If they act like a child, treat them like a child

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июн 2024
  • 👩‍❤️‍👨 My relationship course: psychologywithdrana.learnworl...
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    Today, I discuss some skills for dealing with someone emotionally immature in your life: validating, boundary-setting, modeling empathy and morality, and more.
    Intro music: Church of 8 Wheels by Otis McDonald
    Outro music: Lensko Let’s Go
    Time Stamps:
    0:00 Intro
    3:49 Skill 1
    7:20 Skill 2
    11:08 Skill 3
    11:35 Skill 4
    14:07 Skill 5
    16:52 Skill 6
    18:50 Skill 7
    10:13 Skill 8

Комментарии • 205

  • @AnaPsychology
    @AnaPsychology  27 дней назад +20

    Favorite books including The Whole Brain Child: www.amazon.com/shop/anapsychology/list/2U86DCGR39MB9
    As an Amazon affiliate I earn from qualifying purchases!

    • @ChadMcCall42
      @ChadMcCall42 26 дней назад +1

      Nice video. There is a typo in your Skill 8 time stamp in the summary. Says 10:xx should be 20:xx.

    • @Portia620
      @Portia620 26 дней назад +1

      I wouldn’t say this is always true with immature people can this be true with triggers for people that have complex post traumatic stress or PTSD?

    • @Portia620
      @Portia620 26 дней назад +1

      During trauma, it seems like we go to the small brain to function and we don’t use the higher orders of that brain wouldn’t you say that’s the default? if so, will this book help us cure trauma?

  • @nidhishshivashankar4885
    @nidhishshivashankar4885 21 день назад +137

    It’s unfair to offload emotional regulation onto other people. I don’t see why adults deserve such a high level of compassion when they’re essentially bullying you into prioritizing their feelings over your own.

    • @moosepatil5946
      @moosepatil5946 12 дней назад +25

      It depends on who the person is. Some people genuinely don't know better, and if you love them, you'll meet them where they are. If they love you back, they will improve.

    • @az6462
      @az6462 12 дней назад +3

      Exactly

    • @anthien6451
      @anthien6451 11 дней назад +12

      it happens all the time in customer service jobs unfortunately

    • @Lis_Kid
      @Lis_Kid 6 дней назад +15

      Showing compassion to people who don't deserve it is a lot less energy sucking than getting stuck in a petty argument. This is purely my own experience, but I use these in my day to day life to not have to deal with immature people longer than necessary lol.

    • @StephanieRZ
      @StephanieRZ 5 дней назад +1

      Well said 💯💯

  • @michaelstagar4254
    @michaelstagar4254 26 дней назад +291

    Couples therapy is a huge pain when there is a maturity gap between partners.

    • @BadNessie
      @BadNessie 26 дней назад +15

      I can imagine. Isn't it exactly the job of the therapist to bridge that gap and give both parties the tools to then help themselves? I would think that's exactly their job. If they don't do that, maybe it's time to find a different therapist that is a better fit?

    • @blue-uv4mh
      @blue-uv4mh 26 дней назад +53

      @@BadNessie If the gap is too big no therapist is going to be able to "fix" that. This is the very reason it‘s frowned upon if an over-30y/o dates a freshly 18y/o. Some gaps are just too big, and it hurts both in their development if they stay together.

    • @BadNessie
      @BadNessie 26 дней назад +19

      @@blue-uv4mh well yes, coming to the conclusion that the relationship isn't a healthy fit is definitely an option that even a therapist can help get nearer. Their job is not to 'fix' the relationship, no matter what. It's to moderate their communication in a way they can actually figure things out themselves, no matter what the outcome will be.

    • @simranbansal9303
      @simranbansal9303 25 дней назад +6

      ​@@BadNessieyou're so right. It also involves helping them accept the other person the way they are, mature or not and making them realise their own shortcomings too. The ultimate goal is to know how to love one another better.

    • @Sclopiopipio
      @Sclopiopipio 11 дней назад +2

      I don’t understand how you find people attractive who aren’t at least as mature as you

  • @moonriversou
    @moonriversou 27 дней назад +368

    I'm watching this and realising that I'm sometimes immature myself. I mean, I always knew this but I realise I have a long way to go.

    • @gman854
      @gman854 26 дней назад +21

      Awareness is key!! So proud of you for recognising that. Yeah can’t lie felt called out at some points of the video lol

    • @819jt
      @819jt 26 дней назад +4

      That's right, it's a good watch to remind you to be aware of others because it does matter very much 👋

    • @cowoverthemoo
      @cowoverthemoo 24 дня назад +5

      I'm 43 and regressed into childhood, making me think of the song by Enigma's return to innocence. You're not necessarily childish but more childlike. There's a big difference.

    • @Debble
      @Debble 20 дней назад +5

      No one is mature all of the time as long as you are trying and improving ❤️‍🩹

    • @jennajewert
      @jennajewert 15 дней назад +3

      ​@@cowoverthemoono, there isn't a big difference at all...the task of adulthood is maturity and being child like is antithetical to that. It can be therapeutic sometimes (think inner child work, childlike wonder, etc) but it's generally not a healthy goal for adults to be childlike. And other adults will notice your limitations and not respect you so it's not an optimal behavior choice.

  • @Ash-gj2lf
    @Ash-gj2lf 27 дней назад +189

    Watching this is made me realize just how much I parented my parent as the only child of a parent

    • @laserbrain7774
      @laserbrain7774 26 дней назад +2

      Only child of a single mother? Is that what you meant to say?

    • @embermist3910
      @embermist3910 26 дней назад +20

      ​@@laserbrain7774 stop the sexism

    • @simonhakansson9300
      @simonhakansson9300 26 дней назад +12

      @@embermist3910 I wouldn't say that is sexism. I've heard plenty of stories about fathers abandoning their child/children, letting the mother raise the child by their own. But I believe that the opposite scenario is much rarer, which makes being the only child of a single mother an assumption that is not super far-fetched.

    • @embermist3910
      @embermist3910 26 дней назад +5

      @@simonhakansson9300 Prejudice or discrimination based on sex

    • @mandarinadreux9572
      @mandarinadreux9572 День назад

      ​@@embermist3910on sex, reality and their own experience. I guess multiple statements can be true at the same time even if they seeminly contradict each other. Complicated world eh?

  • @danielbautista7
    @danielbautista7 26 дней назад +203

    When is school going to realise that psychology should be taught in grade school

    • @MIRALUNADACUA
      @MIRALUNADACUA 26 дней назад +3

      Good idea.

    • @talandar5773
      @talandar5773 26 дней назад +13

      They'll "realize" once it becomes incentivized and/or normalized.

    • @spacebar9733
      @spacebar9733 26 дней назад +7

      Many parents would pull their kids from public school.

    • @dollguts9801
      @dollguts9801 25 дней назад +2

      @@spacebar9733why is that?

    • @jeansprojects
      @jeansprojects 25 дней назад +5

      @@talandar5773 But the only way it will become normalised is if they realise it should.

  • @littlepinkskeleton
    @littlepinkskeleton 26 дней назад +100

    I don't know that I agree with the 25 y/o maturity thing. I've met people who are younger than me and are intellectual, emotionally mature and educated, can admit when they're wrong or don't know something. And then I know people who are older than me by decades and act like toddlers, sans any actual disorder that would cause regressiveness.

    • @fernandaAaAaAaA
      @fernandaAaAaAaA 16 дней назад +17

      i think after 25 some people can become less impulsive but i don't think it has anything to do with their maturity, and i think maturity has a lot to do with their education as well

    • @Pomagranite167
      @Pomagranite167 15 дней назад +12

      ^ and upbringing. Parenting is everything, and children who were attended to growing up, but also given appropriate indepenence according to age, taught good emotional regulation, not neglected and not spoiled, encouraged yet also given duly needed reality checks, all fare batter in the end because they have a lot more tools for life, are critical thinkers, think ahead, learn to express themselves in healthy, understandable manner at the appropriate time. And those are all signs of maturity.

    • @jemappellemerci
      @jemappellemerci 14 дней назад +9

      Like she said, if they’re ~25+ and they’re still throwing tantrums, it’s usually a conscious effort. They’re doing it to push their own desires. If they’re younger, they were just simply raised right or they’re just more emotionally mature (which can be a result of trauma, but can also just happen).

    • @leonardo9259
      @leonardo9259 13 дней назад +5

      Yes, that's how generalising works, there's outliers

  • @emisunflowers
    @emisunflowers 27 дней назад +88

    I was initially nervous to watch this video because I subconsciously thought that treating people like children would mean treating them the way my parents treated me - not very nicely. But as usual you are spot on. I sometimes find it hard to comfort people who react in unexpected ways to situations like the ones you mentioned, and these seem like the approaches I need to do better at comforting people like that. Thanks for another great video :)

    • @AnaPsychology
      @AnaPsychology  26 дней назад +15

      That’s an awesome insight! Yes, unfortunately many people think the way to treat children is to mistreat them :(

  • @tobubiify
    @tobubiify 27 дней назад +121

    as an immature person this is exactly how i want to be treated

    • @jsihavealotofplaylists
      @jsihavealotofplaylists 26 дней назад +13

      oh rlly

    • @Giovanna-pg8eo
      @Giovanna-pg8eo 26 дней назад +17

      not what a immature person would say 🤔🤨

    • @risktaker1300
      @risktaker1300 26 дней назад +2

      @@jsihavealotofplaylists really 😆💖

    • @burgosco7024
      @burgosco7024 25 дней назад +5

      𝓣𝓱𝓪𝓽'𝓼 𝓸𝓴 𝓽𝓸𝓸 𝔂𝓸𝓾𝓻 𝓪𝓶𝓪𝔃𝓲𝓷𝓰 ❤❤❤

    • @jimmycolgate
      @jimmycolgate 23 дня назад +5

      your not looking forward to not being inmmature? thats how this worlds going i guess...........

  • @ismaelaguilar7421
    @ismaelaguilar7421 27 дней назад +110

    You’re on a roll lately especially since the subject of this video applies to my relationship with my partner thank you!

  • @SctsceDuwn
    @SctsceDuwn 23 дня назад +9

    This guy was fretting that I declined his requests to call me twice (informed him I was doing something) yet I talked to my friend who was overwhelmed with a pregnancy that came too soon. He had nothing important to talk to me about, just him being needy. I'm learning how to be patient and explained the difference between the times they called (and the weight of the topic) but how could a grown a man not understand. He's like a chiId who wants to be played with first regardless of the circumstances.

  • @donovanmedieval
    @donovanmedieval 25 дней назад +15

    I'm not saying you're completely wrong, but if an adult is used to being treated like a child, they may find it harder and harder to get away from their childish behavior.

    • @corbinortiz5010
      @corbinortiz5010 24 дня назад +7

      That makes sense and I partly agree with it. I think they would get used to it and continue to behave like a child if there was no dialogue and accountability afterwards though. I think it’s important to treat them like a child when they’re being immature because it’ll help them start to mature more. It makes up for parenting they lacked in childhood. Plus I personally think we’re all immature to some level as we’re all continuously growing and learning and sometimes we do behave immaturely when it’s out of our character especially if we’re under stress due to lack of sleep, life transitions etc. And I think it’s important anyway if we’re able to be there for each other in those immature moments because they do happen and it’s nice to be treated with understanding and kindness. I think it brings about good karma as well so when you’re in an immature moment yourself someone will be there to help you grow and feel understood.
      Hopefully that makes sense lol. That’s my take on it.

    • @pip000hi17
      @pip000hi17 14 часов назад

      i think thats where boundaries (=consequences) will play a big part.
      treating them in the way shown here is only teaching them how to regulate.
      setting boundaries will force them to use what we taught them on their own.

  • @audiopainter68
    @audiopainter68 26 дней назад +26

    If teachers or parents treat neurodivergent kids this way, they may feel that they have no motivation to become an adult because all of the benefits that come with being an adult (and you know that parents are still gonna push some of the responsibilities of an adult into the kids) are with out of reach, and different adults (people over the age of 18) have different ideas of what it means to be an adult, AND THEY ALL THINK THAT THEY'RE RIGHT. it seems most people don't know that adults and children are social constructs, and often times, neurodivergent people can't act like how some people with power over them expect them to act.
    I had to live a secret life away from my parents because I knew that I wouldn't learn the things I did had I just tried to force myself to be what my parents wanted me to be.
    I revealed in family therapy that I have lived a secret life, and they don't even believe me because I don't remember every single thing that I have learned, and so they still believe that I haven't grown up, and that I am just lazy.
    I still believe that my life would have been objectively better HD my parents stopped parenting me at the age of 18, but it took tons of push back (which reversed after I became hospitalized) and now, at the age of 25, they have finally decided to stop parenting me, but i think that it is partly because they gave up.

    • @StephanieRZ
      @StephanieRZ 5 дней назад

      Am on mobile browser youtube lol so couldn’t correct any typos, objectively,* and had the* guts~.

  • @Artandnatureloveeee
    @Artandnatureloveeee 27 дней назад +39

    Could you do a video about immature coworkers? Or just coworkers who disrespect your boundaries, what to do when you have to hang out with them all day

    • @citizn-xh7rv
      @citizn-xh7rv 26 дней назад +9

      Yes I second this, being trapped with toxic/immature coworkers feels like a prison sentence. I try to focus on my work and tuning them out as much as possible, but they'll make it into a literal circus or instigate to get me to quit or get fired

    • @StephanieRZ
      @StephanieRZ 5 дней назад +2

      For real. Lol certain people are deviled (selfish).

  • @TheEverGrowingRosey-333
    @TheEverGrowingRosey-333 27 дней назад +48

    Hmm this is interesting to me, I went through an experience where someone I was living with was treating me like I was not just a child but their child (and they aren’t my parent, I barely knew them). Constantly bossing me around, getting on my case about their disapproval on any little thing I did or didn’t do. It was a nightmare. They even went as far to say I was like a two year old. I had tried on numerous occasions to meet them half way, come to them with reasonable expectations of respect, & used my words carefully. But at some point I had enough, & started acting like the defiant brat they had already characterized me as. 🤷🏼‍♀️ I didn’t feel like I had any other option, I didn’t have the means to move out. I was trapped.
    Edited: I am out now, though the person is still in my life due to them being in proximity to a loved one. I play polite now, but I don’t think I can ever trust them. I don’t feel emotionally safe around them.

    • @AnaPsychology
      @AnaPsychology  27 дней назад +32

      Oof that sounds more like MIStreating a child than like treating you like a child. None of these behaviors are a good way to even act around a child. I'm glad you got out!

    • @axl1002
      @axl1002 14 дней назад +1

      I guess they saw your YT name :D

  • @mattcaston9546
    @mattcaston9546 27 дней назад +68

    I literally did this with parents of a teen I was working with lmao

    • @westonford6774
      @westonford6774 19 дней назад +2

      This is literally trained as one of the processes used for dealing with upset customers at my store (listen, acknowledge, take action).

  • @kittenhero568
    @kittenhero568 26 дней назад +30

    "Drunk words are sober thoughts" makes me think Im going to be persecuted for thought crimes or have impulsive or intrusive thoughts

    • @SLYKM
      @SLYKM 6 дней назад +4

      Yea it's a yikes thing to believe. Makes me reconsider trusting her insight.

  • @kerfluffle
    @kerfluffle 27 дней назад +47

    I love your twist on applying the concept of the book to relevant situations and people in life!

  • @raidtheairwaves42
    @raidtheairwaves42 26 дней назад +53

    As a person who has dealt with a person like this my whole life. We have to realize when a person acts like a child when they are significantly in their adulthood they never change. It’s heartbreaking but you either have to accept their childish tendencies or move on which sucks a lot

    • @heav2582
      @heav2582 26 дней назад +21

      People can change. If they’re taking their mental and emotional health seriously, they can change. Ofc it takes a lot of work but it’s possible.

    • @hackedtechnothief
      @hackedtechnothief 12 дней назад +3

      ​@@heav2582The problem is that change comes from an insintric motivation...if it were an external motivation the immature adult just neglects any accountability.
      Adult children can act like that all their life but whenever that family member or partner either stops with their bullshit or something happends that cannot depend on other people they will either get worse or decide to make a change,

    • @brandondegraaf
      @brandondegraaf День назад

      @@heav2582 To do that, you need to be mature enough to have the self awareness to know you are not mature. After age 30, you either get it, or you don't.

  • @DisasterAster
    @DisasterAster 12 дней назад +3

    I like the distinction of honoring a downstairs tantrum and guiding them out of it, but not tolerating/allowing an upstairs tantrum without consequences or setting/enforcing your boundaries

  • @main4066
    @main4066 13 дней назад +3

    The bit about the "upstairs tantrum" really put some things into perspective! Thanks for sharing this!

  • @Fondofmelobster
    @Fondofmelobster 27 дней назад +54

    It’s tough living with children

    • @indigonight
      @indigonight 27 дней назад +43

      Especially when they're your parents.

    • @Fondofmelobster
      @Fondofmelobster 27 дней назад +14

      @@indigonight exactly my thoughts

    • @pinksees
      @pinksees 21 день назад +1

      It really is

  • @CaitDavies-ch5ve
    @CaitDavies-ch5ve 27 дней назад +23

    I have asd level 2 and I feel so ashamed that I’m not developmentally where I should be…

    • @buttzpoopindowski6851
      @buttzpoopindowski6851 26 дней назад +22

      You shouldn't be. I'm 1 point away from level 2 and it's really hard to control your emotions all the time, especially when abuse is being put onto you. I have to remind myself that the times that I've lost control, it was in response to someone going out of control at me first and they aren't taking accountability, they're just telling me to calm down.

    • @obnoxint
      @obnoxint 26 дней назад +12

      The way you are is the way you should be. My first thought when I read the video title was "that sounds ableistic!". Please don't internalize any message of being "not good enough".

    • @scarba
      @scarba 26 дней назад +7

      @@obnoxintI don’t think that’s helpful to say, „You are the way you should be“, when you know that’s not true. You are taking away the right to be sad about the loss of what could have been. It’s not recognizing the grief and not allowing the space for it. It is what it is but it’s still a loss.

    • @fruitygarlic3601
      @fruitygarlic3601 24 дня назад +13

      Clearly you are self aware, if self-effacing. You know when to reflect and what your patterns are. Sometimes (no shade) neurotypical people don't realise they have to do this because no one external has told them they're 'abnormal'. Perhaps you've been told that too much in your life. Shame feeds on itself and leaves you no energy for anything else; getting to where you should be means listening to yourself without moral condemnation.
      You have ASD 2, but a diagnosis is really the name attached to the behaviours you display. So you know what they are. And you'll feel how to deal with them before, after, or during if you take them as a neutral state -- just a matter of life you are not at fault for.

  • @rakastellar8955
    @rakastellar8955 2 дня назад +1

    As someone who was diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder, I find it a bold statement that people over 25 can self-regulate and that the tantrums are deliberate. Setting boundaries as you suggested might actually cause individuals to get harmed when dealing with BPD, as it's like pouring gasoline on a fire. A simple Google search reveals that this is not recommended.

  • @moonriversou
    @moonriversou 27 дней назад +28

    Oh btw I'm seeing you post alot! :) I hope you're taking care of yourself and taking a break every now and then

    • @AnaPsychology
      @AnaPsychology  27 дней назад +18

      Thank you so much for noticing, yes I'm taking good care :)

  • @spades498
    @spades498 15 дней назад +1

    this video was really helpful for seeing how to treat myself! i also really like how seriously you take this without making it difficult to understand. you seem really well read and like you really know what youre talking about.

  • @gman854
    @gman854 26 дней назад +1

    Ana! This video is so stinking good you articulated and provided the science about what I have been intuitively doing ( not just to emotionally immature people but to everyone to prevent hurting feelings, effectively getting my point through and making them more aware of themselves) and thinking ( giving far more leeway to those who *pyschically* can not emotionally regulate). August love love love!!!!

  • @StarAZ
    @StarAZ 27 дней назад +15

    What if something is (for lack of a better word) triggering to somebody?
    When I was with my ex, I found it difficult to address past fights. Bringing a fight up was often enough to reignite the fight.

    • @wrongname2702
      @wrongname2702 27 дней назад +8

      I heard another therapist on RUclips say "you are responsible for your triggers" in the context of the person being triggered needs to be doing active work to minimize their response to triggers. You can't be responsible for their triggers but you can ask about them and try your best to avoid the triggers. So maybe instead of bringing up the fight in the context of it being a past fight maybe reframing the question about what the fight was about and talk about your feelings first that way they have the space to talk about theirs. Try really hard not to play the blame game or present your feelings as "you just don't care about me" remember you aren't a mind reader and even though their actions hurt you it's not productive to restart the fights. They are exhausting to fight about over and over you deserve that energy to better serve you to be fillfulled by the relationship not drained by it. Hope it gets better for you.

    • @spaghetto9836
      @spaghetto9836 26 дней назад +2

      ​@@wrongname2702 That's really good advice. It's hard to realize when you're just acting up, vs the other person not caring about what triggers you & continuing to put you in those situations. Essentially, it can make people in toxic relationships who don't have discernment think it's 100% their fault whenever they're triggered, when things can be done to minimize it. When in a relationship, either's mental health stops being a personal, individual thing, because you affect eachother.

  • @sweet2sourr
    @sweet2sourr 27 дней назад +11

    I love that you incorporated the brain! I la la loved it when my psychologist brought out her brain model to put things in perspective for me.

  • @lawsome2068
    @lawsome2068 День назад

    I definetly agree with you on the saying "drunk words are sober thoughts"
    Loved the tips and thankfully I've already been using some of the skills so that shows I'm on the right track (the definitely help from what I've seen so far. )

  • @rainbowwwkim
    @rainbowwwkim 13 дней назад +2

    For number 4, don't allow upstairs tantrums, you mentioned disabilities so I thought Id throw in my 2 cents as an autistic person. Id actually agree with this rule and Id caution non autistic people to not mistake autistic meltdowns for tantrums. This can be a great way to injure an autistic adult and especially an autistic child. These could be considered similar to "downstairs tantrums" and its better to ride them out and let them calm down before doing any talking/repairing.

  • @bunnycrazygirl
    @bunnycrazygirl 27 дней назад +3

    GOOD TIMING! I'm dealing with a nightmare roommate situation.

  • @Sunflower_that_loves_you
    @Sunflower_that_loves_you 27 дней назад +13

    Can you please make a video on how to heal from a mother wound, mother abandoning, emotuonally blackmailing since childhood, lovebombing, a narcissistic mother... The effects it has on us, how it manifests... Just anything.
    Its really hard right now, as she always goes back and forth from abandoning and loving... Been 12years.

    • @moonriversou
      @moonriversou 27 дней назад +3

      I follow this one youtuber called Terri Cole and she's made some videos on this like the mother wound.

    • @drebugsita
      @drebugsita 27 дней назад +1

      I second this!!! - Daughter of a covert narc high functioning alcoholic mother

    • @drebugsita
      @drebugsita 27 дней назад

      @@moonriversouTy! Will check out her channel

    • @Sunflower_that_loves_you
      @Sunflower_that_loves_you 26 дней назад

      @@moonriversou thank you so much :)
      I will check her out!

    • @Sunflower_that_loves_you
      @Sunflower_that_loves_you 26 дней назад

      @@drebugsita :( oh.. I'm there if you need someone to talk to

  • @adriandaniels1
    @adriandaniels1 26 дней назад +1

    The connect and redirect is a good strategy to use in de-escalation as well! I worked with youth ( as of a few weeks ago, now work in another role) and when they popped off it was used a lot to try to calm down the situation.

  • @lyonqueen
    @lyonqueen 21 день назад

    This is so informative and helpful. Very well put together.

  • @MaryWallace-wv2bn
    @MaryWallace-wv2bn 26 дней назад +2

    I learned a lot and enjoyed listening.! Thank you 😊

  • @alicexiao1003
    @alicexiao1003 26 дней назад +1

    This was quite insightful cus I have a friend who's 2 years older than me and we're both over 25, but I try not to take mutual friends' perspectives in saying that he's emotionally immature and make a conclusion for myself. I am currently trying to distance myself from this person as I do agree with the statement of wanting to surround myself with better people, though on the other hand, I try my best to be friends with this person without him feeling like he could step over my boundaries. Thank you for implementing examples as always, and looking forward to your next video!

  • @libbycabrera8406
    @libbycabrera8406 26 дней назад +2

    I don't know if you've read this book: Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents. I would highly recommend that book and would love to hear your commentary on it.

  • @moonriversou
    @moonriversou 27 дней назад +13

    02:30 Do you have any videos on how we can become more nuanced in our way of thinking? I'm someone who's trying to learn that but I notice that even if I do emphasize with other people and I can understand their perspective, I tend to be get very frustated still later and I think that my way of thinking is correct and they're so wrong so they're either "stupid" or there's something wrong with them.

    • @AnaPsychology
      @AnaPsychology  27 дней назад +5

      Yes, I actually do!! ruclips.net/video/H-byVaxmHeg/видео.html

    • @moonriversou
      @moonriversou 27 дней назад +1

      ​@@AnaPsychology I had a feeling you might! Thank you

  • @pushista9322
    @pushista9322 19 дней назад

    Your videos make me want to keep notes for future use.

  • @madelynnmae6657
    @madelynnmae6657 26 дней назад

    Thanks for this video! A series on twin psychology would be cool.

  • @12Sanguine
    @12Sanguine 25 дней назад +2

    The title made me think of Lindsay C. Gibson books, would love your take on them.

  • @zion367
    @zion367 27 дней назад +1

    Awesome video!❤

  • @caoimherothwell5835
    @caoimherothwell5835 8 дней назад

    This is fantastically helpful as an autistic individual, thank you so much !!

  • @heaven7612
    @heaven7612 13 дней назад +1

    Yea it’s not up to me to teach a grown person, that should have consideration for my feelings as well

  • @xyackhart
    @xyackhart 16 дней назад +1

    My boyfriend's older brother is 30 years old, has autism, but has never left the house or gotten a job. His parents spoil him. His few responsibilities are doing some house chores, and he throws tantrums about that. My bf and I worry for him. I have no idea if his tantrums are "upstairs" or "downstairs" but my frustration has me believe he's just spoiled and doesnt want to grow up. Then again, autism is a spectrum, and his might be worse than others I know who at least make an effort to be better versions of themselves. Idk. I watched the video to try and get some insight but its hard to say where the problem lies...

  • @nias3202
    @nias3202 26 дней назад +2

    Thank you for all your insight! The concept of brain integration was new to me in the context of children. My thoughts drifted away in the middle. I need to watch again. I think if people you knew that all brains are wired differently, we could show more understanding.

  •  25 дней назад +2

    I have a friend who is very immature and invasive and it was hard for me to set boundaries with her since she kept on overstepping them, so now I feel drained whenever I'm around her or even when I think about her or people like her. I see her everyday because we are classmates 😪 thank you for this video

  • @Rina-Sa
    @Rina-Sa 26 дней назад +2

    For skill 1, what happens if they deny they're having an emotion at all and are insisting you're the emotional one, and theyre using blaming language to circumvent aconowldging feeling? Ie insted of "i feel so unsupported by you" you'e being met with a barrage of personal criticisms abour yourself as a person- "you alwaus do things wrong, you did this and you're like that" ?

  • @12Sanguine
    @12Sanguine 25 дней назад

    Fantastic book, reading it at the moment too. Great interpretation to use that on adults too!

  • @alexlofka360
    @alexlofka360 26 дней назад

    Really important topic and skill set for the world that's full of immature but old enough people and those who Choose "violence". This who can't regulate is the one who's being abused more than those who's being aggressive by choice.

  • @sweet2sourr
    @sweet2sourr 27 дней назад +5

    You mentioned personality disorders and depression but what about manic episodes in bipolar and psychosis in schizophrenia.

    • @jnorthtrash1346
      @jnorthtrash1346 24 дня назад

      .034 or Less than 1 percent of the population actually have these neurological defects. With that small of a sample size, there’s obviously not going to be anything other than speculation and predicaments about how these are correlated.

  • @joshuasalinas4054
    @joshuasalinas4054 26 дней назад

    Hi Dr. Ana! Loving the new videos! Could you perhaps do a video on your preparations to get into grad school and journey through grad school to become a Psychologist? What were some of the requirements and recommendations to get accepted into a grad program? How did you maintain a good GPA to get accepted? What were the financial Costs? What was the experience- in terms of education workload and overall environment in grad school like? Pros and cons of grad school? All questions and answers similar to these are welcome. Thank You.

  • @schmumlauf
    @schmumlauf 26 дней назад

    It's like you knew that I considered breaking up with my immature friend last week and then this week reconsidered in lieu of a less drastic approach.

  • @cherryblossom7442
    @cherryblossom7442 6 дней назад

    This is slightly triggering to me because its exactly how I've been talking to my parents, even tho they traumatized me and didnt treat me well as a child. My parents weren't ready to have children at all

  • @HigoIndico
    @HigoIndico 23 дня назад +1

    I heard a mother taliking to her child this way, after the kid had a tantrum that turned into a meltdown, that is a totally different thing. The kid was telling the mother how he felt but the mother didn't understand or listen and didn't wait until the motion had passed. She was just basically shaming the kid for telling about his feelings. This can so easily be used to make children believe that there's something wrong with the way they're feeling or the way they are and lead to dysregulated adults later on life. "Double empathy problem" makes this a weapon, not a recousfull tool for neurotypicals that try to talk to autistic people. When saying "I understand that you feel 'this way' because of 'this thing' " is gonna lead to lot of shit, because you can't read someones thoughts and why exactly they feel some way. You can't understand, if you don't ask first - and even then, you fully can't understand. Saying that is really condescending and not helpful at all.

  • @katu3390
    @katu3390 27 дней назад

    Do you think you could do a video on the concept of relationship competency and how that can potentially make or break a relationship.

  • @M-xlz3
    @M-xlz3 27 дней назад +1

    I’m a fairly new subscriber. Your content is amazing!! The tips you shared in this video are very helpful. Thank you!! I’m in my mid-30s, and for as long as I can remember I’ve always been fascinated by human behavior. (I’ve been told by strangers and friends alike that I have a therapist-type personality.) Also, I just subscribed to your book channel. I’m a book fanatic!
    If you’re interested, can I give you a nonfiction book suggestion? I read it a few years back. It’s been life changing for me!

    • @AnaPsychology
      @AnaPsychology  27 дней назад +2

      Thank you so much! Welcome :) And yes of course, I always love taking book recommendations

    • @M-xlz3
      @M-xlz3 27 дней назад

      You’re very welcome! 🙂 Thank you for taking the time to respond. I appreciate it. I’m excited to be here!!So the book is called: AnxietyRx by Dr. Russell Kennedy. Dr. Kennedy is a neuroscientist, somatic practitioner, and an anxiety specialist based in Canada. He’s been interviewed on numerous podcasts, and he’s all over Instagram. Just Google his name. Nothing else I’ve tried-with regard to managing my anxiety, with the exception of physical exercise-on my own has worked as well as his theory does; he suffered from severe anxiety as well. His theory is counterintuitive. Anyway, I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. I’d be curious to hear your perspective on it given that you are in the field. Oh, and he’s also on RUclips!

  • @YourUpstairsNeighbor
    @YourUpstairsNeighbor 26 дней назад +2

    Reminds me of my last concussion when I flipped out on my Mom for waking me up trying to check on me. 😢 I felt so bad later on, sorry Ma

  • @skyelyte1699
    @skyelyte1699 26 дней назад +2

    If you are in any type of relationship with a narcissist, and especially a malignant vulnerable narcissist or if it is a family member, coworker you must interact with, they ALWAYS behave like children. The worst thing you can ever do is to treat them like children. They will exploit you and usually sooner than later harm you every time. I am not even a minute into this video and I can't watch it knowing the absolute harm this will cause to anyone that takes this person's advice if they are involved in any way with a narcissist.

    • @spaghetto9836
      @spaghetto9836 26 дней назад +4

      Well in that case, I'd just go with the title in the most practical way possible: not sticking up to or tolerating them, aka "putting them in their place". In fact, being a doormat with infinite patience isn't even how you're supposed to treat children. Dr. Ana is right: establish boundaries with consequences.

  • @heyimSkyee
    @heyimSkyee 27 дней назад +9

    Ya im def immature 😂 ouch need to work on this

  • @spytechchronicles
    @spytechchronicles 23 дня назад +1

    My pre frontal cortex is damaged, what kind of doctor can help with this?

  • @SparkleStyle123
    @SparkleStyle123 26 дней назад +1

    How do you know whether the person is having an upstairs tantrum or a normal one?

  • @sweet2sourr
    @sweet2sourr 27 дней назад +4

    Hey Ana, could you make a video one day on birth order? All of my girlfriends are eldest daughters, like me. I'm curious if that is a coincidence, or do we attract each other. When it comes to dating, I've noticed I am drawn to the youngest.

  • @pema7159
    @pema7159 27 дней назад +6

    I am an LCSW and love your videos!! Would untreated ADHD still constitute an upstairs tantrum in your estimation? Thank you.

  • @jimmycolgate
    @jimmycolgate 23 дня назад +2

    dont know if what im going to say is an unpopular opinion, or im just selfish....... but if in early stages of a relatioship (talking stages), whether its a romantic relationship or just a friendship, i see that the person im talking to has the mind of a kid ---- he or she is immature ---- i inmediately decide not to continue evolving the relationship into something else (bigger and better); im not someones father, teacher or mentor thats there for him/her to mature if he or she is the same age as me. maturity is one of those things in life that arent and shouldnt be taught by someone else; its life experiences that make one mature.......
    yes, if i realize he or she is immature, i move on. dont have much time to invest it into an adultchild........

    • @jimmycolgate
      @jimmycolgate 23 дня назад

      dont get me wrong, i get it if its a child. the problems appear when its and adult, no longer a kid.......

  • @russellharris1299
    @russellharris1299 26 дней назад

    Every time I interact with child I get a recommendation like this

  • @LaGataSolar
    @LaGataSolar 27 дней назад +2

    my mom actually gets mad at me when I don't wanna help her solve problems lol idk if this is normal, but it's been my reality since I can remember...

    • @FAVanguard
      @FAVanguard 26 дней назад

      1 of 2 things, fear of abandonment and rejection sensitivity.
      In their mind, 'They dont want to help me, they dont care about me. They don't love me'

  • @ImLehwz
    @ImLehwz 27 дней назад

    Could you do a video how to do this for yourself?

  • @kevintse2870
    @kevintse2870 26 дней назад

    The first advice is like what Jonathan Haidt said. Address the elephant before the rider

  • @TheBub26
    @TheBub26 27 дней назад

    i bought a book like that for a friend and added a couple pages of my own. you could not tell the book had been altered in any way. using the style of the author, i went into depth about how a baby's reaction to the pull my finger joke is used as a milestone gauge by pediatricians, worldwide. i thought it was funny

  • @yourgfsbm
    @yourgfsbm 13 дней назад

    Wait did I hear DR.? You’re not an intern anymore? Omg congrats
    😭😭💕

  • @REBEKAHJOHNSON-lh6xh
    @REBEKAHJOHNSON-lh6xh 23 дня назад +2

    How would this apply to neurodivergent people? Some people with autism have alexathymia (trouble identifying/communicating emotions).

    • @Th3BigBoy
      @Th3BigBoy 14 дней назад +1

      No different.

  • @moonriversou
    @moonriversou 27 дней назад +3

    22:20 Even Anna Akana said this! Ever since hearing that, I've been inculcating that in myself too! So glad I watch videos like this :) makes me want to improve myself and makes me realise that there is a lot of humility in being human and not knowing things.

  • @robertdeskoski9783
    @robertdeskoski9783 27 дней назад

    @Ana: Would you say that avoidantly attached people have emotional self-control? I had a few situations with someone I knew where they basically had a small tantrum about seemingly unimportant things: their brand of milk not being in the fridge, me speaking to them in slightly upset tones after they woke me up while trying to sleep, misinterpreting texts, them thinking I was ignoring tham when they'd asked for space etc.
    Relationships obviously make some people more emotionally dysregulated but...

    • @sushe2817
      @sushe2817 14 дней назад

      From what I've heard it is more suppression than control. You tune out all emotions for years and this makes it hard to connect with yourself and others.

  • @kated4872
    @kated4872 23 дня назад

    I'm confused. If I'm feeling strong negative emotions because of my partner's mistreatment, and even though I'm trying to suppress them and "choose" not to cry, but I can't, does this mean that I'm immature?

  • @wintertarzanjagrup2527
    @wintertarzanjagrup2527 17 дней назад +1

    and what are you ?

  • @k8tiewarrior539
    @k8tiewarrior539 27 дней назад +1

    I really enjoy watching your videos. Yes, I agree drunk words are sober thoughts. Intoxication makes them unable to hide how they really feel or think 💭

  • @katezajac6730
    @katezajac6730 18 дней назад

    Is cerebral palsy considered a brain injury for the purpose of upstairs versus downstairs tantrums? I have cerebral palsy and I have always had a hard time regulating my emotions. I've been to therapy and take psychiatric medications,. I don't have downstairs tantrums or at least what I think we're downstairs tantrums nearly as much as I used to when I was a teenager, but I do still have some. Or at least it feels like it's out of control.

  • @itsciver
    @itsciver 27 дней назад

    Hey Dr. Ana! Thanks a lot for your work. You helped me a lot with your videos! I have a question, and maybe you can help me with it. (Also, I'm sorry for my English, I'm no native speaker) My ex boyfriend was childish, but in a different way. Whenever he had a problem with me, he started showing me the cold shoulder. I always asked, if everything was alright, that I feel something is wrong, but he would always tell me that 'everything is fine'. At one point he stopped greeting me when he came home. He wouldn't speak a word for several weeks, and I felt like an idiot, constantly trying to get him to talk. We stopped having s*x for several months at this point, but I kept trying talking to him in a very calm voice but as always 'everything is fine'. I think half a year went on like this, until he finally broke the silence and said, that he was jealous because of my previous boyfriend. He broke it off with me, and his main complaint about our relationship was, that I never shouted. Whenever I wanted or needed something from him, or whenever I was annoyed with anything I usually just talked about it in an mature and calm way. And he told me, that I should have shouted at one point in our relationship, and that was the reason why he broke up. Is it really necessary, to go get mad in relationships? What should I do when my partner doesn't want to talk about things, and is showing me the cold shoulder for weeks/months? Till this day, I still think about the breakup and I haven't had a relationship afterwards for years now. I really thought that we could marry one day, and I tried my best to put everything into that relationship, but I never got the warmth from my ex boyfriend which I wanted. Maybe you can make a video about it? Thanks a lot in advance!

    • @MusicalCreativity
      @MusicalCreativity 19 дней назад +1

      He was baiting you.
      What would have happened if you had actually shouted is that he would have used that as the reason to break up because "they're crazy and hysterical!". He had already decided to break up, he just wanted you to be the bad guy and give him a good reason to do so. So no, shouting and getting mad is not necessary, you were just incompatible.

  • @sweet2sourr
    @sweet2sourr 27 дней назад +4

    The title triggered me, I love it 🥲

  • @aceshigh5157
    @aceshigh5157 20 дней назад

    can you do a similar video re coworkers and bosses/csuite.

  • @catrardellybird2526
    @catrardellybird2526 26 дней назад

    What if my parents treat me like a child even though I'm 18 and a half? I aint immature. I wanna get tf outta my house, and my friends are helping me out. My parents have procrastinated helping me get my drivers license for YEARS. God, they made it so I couldnt take drivers edd in 10'th grade by making it stupidly hard to get my permit.

  • @Anniecurls
    @Anniecurls 7 дней назад

    Bro how if they're your parents

  • @Mellyouttaphase
    @Mellyouttaphase 22 дня назад

    I need this. I told my partner he couldn’t get in my car the other day because I didn’t have a baby seat 😂

  • @a.abdulaziz1679
    @a.abdulaziz1679 26 дней назад +1

    GIGACHAD Ana

  • @MrJulka11
    @MrJulka11 26 дней назад

    22:29-22:44
    12:04
    19:05
    20:45

  • @asdfghjklasdfghjkl321
    @asdfghjklasdfghjkl321 27 дней назад

    Omg the title of this video is so petty and I mean that in the best way possible 😂

  • @sparrowfree5
    @sparrowfree5 26 дней назад

    19:51

  • @godsent2000
    @godsent2000 26 дней назад

    19:42

  • @tinymegazell6060
    @tinymegazell6060 27 дней назад

    Me doing this to myself

  • @gabrielatorres7006
    @gabrielatorres7006 6 дней назад

    ❤❤❤

  • @amitshridhar
    @amitshridhar 26 дней назад

    Most of the time the new weird psychopathic type of helping nature & attitude these days is more dangerous than anything else because most people these days keep developing new ways of saying no & like corona virus's defense mechanisms, most people are now developing new ways to lie & deceive about everything, for example:
    like imagining that first helpless person has to wait for help on the road for several hours after the accident, then the second person comes to the scene, then to the first person that second person suddenly starts giving educational speech about everything, lectures about everything, motivational speech about everything & then starts showing advertisements on mobile phone about everything instead of providing immediate help & then that second person runs away without providing any official effective help.
    16/05/2024, thursday 16 may 2024, 12:41 p.m, indore, madhya pradesh, india.

  • @mr.irrelevent8956
    @mr.irrelevent8956 27 дней назад +3

    Doesn’t this apply to dealing with conflict or hurt of any kind?

    • @AnaPsychology
      @AnaPsychology  27 дней назад +9

      The skills could definitely be helpful with anyone, but ideally you wouldn't need them with someone who's psychologically developed for their age. For example, you shouldn't need to model morality for someone to be moral, or to walk the other person through regulating their own emotions during a conflict. But sure, it can't hurt!

  • @laserbrain7774
    @laserbrain7774 26 дней назад +1

    Bicycles are not just kids toys. But that is the normie stereotype.

  • @cassandrarowden
    @cassandrarowden 26 дней назад

  • @Volleyball_Chess_and_Geoguessr
    @Volleyball_Chess_and_Geoguessr 14 дней назад

    "When I have kids". Boy it's never easier to be a parent than before you have kids. I will just validate them and they will be great! How about, you do everything right and they are rude to you and say no to everything you ask, no matter how reasonable or how you approach it.

  • @tesha8202
    @tesha8202 25 дней назад

    I feel the left side is more logical 😜 1:21

  • @laureanooliva7836
    @laureanooliva7836 27 дней назад +1

    About "maybe you should consider what Im going through", I think it feels bitchy. I believe it's because if the other person can't know about the extreme circumstances he kind of has a point about being mad. Its only because the extreme situation that those get over ruled but yet he can't really know about the circumstances so he shouldn't be expected to. I realize it's an example but I wanted to share my thoughts

    • @AnaPsychology
      @AnaPsychology  27 дней назад +8

      Yes, it's just a spur-of-the-moment example I came up with. Always tailor boundary-setting to your own communication style and preferences.

  • @laurencebureau7677
    @laurencebureau7677 22 дня назад

    Here's how you address them: don't.