movies and black and white TV back in the day? Did it fire and wire new neurons in her brain and impact her nervous system?

  • @86sineadw
    @86sineadw6 ай бұрын

    As someone with ADHD, who just completed a masters and my dissertation topic was research on parents with ADHD, with a daughter with ADHD and autism, who respects Dr Gabor Mate and who is a huge fan of the Diary of a CEO you really should have Dr Russell Barkley on to talk about ADHD. As much as I like Gabor, he is not a specialist in this field. So it would be ethical journalism to ensure you have someone who specialises on this topic to provide solid facts on ADHD.

  • @thelmawintercat
    @thelmawintercat7 ай бұрын

    Someone with ADHD isn't "broken", our society is.

  • @ohmazome

    @ohmazome

    7 ай бұрын

    I don't think the term is appropriate for either. Which is why to invest in literary, philosophy, and education.

  • @ohmazome

    @ohmazome

    7 ай бұрын

    Both an organism which requires care, guidance, and heartfelt treatment. Utopia belongs in the realm of ideas, not reality. But it's *directionally* desirable. Not at the blind assumption that it is necessary an attainable endpoint. But a direction for improvement and net reduction of mass suffering.

  • @ohmazome

    @ohmazome

    7 ай бұрын

    There are many wordy ways that we can say society is 'broken', if we assume that morality disposition, but that is as much to fail the patient as it is to say that about an individual. I understand your intent is good, but your statement requires many biases that hinder as well as help.

  • @izzy4575
    @izzy45758 ай бұрын

    A lot of gifted people have ADHD, they have a heightened sensitivity and they do get overwhelmed by their environment. It’s not necessarily a bad or traumatic environment. I don’t believe that every child who has ADHD has been traumatised.

  • @nyawiblack4

    @nyawiblack4

    7 ай бұрын

    It’s not always about trauma, it included stress such as parental or financial stress that occurs during critical developmental year

  • @lukejk6382

    @lukejk6382

    7 ай бұрын

    Neither do I believe that, but stating that "a lot of gifted people have adhd" is simply not true. There's pretty valid research out there suggesting a small negativ correlation with adhd and iq

  • @izzy4575

    @izzy4575

    7 ай бұрын

    @@lukejk6382 that’s not what I said. I didn’t say those who have adhd are gifted, in fact, it could be the opposite. But those who are gifted, many of them have ADHD. And gifted people are super sensitive to their environment.

  • @lukejk6382

    @lukejk6382

    7 ай бұрын

    @@izzy4575 it is still not true: there is no scientific evidence for gifted people being more like to have adhd. They seem to have it as often as other people do. In fact research suggests that adhd is often not as severe in those who are gifted and have it. It isn't even plausible why Individuals who are gifted should have a higher rate of adhd.

  • @izzy4575

    @izzy4575

    7 ай бұрын

    @@lukejk6382 agree to disagree. It is very common for gifted to have other neuro atypical differences like ADHD, which is one of the most common ones among gifted. In fact, it’s rare to just be gifted and not have anything else atypical going. Also, the symptoms of giftedness and ADHD overlap, that’s how close the correlation is. There’s even a term for it- when giftedness comes with challenges- twice exceptional. Not every person with ADHD is gifted though.

  • @BookieLukie21
    @BookieLukie216 ай бұрын

    I grew up in an abusive household, lots of stress, and family history of alcoholism and poverty that goes back generations. I used to daydream a lot as a child, as a coping mechanism, and I still do. I'm 48 now and just got dx for ADHD and autistic tenancy. I've got autoimmune disease, fibro, and osteoarthritis. I'm also a veteran and DV survivor. I'm working on breaking generational trauma with my child.

  • @timefortee

    @timefortee

    5 ай бұрын

    You can do it!! ❤

  • @kylorenthehusky2584

    @kylorenthehusky2584

    4 ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤

  • @twistedoperator4422

    @twistedoperator4422

    3 ай бұрын

    You can do it mate.

  • @sharonbelieves

    @sharonbelieves

    3 ай бұрын

    What is autistic tenancy? Is the word tenancy wrong?

  • @janicemcauliffe9490

    @janicemcauliffe9490

    3 ай бұрын

    Same

  • @shanastanek432
    @shanastanek4327 ай бұрын

    I was misdiagnosed with ADHD for 20 years until I had a brain scan done, which showed that I actually have severe PTSD and depression. The symptoms of ADHD were being caused by my mood, not from low blood flow or damage to my prefrontal cortex. Willing to bet this may be the case in many other ADHD diagnoses.

  • @marissangephart

    @marissangephart

    7 ай бұрын

    Where did you have a brain scan done?

  • @shanastanek432

    @shanastanek432

    7 ай бұрын

    @@marissangephart Amen Clinic

  • @irinatsar9447

    @irinatsar9447

    5 ай бұрын

    @@marissangephart- no brain scan shows that lol

  • @oraclex6

    @oraclex6

    5 ай бұрын

    I took my daughter to many medical Dr and I decided to take her to holistic Dr. They did blood work and it showed up on that her brain. I always knew she had the ADHD which was the least of her problems But they did see she didn't have much melatonin in her brain which caused her depression. I was pretty desperate because she has alot of mental disorders. Has been in therapy since the age 7 and now is 26 years and she still goes every week.

  • @karenfearn7906

    @karenfearn7906

    3 ай бұрын

    PTSD can definitely cause similar symptoms

  • @andrewphillips5882
    @andrewphillips58827 ай бұрын

    ADHD was first described in 1798. It's one of the most longest known, longest studied and best understood conditions in all of neurology. It's also one of the most treatable, which makes it all the more a shame that someone with the status of Dr Mate can appear so inconsistent, vaguely dismissing medication while taking it himself, seemingly suggesting it's not a 'real' medical condition, whilst at the same time acknowledging that stress & trauma in the young affects brain development. ADHD is a neuro-developmental condition - a significant delay in brain development, which can have a number of causes. He's too focussed here on his own specialisms and confusing the issues. He states medication can't 'heal' adhd, but suggests that dealing with underlying trauma will. You simply can't 'heal' brain development. Of course medication doesn't 'heal' it. You can manage it with medication, in the same way you would manage diabetes with medication. ADHD is a lifelong condition - and it's real enough to be clearly visible on an MRI scan.

  • @richardcollis5576

    @richardcollis5576

    6 ай бұрын

    Problem also with this is why not have a follow up video from ADCA. It is becoming clearer and clearer each day that ADHD (which only defines a few of the neurological components) is a far reaching and complex neurological-developmental brain type and the attention deficit hyperactive component title needs to be re-branded. For those who go through life undiagnosed it can pose real issues. Understanding it’s effect in the pre-frontal Cortex and how to manipulate dopamine responses can have a profound beneficial effect on individuals who have been diagnosed. I think we are at a paradigm shift where neurodiverse brain types become accepted. We are really just looking a varied brain types.

  • @Lukearthwalker

    @Lukearthwalker

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm in the undecided camp so using diabetes as an example isn't going to fly because diabetes can reversed with a proper healthy diet. This is also why I remain skeptical that ADD can only be treated with medication. Also, just because something has been studied for many decades does not mean that it's understood, especially these days when there're always big money behind the treatments. Lastly, regarding Dr Mate being inconsistent, he only said that he used to take the medication but now his brain has changed and he doesn't need it anymore.

  • @AK-ut6nn

    @AK-ut6nn

    6 ай бұрын

    Exactly what I was thinking..... my daughter aged 4 years has ADHD and she's the most happiest child she is loved very much and has never gone through any trauma. It does really make me question these doctors that come on KZread and give health advice without even realising the facts it's very confusing. ❤

  • @gwoxergwoxer5962

    @gwoxergwoxer5962

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@Lukearthwalker Only type 2 diabetes can be healed. If you talk about type 1 then lifelong medication is absolutely necessary

  • @CK-solutions

    @CK-solutions

    6 ай бұрын

    Don't dismiss this doctor's advice. It's very wise. Because medication works while it works, but what happens when you don't treat the underlying psychological disorder? Answer: the medication becomes less effective over time, because the brain chemistry changes. Only leaving you with the mounting and debilitating side effects, the medication gives you. So now you're prescribed new medications to deal with the side-effects of the old. Spoken as someone who has treated type 1 diabetes successfully for 34 years. The crux of the problem is a broken endocrine system. It's role is to communicate to every organ, cell & electrical impulse for optimal hormone release. Enter chronically elevated cortisol levels. The only hormone capable of switching the endocrine system off for long periods of time, when at chronic levels. This is why there's an increase in all mental health and chronic disease. Without an endocrine system, hormone production has no moderating system. At maximum saturation, the immune system steps up do deal with conflicts - caused by cells now full to capacity and dying off in large numbers. This is caused by a broken endocrine system, but also pumping the body full of synthetic hormones. Enter chronic inflammation, and a new list of medications considered non related to your initial treatment plan. I could bore you with what I know after 34 years in a medical system, that medicates you into palliative care. But I'd rather tell you it's possible to treat all underlying issues in the body, by eliminating cortisol. Which is how I got off the raft of growing medications and "inexplicable" (not at all related) side-effects. 😉 I take only insulin now, and I can virtually eliminate it with the right diet. That's not what they'll tell you though. You'll die without insulin. When insulin is merely a hormone response to food and stress. Manage those and you don't need as much, if at all, the synthetic supplement.

  • @denise2169
    @denise2169 Жыл бұрын

    I had ADHD which manifested in lifelong workaholism and depression, since a very early age. Through listening to Dr Maté these past years, I now understand the connection of my depression, ADHD and workaholism with my own childhood traumas. Now when I am triggered, I am able to breathe through the familiar reactions to let them go and find real inner peace. I was an elementary school teacher for decades, and saw many children with similar challenges. I always tried to create the learning atmosphere and safe environment, especially for boys with ADHD, that I didn’t have as a child. Thanks for helping me find my real self, Dr Maté!

  • @skyehannah8388

    @skyehannah8388

    Жыл бұрын

    This is so beautiful! Well said and ty for sharing

  • @Hugo-dc9nd

    @Hugo-dc9nd

    Жыл бұрын

    Workaholism and adhd!!! 😂😂😂 You have no clue!

  • @MagnumOpusYT

    @MagnumOpusYT

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Hugo-dc9ndI first thought the same thing.. however he found his passion

  • @rich3222

    @rich3222

    Жыл бұрын

    I personally think it is a problem with low dompamine , hence why adhd suffers are more likely to become alcoholics in order to feel normal for a short period,and why the chosen medication speed is the best drug to boost dompamine and give a temporary fix.I have done alot of childhood therapy but still feel like a space cadet and unable to concentrate yet give me a strong coffee and lots of sugar and I feel focused for a while. The only way I found is to boast domamine naturally by eating well ,exercise and sleeping well.

  • @jenwendy7

    @jenwendy7

    Жыл бұрын

    That is awesome ❤🙏

  • @watchdaride
    @watchdaride Жыл бұрын

    i am 51 and in school in 80s no one in school even mentioned adhd . i thought my whole life i was just lazy . In my 40s after researching on the internet that i have the symptoms . Now i am aware and my life has improved knowing why i act like i do .

  • @mac-ju5ot

    @mac-ju5ot

    Жыл бұрын

    One of my psychologist thinks I gave ADHD also

  • @Sufferingsassafrass

    @Sufferingsassafrass

    Жыл бұрын

    The book that changed my life by the title alone, “You Mean I’m Not Lazy, Crazy or Stupid?” Is fantastic. I felt less like an alien and much less alone in the world. The 2 authors have ADD as well. Excellent read and very reassuring!

  • @nina1528

    @nina1528

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m 48 and we didn’t know about dyslexia let alone ADHD. You were either clever, or sporty or hyper and naughty. I’m glad things have moved on in terms of what we know about behaviour, trauma, coping mechanisms, masking etc.

  • @BluishNomad

    @BluishNomad

    Жыл бұрын

    But do you actually know why you act the way that you do? Or are you simply familiar with the label those actions are given? That's the crux of the problem being discussed in this video. ADHD is not a *cause* of anything. It's a term used to describe a pattern of behavior for which the cause(s) are largely not agreed upon.

  • @nina1528

    @nina1528

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BluishNomad yes I do. early childhood trauma plus social conditioning plus physical ill health

  • @rand0mroll77
    @rand0mroll778 ай бұрын

    I have no childhood trauma and I have extreme adhd. Its highly genetic and I see patterns of it all over my family. Because I am self employed, have no structure in my life, and am slightly obsessed with the internet it effects me more than them. Its an issue with dopamine dysregulation, maybe trauma can make it worse but it definitely doesn’t cause it. Trauma can cause borderline personality disorder which has some symptom overlap with adhd but it also has a genetic component. Lots of studies that show stimulant medication helps almost immediately in 85% of ADHD patients. It doesnt come without side effects but those can be regulated & fine tuned with different formulations & other supplements

  • @shanastanek432

    @shanastanek432

    7 ай бұрын

    Trauma can cause PTSD and depression, which is oftentimes misdiagnosed as ADHD.

  • @WMBCS

    @WMBCS

    6 ай бұрын

    Same here no trauma

  • @imen8254

    @imen8254

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@WMBCS But they say you can inherebt your mother's traumas that she herself inherited from her mother,they call generational trauma,plus you can experience trauma when you're in your mothers' womb ,and brain can erase a harsh experience from your memory and you'll think you have never experienced it..

  • @Maowdig

    @Maowdig

    Ай бұрын

    @@imen8254 That is some stupid statements!

  • @Elena-ty5xg

    @Elena-ty5xg

    Ай бұрын

    @@Maowdiggenerational trauma has been proven, look it up.. You say “no trauma”, but everyone has some. Your childhood was no unicorns and butterfly’s trust me. You might remember it that way, but for sure there were bad moments and days.

  • @terryleederrick1927
    @terryleederrick192711 ай бұрын

    He is so right on. I know from my own life experience. Drugs alone won't solve trauma. Trauma must be uncoved, felt, grieved and create meaningful understanding. The truth can set one free.

  • @ohmazome

    @ohmazome

    7 ай бұрын

    Can't argue with that per se. But some "doctors" refuse to provide life saving medication regardless of the fact that people have came to terms with and have understood their trauma intricately for decades. And to withhold an easily available treatment to a desperate dying soul with a neurological disorder is a crime against humanity.

  • @veganrican606

    @veganrican606

    5 ай бұрын

    ADHD is not trauma, it's neurological.

  • @Stoitism
    @Stoitism Жыл бұрын

    Diagnosed with ADHD last year at 41. Its funny because I was doing everything Gabor says to do to correct it before I even knew what ADHD was. My lifestyle was 95% coping mechanisms for something I didn't know I needed coping mechanisms for. The only thing I had never done was Therapy, which I begun last month. And its helping. I also use the medication but I only take it 4 days a week with a 3 day break at the weekends. I'm hypersensitive and a partial responder to the medication so it doesn't even help me that much in terms of focus, internal hyperactivity and distractibility but it does help my executive dysfunction a bit which is my worst ADHD trait. I would like to come off the medication completely one day but for now i'm finding it has some utility while I find my way.

  • @No-nl8jn

    @No-nl8jn

    Жыл бұрын

    Try microdosing psilocybin

  • @Stoitism

    @Stoitism

    Жыл бұрын

    @@No-nl8jn Doesn't work as well as stimulants for executive dysfunction. I have extensive experience with microdosing psychedelics.

  • @ariesred777

    @ariesred777

    Жыл бұрын

    there are very good books on the highly sensitive person try deep breathing when you get anxious and meditation to lower blood pressure and help calm you down in order to grasp your environment without panic

  • @Stoitism

    @Stoitism

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ariesred777 Hi. I've been practicing meditation for 21 years. I have had problems with anxiety, never with panic.

  • @ariesred777

    @ariesred777

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Stoitism It is a general suggestion I hope the meditation has helped you

  • @joycependleton4117
    @joycependleton4117 Жыл бұрын

    1. You're not doing any of your friends any good by suggesting that ADHD means broken! That's insulting and sad. We're not broken, we're different. The term is NEURODIVERGENT, and we work hard to adapt to neurotypical formats. 2. No, there's no proof that anything can "heal" ADHD because it's not a temporary illness, it is a condition of how our brains are wired. 3. Maybe one of the reasons we feel more stress is because we are structured more like square pegs and society wants us to fit into round holes! 4. ADHD is not an accurate label. Most of us don't have a deficit of attention we have an abundance of attention and it is harder to filter things out. 5. Please don't limit your focus or interviews with one person who disagrees with the inherited factor or choose only those who support your limited preconceived notions. Look up Jessica McCabe's TedTalk. 5. ADHD has a large spectrum! Think of any neurodivergent spectrum as a pie shape not a line. There are many, many, overlapping factors with as well. 6. Best wishes for learning about the vastness of neurodivergent people and someday supporting the understanding rather than where you currently sit.

  • @lauradegregorio5005

    @lauradegregorio5005

    Жыл бұрын

    You don't want to live with cancer, Think of long Term medication, medication damages alot in the body

  • @lisasommerlad1337

    @lisasommerlad1337

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lauradegregorio5005 you missed the point of the op. Please read it again, slowly.

  • @Savingdea

    @Savingdea

    Жыл бұрын

    Number four 👌

  • @coachedbyjt903

    @coachedbyjt903

    Жыл бұрын

    Or check out russell barkley

  • @saeedneuro

    @saeedneuro

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your post! Please could you expand on number 4

  • @brainsandmountains
    @brainsandmountains11 ай бұрын

    gotta say this is the most pathologizing explanation of ADHD I've heard to date and ignores entire bodies of research better explaining the phenomena discussed (like the increases in diagnoses, the overlap or misdiagnosis of ADHD and trauma, the problems that arise from "complex trauma" not yet being a legitimized diagnosis, and why kids in lower SES households are more likely to present having ADHD). ADHD is a pervasive wiring that isn't just tuning out or avoiding uncomfortable realities or reacting to stress. Parenting interventions ARE super important and in general helping adults respond positively to kids who do have ADHD (or other adults), but if it's actually ADHD, changing these things do not fix the adhd - if it's actually the correct diagnosis, then ADHD will be present for the person's whole life, though some symptoms naturally resolve or are lessened with age. I totally agree with that the environmental and behavioral parts of ADHD treatment are just as if not more important than medication depending on the severity, but this "origin story" for ADHD is rather discouraging. ADHD and wiring from complex traumatic experiences are different (though they do impact each other). You don't "heal" from ADHD - you definitely do "heal" from trauma. By using that language, it suggests that ADHD is some kind of wound - there are many joyful parts of ADHD and it isn't something to fix but something to manage and learn how to work with, like a powerful horse. There are other explanations out there folks that aren't quite so pathologizing and don't center on intergenerational trauma or the necessity of "healing" ADHD. Healing trauma? yes. "Healing" ADHD? nope.

  • @DEEJAYNH10

    @DEEJAYNH10

    Ай бұрын

    Scienctific - changes ALL the time from left to right . Do't put yourself in a box cuz "science" said so .Everything is a "theory" . I had identity disorder that then developped to sexuality disorder and have heard all these lies about "born with it" that some still push , it's wrong . I think people should take the lesson from the triangle of food and SO MANY labled "scientific facts" . Don't push yourself into the wall , you never know if it can be healed or not , no doctor or an scientific should make you think they know facts , cuz that's a lie . They know just based on the tools they have , and let us not add the fact of agenda that get pushed in a lot of the research field .

  • @loganjernigan

    @loganjernigan

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you. I completely agree! Some valid points were made throughout, but overall I was left disappointed. And, especially with his stance on the matter, there seems to be an avoidance to an even larger issue at hand. And that is that we live in a broken system that is invoking unnecessary stress. But considering he and so many others have benefited substantially off of this system, it's probably best that he not bite the hand that feeds him so to speak.

  • @LATSRN
    @LATSRN7 ай бұрын

    I’m one of four children all with issues from childhood bereavement’s but this clip has really made me understand my child self & why I always felt I didn’t fit in. Insight is amazing!

  • @devplace8375
    @devplace8375 Жыл бұрын

    This was almost healing to hear as someone diagnosed in their 20s- thank you for this conversation

  • @devplace8375

    @devplace8375

    Жыл бұрын

    @ROBERT MICHAEL you had to ruin it

  • @mandolinistry3207

    @mandolinistry3207

    Жыл бұрын

    Mate is a crank who lied about his credentials and pushes long debunked nonsense theories.

  • @BaiMengLing
    @BaiMengLing6 ай бұрын

    My partner was diagnosed with ADHD as an adult, I have some similar symptoms though an ASD diagnose and was certainly the "dreamy girl that tunes out in the background", our toddler started exhibit ADHD symptoms early and I chose to get educational help as well as psychological support for us, parents, because my partner needed help to understand our sensitive boy, and I had to work on my childhood PTSD. Our boy healed quickly and his behovior returned to normal, despite his "genes" and without medication. So I have experienced what Gabor MAte describes in this clip. THANK YOU doc ;)

  • @samink.8686

    @samink.8686

    6 ай бұрын

    Could you elaborate on how you achieved that please?..

  • @feliciamcconnell7335
    @feliciamcconnell733510 ай бұрын

    Great conversation! Packed full of nuggets and insight that has helped me! I am a retired housekeeper turned somewhat caregiver to seniors and young families struggling with ADHD, early onset dementia and mild depression. I will get the book mentioned here! Thank you✌🏾

  • @IamNoodly
    @IamNoodly Жыл бұрын

    We're not broken, we're born in to a world that is broken. There are brain differences that have clearly been shown in neuroimaging research. We're not coping with the systems and structures in place because there is no value in these differences. 'Success' and respect is only earned through greed, wealth, capital and 'production'/'productivity.

  • @MsChurromaiz

    @MsChurromaiz

    9 ай бұрын

    Glad someone said this!!🎉

  • @AishaMamoa

    @AishaMamoa

    8 ай бұрын

    🙌🏻

  • @doctorjonathanyoniajzner6779
    @doctorjonathanyoniajzner677911 ай бұрын

    I'm a fan of Gabor and I think his efforts to bring the role of trauma to the forefront and to remind adults about important considerations when raising children, is excellent. I think he misconstrues the gaps in our understanding of ADHD causes and he over reaches when drawing conclusions. Yes he has ADHD. Yes his traumatic early years had a lifelong impact on him. His evidence to link the two, in him and others is shaky He should keep up his good work, even though he gets it not quite right on the adhd topic

  • @subschnee4573

    @subschnee4573

    8 ай бұрын

    And yes...there is a group of genes that it interlinked with ADHD, BPD and ASS. It's just not clear to what effect and why but it's there. You'll find seriuos studies with one search attempt, He's no expert on this and simplifying near to painting a romantic picture of it.

  • @DanniBby

    @DanniBby

    8 ай бұрын

    What are the gaps missing where you’re saying he’s not correct?

  • @christianekrogh3265

    @christianekrogh3265

    8 ай бұрын

    @@DanniBby As I understand it, foremost it is not a 'mental illness' but rather a biochemical imbalance in the brain caused by the receptors who are supposed to receive dopamine, serotonin and nor-adrenalin does not fully receive...I heard it describes as a car (this case the mentioned neuro transmitters) who drives in to a carport only to have the door stop midway, so only some of the neurotransmitters 'hit home'. So it is not that the body lacks the ability to produce the neurotransmitters, but the receptors are somewhat blocked...and this of course has a huge impact on executive brain functions etc. I hope a neuroscientist or someone with up to date research reads this and correct me, if I am wrong (but I also find that Mr. Mate goes over a very complex matter too smooth)

  • @dallimamma

    @dallimamma

    8 ай бұрын

    @@DanniBby::: We are all being poisoned by what we consume - air, food, water, and especially, what is injected directly into our bloodstream. The epigenetic pressure is mounting, sensitive or not.

  • @kellyalsaleh3032

    @kellyalsaleh3032

    8 ай бұрын

    I totally agree with you. I personally have CPTSD (from childhood trauma) and ADHD-C (ADHD and Autism are common in my family). I see the two as distinct conditions. Of course they affect each other (the same as any co-morbidity) because they both exist in my body. I find Gabor's insights into trauma very useful but I prefer Dr Russel Barkley for a better understanding of ADHD (Barkley's information is more scientific and sobering.... no fluffy sound bites, just robust research findings).

  • @SlipMahoneyBowery
    @SlipMahoneyBowery8 ай бұрын

    I’m 65 and have had ADHD (as described) my whole life. We used to call it scatter brained. It made certain things more difficult but at the same time I can excel at some things. I think my brain was always looking for anything that would give me a Dopamine rush. You can’t focus because your brain is saying it wants more Dopamine than you feel right now. Anyone that is scatter brained knows how incredibly difficult it is to listen to a person when they are talking directly to you. But it’s common and doesn’t make people diseased, just different. I sometimes wonder if modern Psychology is getting too aggressive on labeling or categorizing behavior types. Especially if they are saying that 10 % of the people have it. Imagine if ten percent of people had ANY other disorder, syndrome or disease of any kind. It would be horrific right. That tells me that someone went too far in categorizing ADHD as not normal. Trust me my “ADHD” has allowed me to do things other “normal “ people can’t. People are different. Yes if you are Dopamine starved it’s a wild ride for sure. Don’t give people a new syndrome as an excuse for irresponsibility. But it sure sells a lot of meds.

  • @mundomagico7787

    @mundomagico7787

    8 ай бұрын

    I see people giving people an life line of reasons why they are the way hey are and people live in that narrative if it suits them. A blessing and a curse.

  • @amberhorrox

    @amberhorrox

    8 ай бұрын

    10% of us are living with endometriosis and 12% are living with migraine disease. Both illnesses are becoming increasingly debilitating and disabling. Over a 1/3 to 1/2 of us are living with chronic illness of some kind. Cancer is 1 in 2. As a society we are becoming more sick and unwell. At the same time we are under more stress and pressure in all areas of our lives than ever before. To me, it’s all bringing us back to the fact we are human beings, here to live a human experience. But instead we are trying to keep up with the demands of modern day living and technology. All of which are illusions of our own creation. Imagine what else we can create? As someone who is living proof of it, I believe health is one of the things we can now go on to create.

  • @SlipMahoneyBowery

    @SlipMahoneyBowery

    8 ай бұрын

    @@amberhorrox but there’s no money to be made with cures. But there is with making up diseases. My sister lived with terrible migraines for years. It was awful. I feel bad for you. She found out she was depressed, got treatment and her migraines stopped.

  • @amberhorrox

    @amberhorrox

    8 ай бұрын

    @@SlipMahoneyBowery your bang on there. I do believe illness and disease in the majority (if not all) is man made, in that we have created it. But I do also believe we have the power to move away from it and create wellness

  • @janetcross5211

    @janetcross5211

    8 ай бұрын

    Interesting Our thinking creates … chemistry and it is through this chemistry we record understanding through our senses and eventually into memories etc. in effect we are all chemical factories. Our “chemistry set”feeds the all the systems of the body and wellbeing… or not. Hence we are to be careful what we put into our systems for they are vulnerable to toxic thinking and chemicals… We think fear into reality and then make ourselves triggerable… by our own thinking or others … and we all know we are auto-suggestive. All this is said to set a scene… what we create, we can dis-assemble … I mention this as the subject matter touched on dopamine and this “high” introduces our predisposition to addiction. Dismantling the chemistry involved in addiction is the process of cracking the driver which is holding us ransom. Mindfulness beats medicine as we can create our own well-being and with it self-confidence in our ability to assert self-control. Not something promoted much these days in the world of consumerism. But it can be done and our over-wrought senses can be gently recalibrated if we are kind and patient with ourselves as we gently explore reversing things. No easy when the message of this era has become convenience… which comes at a price. And the world’s addiction appears to be speed … and still pushing for ever faster … so the answer?? … is to slow down Many cultures have positive modelling for wellbeing based on how we think and behave towards our mind/body/spirit… for good reason.

  • @alicehatzoglou5683
    @alicehatzoglou56838 ай бұрын

    This interview helped me so much to understand better the right way to handle stress and medication. Thank you very much!

  • @nancyadjmi7148
    @nancyadjmi71485 ай бұрын

    I’ve been saying this for years! I was told I had adhd and knew intuitively after practicing deep long periods of meditation 20 years ago, my mind became clear and organized when residing in stillness. It’s like a layer of anxiety and a head filled with noise talking fast. I know it’s a direct result from the childhood trauma I endured . It’s like removing all the negative conditioning to see your beauty. I went to college right after in 2016 that could not keep up w my meditation practice and it’s back all the thoughts felt scattered and have issue w moving forward expressing my gifts feeling blocked. The only way back is doing deep inner work.

  • @zasta7

    @zasta7

    26 күн бұрын

    Hi, how long did it take you to become almost as effective as a normal person in day to day tasks after meditating?

  • @meganann3876
    @meganann3876 Жыл бұрын

    I think Gabor Mate needs to do more research on the genetic makeup and mutations found in those with ADHD. Multiple studies have shown evidence.

  • @Scoobysue1977

    @Scoobysue1977

    Жыл бұрын

    Completely agree! I'm so glad to read your comment. Gabor Mate has no evidence to back his claims. Whereas there is an ever-growing body of peer reviewed evidence that disproves him!

  • @tonjen3234

    @tonjen3234

    Жыл бұрын

    He actually says that ADHD is a brain adaptation to an stressful environment in early brain development which it can originate as early as in the womb if I recall correctly. I suppose the right question here could perhaps be "what came first? The chicken or the egg?" meaning: What came first? The genetic adaptation or the stressful conditions? I've personally met Gabor Maté few years ago and watched him in action dealing with someone who needed help and so I can tell you a couple of things about this phenomenal individual. For one, what you see is what you get. He is the same off camera. Selfless and compassionate. Secondly, he is so highly attuned to people and instantly pick up on who needs the most help out of a crowd of people. And last, he knows how to attend to them. I would highly recommend reading up on his work before before making any sort of judgment on it. His research has changed my life as well as my ability to better understand not just myself but my children as well. I'm a better person, friend, partner, and parent thanks to him.

  • @Scoobysue1977

    @Scoobysue1977

    Жыл бұрын

    @Tonje N I'm glad you have got so much from him. It by no means is an attack on him as a man. Im sure he is caring, compassionate, and charismatic! He has also made good progress in the field of addiction and trauma. However, my comment still stands. I'm a clinical psychologist, so I'm up to date on the peer reviewed literature on the possible origins of ADHD. He has absolutely no evidence (as in peer reviewed published journal papers) to back his theory. Therefore, it becomes his opinion only. Ps, just for the record, my comment was based on reading his material.

  • @lvr5266

    @lvr5266

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Scoobysue1977 So, by now, in 2023, i may hope it is well known carrying certain genes does not mean they will surely come to expression. We are walking epigenetic control cabinets. Mutations occur during life, not death; gee, i wonder why. Also your "I'm a clinical psychologist, so I'm up to date on the peer reviewed literature on the possible origins of ADHD" gave me a good laugh, thank you for that.

  • @Scoobysue1977

    @Scoobysue1977

    Жыл бұрын

    @L v R you're welcome I'm glad it gave you a good laugh. It's good for the soul, especially in these times 😃 i did not mean to mention my profession in a condescending way, but you seemed to have taken it that way which was not my intention, it was to illustrate that I wasn't pulling ideas out of thin air. So, what are your thoughts on the origins then? I'm genuinely interested since my comment prompted you to call me out.

  • @melberlin89
    @melberlin89 Жыл бұрын

    I have ADHD and I am NOT broken!

  • @susannalarsson1525

    @susannalarsson1525

    Жыл бұрын

    So glad to hear you say that. This video made me really angry. I was diagnosed a couple of years ago, and having access to ADHD meds and an ADHD coach has absolutely changed my life. I had to have a heart-breaking conversation with a woman I work with whose child has just been diagnosed with ADHD. She has really fought for him to be treated better at school and to get an assessment on the NHS and I've been talking to her a lot as she knows I have ADHD as well. She came to me nearly in tears one day and told me that she had been watching Gabor Mate talking about ADHD, and she was now worried that she had done something to her son to cause him severe trauma, and that's why he has ADHD. Awful. I felt so bad for her.

  • @melberlin89

    @melberlin89

    Жыл бұрын

    @@susannalarsson1525 Exactly this. It's extremely damaging rhetoric that's not founded in any reliable research.

  • @dancole2994

    @dancole2994

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed. But I'm glad he said that because that's a perspective many people have, so they are more likely to listen to this whole clip. If it started as 'we are going to explain why ADHD is real.. or why ADHD doesn't mean you're broken..', people might draw assumptions and double down on their preconceived notions, deciding that everything about to be said is stupid, and then conclude it's not worth hearing.

  • @noeliajaime7656

    @noeliajaime7656

    10 ай бұрын

    Same.

  • @mr.d7689

    @mr.d7689

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@melberlin89his team did research on 65k children and noticed the common denominators were 'stressful environments' that doesn't immediately mean bad parenting

  • @queenj.8i895
    @queenj.8i89511 ай бұрын

    Amazing! I love how ADHD & PTSD are being studied so much more now. Wish it had been much sooner, but at least it’s happening now! 🙏🏽🙏🏽 God bless! 🦋

  • @Ingifiorini
    @Ingifiorini7 ай бұрын

    I can’t agree more! Thank you so much for this beautiful explanation.

  • @angelfreedom911
    @angelfreedom911 Жыл бұрын

    I hereditated a neurodegenerative disease from my dad, I also developed refractory celiac disease and IBS. In my childhood I have seen my brother struggling with epilepsy and my mom with Chron s disease. These emotions are still haunting me and the physical pain that I have suffered with my intestine, killed my balance. For me zooming out were: hyperactivity, compulsion, addiction and self doubt.

  • @SunnyGirlFlorida

    @SunnyGirlFlorida

    Жыл бұрын

    If you haven't already, you might try daily meditation to bring your body back into homeostasis.

  • @elvisbz

    @elvisbz

    11 ай бұрын

    You can try the carnivore diet and maybe your IBS will heal, there are a lot of testimonies of people who got cured.

  • @soulTraveller144

    @soulTraveller144

    6 ай бұрын

    Have you tried a juice feast?

  • @anjalinsybil6929
    @anjalinsybil6929 Жыл бұрын

    Some children are also naturally been very sensitive to their environment and pick up stress more easily. Also the school environment can be stressful with its competitive nature & lack of creativity.

  • @ariesred777

    @ariesred777

    Жыл бұрын

    and the increasing amount of unnecessary vaccines!

  • @queengoblin

    @queengoblin

    Жыл бұрын

    Public school kills the child. Homeschool or send your kids to Steiner and Montessori schools.

  • @rosyapplekitchen635

    @rosyapplekitchen635

    11 ай бұрын

    He says ‘the genes don’t determine, they make you more sensitive to the environment…the more you feel the stress of the environment’

  • @jacobroberts411

    @jacobroberts411

    2 ай бұрын

    Yeah, are you repeating what he said or did you not watch the video?

  • @anjalinsybil6929

    @anjalinsybil6929

    2 ай бұрын

    @@jacobroberts411I’m adding my experience as a parent if you didn’t understand my comment.

  • @tintinlavigne5257
    @tintinlavigne52578 ай бұрын

    Somebody once said " when you have a hammer in the hand, you begin to look at your environment as some nails to pin." Dr Mate make a big work on child trauma, then every problems look like related to child trauma. Same bias when you begin to look through the acknowledgement of ADD symptoms.

  • @edithwakeley6340
    @edithwakeley634010 ай бұрын

    Eye opening. The most helpful thing I have EVER heard about ADHD! Thank you!

  • @RitaaLeci
    @RitaaLeci Жыл бұрын

    Having ADHD does NOT mean you're broken. We're neurodivergent. We KNOW that neurodiversity exists, some brains exhibit similar structures/neural patterns which can be categorised broadly into a label such as autism or ADHD. This means ADHD expresses itself differently and affects everyone who has it differently. Some people have low support needs and others have very high support needs, for example, their mental health might be severely affected by ADHD and they need to constantly manage it. I suggest you look up the stats on people with ADHD who attempt suicide and suffer severely with their mental health before you make sweeping statements which are really NOT helping us with ADHD AT ALL.

  • @lisasommerlad1337

    @lisasommerlad1337

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @mouwersor

    @mouwersor

    Жыл бұрын

    What does the specific label matter? You're just trying to dodge the associations attached to them without any actual difference between the terms. And he's not at all denying that there are different sorts of structures (or more precise, tendency for structures to form, due to higher 'sensitivity-settings') which could be given some arbitrary label because this happens to quite a lot of people with roughly shared symptoms. The rest of your comment is just you repeating the claims of the current narrative as if they were established facts and not loosely created and held hypotheses. Know how science works. As someone with ADHD I want to prevent the same suffering I have gone through, which is exactly as Gabor Mate's hypothesis, and to do that we need understanding of what causes the negative symptoms.

  • @queengoblin

    @queengoblin

    Жыл бұрын

    ADHD is not neurodiversity it is a stress response. I have both ADHD and ASD. ADHD is curable and ASD is just how my brain works naturally. ADHD is cured by healing trauma and regulating your nervous system. Stop trying to seem special by making yourself out to be neurodiverse.

  • @Scoobysue1977

    @Scoobysue1977

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@queengoblin Utter tripe! Show me one peer reviewed research paper that back your claim?

  • @damianeadie510

    @damianeadie510

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@queengoblin I'd find your comment less objectionable if you'd just started with "I personally believe..."

  • @cherylannebarillartist7453
    @cherylannebarillartist7453 Жыл бұрын

    The “Nurtured Heart approach”, by Howard Glasser is THE best source for this information! He guides families how to respond differently ADHD and ADD diagnosed children. And just in general, a GREAT parenting guide!!!

  • @jmc8076

    @jmc8076

    Жыл бұрын

    No one thing works for all. For me it’s to stay open to many sources incl Dr Mate. I don’t follow. This way I rec’v info from diff views. We all need to find what works best and right for us. I’m glad you did. You may also like quotes by Jiddu Krishnamurti and his books like Happy is the one who is nothing, or The book of life. Peace and health.

  • @artisticafflair408
    @artisticafflair4087 ай бұрын

    He is brilliant. 😮. What a guy. I was diagnosed with ADHD and autism both by different psychologists. My mum even after my diagnostic reports came back positive, refused to believe I had ADHD. When I tried to confront her about my autism, she snubbed me and sniggered and snared and told me to stop giving myself things....😢 . I decided we have nothing in common and we don't see eachother any more.

  • @ghadaeid.BalanceRevival

    @ghadaeid.BalanceRevival

    6 ай бұрын

    I’m sorry to hear that, she seems like a loving mother , that wanted to protect you from labels , I hope you forgive her and talk to her again ❤

  • @ellenbrown579

    @ellenbrown579

    6 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@ghadaeid.BalanceRevivalwow, someone is trying to have boundaries that work for them and you tell them to not listen to themselves and prioritize mom who makes hurtful comments?? A healthy mom would apologize and try to do better

  • @MrHandsomeferny

    @MrHandsomeferny

    6 ай бұрын

    Can I ask how you were diagnosed? And what test did you take? I’m trying to see if I’m autistic because there’s a lot of social cues that I miss

  • @ghadaeid.BalanceRevival

    @ghadaeid.BalanceRevival

    6 ай бұрын

    @@ellenbrown579 putting boundaries is great and it comes hand in hand with forgiveness, love and forgiveness heals ❤️ it’s not either this or that . Ultimately it’s up to her to decide if and when to forgive.

  • @CanadianGirlRevenge

    @CanadianGirlRevenge

    6 ай бұрын

    Snickered *

  • @emmaparker3509
    @emmaparker3509 Жыл бұрын

    This is an amazing talk ..thank you ❤

  • @lanakim2537
    @lanakim25378 ай бұрын

    Sometimes i just think ADHD is looked at as a disease because the world is built around people who function “normally”. I wonder if ADHD was treated simply as another way humans function, and have systems that makes an environment that enhances their performance, all the negative aspects such as trauma, feeling of worthlessness, then all the anxiety and depression that comes with it just might not have to exist. Maybe we’re just built different, not wrong. And maybe society could make rooms and systems that fit our way of functioning. Then maybe we could thrive as healthy, creative individuals.

  • @CherryJuli

    @CherryJuli

    7 ай бұрын

    The anxiety and depression that CAN come with ADHD doesn’t necessarily come from not functioning in society. Most people with the condition do function somewhat well because they’ve learned to live with it.

  • @kurtwinchell

    @kurtwinchell

    7 ай бұрын

    This is the fundamental underpinning of many issues, to be honest. People are highly irregular, or variable, yet society wants to have a single standard of "normal". Any deviation is seen and treated as strictly a problem, and often a moral/character failure, instead of simply naturally occurring variation. It's a wholly unrealistic expectation that's built into the foundation of the culture... that's a serious problem.

  • @nunya5270

    @nunya5270

    7 ай бұрын

    Precisely, it's the same thing when it comes to the concept of time for me. I've tried countless methods and maneuvers to try to be a more timely and time conscious person, yet while I'm occasionally on time for things, in general, I fail miserably and feel so ashamed bc every one always seems so disappointed in me for it. Our society seems to think that people who are chronically late are selfish and inconsiderate of other people's time. However, it's like a blindness to the concept of time for me and it's never been my intention to disrespect anyone else's time. I'm far from a selfish person, I've been perceived more so as a people pleaser than anything else (to which I mostly disagree about anyway), but I'm a truly loving, caring and considerate person. I just don't think this society is built to allow for people like me who just cannot grasp the concept of time like everyone else seems to. I often feel like I've been doing a task for about 5 minutes or so, when it's actually been 15-30+ minutes. It happens constantly. It's miserable feeling attacked by people for something I never intentionally do!!!

  • @keelymatteson5171

    @keelymatteson5171

    7 ай бұрын

    I also have wondered if we were born during a time with tough work on a farm years ago if that would have been thought of as a society positive.

  • @1308Scrabble

    @1308Scrabble

    7 ай бұрын

    Absolutely 👏

  • @debbykohler7111
    @debbykohler711110 ай бұрын

    I have ADHD and a lot of what he said I agree with. Medication does help but for me I used meditation and counseling and systems that keep me on track. I would say what I have found is medication alone isn’t enough you need to bring in other modalities to help you figure out what you can do to manage it. My opinion is it’s not a disease but a different way of thinking and all of us have challenges of different types mine just happens to be ADHD it’s ok. That’s what makes me extra unique.

  • @Sez.the.shortone.
    @Sez.the.shortone.2 ай бұрын

    Diagnosed at 32. Always knew something was different about me and struggled to relate and had a lot of depression. it was so validating to me to know im not alone and not just lazy and depressed

  • @phykex8093

    @phykex8093

    Ай бұрын

    28 here, just got diagnosed 2 weeks ago. Haven't started on any meds yet.

  • @josephpa05

    @josephpa05

    Ай бұрын

    @@phykex8093you should start as soon as possible. Its life changing

  • @desmondfransen5588
    @desmondfransen55888 ай бұрын

    It’s really true. I feel so much better and do so much better since I am gone out of my stressed parents home.

  • @crocoall3699
    @crocoall36993 ай бұрын

    Gabor mate is such a game changer Blessed to have him everywhere now Amazing entreview!!

  • @andyvandercoy6049
    @andyvandercoy6049 Жыл бұрын

    I always have to tell others, I don't take ADHD medication everyday because I don't require the focused push, but some days I do. The variability in not taking the medication helps me to to focus on building skillsets, to learn from how I was able to find ways to accomplish tasks I otherwise thought was impossible while on medication. While its so much more difficult without, I do believe I can complete more without medication because of how I take my medication. To each their own and communicate with your Doctor, but I also focus on improving my health, get into nature and keeps a more routine life, and keep working to improve sleep (VITAL). My ADHD I believe is family related and not all nurture, however I have had several Trauma and losses that I believe exacerbated the sensitivity I already possessed as a child. I still believe it is more genetic, but the environment has been worse (stress and trauma, poverty, increasing wealth gap, etc.) and detection has improved so hence more diagnoses. I also believe it's just a divergent characteristic in humans anyway as we are finding more across a spectrum with diagnosable traits and symptoms.

  • @kellyalsaleh3032
    @kellyalsaleh30328 ай бұрын

    Gabor Mate has useful insights on trauma but I think he is making quite sweeping assertions regarding ADHD and overlooks what we have learned about it from longitudinal studies and research. As regards ADHD, I'm afraid I'm with the science. Also, ADHD medications don't claim to cure ADHD, just manage some of the symptoms on a day-to-day basis. Occupational therapy is also needed alongside to manage executive functions.

  • @Akissi1982
    @Akissi19829 күн бұрын

    I very much enjoyed this episode, as this is what I have been doing with my daughter making sure she exercises, eats well etc… Gratitude to you Dr Gabor Mate✨🙏🏾

  • @jamesconnors5653
    @jamesconnors56538 ай бұрын

    Have ADHD. Not broken, simply more aware than most about what occurs around me. I can divide my focus. My teachers never let me see a downside to it, they just gave me more to do.

  • @Skoopyghost

    @Skoopyghost

    8 ай бұрын

    Dyslexia, and ADHD, but a ASD diagnosis. It's all bullcrap. Science to be honest. It's not even testable.

  • @imanuel4533
    @imanuel45338 ай бұрын

    The interview is life changing! It helps me make sense of some symptoms that I have struggled with for decades! It makes perfect sense that they are not so much symptoms but responses. I thought i would need medication for life to manage these symptoms and i hated the thought. I now have a hope that I did not have before this. I am grateful for both the interviewer and the interviewee for changing my life 🎯🏆🙏🏾👍🏾

  • @kianmokhtary3539
    @kianmokhtary35397 ай бұрын

    Just listening to the back catalogue 2020 of SB CEO now I have these youtube clips. Really enjoying the content. Great team behind this. I was diagnosed with ADHD at 39yrs old, I have to laugh though! Reading Johan Harri book about medication i feel meds help but then environmental factors massively play their part. Again Steve love the content thank you to you and the team 😊

  • @simonaescobar5540
    @simonaescobar55408 ай бұрын

    Let's talk about the breakdown of families and being a part of community a and/or village for a collection of support so that it's not just all on the parents. The more individualistic and isolated the more pressure there is on the individual. As a family with multiple ADHD brains, I don't believe we are broken, but I do believe that it's harder for us to find a place and acceptance in our differences in the way that Society is structured right now, especially in City living. I think our expectations of one another have change, I think we have less Grace for uniqueness and when we have the privilege of being a part of community we can press into one another strength. This is understood in business but not really Community or families. We're all just kind of expected to function as a perfect individual whole without acknowledging a need for one another. ADHD brains have strengths to offer, but more often than not the way that our society has been restructured, there's less opportunity to utilize those strengths and more focus on the weaknesses. Everybody has two sides of the coin. Everybody has strengths and weaknesses. What are we willing to notice and give attention to? That boy in the class whose fidgety probably just needs to be in a better environment that utilizes his energy and creativity and strengths!

  • @bgi384

    @bgi384

    8 ай бұрын

    One of the most sensible posts I have read in a long time. It's true that city living makes family life more isolated and forget about extended families. The pressure is mostly borne by the parents

  • @dallimamma

    @dallimamma

    8 ай бұрын

    ::: If possible, plant a community garden. The one crucial issue not mentioned, is that our diet is whacked out, and, we are what we eat.

  • @barbro6525
    @barbro6525 Жыл бұрын

    I was diagnosed with ADHD as an adult 6 years ago, and both my kids have it as well. My parents had traumas from their childhood, and passed it on to me, leading to me taking my traumas into my parenting. In the last couple of years I have done a lot of inner work, and I totally agree with Gabor Maté. We need to see that the diagnosis is not the cause of the symptoms, but that the traumas we endured caused us to have these symptoms. We still have ADHD, with all its negative and positive sides, but this way of looking at it makes a huge difference in how we look at our selves and how we can manage life.

  • @ariesred777

    @ariesred777

    Жыл бұрын

    Meditation helps

  • @mandolinistry3207

    @mandolinistry3207

    Жыл бұрын

    Mate is completely wrong though. ADHD is genetic. It is not caused by trauma. His theories have been proven wrong and completely discarded by actual ADHD specialists for good reason. Mate is a fraud. He lies about his credentials. He has zero background in neurology, his specialization was in general medicine and pediatrics.

  • @barbro6525

    @barbro6525

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mandolinistry3207 do you have any documentation on these statements to back it up? I'm just curious 😊 Some hundred years ago it was believed that oar releasing was the cure for a number of illnesses. They even found evidence for it. Thankfully they changed view point around 1900...

  • @xO_oxDK

    @xO_oxDK

    Жыл бұрын

    Does thinking like this still help every day all day? Gabor Mate is oversimplifying ADHD... All models, methods and reliefs, work 75%, 50% of the time when it comes to ADHD. Ironically, when it comes to not passing it on and being rational about good parenting, I'm at my best after the kids are lying in bed, and I'm 5 minutes away from sleeping myself.....

  • @martincoronado9232

    @martincoronado9232

    11 ай бұрын

    I have to see a psychiatrist, and I do think that I might have ADHD. I’ve seen videos, and I’ve seen what they have gone through meaning, the people that are making the videos some thing I finally realized is not to fight against ADHD, but know how to use it to your advantage. One of the things that I’ve heard the people with this disorder is that they work so hard and get fail. Now I’m looking at those things and realizing I’m not going to fight against it, but know how to use it.

  • @gracehall9199
    @gracehall91997 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the information❤

  • @JesseRobson-dk5cy
    @JesseRobson-dk5cy7 ай бұрын

    I suffered severe anxiety and mental disorder for over 24 years. It's just amazing how psilocybin mushrooms treatment actually saved my life. 6 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.

  • @RubenDuate

    @RubenDuate

    7 ай бұрын

    they saved you from death bud, lets be honest here. and mushrooms are one of the most amazing things on this planet i wish people would all realize.

  • @darlingtonegeonu1110

    @darlingtonegeonu1110

    7 ай бұрын

    I've been looking to try shrooms, it's just very difficult to get a reliable source here in Orlando. Really need!

  • @Tarik-if9zc

    @Tarik-if9zc

    7 ай бұрын

    @@darlingtonegeonu1110 florida? just go outside after it rains lol

  • @mahoganyshanae6116

    @mahoganyshanae6116

    2 ай бұрын

    Do I think that mushrooms will help my son it's be a wild ride with him!

  • @TrippyKitty08
    @TrippyKitty088 ай бұрын

    I was "diagnosed" with adhd in 1999 when i was 6 and my parents were divorcing and fighting all the time. Then my mom left me with my drug addicted father for a year (first grade). And they wondered why i couldn't focus on useless school crap? I was on survival mode. My mother was prideful and wouldn't allow me to be medicated but i wasn't helped either. I'd often be berated about how i was such an awful student. Even as an adult out of school she'd love to tell people about how i was the worst student ever🙄🙄🙄for the record i wasn't. I'm an artist.

  • @brigittahoffmann9283
    @brigittahoffmann928311 ай бұрын

    The numbers are increasing in diagnosis because first of all worldwide more and more people start to understand what this disorder is, more of us are identifying it as present under a form or other in our lives affecting us and impacting our mental health.

  • @ThatADHDKid

    @ThatADHDKid

    11 ай бұрын

    Exactly this is essentially gobbledygook. The only reason diagnosis are going up is because we let so many people down. Even older generations, they have it in their brains that they are okay. Many of the older people learn to cope because they had no knowledge and no tools available to them to help them with the struggles they have. It wasn't until recently we started understanding how much complexity there is with this developmental disorder. Those of us who actually have it can attest as life with ADHD is not fun. It's not about getting freaking stimulant medication. Stimulate medication makes me chill, it allows my brain 8 hours or so a day to actually focus instead of running through endless loops of random shit. This stuff may work for some people but even with mindfulness tools and breathing techniques and behavioral techniques that I've learned throughout the years and CBT. They're tools, none of it is a cure-all and people can come on and off medication at any time and have different effects because everybody's biochemistry is different. But labeling it as there's no such thing that it doesn't exist it's just way overreaching. This dude is literally the "I had ADHD all my life but I managed to struggle through the struggle and pull myself up by the proverbial bootstraps to learn really awful coping mechanisms and to condition myself in a way that doesn't actually change anything about my diagnosis It's just a product of it..." (🫠) They're too old to care to change. And most likely they are so ashamed that they are different that would never dare utter the fact that they were damaged or broken or however they see themselves. You don't have to take stimulant medication if your diagnosed. You just get the tools that actually help instead of really bad coping to mechanisms and twisted way of thanking about it. It's cuz you think you don't have it doesn't mean that it doesn't exist

  • @rafa10perez
    @rafa10perez3 ай бұрын

    I agree with Andrew. The understanding of ADHD has evolved significantly since it was first described in 1798. Over the years, it has become one of the longest-known and extensively studied conditions in neurology. While the field has made substantial progress, ADHD remains a complex and nuanced neurodevelopmental condition, not without controversy. It's important to acknowledge that ADHD is indeed a real and well-documented neurodevelopmental condition, with clear evidence of its impact visible on MRI scans. However, debates persist regarding the most effective approaches to its treatment and management. Dr. Mate's perspective, while valuable in some aspects, may appear inconsistent to some. His emphasis on the role of stress and trauma in young individuals affecting brain development is grounded in scientific literature, highlighting the multifaceted nature of ADHD. However, it's crucial to note that ADHD is a neurodevelopmental condition with a genetic component, and brain development delay is just one facet of its etiology. While Dr. Mate contends that medication cannot "heal" ADHD, it's essential to clarify that medication, such as stimulants or non-stimulants, is a recognized and effective method for managing symptoms, much like medication for other chronic conditions such as diabetes. Medication helps individuals with ADHD lead more functional lives by mitigating the impact of symptoms on daily functioning. In summary, ADHD is a complex and lifelong neurodevelopmental condition, rooted in both genetic and environmental factors. While Dr. Mate's focus on the role of stress and trauma is valid, it's crucial to recognize the multifaceted nature of ADHD and the importance of various treatment modalities, including medication, in managing the condition and improving quality of life.

  • @HattieMae88
    @HattieMae884 ай бұрын

    I really appreciate this convsation! I will definitely be reading the book!

  • @carinaluxford241
    @carinaluxford2418 ай бұрын

    Both ADHD and autism are neurodevelopmental conditions which are with us for life. They are neither mental health disorders, nor diseases. These conditions simply mean our brains are made differently and we look at the world in a different way, which can often be positive. There is also often a genetic link between generations.

  • @nataliaalfonso2662

    @nataliaalfonso2662

    7 ай бұрын

    They are disorders. There is often a generic link to most disorders and diseases. It’s not a communicable disease of course; but autism is a disorder. That’s why it can be helped with things like neurofeedback therapies. And why it’s caused by poisons, toxins, and hormonal imbalances during pregnancy.

  • @nataliaalfonso2662

    @nataliaalfonso2662

    7 ай бұрын

    Remember that in brain scans, an autistic brain is most similar to a psychopaths in the sense that it lacks normal formative neural pruning. That’s why they can’t process empathy. It most certainly is a disorder.

  • @beluga7270

    @beluga7270

    6 ай бұрын

    Shit this guy is explaining like a fool. 😂😂😂 If a person always forget to do simple tasks everytime That is ADHD because their neurotransmitters are weak

  • @carinaluxford241

    @carinaluxford241

    6 ай бұрын

    @@nataliaalfonso2662 If you listen to mental health professionals talk about autism you will hear that it's described as a neurodevelopmental condition. I have seen no evidence that autism has any connection with toxins in pregnancy.

  • @KeepLearing
    @KeepLearing11 ай бұрын

    If I have to write a book or articulate myself, there will be no difference from how he's illustrated on the matter - in this video. He's absolutely spot on. No one can hit the nail on the head harder than this.

  • @philippeleblanc2953

    @philippeleblanc2953

    8 ай бұрын

    I don't get it. He's not saying anything new that you wouldn't find formulated in other's authoritative presentations like Dr. Russel. The stress adaptation can be true but it's also true that it will manifest in the genes thru epigenetics. Those are known to potentially be multigenerational environmental stress induced adaptations. Therefore, ADHD can be genetically acquired. We know that TBI amongst other things can induce ADHD to adults.

  • @-7-7-6
    @-7-7-68 ай бұрын

    Thank you very interesting, exactly what I was looking for

  • @purplephoenix4969
    @purplephoenix49698 ай бұрын

    This makes a lot of sense about the extra sensitivity. Bullying through the years at school with no way to get away from it causes trauma, even if the home environment isn't causing it, especially with the amount of hours a child is at school now. Many spend more waking hours at school than at home.

  • @juliecallensfreelance7326
    @juliecallensfreelance7326 Жыл бұрын

    nature calms the mind, I love that, because I had really been struggling with my adhd, I just went on a surf trip working remotely and I have never felt more at peace. I realise not everyone has the privilege or resources to travel, but such a mindful sport, combined with a peaceful environment were better then any of the medication I ever had.

  • @melaniecascante6177
    @melaniecascante617711 ай бұрын

    Great talk! I love Dr. Mate's work. I started following him for his work on trauma first and now I got diagnosed with ADHD in my 30s. What he says is true. I'd love to take medication to focus better (I struggle A LOT with motivation so my life's been a mess) but I've spent 10 years already working on past trauma with therapy, I definitely think medication will help me achieve my goals of finishing my studies but I'm not planning on dropping journaling, meditating, working out regularly, hiking, setting up alarms and writing everything down and all the stuff I've been doing to manage my ADHD symptoms without knowing before. Thank you! Hearing this made me feel so validated of my decision to take medicine.

  • @oyandakona5994

    @oyandakona5994

    11 ай бұрын

    Warm hugs 🫂❤️

  • @superzjon4308

    @superzjon4308

    4 ай бұрын

    Dude believe me i tried them all your just running away from the real you! Learn to cope with it because you have to eventually, cause the drugs dont work they just make you worse! The real you is a godsend

  • @superzjon4308

    @superzjon4308

    4 ай бұрын

    Dude believe me i tried them all your just running away from the real you! Learn to cope with it because you have to eventually, cause the drugs dont work they just make you worse! The real you is a godsend

  • @HAJSEPI-mc1qs
    @HAJSEPI-mc1qs6 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed the conversation and thank you dr mate , i would like to know more about executive functions of the brain regarding having an Adhd ,

  • @sunnyday8254
    @sunnyday825410 ай бұрын

    Very good topic and guest, thank you! Would be very helpful if there would be subtitled. Thank you!

  • @needlework8921
    @needlework89215 ай бұрын

    I find it very interesting how he said he did take medication for his ADD but now doesn't as his brain chemistry has changed and the medication stopped working. It's the first time I've heard someone speak of this! I was diagnosed with ADD at 16 years old and im now 42. I too have noticed the medication doesn't work as it used to since I had my son 10 years ago and I'm needing to use a lot of other helpful strategies that help my ADD instead of medication. There needs to be more info out there about this.

  • @JohnColorado3811

    @JohnColorado3811

    5 ай бұрын

    I find exercise really helps

  • @randella08

    @randella08

    3 ай бұрын

    Look up pre/post menopause and increase in adhd symptoms.

  • @marcuswalters2290

    @marcuswalters2290

    20 күн бұрын

    I’m a psychotherapist with adhd I was on meds for years they made me worse! Med free and enjoy life far more now

  • @TurquoiseInk
    @TurquoiseInk11 ай бұрын

    I have done a lot of therapy and self-help, meditate, eat well, learn about supplements, did yoga, go out in nature, work out. Now I do all that and take ny ADD meds. I wish I had startes taking them 20-30 years ago.

  • @kirilllosik7054
    @kirilllosik70548 ай бұрын

    thank you for the great content!

  • @derekeboyd
    @derekeboyd11 ай бұрын

    OMG, a nuanced view on ADHD. I didn't think this was possible. Thanks for publishing!

  • @stevenleighton1947

    @stevenleighton1947

    11 ай бұрын

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabor_Mat%C3%A9#Criticism

  • @derekeboyd

    @derekeboyd

    11 ай бұрын

    @@stevenleighton1947 I appreciate this additional perspective, and can see how criticism could be made. I just appreciate that there’s some nuance. My personal experience with ADHD aligns with Dr. Mate’s narrative, however I realize that’s not true for everyone. I wonder if there’s a degree of genetic trauma, or perhaps there were environments in the past where my inability to focus on things I find boring was advantageous, and now that is translated as ADHD. It’s obviously complicated, and often accompanied by other neurodivergent traits, like depression and anxiety, which present a lot of ‘chicken and egg’ scenarios.

  • @TellmewhyIdontlikeMondays

    @TellmewhyIdontlikeMondays

    11 ай бұрын

    It's not nuanced at all. He entirely discounts any other theory of etiology other than childhood trauma. He's totally blinkered.

  • @derekeboyd

    @derekeboyd

    11 ай бұрын

    @@TellmewhyIdontlikeMondays in my experience there are two schools of thought on ADHD. 1. It’s fake 2. If you have it, you were born with it, and you have to be medicated for the rest of your life This idea that people are predisposed and can use medication as needed has a lot more nuance than either of the previous ideas I mentioned. I’m not saying this guy is 100% correct, but neither are the people that tell me I need to be on stimulants for the rest of my life.

  • @alnicholson4344
    @alnicholson4344 Жыл бұрын

    Big fan of Gabor and his work. I was diagnosed a year ago (age 48) and obvious I had issues from age 8. When doing my assessment I could clearly see both my Dad and his Sister had the same focus and inattention issues and struggled completing things due to overwhelm. I've often thought its genetic but interesting to think that the condition isn't genetic but the sensitivity to the environment can be inherited. Although I am currently taking a stimulant medication (2 weeks in) I am still looking at childhood traumas and other kinds of therapy to understand and work through those traumas and hope one day to not need the medicine

  • @krystenme6841

    @krystenme6841

    Жыл бұрын

    It is proven as genetic, the surrounding environment and childhood traumas can enlighten the symptoms

  • @mandolinistry3207

    @mandolinistry3207

    Жыл бұрын

    Mate is a fraud and a grifter who lies about his credentials to push his debunked theories and sell books. ADHD is not caused by trauma. It is genetic.It also can't be reversed despite his nonsense claims. No amount of working through trauma can ever undo ADHD.

  • @dallimamma

    @dallimamma

    8 ай бұрын

    @@krystenme6841::: Look into epigenetics, how our bodies respond and cope with environmental stress, like pollution. We are all being poisoned by what we consume - air, food, water, and what is injected into our bloodstream; where normal filters can’t protect us from harm. We are what we eat.

  • @jillybe1873

    @jillybe1873

    8 ай бұрын

    We aren't v advanced yet on genetics but ADHD and associated conditions seem to "run in families"

  • @dallimamma

    @dallimamma

    8 ай бұрын

    @@jillybe1873 ::: Environmental pressure on our biology may allow epigenetic influences to affect the weakest link, our consciousness, and how our bodies handle those forces. Identifying that MTHFR gene, for example.

  • @sirgregoir
    @sirgregoir8 ай бұрын

    I was diagnosed in the 70's as a Hyperactive child. My mother controlled my behaviour with sugar....NONE. To this day, I continue to restrict sugar in my diet. I cannot drink a soft drink, lollies.....It all tastes tooooooo sweet for me...BONUS MUM...THANK YOU...X I had a traumatic birth, and also suffered a head injury at 18 months of age. I dont think that helped me...lol I have never taken one drug prescribed by doctors. Thank you Mum...xxx Focus, or brain activity is supported by the food you eat, meditation practises, and sleep.

  • @Pitcher902

    @Pitcher902

    7 ай бұрын

    Finally someone who links diet to health issues. Get off of sugar and grains and see if you don't make great strides towards optimal health including brain health.

  • @FallisaSeason
    @FallisaSeason7 күн бұрын

    I was diagnosed with everything under the sun, including ADHD, until I went and had a few sit-down sessions with a psychologist who specializes in complex trauma and PTSD. When I told her I had been diagnosed with ADHD and it was suggested that I start medication, she smiled and said, "Most of my patients, at some time, have been diagnosed with ADHD or BPD. In my experience, what is typically called ADHD , is actually a normal response to complex trauma. What you are experiencing, is a completely normal response to complex trauma." She then went on to explain to me how the DMS5 and diagnosing works and the risks that come with diagnosing a patient with out taking into account their life story. She said, "You are your life experiences coming alive. If I did not take the time to sit down and listen to your journey, I may have said you have ADHD as well." This changed my whole perspective on mental wellness.

  • @srijanasubba3508
    @srijanasubba3508 Жыл бұрын

    I’m so glad I watched this and thankyou for this video… I have a nephew who’s 8 years old and he’s got adhd. Today he got expelled from his school due to his behaviour and this is his third time, he’s changed three schools… he’s very smart and very sensitive and I love him too much. He’s been through a lot, his parents keep fighting in front of him and I feel for him. If he misbehaved or doesn’t study he gets beating from his parents. They don’t have the ability to understand him cause they both are so much stressed with their own problems but even with that they do try sometimes… I being his aunt sometimes feel so helpless to do anything for him and I don’t want to offend them. I just try to do my best to help him calm down. I’m married and the reason I don’t wana have kids is because i want to take care of him but again I feel like for how long can I do that. Is there anything I could do to help him🙏🏻

  • @ingamcgown3371

    @ingamcgown3371

    Жыл бұрын

    Let them listen to this. Can you send it to them??

  • @alena5484
    @alena54847 ай бұрын

    Omg I can’t believe you think people with ADHD or other mental differences are broken. People are different, we’re more aware of it now, and it is beautiful!!

  • @isaacverrall8782
    @isaacverrall87829 ай бұрын

    Resonates , i had a hard childhood due to my mums terrible mental health and my dads harshness and i was an extremely sensitive young boy .. i also suffered from a 10 year drug addiction , im 28 now and clean but by god do i not enjoy life , i am constantly battling myself and i dont think ill ever find peace , i have been diagnosed and decided to not take medication

  • @tentoglou
    @tentoglou7 ай бұрын

    Amazing and very helpful video, thank you

  • @DJOrenstein

    @DJOrenstein

    7 ай бұрын

    Just because media and KZread love this Dr. Please check who he is and his clinical background. He is not a psychologist, psychiatrist or neurologist. He is a general family doctor who claims to be an expert however, he has no peer reviewed clinical publication in ADHD or clinical proof to what he says which is against all known and researched and published approaches to ADHD. He is even inconsistent in his own approach claiming it’s from trauma from his past with no genetic connection, and yet his children have it also. (Does that mean he is admitting to giving his children a similar traumatic upbringing). Pls check scientific facts before listening to this clickbate

  • @carissabarden3681
    @carissabarden36812 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this!❤❤❤

  • @rodroddingson
    @rodroddingson Жыл бұрын

    “Several of the genes were associated with ADHD, including SLC6A3, DBH (609312), DRD4 (126452), DRD5 (126453), and 5HT1B (182131). In studies of individual genes, what appeared to be a consistent pattern of preferential paternal transmission of risk alleles to affected children with ADHD was observed.” I guess Gabor doesn’t have Google 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @wilhelmvg9978

    @wilhelmvg9978

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes the key word here would be “Associated” with ADHD. Meanwhile, this dude is explicitly saying “there is no gene or group of genes that *implicitly guarantee* you have ADHD” which is true. I guess Rod has selective hearing when he wants to make a biased point 🤷‍♂️

  • @SunnyGirlFlorida

    @SunnyGirlFlorida

    Жыл бұрын

    According to ground-breaking biologist Dr Bruce Lipton, you can have a gene that might be related to a particular disease (i.e. cancer gene) but that does not cause the disease. It is correlation but not causation. It is 100% the environment that activates it. As would be the case if a grandmother, mother and daughter all got cancer (same environement). According to him, only 1% of all diseases are actually inherited. Schools are still teaching the old hypothosis that disease is inheritable, even though it has been disproven.

  • @omphemetsechake2839

    @omphemetsechake2839

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wilhelmvg9978 what a counter😊👏👏👏clapping from South Africa...

  • @wilhelmvg9978

    @wilhelmvg9978

    Жыл бұрын

    @@omphemetsechake2839 thank you 😊❤️

  • @natashagrist9412

    @natashagrist9412

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes. There is a huge amount of research showing ADD is largely genetic ie inherited and then ALSO shaped by environmental and family factors. I find it bizarre he doesn't address this scientific research directly. Have been discussing with neuroscience specialist.

  • @kierancook6714
    @kierancook671410 ай бұрын

    I got diagnosed with adhd when I was 16 kicked out of school was never good with education I am only good at things I 100% enjoy learning about also got diagnosed with ptsd my life is a massive struggle there needs to be more help for adults with adhd as it effects your life dramatically I am now 23

  • @MaryWise-cn8mc

    @MaryWise-cn8mc

    8 ай бұрын

    I’ve watched a lot of carnivore lifestyle videos where they describe their mental clarity improved. Removing processed food from my diet at this time, hoping this helps me improve my life. Prayers for you!

  • @alisonforrester4612
    @alisonforrester4612Ай бұрын

    I have ADHD, just diagnosed, I’m 55, I’m not broken. Im a creative and very successful. ADHD is my superpower. But not everyone sees it that way sadly

  • @wishingonastar1220
    @wishingonastar12207 ай бұрын

    i was diagnosed at 8 because i was hyperactivie and couldn’t sit still like how he described most young boys does, at 12 i took medicine but for some reason i stopped taking it as my parents say i felt emotionless. I have memory loss so i don’t remember many things from my childhood. all i can remember is i was an unwanted child around my cirlcle wherever i go. with high school i learned how to mask and could create an environment that i could have friends. still at the end of the day i had a rough childhood. today im trying to find who i was before i learned to mask the little girl i used to be. i’m fighting with high level of anxiety with a professional help.

  • @jackiegrant410
    @jackiegrant4108 ай бұрын

    62 years old, labelled the naughty girl in school and by my mother, insulted because my lack of concentration span on any academic subject wasnt expected as normal. Give me something that i like to do and you cannot break me away from it until satisfied, hence im an artist. Im not into labels, but having done research on ADHD and being able to relate to most of the symptoms has made me feel all of a sudden acceptable in society, so, i wear the label in order to finally be acepted for being me. What if being me is already normal, just was never channeled with the right support and encouragement just because of an old fashioned system.

  • @Altabozz
    @Altabozz8 ай бұрын

    As a teacher in the US I am scared of my working colleagues recommending parents to medicate students that they cannot control. How easy we can change the life of a kid. In my conferences with parents I always speak about what this expert says at the end: good food, take the kid outside more, practice sports…don’t take the easy way so fast.

  • @Chippy88

    @Chippy88

    7 ай бұрын

    I live in NJ I’m the US. I work as a paraprofessional. I am working with the special-needs children. But I can tell you 100% and there are strict with it in my town and all the towns around me. And they really get so anal about it and then you’re scared to say anything. But the teachers are not allowed to say anything even if they think your child is ADHD or autistic or on the spectrum etc. They would get fired, which is ridiculous because certain things I don’t like ADHD or OCD, which I also have a teacher would be the one to notice more. She’s with the kids 10 months out of the year old are you in her classroom. And then the child study comes in maybe once a week but I’m not even sure if they’re allowed to tell the parents it’s very strict here with that. So at the conferences they just saying with the kids doing and all that I am showing what she needs help with. I know when I totally get why a teacher wouldn’t be allowed or want to tell somebody they think their child is autistic or something kind of a serious disease, so where this kid is going to be nonverbal his whole life. A lot of more I have to say living with their parents and I can’t live on their own. Of course some Cana depends on what the diagnosis is. OK bye I’m babbling on 😂

  • @mareezy

    @mareezy

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Chippy88it is very hard to read and understand your comment. Could you fix the grammar? And restructure your sentences so we know what you're talking about. Thank you kindly

  • @Chippy88

    @Chippy88

    7 ай бұрын

    @@mareezy I am sorry you know what I did. I spoke into the phone and I didn’t check it before I sent it. So yes, I will edit it

  • @Chippy88

    @Chippy88

    7 ай бұрын

    @@mareezy I went through some and found a couple of misspelled words or things that did not make sense. That’s why I have to sometimes turn off my talk to text because even my friends want to kill me. And there you go because of my ADHD it’s just easier and quicker to talk into the phone. I don’t check it before I send it most of the time because I don’t want to take the time to look it over. As you know with ADHD, you act before your mind processes what you’re gonna say or do or you just simply ask before you think. So I’ve been writing so much in this, and I actually appreciate you letting me know that. I fix some that I saw, but if you could kindly let me know which ones good use correction that would be great! But I can tell you don’t expect i Reconstructed perfect sentences. Lol not just because I can care less about any of that in school and of course I do know how to have a good grammar etc. when needed. But talking about this and seeing different comments, things I say, are going to be all over the place . Thank you

  • @HG-gj9lh

    @HG-gj9lh

    7 ай бұрын

    Sometimes there are no other options. We’re non GMO, no dyes, no high fructose corn syrup and extremely moderate sugar household. We grow our own vegetables and avoid fast food. My kids do sports and have near endless time outdoors and very little screen time. All of this and one of my kids is still exceptionally difficult to maintain. He absolutely cannot sit still, even as a baby. He struggles to stay on fast for more than 2-3 minutes, he immediately shuts down if he’s told to do anything. For example, He can be excited to take a bubble bath all day and as soon as I tell him to take a bath, it’s immediate expressionless shut down. No moving, no talking, just essentially glaring at you as if to dare you to make him do it. We can work around it at home by phrasing it as a choice, but at school it has been awful. I was getting notes home daily. Always the same thing, he’s bright but won’t do his work, he knows what is expected, but won’t sit in his desk and is constantly distracted and disruptive. He talks constantly and is negatively influencing others to talk during inappropriate times. He is capable of doing his work and does it correctly, but he will only do it if I sit with him and essentially force him to do it. I tried everything I could before resorting to medication, but medicating him has made a huge difference for him. He can focus, he stays on task, he’s less argumentative, he’s no longer disrupting class. Most importantly, he’s happier. He’s less frustrated and more confident in himself because now he’s making good grades and excelling at sports. He discovered a love of reading Bebe can sit still long enough to finish a chapter. I don’t and have never expected perfection, but seeing him struggle less and feel better about himself is worth everything to me.

  • @nato2panama
    @nato2panama6 ай бұрын

    Excellence all around: excellent interviewer, excellent interviewere.

  • @papadwavs
    @papadwavs3 ай бұрын

    Wow!! I’m 62 & full on adhd had an an amazing but frustrating journey / career So thankful I did not watch this 45 years ago Your negative low vibe disturbs me I’m not hearing your words For everyone else find your thing stop overanalysing & kick ass you really can 👍🏻x

  • @shoshanaThrive365

    @shoshanaThrive365

    2 ай бұрын

    I agree with you. I acknowledge what he says but once I had my ovaries removed and this took away dopamine my brain could not do executives functikna for 3 years. I took 1 dos of Dex and my brain was back. So I think he js generalizing way way too much. I have lived the way he speaks of. But loose estrogen!- executibe fx disorder

  • @pujatelicreative
    @pujatelicreative Жыл бұрын

    Diagnosed with ADHD at 35. Waited to see if medication was the route. It hasn't been, and I'm glad and relieved. This was probably the best podcast and approaches for this process and understanding about the route to take in this sphere of ADD/ADHD and trauma that I've heard. Thank you.

  • @vz7742

    @vz7742

    Жыл бұрын

    So what are you saying,how can we help ourself instead of medicine?

  • @Leelanau03

    @Leelanau03

    Жыл бұрын

    medication for ADHD is not the route, you might as well be taking crack. its the same. and the inability to relieve the symptoms of ADHD is the same

  • @pujatelicreative

    @pujatelicreative

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vz7742 Yeah, don't see it as the only avenue. Take your time in understanding what the pros and cons are for you. This is my way of handling what I was diagnosed with. And I don't think the diagnosis alone was all I fit the criteria for. But I decided against looking further.

  • @vz7742

    @vz7742

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pujatelicreative So what do you do,to help yourself ease problems with ADHD. Do you meditate? Im having problems with reading one page,or listening to people talk to me,i cant follow what are they saying :x

  • @pujatelicreative

    @pujatelicreative

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vz7742 I started yoga recently, and am an avid walker. I look after my food ensuring I get my protein in. I ensure I eat first thing. You have to listen to your own body and work out how it works, and not fight it. I read daily. I put on noise cancelling headphones and brown noise so it helps focus. If I struggle reading, I will accept it's not happening. Telling people also matters, because then they are aware at least. Just don't be a victim of it. It's your normal. It helped me decide I am much more suited to project work and makes sense why in my career I always burnt out, and couldn't do a 9-5. Overall, just take the time to understand what works for you.

  • @Hadrian363
    @Hadrian36311 ай бұрын

    I do gym 3 times a week, 5 litres of water a day, and i stick to a protein rich and Mediterranean based diet. Still cant hold a job down or motivate myself, self regulate or control my emotions. I have my assessment finally next month and cannot wait to get on the meds to straighten me out and start making the most of my potential

  • @codyevans6454

    @codyevans6454

    Ай бұрын

    How are you doing?

  • @teslaandhumanity7383
    @teslaandhumanity73838 ай бұрын

    Diagnosed age 55 with ADHD. We’re from another planet 🌎, well our souls personality is . We are gifted , unique. Hyper focus is our superpower, taking risks , we’re good at being self employed. We have lots of pain being sensitive and in tune with others sensitivities.

  • @jeanbrowne456
    @jeanbrowne456 Жыл бұрын

    This man Gabor..has influenced the way I think and move in the world....

  • @myadhdaddictions3313
    @myadhdaddictions3313 Жыл бұрын

    IT'S THE environment you're in and the people around you that makes you a genius or go to prison, I love being happy but when around toxic behavior its worse, everyone thought I was crazy 🤪 I just thought I was naughty and had lots of guts, I got diagnosed in prison age 30 ,I cried my eyes out that finally I felt sort of normal and there was a reason I feel the way I do rather than not knowing, people think I have a personality disorder and maybe more but its what makes me me so sod it ,embrace it enjoy it. While you are on your hi, and sleep it off when on your low , have a great day , sorry for my grammar also dyslexia ffs 😆

  • @ariesred777

    @ariesred777

    Жыл бұрын

    Excellent self help mate good on you!

  • @myadhdaddictions3313

    @myadhdaddictions3313

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ariesred777 I'm still not there yet lol

  • @mattcox87mc
    @mattcox87mc Жыл бұрын

    Wow… this is eye opening, I can relate to everything Gabor has said. I was diagnosed at 32, one of my parents had a very stressful childhood (physical and mental abuse) I witnessed their breakdown as a child. I have inattentive type, this makes sense to me 😮. My children appear to have issues surrounding sensory needs, the sensitivity thing just makes sense… I wonder has anyone else just seen this and can relate like I can? I’m medicated as an adult but I have recently found I’m struggling with the everyday stresses again, the dose goes up but it is just temporary. Surely it would be better for clinicians to focus on treating the route cause rather than numbing the sensitivities with expensive medication that can have awful side effects. Notably no.1 on the list of side effects sudden death and heart problems.

  • @thegameschanged1248

    @thegameschanged1248

    Жыл бұрын

    Get off medication and look up IOPT trauma therapy pioneered by franz Rupert - connect with the body daily and release the trauma

  • @bellakrinkle9381

    @bellakrinkle9381

    Жыл бұрын

    Sudden death and heart attacks for unresolved mental heath issues? Diabetes and obesity for unresolved issues seem to be the result of underyling, core, mental health issues. Quick...more meds! Our Medical System is BROKEN . COVID is telling us this reality!

  • @truerosie

    @truerosie

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem with this very good idea is that clinicians are psychiatrists, and are not trained in much other than pharmacology. They are not trained in healing emotional problems.

  • @mattcox87mc

    @mattcox87mc

    Жыл бұрын

    @@truerosie i completely agree with this. They just throw meds at you and expect the rest to be ok.

  • @mandolinistry3207

    @mandolinistry3207

    Жыл бұрын

    Mate is a fraud though. He lies about his credentials, he never specialized in neurology or mental health. His theories are all garbage and have been repeatedly debunked. He's just a grifter preying on people like us.

  • @Jennifer-bw7ku
    @Jennifer-bw7ku5 ай бұрын

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

  • @elizabethwilliams6651

    @elizabethwilliams6651

    5 ай 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!

  • @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU

    @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU

    5 ай бұрын

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

  • @patriaciasmith3499

    @patriaciasmith3499

    5 ай 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.

  • @elizabethwilliams6651

    @elizabethwilliams6651

    5 ай бұрын

    Is he on instagram?

  • @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU

    @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes he is. dr.sporessss

  • @njg247
    @njg2476 ай бұрын

    This is a very interesting subject. I'm constantly researching this area including neuroscience as my adopted son endured terrific trauma and neglect and the adverse conditions were there even in utero. His response to his environment at such a vital stage of brain development has resulted in him being wired to a fight or flight default. This is a work-in-progress now for us as adoptive parents meaning that we are providing him with many tools and strategies to help him deal with situations and understand his responses. Physical activity, social stories, sensory integration, occupational therapy, visual aids and many more. He is a prime example of a scattered mind and busy busy body. Compassionate parenting is key, as are boundaries and adopting strategies that include the language you use. I think that the way he responds to life is wholly due to how his brain was wired as a tiny baby. He doesn't remember things but his brain and his body do. He is not currently on medication but it's an option to help him to focus as he finds every detail to be distracting but it would not be the be-all and end-all. . It's very interesting to read people's comments - all very useful to take on board.

  • @rachaelbrown2485

    @rachaelbrown2485

    6 ай бұрын

    Look into primitive reflexes

  • @njg247

    @njg247

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you. In fact I found a professional who administers this kind of therapy and we have been pursuing this technique that involves skin brushing since August 2021. It helps to a certain extent. Many thanks for replying. @@rachaelbrown2485

  • @MeloniousThunk
    @MeloniousThunk Жыл бұрын

    “Born broken?” Rank ableism in plain view. Maté conveniently ignores the existence of genetically-linked disorders that also require an environmental trigger such as IBD. Neurological differences like ADHD, autism and dyslexia are not mental illness, and they’re not caused by childhood trauma. People with genetic differences don’t need to be “fixed,” but we do need support to function in a world that is not built for us. Shaming us by calling us “broken” is not doing anyone any favors.

  • @NicolaMulholland

    @NicolaMulholland

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah the born broken bit really annoyed me, would he say that about a child born with physical disabilities then? It also narrates ADHD as being a purely negative condition which it is not, its just hard to have it and live in a world that requires us to be switched on to schedule all the time.

  • @damianeadie510

    @damianeadie510

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm not broken. A lot of my stuff is, but I'm not!

  • @jamesongogoleczko5932

    @jamesongogoleczko5932

    11 ай бұрын

    So what about people with C-PTSD that have the same symptoms as autism and adhd people?

  • @md82892
    @md828924 ай бұрын

    What Gabor Mate claims doesn’t have a scientific background, you should watch Russel Barkley’s video on Gabor Mate.

  • @Reece060289
    @Reece060289 Жыл бұрын

    People with adhd are not broken but we definitely inherit it from parents as I have it my dad definitely had it and both my kids have it, the best way to put it would be people with adhd are more active and less focused on tasks unless we enjoy or feel we must complete the task. We are also very emotionally in tact

  • @jonesaleroy
    @jonesaleroy3 ай бұрын

    This explains me to a tee!!! I have even now in my 40s been able to bring out the super creative and high IQ (153) I was said to have in elementary school. I was super sensitive growing up and had a lot of trouble with social interactions because I was always so overwhelmed and emotional during confrontations. That I developed a coping Mechanism of burying my emotions and didn't realize till started getting healthy in mY 30s. In my 40s I learned alot about the positive effects of psychedelics. I gotna routine of nootrooics and supplements and an organic Keto diet along with moving to a life that got me out doors every day I was able to fix a lot of my issues and now think clearer than I have my whole life at 46! This channel has been a game-changer for me. One of my favorites.

  • @amanda777_

    @amanda777_

    2 ай бұрын

    What are the nootropics that helped you

  • @filizgorkey4272
    @filizgorkey42727 ай бұрын

    Thank you ❤

  • @SamanthaFrancis
    @SamanthaFrancis10 ай бұрын

    I’m a massive fan of both Gabor and Steven! Just slightly disappointed in this video as I’m someone who has been diagnosed Adhd at a very young age, and really worked extremely hard through adapting myself to function well in a routined society. The snippet is way too short to explain Adhd and how to treat it - so the “rationalized” intro triggered me to comment. The video is top level surface info and require a lot more in dept conversation. Specially as Steven mentioned 1/9 people are diagnosed. That’s insane! Interesting to hear an episode about the dark side of ADHD. Concern how easily people get diagnosed with ADHD, dive into the people who abuse ADHD medication (just google Ritalin and the first search that comes up is “what happens if a person without adhd takes Ritalin), understanding why well diagnosed ADHD people feel ashamed of it (like I used to), the psychological Pro’s and con’s of constantly masking adhd and behavior. Contradictory the way it feels to a diagnosed person when ADHD is a “trendy word people throw around when they self diagnose themselves. Lastly, why people are so against medication for ADHD compared to other “brain conditions” as I struggled until my husband helped me taking my medication routinely - which I wasn’t able to do myself. Adhd is not a choice, it’s a differently wired brain. Some brain parts will never have the ability to master skills “normal” brains have. In my case, medication was a necessity to got me to where I am today, and prevented me from having a life in which I can not function in society. (Having a job, starting a business, having a family. Etc) Not everyone has the daily guidance how to mask, adapt or learn how to deal with adhd. It’s a wonderful brain we have, but definitely a love hate relationship. Issues like time blindness or severe forgetfulness or “being skilled to spot distractions”😆 are just the longest journey to tackle. Learning a skill requires routine, and routine is the enemy of an adhd brain.. 😅 I’ve gotten so much better over the years but I’m still terrible at it. Apps, clocks, reminders, organizing programs, a PA, Apple Watch with reminders list goes on. It’s the toughest job to have a brain that constantly needs to work differently - it’s like throwing a stick to a cat and expecting it to fetch. The brain just errors 😂 Whatever my opinion is, thanks for creating this video and opening the conversation. I’m looking forward reading Gabor’s book and hopefully learn something meaningful like I usually do in both of your amazingly valuable content! Meanwhile - typing this comment I’m 46 minutes late for my business meeting, thanks adhd. 😅

  • @sunshinelively

    @sunshinelively

    8 ай бұрын

    We are not wired for the world as it presently exists. While we have to survive and adapt because here we are, who’s to say that the world in its present state is functioning naturally or correctly?

  • @jniertit

    @jniertit

    8 ай бұрын

    I recommend reading his book Scattered Minds... it is thorough

  • @reecemccullough4829

    @reecemccullough4829

    8 ай бұрын

    Jeez write a novel. At your age you still have no self awareness.n

  • @persona2bestpersona891
    @persona2bestpersona891 Жыл бұрын

    ADHD almost ruined my life before I started taking my meds

  • @lisasommerlad1337

    @lisasommerlad1337

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly. I hear you.

  • @mialeroux2943

    @mialeroux2943

    Жыл бұрын

    That's a shame. Ritalin was way worse on me than changing my lifestyle ever was. I even love my adhd tbh

  • @eleanormarshall455

    @eleanormarshall455

    Жыл бұрын

    Hard same. Saved my career

  • @lindacastillo9255

    @lindacastillo9255

    Жыл бұрын

    Try keto

  • @areyoukirringme7679

    @areyoukirringme7679

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mialeroux2943 you sure it’s adhd ?

  • @NJTremblay-dp4gr
    @NJTremblay-dp4grАй бұрын

    i am one of them, highly emotional child when i was young.. high energy family.. stress from everything.. still today i deal with it.. now i am 54.. and have read and learned.. and most of my kids are fine..