Inside the Brain of a Psychopath

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 12 тыс.

  • @theanatomylab
    @theanatomylab  2 года назад +824

    Check out Brilliant and get 20% off!! www.brilliant.org/IHA/

    • @espenlangnes8664
      @espenlangnes8664 2 года назад

      I think this video is flawed. Using PET is an old way of scanning psychopaths. You are referring to PET studies conducted by a scientist scanning himself. The moao theory is old news. Real psychopaths are born, and this is shown through massive amount of studies. You can be antisocial, but rarely do you have both factors shown by Hare's psychopathy checklist.
      Current studies use fMRI, and show much more accurate pictures of low activation. One researcher in this field is Kent Kiehl, and he has done thousands of scans of psychopaths.

    • @Ebolachicken
      @Ebolachicken 2 года назад +1

      did you removed that brain from a psychopath?

    • @SoCaliana
      @SoCaliana 2 года назад +22

      I know many psychos, this seems to fit

    • @pat8988
      @pat8988 2 года назад +1

      Justin, very interesting video. Can you please do an episode about autism?

    • @Portia620
      @Portia620 2 года назад +17

      New studies show the serotonin is not the cause of depression and now we found it’s the same in healthy brains and now we haven’t a clue how the drugs work. Never knew how they worked in the first place.

  • @marniemarn4574
    @marniemarn4574 2 года назад +30278

    My child (16 yo) was murdered by an individual with ASPD. I wrote a heart wrenching victims impact statement, but when I faced him in court, I decided instead to tell him he did not deserve to know the devastation he has delivered upon me and my family. Though his demeanor expressed little more than disinterest, I like to think that I didn’t give him the pleasure of knowing his actions have caused long reaching, Devastating pain. This video affirmed my decision. Thank you for posting it.

    • @isabella4793
      @isabella4793 2 года назад +3011

      That is so unbelievable and sad to know that they dont feel remorse for anyone.
      No parent deserves to go through that. I really hope you are able to find peace with yourself and that ur ok now!! (Though idk how long ago that was, but still :)
      My best wishes :D ❤️🫂

    • @everyonehasone7818
      @everyonehasone7818 2 года назад +1611

      My sincerest condolences to you and your family for your tragic loss. I admire your strength to confront that evil thing, and the wise decision you made in not sharing your pain with him.

    • @countrygirl4422
      @countrygirl4422 2 года назад +1219

      I'm not good with words but I'm so very sorry for the loss of your child.

    • @corticallarvae
      @corticallarvae 2 года назад +288

      You might want to know they hand this diagnosis out like candy in prison. I got mine as an adolescent entering adulthood in a violence and head trauma study... that was obviously looking for psychopathy 1.. dead give away question is always the theater smelling smoke..some warn, some leave and lock the door.. sexual sadism and other paraphilias run rampant in such a community.. I can only speak for myself its not really about the offense... its as I understand it its about you.... and informing the sentence for the offense. As long as it's in the jacket.. most prosecuters don't take the time to explain this.. I see 90 percent of relationships as strategic alliances...there the 10% which are the result of curiosity. I had to be socially self aware in a concretized sense ..i tended to fall into internal abstraction without stimuli.

    • @nicolafrost9775
      @nicolafrost9775 2 года назад +406

      I'm so sorry; indeed they do seem to be entertained by the misery they cause. My therapist and I decided it was best for me to go into hiding over the years that my parents were failing and passing, in case my brother (a senior airline captain and instructor) decided to take a contract out on me. I wasn't an emotional decision, my therapist served 20 years in the prison system, just common sense: " Phycopaths; they kiss and kill without a thought."
      Today I'm living out of my car as a result of poverty caused by PTSD and I'm free and happy. My inheritance was a small price to pay for the peace of mind of finally being rid of him.

  • @orion10x10
    @orion10x10 2 года назад +5285

    Seeing that having "little to no anxiety" is a symptom of psychopathy was very relieving, I have very high anxiety perpetually. This is the first time I've been happy about it 😬👍

    • @TheRedTigon
      @TheRedTigon 2 года назад +586

      If it makes you feel any better as well, people with APD more likely than not don’t ponder the idea that they might have APD in the first place

    • @thiccredgyal3404
      @thiccredgyal3404 2 года назад +19

      Same here

    • @CantonDem13
      @CantonDem13 2 года назад +149

      Yup, same. I have clinical anxiety and depression (for which I'm medicated) combined with a tendency to hide my own feelings to the point that sometimes they seem distant even to me. It's a great combination for worrying about whether you actually feel things at all. But... I do. I really, really do. My most vivid childhood memories are linked to guilty feelings.
      So, yeah. No APD here.

    • @Roadking556
      @Roadking556 2 года назад +11

      I feel you

    • @lindarothera7838
      @lindarothera7838 2 года назад +7

      I know what you mean 😏

  • @hibryd7481
    @hibryd7481 Год назад +6067

    "Psychopaths have a different brain than you or I...unless you're a psychopath. But not me, I'm definitely not a psychopath", said the man holding the human brain.

    • @Chavacandraw
      @Chavacandraw Год назад +114

      LoL

    • @fathiadnan1468
      @fathiadnan1468 Год назад +56

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @darlenelabelle7212
      @darlenelabelle7212 Год назад +25

      🤯🧠👀
      Love your video's. Thank You for your time and effort.

    • @laurmito
      @laurmito Год назад +75

      Haha, with the difference the he can switch his emotions on/off due to the exposure and the nature of his work, while a psychopath would never be able to show empathy.

    • @Nostradamoss
      @Nostradamoss Год назад +6

      😂😅 game changer

  • @Maiden_America
    @Maiden_America Год назад +171

    7:43 “Synchronicity”
    12:42 PET Scans - “metabolic active during specific thoughts and actions.”
    13:33 pre frontal cortex
    15:00 lack of empathy / moral compass
    16:03 environmental morality
    18:09 environmental destabilization
    19:06 childhood trauma
    20:29 heart rates
    20:42 risk and dopamine (sociopath)
    22:51 characteristics
    24:37 impulsive actions
    27:29 parenting
    29:39 personal thoughts… 😊
    30:49 sponsor
    Excellent video. Writing about the subject and this breaks it down perfectly. Thank you.

    • @wolfbenson
      @wolfbenson 11 месяцев назад +7

      Thanks for the breakdown. Very helpful and considerate of you!

    • @theharshtruthoutthere
      @theharshtruthoutthere 9 месяцев назад

      @@wolfbenson Turn to bible and allow CHRIST to be your therapist, psychologist and psychiatrist. No man nor women fits to be one. All are sinners and without glory, all are tempted and suffer the same.
      All are expected to REPENT AND BORN AGAIN, to LIVE HOLY AND GO AND SIN NO MORE.
      All are weak in the daily fight between their spirit and flesh.
      All these therapist, psychologist and psychiatrist, this world provides, can do is:
      to deceive and steal.
      They deceived you through all these “diagnoses” and they steal your money, through all the pills which you “need”.
      In short: they poison your mind and your overall health, leaving you with neither one.
      Therapist, Psychologist and Psychiatrist = Field where no human soul, never ever going to fit of being an help, no matter the among of years spend in “medical schools” or the decree gotten from there.
      ALL of us are daily deceived, no matter the walks of life.
      Do not trust one nor to try to be one.
      1 John 4:1 KJV
      Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God: because many false prophets are gone out into the world.
      Turn to the BIBLE yourself and advice it to others also.

    • @pachiramen4605
      @pachiramen4605 5 месяцев назад

      Ty kind sir or ma’am. West Virginia mountain mama

    • @carolburnette2019
      @carolburnette2019 3 месяца назад

      Thank you

  • @herothegeorge
    @herothegeorge Год назад +3350

    The fact that a group of humans have figured this out is probably more amazing than the pathological development of psychopathy itself. My mind is blown.

    • @jaredwilliams6853
      @jaredwilliams6853 Год назад

      I have aspd and I think this stuff is propaganda. It’s like saying a depressed guy killed his family. Watch out for those depressed people they’re dangerous. It’s a survival mechanism developed from trauma. You meet them all the time Doctor, Lawyer, CEO. It’s not that dangerous and you get super powers like being smart and able to read people instantly.

    • @OnePieceSS23
      @OnePieceSS23 Год назад +47

      @Beaver Gaming amazong

    • @TassieJake
      @TassieJake Год назад

      They have no clue but have too act like they do for the court and justice systems, for the medicine industry, and for the ones that actually are in power not giving a fuck about anybody. Are we capitalist or communist ?? 😂 no, we are human.
      So go get fucked with ya BS science lol

    • @gcko
      @gcko Год назад +40

      @@OnePieceSS23 theyre a beaver who games. dont mock this incredible creature for their typo. XD

    • @OnePieceSS23
      @OnePieceSS23 Год назад +32

      @@gcko im not mocking, I just loved the word amazong

  • @Verniece1968
    @Verniece1968 2 года назад +2184

    I was in a relationship with a Narcissistic Psychopath. The craziest thing I noticed is that he couldn't cry. He learned how to make himself cry. He was so good at faking emotions. They learn by observation of non-psychopathic people and they learn young. They observe others and mimic emotions and get really good at it. It's so crazy.

    • @ai8788
      @ai8788 2 года назад +171

      Well isn't that scary?
      One way to trick em is to act like a happy situation is supposed to be sad and that'll get them thinking wether or not to be happy or sad since they see 2 differences in which they don't know how to react to.
      That's a thought btw I'm not sure if it even works

    • @RandomPerson28337
      @RandomPerson28337 2 года назад +181

      You sure you ain't the narcissist?

    • @Verniece1968
      @Verniece1968 2 года назад +60

      @@RandomPerson28337 yep

    • @santivargasf
      @santivargasf 2 года назад +99

      Responses to emotions are usually learned from others.
      Emotions may be well ingrained into most people, but the response to those emotions usually forms part of cultural norms.

    • @mollytovxx4181
      @mollytovxx4181 2 года назад +303

      I'm always sceptical when people make claims about others internal experiences. "He couldn't cry" but then you immediately follow that with "he learned how to make himself cry". So he _could_ cry. You say he was good at faking emotions, but how can you know that they were fake? Nobody can know that about someone else. Though I am sure you have reasons to believe that and I don't intend to diminish any negative experiences you had in that relationship.

  • @thev0idnati0n
    @thev0idnati0n 2 года назад +6208

    As a person with an Antisocial Personality, I appreciate you going through this! I never knew that my CNS could change due to trauma. One thing I would like to say though is that most people with this disorder usually do have a moral compass, but it's more skewed. Personally, it's not about hurting people. It's like, my mind is so logical that it only works in that way without emotional empathy. I can reason why it's not a good reason to do something, but there's no emotional attachment to the decision.

    • @theanatomylab
      @theanatomylab  2 года назад +1284

      Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!

    • @simoneb4177
      @simoneb4177 2 года назад +546

      Thank you for your explanation about "logical" decisions, that makes sense.

    • @jodybogdanovich4333
      @jodybogdanovich4333 2 года назад +425

      Years of suppressing trauma can also contribute to or trigger autoimmune diseases. May God bless you and bring you peace.

    • @rujjivittapashcharya1407
      @rujjivittapashcharya1407 2 года назад +5

      One question though. Are you an atheist?

    • @Andromeda14167
      @Andromeda14167 2 года назад +1

      When I learned one thing out of my Relationship with one. Their decision are based on pseudo rationality and power.
      Think they are smart and yet not able to think longterm. It wouldn't be a disorder If it were working for you.
      Try to be as egoistic as possible.
      But please think it throught for gods sake

  • @SebastianDavidPB
    @SebastianDavidPB Год назад +602

    As someone who had a drunken psychopathic father with a brain tumor I went thru enough trauma that almost made me insane, beside that the bullying in school by teachers and rich kids, still however by some miracle I have not developed APD. Instead it made me introverted, withdrawn kind of shy and suspicious of the intentions of others.

    • @alaricace8118
      @alaricace8118 Год назад +27

      That means you must be really smart and you may not aware of it, Good for you!

    • @MementoTurtle
      @MementoTurtle Год назад +20

      I'm sorry to hear that, I can relate to being introverted, shy and suspicious
      Know you have worth
      Stoic philosopher Epictetus said "Some things are in our control, while others are not. We control our opinion, choice, desire, aversion, and in a word, everything of our own doing. We don't control our body, property, reputation, position, and in a word, everything not of our own doing"

    • @jamja3226
      @jamja3226 Год назад +4

    • @jujubean54ify
      @jujubean54ify Год назад +5

      You have done well with your challenges, I am proud of you!❤️

    • @devanshgupta4107
      @devanshgupta4107 Год назад +2

      Somewhat same with me..!

  • @xeztan
    @xeztan 2 года назад +2538

    Crazy that we know the brain doesn’t fully develop, specifically the part in our brains responsible for logical/rational decision making, until we’re about 25 years old yet we’re expected to decide what we want to do with our lives while we’re still in high school. Arguably one of the biggest decisions we’ll ever make which requires a lot of planning and logical thinking.

    • @donaldtrumplover2254
      @donaldtrumplover2254 2 года назад +158

      But let me ask you this, who actually decides what they want to do in high school? Most people that age either follow there parents wishes or change there mind once they leave.

    • @vitaminprotein9669
      @vitaminprotein9669 2 года назад +85

      actually no matter how old you are you can't decide...to start with something..fall down and then change your path is the only way...so it's better to start young because you got less time

    • @fa-pm5dr
      @fa-pm5dr 2 года назад +37

      there is also better brain plasticity at that age, so that the quality of the learning during the educational period is better. i mean, it's a sacrifice of the individual for the overall outcome of society

    • @mark2073
      @mark2073 2 года назад +46

      25? I didn't mature until 35 to 40, or even 45

    • @yunan9610
      @yunan9610 2 года назад

      @@fa-pm5dr the stereotypical asian parents doing the right thing I suppose

  • @DMG118
    @DMG118 2 года назад +3578

    I was diagnosed with psychopathy (ASPD/psychopathic traits) and I agree in most part with this video, although I have to say I think more should have been made of the fact that we hav emotions AROUND empathy. We may not experience "empathy" but we DO experience disgust, sadness, fear, etc. and a good, loving upbringing is VITAL to keep those with psychopathy on track. TEACHING your children good morals and good lifestyles is vital. For eg. people laughed and scoffed when Ted Bundy talked about "pornography" luring him, but I can honestly say that (for people WITH a predisposition) that stuff really is a blackhole for us to fall into. NOT for most people, but for those with a pre-disposition. But THE most important factor imo is a good, loving upbringing where parents teach their goods good, solid morals and worldviews. Don't just let your kids "figure it out for themselves". If you don't FEEL something, you CAN be taught it.

    • @stigludwigsen
      @stigludwigsen 2 года назад +58

      The fact is that a real psychopath doesn't experience anything. It is not sentient.

    • @MamaBear_2629
      @MamaBear_2629 2 года назад +802

      @@stigludwigsen that’s factually incorrect that they don’t feel “ANYTHING”. That’s 100% proven wrong. They feel things DIFFERENTLY and some emotions they feel more strongly or less intensely. But your statement is proven to be wrong. That’s just facts.

    • @stigludwigsen
      @stigludwigsen 2 года назад +74

      ​@@MamaBear_2629 They have "floating" emotions, i.e shallow emotions. Emotions can be measured physically, but is not a physical phenomenon in it's essence. A psychopath have a physical body. The reason their emotions become shallow is because there's no consciousness behind them - it's simply a physical sensation that wears off quickly.
      For a normal human emotions run deep because we are sentient. If we are worried for instance, it doesn't go away quickly because the nature of being sentient means we are capable of love, which in turn means we think about how something would affect not only our selves but those around us. A psychopath, being non-sentient and therefore not capable of love, is only worried in a purely egotistical sense, and even then it's much less intense and like an on and off switch.

    • @fatimaisra9143
      @fatimaisra9143 2 года назад +433

      @@stigludwigsen omg, either pay attention or shut up, this is a science channel.
      if you just want to make statements , go off to some other soapbox.

    • @GoldenCorvum
      @GoldenCorvum 2 года назад +66

      Fantastic comment! I am wondering if you have any tips or suggestions for getting tested/ diagnosed for Antisocial Personality Disorder? I experience symptoms very similar to APD and am wanting to look into getting it checked out but am not sure where to start

  • @yolandaponkers1581
    @yolandaponkers1581 2 года назад +1683

    My mom worked with someone she now believes to have been psychopathic. Her name was Lynn, and she and my mom had to interview candidates for positions at the company. Lynn loved to torment the interviewees. She would always make the person cry, and when they left in tears, she’d turn to Mom and say, “Isn’t this fun?” Mom said that she’s never seen anyone else get so much genuine joy out of mentally torturing others.

    • @survivinggamer2598
      @survivinggamer2598 2 года назад +267

      According to the video this would be more sociopathic behaviour.

    • @simons7056
      @simons7056 2 года назад +80

      Why would anyone cry at an interview?

    • @Mary-cw4lf
      @Mary-cw4lf 2 года назад +209

      That was a sadist

    • @PC.NickRowan
      @PC.NickRowan 2 года назад +214

      Don't think that constitutes a psychopath. Psychopaths are absent of empathy, but that doesn't inherently make them pathological. I've seen non-psychopaths take pleasure in the misery of others, and that can just be serious psychological issues, or sociopaths.

    • @beckyrehman1059
      @beckyrehman1059 2 года назад +23

      Would have loved to come across her for five…

  • @little.pixiedoll
    @little.pixiedoll Год назад +153

    I took medication that I believe altered and somewhat damaged parts of my brain temporarily. I experienced how I would imagine people with ASPD experience life on a daily basis. I used to be a very sensitive person, and I could feel emotions so deeply. After I took the medication for some time I suddenly began to not feel anything, I couldn’t feel empathy, I couldn’t feel any emotions, I couldn’t even sense fear. Imagine what you love the most in this world and then suddenly your brain literally loses connections and you no longer feel anything negative or positive towards that thing, you have no control over this you can not force your brain to feel something if the connection isn’t there. I just felt empty for months, like a body without a soul. Prior to this, I could not have even fathomed what someone with ASPD experiences and now I completely understand. I personally didn’t feel any drive to do anything horrible during this time, but now I even understand why some psychopaths do horrible things, it doesn’t affect them the way it would someone with a more typical brain. just remember people with this are truly missing out on the things that we get to experience and take for granted. No one chooses if their brain will work properly or not. No one chooses to be a psychopath, just as you (if you are not someone who suffers from ASPD) didn’t choose to be normal.

    • @poot-poot
      @poot-poot Год назад +14

      What medication was it?

    • @little.pixiedoll
      @little.pixiedoll Год назад

      @@poot-pootZoloft and Lexapro. Although some people are seemingly unaffected by these medications others can experience lasting effects on the brain. There are a lot of reports of people dealing with the same issue as me even years after being off the medication.

    • @gracez593
      @gracez593 Год назад +3

      Do you feel back to your usual self now?

    • @little.pixiedoll
      @little.pixiedoll Год назад +20

      @@gracez593 Thank you for asking! After almost a year of feeling like an absolutely soulless being on autopilot, I have just recently began to feel again! I cannot describe how unbearable it is to feel absolutely nothing. I think anhedonia needs to be taken more seriously because looking back I was a completely different person during this time. You know when you almost get into a car accident and how scary it is? Not even that made me feel anything. I truly believe someone could have pointed a gun at me and I wouldn't have felt it. (I read these medications can change the architecture of your brain as well shrink your amygdala so that would explain the absolute lack of flight or fight response.) I now have a bit of an understanding of what life may be like from the perspective of someone and what its like to not be myself because I wasn't "me" for a year.

    • @leonfa259
      @leonfa259 Год назад +13

      @@little.pixiedoll Let me guess, you took an SSRI like Citalopram. I am pretty much a psychopath already without it, but it somehow made me so numb that I looked at gruesome war footage to get any emotion at all.

  • @heha4383
    @heha4383 Год назад +959

    I have a graduate degree and have been a psychiatric social worker for 20 years. I learned more in the last 30 minutes about brain function in chemistry than I did in any of my grad school classes. I cannot believe there’s so much more updated information from recent research.

    • @luminouswolf7117
      @luminouswolf7117 Год назад +35

      The internet is beautiful isn’t it

    • @Itz_Ashley11
      @Itz_Ashley11 Год назад +17

      I love this channel!! Dang that says a lot,
      I'm an undergrad taking a Neuroscience class and i found this to be super helpful and very informative

    • @susanmolnar9606
      @susanmolnar9606 Год назад +19

      @heha4383 that’s because you’re a social worker and not educated like other professionals in psychiatry. Not your fault. As a psychiatric nurse for over 35 years I have been exposed to these patients and educated regarding brain functions and the behavior associated with these abhorrent behaviors.

    • @user-bf6gz8ej4o
      @user-bf6gz8ej4o Год назад +18

      That's very scary that a psychiatric worker is allowed to do his/her job not knowing what they're actually doing...

    • @lowkey276
      @lowkey276 Год назад

      ​@@user-bf6gz8ej4o ​​social workers are there for the administrative and financial aspect, they are not health professionals (doctors, nurse, etc).

  • @lumy232
    @lumy232 2 года назад +912

    This is very interesting to me, because my father was the narcissistic type of psychopath, and now I understand better why psychiatrists sounded so desperate when they had to repeat to my mom that no matter how hard she would try to "change" him, she could actually never fix him.
    Thank you so much for these explanations!

    • @smartass0124
      @smartass0124 2 года назад +12

      Children not being traumatized is the unnatural thing. And how do we know it's only detected in boys . In fact normal people take pleasurebin suffering of those they consider evil or told authoritive source's on who's evil .n
      Most of what he described is the human norm

    • @smcic
      @smcic 2 года назад

      @@smartass0124 LOL how many children have you traumatized?

    • @PatchouliPenny
      @PatchouliPenny 2 года назад +126

      @@smartass0124 I think you need to watch the video again. He did NOT say it's only detected in boys! He did however explain very clearly why it is more prevalent in males. Also it would be ideal if children were never traumatised and saying these traits are normal in everyone? You either need to change those around you or seek therapy for yourself.

    • @bumblebaa2327
      @bumblebaa2327 2 года назад +32

      ​@@smartass0124 nah bro, I'm female and have both variants for MAOA messed up. Never enjoyed punishment or suffering of anybody or anything. Am too much empath even. Am autistic though. Might fail the the human norm you describe because of that, not because of the MAOA.

    • @frankG335
      @frankG335 2 года назад

      @@smartass0124 No one said it's "only in boys". It's just more likely in boys because they have XY, and if the X has the psychopathy gear, there's nothing to counter or mitigate it's expression.
      For a woman to have psychopathy, Both X chromosomes would have to have the gene, and if only one does, the other cancels it out.
      There are plenty of female psychopaths. Watch The Behavioral Panel as they analyze some psychopaths being interrogated (They are human behavior and neuroscience experts, and interrogation experts).

  • @andrewkoster8895
    @andrewkoster8895 Год назад +1314

    I love your parenting advice. As a father of 4, it’s absolutely critical to strive to be a better parent everyday. This is not a matter of opinion, it’s fact. Kids are suffering today because of the lack of parenting. Many parents today are more concerned about their own WANTS (not always needs) instead of their children’s NEEDS. Being a good parent requires sacrifice, and many parents don’t want to do that. Well done sir.

    • @Adelicows
      @Adelicows Год назад

      *every day

    • @deeee4663
      @deeee4663 Год назад +30

      This is so true. I’m not a parent, but my best friend is a psychologist and she has stopped taking on new patients that are under 18. Not because of any reason other than their parents. It’s impossible to really help children who’s parents refuse to stop being people filled with denial about their parenting and are more obsessed with social media than their own kids. As soon as any progress is made it’s erased by their continued horrendous parenting, of which they refuse to change or acknowledge. Therapy cannot compete with daily life in a never ending toxic situation a child can’t escape from. It’s really sad and it’s genuinely so many kids these days. Parents are either weirdos (in a bad way), completely disconnected, or narcissistic moms who want to be 16 again. Anyway, props to you for trying to be present and aware and doing your best, that’s the best thing any parent can do for their kid.

    • @andrewkoster8895
      @andrewkoster8895 Год назад +2

      @@deeee4663 thanks. It’s definitely not easy, but it makes you a better person and you end up enjoying life more.

    • @deeee4663
      @deeee4663 Год назад +4

      @@andrewkoster8895 and your kids will appreciate you even more once they’re older. My dad was hard on us as kids with certain things such as grades and activities, etc. but I see now how much it came from a place of caring. We’re all super close with him now that we’re adults, he’s my hero! Good dads are the best 🤍

    • @happyjellycatsquid
      @happyjellycatsquid Год назад +9

      @@SJTJ Yeah but it’s your duty, before birthing a child into the world, to actively seek to do better, to deal a better deck to your child than you were given. You have to do better, you must try to learn, there are so many books, classes, so many ressources to not pass onto others trauma they don’t deserve. There’s no excuse for choosing to be a parent and them not going through the efforts to be prepared for it; you don’t get to practice law without passing the Bar, your shouldn’t be a parent if you didn’t think or didn’t care to take the utter first steps to do it well.

  • @brittnyrv5087
    @brittnyrv5087 Год назад +11

    My mother had severe childhood trauma and shes a very difficult person but she does have a conscience. Childhood trauma breeds bad things.

  • @humpadumpathump5918
    @humpadumpathump5918 2 года назад +303

    I like the portion at the end about parents. To anyone who’s a parent, get help immediately if you’re struggling with anything such as depression, anxiety, anger, addiction, etc. You’ll make such a profound difference in your kid’s lives. We’re extremely fortunate to have resources available to us that prior generations never had. Stable family life + children = peaceful society

    • @WillyEckaslike
      @WillyEckaslike 2 года назад +1

      50% of children live with single mothers...its all going to plan hehehe

    • @trynabeproductive6808
      @trynabeproductive6808 2 года назад +13

      Exactly! Not everyone should be a parent or we see the results.

    • @mushroom11g55
      @mushroom11g55 2 года назад +9

      Those resources cost a significant amount of money.

    • @Goldiibug
      @Goldiibug 2 года назад +15

      People typically don't get help because of a huge lack of availability due to the ridiculous costs of seeking treatment. It's becoming even more rare for insurance to cover mental health services. A lot of people will still tell you it's a choice even though information like this video prove it's so much more complex than that.

    • @mushroom11g55
      @mushroom11g55 2 года назад +7

      @@Goldiibug yeah, and any time I search depression, it automatic points me to suicide prevention. Like wtf, just because I have depression doesn't mean I'm suicidal. Where the depression help? I guess I will buy a psychedelic mushroom grow kit.

  • @BeastM140i
    @BeastM140i Год назад +2286

    I was diagnosed with ASPD in early adulthood. I wanted to say a few things:
    I can understand other peoples emotions, but I cannot feel them. Imagine not understanding a math problem, that’s what it’s like in my brain regarding emotions. I know people feel them and what they look like, but I don’t feel them.
    The connection between right and wrong exists, I can see which is “right” and “wrong” but it really comes down to which benefits me more.
    I think the biggest take away is that what normal people feel, the consequences for other people they hurt, it doesn’t compute for me. It almost doesn’t make sense, it’s literally something I cannot understand, like reading a foreign language.

    • @donnahalsted7718
      @donnahalsted7718 Год назад +191

      Thank you.
      When I faced my 77 year old Brother whom I took in because he was "homeless", I confronted him about "consequences" of his actions. He, an English Major, gave me a blank look as if the word never existed, not in the dictionary, not in his consciousness. The same reaction with "responsibility".
      He had a moral compass for me, or could give me a five minute diatribe on why I was dishonest for attempting to "look at", not touch, take, damage... just open the case and look at his five year old granddaughters tiny violin. But he had no problem locking me out of my shop, deliberately ruining my tools and machinery...the list is very long, stealing money and goods from me, staying rent free and finally walking away with absolutely no remorse.
      I knew there was a mental problem. That's why I am researching this. Your testament is helping me understand.
      His toxicity has prompted me to go no contact. I am suffering financial loss, life setback, PTSD and other consequences of permitting him to invade my home, where I became his slave. Obviously I had no boundaries and neither did he. That gave him the advantage.
      Question. Does this condition cause you any kind of suffering? My brother seems to go from supply to supply leaving nothing but ashes in his wake... broken lives of broken wives, hook ups that are soon forgotten, a great number of children who had no father and whose memories of him are anger producing. They DONT want him around.
      I feel so sad for him. But I know there is no fix for him. I pray for a day when he can find healing. Yesterday was his BD. I couldn't give him the wedge to drive into me again by even wishing him a happy one. On top of this condition is extreme narcissism.
      My heart aches for him. But he seems to have no heart.
      How do you deal with your situation?
      Can a personal "moral compass" be developed within a psychopath so society can enjoy the gifts and talents of a person like yourself?

    • @BeastM140i
      @BeastM140i Год назад +199

      @@donnahalsted7718 I hope I can give you so answers.
      He doesn’t sound similar to me, as I have a level of respect and love for my family. Although I have been told it is cognitive empathy.
      The stealing of tools and destruction of property can be for a few reasons. When I get bored I get destructive and look for trouble. When you took him in you gave him a gateway to see weakness within you.
      Consequences are something we know about but don’t think of them or care about them.
      I don’t know why or what he was thinking, I can only give anecdotes regarding what I’ve done and have been through.
      I think he is a low functioning psychopath, potentially a sociopath has he cannot fit into society and have a productive life.
      I am in sales for a living, and have no issue getting people to sign away savings or get them into terrible financial situations because it benefits my bank account.
      We are not all monsters. Cutting him off was the right thing to do for you, but from my own experience he will come back wanting something and will spin a story as to why he made a mistake. I’ve done this numerous times.
      I hope this is something that makes sense to you, like I said I am not you or your brother so I cannot say unequivocally why he did what he did, but knowing myself and learning my behaviour through numerous, expensive, stupid sessions with a therapist, I can relate to his behaviour.

    • @BeastM140i
      @BeastM140i Год назад +156

      @@donnahalsted7718 I didn’t see the last part of the question.
      This condition doesn’t necessarily cause ME suffering, but others.
      He does sound similar to me. I’ve been unfaithful in relationships and I’ve ruined marriages because i desired the woman I saw.
      My impulse control is really not there. Someone hit my car on the way home from work so I followed him home and threatened his family. Later talking with my therapist, she told me that that’s not normal, there is a barrier in people called impulse control which stops them from doing stupid things. To me this made no sense, and if still doesn’t.
      My moral compass is something I have had help creating. I was not born with one and I was not born with a conscience. I believe some of the key parts of those can be learned and taught but not felt.
      I am extremely good at hiding myself behind the mask I wear in public and at work. My family knows me, but my mum truly knows who I am and the damage I have done to her is terrible. I genuinely am displeased with my past actions regarding her.
      I do believe that therapy has helped. My therapist has me understand why I am and who I am. While I don’t feel remorse for the things I’ve done, I can now process pain I’ve caused and have learned not to do them again. I don’t feel bad for the suffering I’ve caused, but I do regret it.
      If you want to give me your email I am happy to explore this more with you.

    • @jmart5302
      @jmart5302 Год назад +58

      @@BeastM140i thanks for sharing, oddly interesting to read this while It may have zero impact on my life. Do you feel any form of excitement? I see BMW, so does driving at high rates of speed whether it be on a track or highway create anything for you?
      Thanks in advance

    • @BeastM140i
      @BeastM140i Год назад +83

      @@jmart5302 no worries. I can feel excitement sometimes yeah. I have 2 BMW’s, both very fast which I take to the track to race them as I really enjoy driving them fast. I used to drive like a maniac on the streets until I lost my license, so I took it to the track. Fastest I’ve done is 310km/h, which was actually, what I would consider to be, exhilarating

  • @ElieBeth___
    @ElieBeth___ 2 года назад +709

    This video is so important. As a child of a parent who suffered child abuse, the trauma can easily become generational. This is why I pay so much attention to neuroscience, psychology, mindfulness, and these kinds of topics to educate myself so that when I do become a parent one day hopefully, that trauma doesn’t pass on.

    • @salmonella4u
      @salmonella4u 2 года назад +30

      I believe that it's not just generational, but cultural too. That, makes me think of people in middle eastern cultures, who seem to be just as the way he stated in this video. It's why some, let's say in the islamic sector, seem to have no remorse when they murder the way they do, such as beheading. The blank expressions and lack of emotions, no remorse.

    • @jehanali839
      @jehanali839 2 года назад

      @@salmonella4u Racist !

    • @darkmatter503
      @darkmatter503 2 года назад +4

      You can change that just remember that you don't have to be like your parents eve. Though if you've done research we inherent character genes as well but the good thing is we can change that in real time by mindfulness studying neuroscience reading a lot. It's also nature vs nurture.

    • @salmonella4u
      @salmonella4u 2 года назад +5

      @@darkmatter503 I know we can change. I've tried hard when I was young not to be like my father. We butted heads a lot. He annoyed me with every mannerism and annoying traits and quirks I saw in him. I tried hard to be totally different. I did pretty well in doing so. I know a lot of other people who found him repulsive as well. I molded myself the best way that I thought I could be, for me and for others around me. I had a lot of quirks that caused me a lot of bullying, but I acknowledge what others saw in me too at the time, and changed that as well at that time, because I started picking up some of my fathers quirks. I tried to see myself from another point of view and angle and set forth to fix it.

    • @humpadumpathump5918
      @humpadumpathump5918 2 года назад +9

      It does become a vicious cycle. My kids were abused by their mother. And she was abused by her mother. And she was neglected by her mother and abused by other family members, who in turn had all been abused. This abuse cycle has spanned across at least 4 generations. I’m trying to stop it here and now. No more vicious cycle.

  • @lauraclarkson8935
    @lauraclarkson8935 9 месяцев назад +10

    Your children will teach you who you are. You are the only one in control of your responses and emotions reactions. Children at times don’t have words to express what they are experiencing. Just hug them really tight until it passes. Validating there feelings and help them find the words.

  • @33Jenesis
    @33Jenesis 2 года назад +765

    My coworker and her child psychologist husband raised 3 amazing kids. One thing I remember well is that they always had dinner together. During dinner no matter who asked questions, there was no immediate answer. It’s always a round table of “what do you think?” and “what is the logic behind or what would be the logical conclusion?”. Her kids learned to process thoughts and explore possibilities from early on. My old supervisor and his wife also raised 3 great kids. They listened to them and not confined them mentally. Kids trust them and talk to them freely. They practice their belief without preaching, in essence showing their kids how to live a responsible life. They also do certain things together like Friday night movie premiere (they know every comic book, superhero movie, and tv shows), comic con yearly, and scifi channel watching nightly.

    • @eaterdrinker000
      @eaterdrinker000 2 года назад

      Sounds like a wonderful life in the People's Democratic Republic of Perfectistan! Alas, my parents and I were/are a bunch of retardeds.

    • @33Jenesis
      @33Jenesis 2 года назад +30

      @@PoM-MoM i know all 6 kids (now adults) in real life because I work with their parents in the same office for 25 years (they had been my supervisors). They came to brings your kids to work day, annual office picnic, and year end party every year until they went to college. I went to their high school graduation (except one who went to a boarding school in Santa Barbara) and their family gatherings. I love both of my old supervisors and considered them life long friends.

    • @frankG335
      @frankG335 2 года назад +11

      This would have no effect on a true paychopath, in terms of them caring for anyone or having a capacity for empathy.
      In other words, that family, if they give birth to a psychopath, can't prevent a child from growing up to be a serial killer.

    • @danielkerr4100
      @danielkerr4100 2 года назад +33

      @@frankG335 psychopaths aren't all killers psychopaths are born but also have to go through a seriously bad upbringing and witness horrible stuff growing up which triggers it properly unofficial term is fighting gene I believe and if you go through a very abusive upbringing then you'll like be a killer. And socalpaths are made not born like psychopaths.

    • @TheBeastKane
      @TheBeastKane 2 года назад +3

      @@danielkerr4100 You have no idea what ur talking about, stop pretending to know something you don't.

  • @stevenzerbach6447
    @stevenzerbach6447 2 года назад +323

    "React less and respond more," is perhaps the most important thought in this presentation. A reaction requires no knowledge or forethought, while a response is measured and typically reliable because it is based on knowledge and forethought, which when combined become wisdom.
    Thanks for your digestible presentation. It made a lot of sense to this layman.

    • @bensoncheung2801
      @bensoncheung2801 2 года назад

      42nd 👍

    • @daw7773
      @daw7773 2 года назад +1

      Well written explanation. ✌️

    • @neglectfulsausage7689
      @neglectfulsausage7689 2 года назад

      might as well say "be diplomatic and lie more often, and dont respond automatically and naively like a child would"

    • @rogerkey6795
      @rogerkey6795 2 года назад

      I find it humorous that so many are loving that advice, react less and respond more, as that is how psychopaths are wired.

    • @stevenzerbach6447
      @stevenzerbach6447 2 года назад

      @@rogerkey6795 Fight fire with fire, then?

  • @faecreature21
    @faecreature21 2 года назад +962

    my dad once told me "Somewhere along the way adults forget what its like to be kids. They forget what its like to be be new here, to not know how anything in the world works and that basic things has to be explained to kids." and hes right. I was a kid when he told me that and I remember feeling so relieved that this adult understood that I didn't understand why the rules were the way they were. It was stressful donig something and not knowing why i was being yelled at. Worse was when no one would explain what I did wrong so I had no idea if i'd do it again or not.
    Some things just made no sense. Why do I have to stop and wait before running across the street? what are we waiting for? The park is RIGHT THERE!" "Why can't we just flush things we don't want (like annoying brothers...) down the toilet? its a magic hole that makes things disappear!" And he would take the time to explain "Cars are on roads. Cars are big and heavy and move fast. Come sit here and look out. From here, the adult can't see little kids as well because the front of the car is in the way. They may not stop for you because roads are meant for cars, so kids shouldn't be in the street and they cant see you." Oh. Ok. that makes sense (and I could apply that to other situations. If I run across this park can that adult with a baby carriage see me? Maybe not. I'll wait). "We can't flush things we don't want down the toilet because the hole is this big. theres pipes that take everything away and it can only handle potty stuff. And also, you may not like your brothers but I'm a little invested in them so please don't flush your brothers." Ok. that makes sense I guess. Its not a magic hole that makes things go away. There's limits to what the magic tube can take away and my brothers cant fit. Also, my dad would be sad for some stupid reason if i flushed and I don't want my dad sad so I won't."
    Parenting is really hard but taking the time to remember that kids don't know how anything works and then taking the time to explain it not only helps them learn quicker and apply that knowledge to other situations (instead of just guessing while being yelled at), but it builds trust with the parent. I always knew I could ask my dad any question, no matter how stupid, and he would explain it. This helped out a lot when i look back at situations where, (now) I can see that an adult was being inappropriate towards my siblings and I but as a kids, they were just acting weird and much like most of the world, I didn't understand why. Asked my dad "hey dad, XYZ said/did this weird thing. i dont understand why he was being so weird." and he was like "Yeah kiddo. thats pretty strange alright. I dont know why they would act like that either but I'm gald you told me. You kids stay here, I'm going to go find out." And then XYZ never talked to us ever again.
    take the time to explain things. take the time to let them ask question. take the time to ask them how they think something works so you can correct it. Building that trust goes a long way.

    • @hulamei3117
      @hulamei3117 2 года назад +20

      I need to take more time to explain why we do or don't do certain things!

    • @sarahrosen4985
      @sarahrosen4985 2 года назад +83

      Your dad was soooo insightful! Big love to him.❤❤❤❤ You really hit the jackpot. I remember so many things from my childhood where I would stop and say to myself, "Remember this when you're big. Don't be like them." I tell people to treat children like foreigners from another continent who don't speak the language or know the culture. Explain, explain, explain. Then take a deep breath and explain some more. Just ask yourself: how would I want to be treated if I woke up in Outer Mongolia and my life depended on endearing myself and not offending anyone?

    • @jesss7302
      @jesss7302 2 года назад +27

      Beautiful, thank you! Explaining should be at the heart of parenting. Kids give you a gift when they say "Why?". If you don't understand why, admit it, and research it when you have time, so you can have a dialog about Why. Parents who just say "Because I said so" just shut down the whole logical process, and teach their children that might makes right. It's ok to hurt someone else if you are bigger or more important than them. In fact, if you are "more important" you are automatically right in all circumstances.

    • @dimarks444
      @dimarks444 2 года назад +14

      He sounds fantastic!

    • @faecreature21
      @faecreature21 2 года назад +35

      @@jesss7302 'If you don't understand why, admit it and research it-' That is an EXCELLENT point because you're still teaching the kid a very important lesson. 'you don't have to always know the answer. its ok to not know. i can find out though.' and then, depending on the situation you teach them *how* to find out. Valuable lessons that go beyond "just stick to your guns and never admit you don't know."

  • @elisamontrose-roback676
    @elisamontrose-roback676 9 месяцев назад +18

    I've been a licensed therapist for 20 years now and have worked in many different settings. This is the best explanation I've come across. Thank you.

  • @elainebraden2565
    @elainebraden2565 2 года назад +402

    Tips for parenting: The softer you speak, the more the child will lean in to listen. If you always show them respect, they will learn respect. Use words like unacceptable behavior. Keep your voice calm. Be patient. Don’t ever tell a child they are bad or they will become what you tell them they are, bad. If you yell they will learn how to yell. As a parent you will repeat the same lessons for years before the lightbulb comes on. I had a tendency to teach earlier than the child could grasp. I was never disappointed they hadn’t learned. Every one has a different pace in which they learn. Consistency is key. This was preparing them to possibly succeed earlier at “getting” or understanding than their peers. Good luck parents! It’s the hardest job on the planet.

    • @Moi_81
      @Moi_81 Год назад +14

      I know this sounds weird, I have a fear of hurting people and I am uncomfortable with speaking in a hostile way. I always spoke this way with my niece and nephew and they always respected me and listened to me more than others.

    • @victoriaradu736
      @victoriaradu736 Год назад +9

      This comment should be pinned.

    • @tupakkaonhyvaa
      @tupakkaonhyvaa Год назад +18

      Tips for parenting: don't make kids

    • @knie1172
      @knie1172 Год назад +15

      my mom just scream at me whenever she feel like it's fun (for her)
      now she wonder why I have a habit of raising my voice to her

    • @misha6708
      @misha6708 Год назад +3

      that explains a whole fucking lot about me...

  • @kslinaz5668
    @kslinaz5668 2 года назад +445

    You're correct.
    My mom was a PhD in early childhood development. She'd always say, "...just cuz ya can poop 'em out, doesn't mean you know how to raise 'em".

    • @nicolab2075
      @nicolab2075 2 года назад +15

      Was that the title of her PhD? 😊

    • @funky_gold_medusa
      @funky_gold_medusa 2 года назад +1

      100% accuracy! 😂😂

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie 2 года назад +5

      Clearly, your Mom was a deep thinker😂

    • @IntercontinentalArmy
      @IntercontinentalArmy 2 года назад

      Your mother never had a PhD in early childhood development unless she stole a Man's Identity and Education!

    • @CathAlexandra
      @CathAlexandra Год назад

      *pop

  • @Megan-rr6qg
    @Megan-rr6qg 2 года назад +813

    I was put on a APD watchlist when I was younger and later diagnosed but I went through severe brain-damage and idk how else to put it but it was like waking up with a soul. Like I learned from when I woke up all emotions a whole second time. Now that I’m 15 years beyond that point I feel I’m a much nicer person. I hope. I try to be.

    • @megs4193
      @megs4193 2 года назад +18

      Sounds like it worked to me ✌😃🇦🇺 ps, great name 😉😃🕊🌻.

    • @Ms_Nightshade
      @Ms_Nightshade 2 года назад +170

      That’s so interesting! An ex-boyfriend of mine fell off of the back of a truck when he was 18, had a brain aneurism as a result, and after a week in a coma, woke up without being able to feel much - if any - anger. It wasn’t a spiritual transformation; he had damage to the part of the brain specifically in charge of emotions. It didn’t affect him negatively, and may have ultimately been of benefit: he works as a Nurse’s Aid at a psychiatric hospital for troubled adults, and he can physically and psychologically manage patient outbursts and assaults without being reactionary.

    • @Megan-rr6qg
      @Megan-rr6qg 2 года назад

      @@Ms_Nightshade that makes a lot of sense I would like to see the change in personality disorders following brain damage or serious tragedy. It can re-wire you for sure.

    • @goliath6513
      @goliath6513 2 года назад +29

      good i think all people can be good people even psychopaths

    • @madisonnoblin8273
      @madisonnoblin8273 2 года назад +35

      @@Ms_Nightshade that is so freaking fascinating

  • @Jason-ml3vs
    @Jason-ml3vs 8 месяцев назад +29

    I dated a guy who is a narcissist. If I told him a weakness or fear, he would use it against me in insidious ways. He would lie constantly and craved being seen as perfect by strangers. He would shower strangers he met with adoration on social media and go on about how great they are, but would revel in withholding any compliment from me. He would smirk if he made me cry. It was pure hell.

    • @karanowlin9506
      @karanowlin9506 2 месяца назад

      It's crazy bc This is EXACTLY how the devil works.

    • @AcidGubba
      @AcidGubba Месяц назад

      Sounds Like borderline

  • @millig8980
    @millig8980 2 года назад +931

    I am a victim of child abuse, I completely agree with you that childhood trauma changes synaptic connections. As a child I was under so much heightened stress response that now I desperately seek stress. I love stress, I thrive under stress and if I do not have stress I will actively seek a stressful situation. Its like an addiction. Stress gives me so much kick that I feel fearless sometimes 🤔.

    • @tselotahaduab6339
      @tselotahaduab6339 2 года назад +84

      I hope you're ok. Are you getting help
      ?

    • @xxfree-forevloverxx9325
      @xxfree-forevloverxx9325 2 года назад +52

      @Lizard Tortilla hold up we have a youtube psychiatrist and psychology expert here

    • @Luluindia2003
      @Luluindia2003 2 года назад +13

      That's bcoz you are in control of a depression spirit which makes you feel depressed and without depressing you feel disoriented or ubnormal... I did have all these type of prblm which now i am out of it... It's like a bondage of depression ..‼️ only treatable via meditation ‼️

    • @millig8980
      @millig8980 2 года назад +23

      @Dancing to my own beat I am actually thankful that my mother used to beat the shit out of me 🤣. I actually get aroused literally when I am challenged or in a extreme difficult situation 🤣. It's like while trying to destroy me she has turned me into a superhuman 🤣. Now I punish her ( Not physically) and let her have a taste of her own medicine 🤣. I am a strong believer of Karma ❤️.

    • @goldenlamb777
      @goldenlamb777 2 года назад +68

      @@millig8980 wtf

  • @cheeky8015
    @cheeky8015 2 года назад +811

    As someone with ADHD I'd really love for you guys to do a breakdown of the current understanding of the ADHD Brain based off of real studies

    • @julieasunderjulz9512
      @julieasunderjulz9512 2 года назад +36

      I second this proposal.

    • @em.1633
      @em.1633 2 года назад +30

      Check out Alie Ward's podcast Ologies, she did an episode with Russell Barkley, the world's foremost expert on ADHD. It's really, informative!

    • @jonnakay83
      @jonnakay83 2 года назад +2

      Yes 🥰

    • @sergiorome48
      @sergiorome48 2 года назад +4

      Listen to the Huberman Lab podcast on ADHD

    • @shreyab3995
      @shreyab3995 2 года назад +6

      Petition signed

  • @theburrowrises8549
    @theburrowrises8549 2 года назад +27

    This is one of the reasons why when someone says "kids are resilient", I get really upset. Kids aren't resilient. They learn to survive, but the techniques they develop are generally not wise and healthy.

  • @EmbeeSpeaks
    @EmbeeSpeaks 11 месяцев назад +165

    This is an excellent video.
    I am currently divorcing my husband of 26 years. I left him 7 years ago after finding out about his love of prostitutes, beginning to drain our bank accounts, etc. We went to marriage counseling at my demand. It was during this time that he admitted he has never loved anyone. That he doesn’t know how to feel love. When asked how long he knew this about himself, he said at least since high school (55 at the time he said this). I was his second wife and he had three children and to hear he never loved anyone was a smack in the face.
    For 19 years, I saw my husband as perfect. In hindsight, I remember his financial control over me. I remember his humiliation of me, thinking he was so much smarter than me, denigrating me, gaslighting and manipulating me. I remember the smirking when he’d say something that hurt me. I remembered how he’d sometimes look at me like I was prey. He’d literally zone in and look at me like a predator looking at its prey. I called him on it once and he said that was the look of “adoration”.
    I honestly could not see it the ASPD. I know some of my family find it hard to believe but it was almost as if I was brainwashed. Our marriage counselor said I was probably the first person to see his mask off.
    All five of our kids were out the door ASAP after graduation. My two kids want nothing to do with him. One of his feels the same. Another of his kids keeps in contact for, I believe, inheritance reasons. His youngest… she has said he’s the only one that pays attention to her. Sadly, she is the child most like him.
    My daughter in law insists he is a sociopath. She’s a psychiatrist and has observed him for 13 years. I see it could go either way…. I’ve seen him methodically plan but also do things just for excitement with no planning.
    What’s embarrassing for me is I minored in psychology. I studied abnormal psych. I could not see any of this in him while it was happening. It took me catching him with the prostitutes to start looking back at things.

    • @SuperElwira
      @SuperElwira 9 месяцев назад +1

      Why you are still have contact with him and kids?

    • @EmbeeSpeaks
      @EmbeeSpeaks 9 месяцев назад +19

      @@SuperElwira I don’t have any contact with him. I haven’t spoken to him in three years and only because the courts make us file taxes together until the divorce is final. The past two years, I take my taxes in, drop them off and let the CPA handle him.
      I haven’t spoken to his kids since 2017 just after I left him.

    • @ronniliddell3244
      @ronniliddell3244 9 месяцев назад +12

      @EmbeeSpeaks I survived something similar. My family forced me to marry my husband on Valentine's Day 1993 when I was 19. He is now on wife #3. I discovered the prostitute issues while living on a strict financial diet that he placed me on. We had 3 children together and became he is wealthy & I am in poverty, he won custody 😭 I am almost 50. I have survived. I miss my kids. But these people who have damaged brains do a lot of damage.

    • @EmbeeSpeaks
      @EmbeeSpeaks 9 месяцев назад +6

      @@ronniliddell3244 I’m so sorry. My heart goes out to you. Hugs.

    • @leealpalazzolo8024
      @leealpalazzolo8024 9 месяцев назад +5

      You wrote what could be an accurate description of my Ex husband. It’s amazing how people think he’s so charming and charismatic but after living with him for 18 years I couldn’t believe anything he said or did.

  • @CassandraH18
    @CassandraH18 2 года назад +418

    My father is a narcissistic psychopath. I got so used to his gaslighting and abuse that I didn't know that it wasn't normal. I had to cut him out of my life and am now in therapy to undo his damage.
    Congrats on your baby!

    • @danielgonzalez5787
      @danielgonzalez5787 2 года назад +11

      @@NAT-turners-Revenge 🤢

    • @danielgonzalez5787
      @danielgonzalez5787 2 года назад +5

      @@NAT-turners-Revenge omg your joke is so funny i just died of laughter

    • @Alfakkin
      @Alfakkin 2 года назад +5

      Good luck with your new life ❤️

    • @danielgonzalez5787
      @danielgonzalez5787 2 года назад +2

      @@NAT-turners-Revenge 👻

    • @PoM-MoM
      @PoM-MoM 2 года назад +27

      From my own personal experiences I deeply understand your comment. It's like expecting bad behavior from everyone and when it never 'shows up', because the other's aren't manipulating or degrading you it really does make you feel odd.
      It's THEN when you realize that what's been happening isn't typical/normal and that you've been abused/neglected.
      I wish you well 🙂 take care.

  • @renachai6616
    @renachai6616 2 года назад +196

    I really love the last part where you shared your opinions about parenting. React less, respond more, couldn't have said it any better. Our children deserve good parents.

    • @jlllx
      @jlllx 2 года назад +1

      Having children is immoral.

    • @mykalkelley8315
      @mykalkelley8315 2 года назад

      @Talen antinatalism is evolutionarily unfit, and cringe.

    • @thotbusta
      @thotbusta 2 года назад +5

      @@jlllx wym

    • @Echo81Rumple83
      @Echo81Rumple83 2 года назад

      if that's the case, then there should be robust laws in protecting people's right to access contraception, abortion services, and even full-on vasectomy/castration or tubal ligation/hysterectomy for those who WANT THEM and KNOW they will suck as parents. ALSO, mandate comprehensive sex education, parental education, and subsidize raising families so finances won't be a burden to the lot of them, which is where most of the trauma comes from.
      i'd also go as far as mandating parental licenses, and sterilization as punishment for individuals who're most likely to be (if not reporduce) the next Hitler on our hands, but i know that's a slippery slope to tread on. i can't help but feel that way, though; they have cause so much pain and suffering throughout the world, and i'm sick of it to the point of ending the world and starting over again...

  • @agileminded7949
    @agileminded7949 2 года назад +76

    Dont ever call your child stupid ever, not once! Consider how much you program your child, its unavoidable as a parent, but if monitored it can be minimal and positively productive. Very insightful video, thank you.

    • @danner209
      @danner209 4 месяца назад +2

      Nah. I work with plenty of people whose parents should have called them stupid! Not everyone deserve a trophy, and it sucks working with those kinda people

  • @freespirit343
    @freespirit343 Год назад +152

    One of the closest people to me in my life has BPD and is a sociopath. I have "less spicy" mental health issues myself, but let me say that somebody with these conditions is still worthy of love, attention, and basic dignity. They try so hard every day to step right and be as good as they can be, and they often succeed. There's moments where I try to relate why I feel certain things or why others feel certain things, but if you take it in stride and do your best to explain rather than judging them right off the bat, they respond much better.
    This isn't meant to apologize for anybody who's been abused by such a person, all I mean to say is that these people are not write-offs. We're all simply products of the cards fate deals us.

    • @get_it_done4580
      @get_it_done4580 Год назад +6

      thank you for saying this. I have a huge fear of being alone. I live in the past a lot and I fear also moving on to a new thing that is uncomfortable for me because of BPD being so immensly difficult to adapt to new environments. So, I do "splitting". It is a form of sociopathy. I do have complete empathy and guilt from hurting people. Oddly enough, when I see them hurting it makes me fight even harder to not do this. I have made good progress so far. I HATE HATE hurting people. I just am so confused. I know, but then it's like I don't.
      However, I respond so good when I'm told I am loved by the person and they help me in the way of understanding me. I feel this person is safe to trust and I thrive/flourish. They say nothing wrong with me. I wish I was normal person😕🫤

    • @gravity00x
      @gravity00x Год назад +15

      the lies of psychopaths and their victims. my oh my.
      psychopaths are commonly refered as predatory parasites, which is the best description of such a human being.

    • @ItIsJustDucky
      @ItIsJustDucky Год назад +8

      They absolutely are a write off. Run, don't walk away from them.

    • @emeseh993
      @emeseh993 Год назад +13

      Sorry but if they do “try their best” is not because they want to be better for others but to avoid negative impacts in their lives (for instance they wouldnt mind beating up someone but they could get to prison which would make them uncomfortable what they want to avoid). A diagnosed person told me that. He also said they like to manipulate people and make them think they care or so and they enjoy watching their reactions. Highly likely that you are manipulated too. Its possible to live with psychopaths but getting emotionally involved with them anyhow is a very stupid idea.

    • @sallyjane8274
      @sallyjane8274 11 месяцев назад +9

      Until they decide you aren't beneficial to them and they don't fear the consequences to themselves of hurting you. You should avoid them at all cost.

  • @Thundercats-HOOOOO
    @Thundercats-HOOOOO 2 года назад +330

    My Mother was a sociopath/psychopath/ASPD. It was kind of a blessing. I can spot people with ill will toward me or others in minutes of meeting them. I have a manipulative behavior meter basically.

    • @ThePitchblue
      @ThePitchblue 2 года назад +18

      and you're paranoid

    • @CoolTrainerYoyo
      @CoolTrainerYoyo 2 года назад +53

      @@ThePitchblue there’s so many out there, one would be foolish not to have some sort of eye out.

    • @ThePitchblue
      @ThePitchblue 2 года назад +9

      @@CoolTrainerYoyo so many? Arent they a minority, hence the fascination?

    • @carogibson7109
      @carogibson7109 2 года назад +12

      One of the gifts of the Spirit from the Bible is the ability to discern.

    • @Iram_Ali
      @Iram_Ali 2 года назад +33

      @@ThePitchblue There's a lot of them, but remember that most don't ever get diagnosed. My father-in-law is a typical psychopath, absolutely a vile old man. Fake cries and manipulates. Loved beating up women and children, when he had the strength. Was ridiculously spoiled as a child. But he has never been diagnosed.

  • @erinrahrig4247
    @erinrahrig4247 2 года назад +691

    As a teacher (elementary), you are spot on. There is a huge issue with various things. Students (not all, but a majority of them) have little to 0 coping skills. They have a huge problem with self-regulation, showing/understanding empathy/sympathy. Parents no longer teach that at home, and it falls to the teachers to do. There isn't enough time in the day to teach them "people skills" when so many are already behind academically.
    I have noticed that many children show these psychopathic tendencies, where they do not care or understand to care about others. Doing something to someone else is almost like a game to them. To see what kind of reaction they can get. And many parents either don't understand or don't care about the social-emotional aspect that they need to teach their child. The lack of consistency makes starting each day like it was never discussed. I agree that parents need to step up. We never had anything of this level when I was in elementary school (90s). The behavior issues weren't nearly to the level they are now. A physical response was usually not the first reaction a student had, from what I remember.
    I am wondering if there is a correlation between the lack of parental involvement and a possible increase in psychopathic behaviors. It would be interesting to read.
    Sorry about my rant.
    I do love this channel and I use it a lot in my science class. Please keep making them!

    • @CJG-bk4bk
      @CJG-bk4bk 2 года назад +110

      Great observation. I had I guy work with me offshore and we were talking about our kids (his kid was lazy, wasted money, wouldn’t work or help around house etc etc) and he said “the teachers really didn’t do their job” with his kid. I told him it was his and his wife’s job to raise that kid not the teacher’s. The teachers job is to teach school stuff not raise “your” kid. Needless to say he got mad at me but later said I was right.

    • @pabbies
      @pabbies 2 года назад +56

      there is definitely a correlation. humans start learning empathy, social skills, communication skills from infancy. how parents teach their children these skills and perspective taking can definitely impact how a growing person’s brain develops. especially because the brain’s plasticity is particularly heightened during the first 2 years of a child’s life and then spikes again during puberty.

    • @spicyirwin5835
      @spicyirwin5835 2 года назад +15

      Tech does not teach empathy so parents letting tech babysit, I so understand ur words. I thank u for being a teacher bc we so need to be taught. Knowledge is power! U shouldnt have to be a parent & be able to teach hormones & testosterones. I heard of alot of parents aborting their gay baby. Bonobos r bi. Seems gov wants to teach hate also. Children dont see color etc but r taught. I believe kids learn what they see more than what they r told. Hence cig smoking. We used to have villages raise children. Thx for ur LOVE! God Bless & Stay Safe & Healthy🙏💜✌️

    • @morteamoureuse
      @morteamoureuse 2 года назад +35

      I work with kids and agree. Many parents aren't as involved and by the time they notice their kids are having behavioral issues, it's an uphill battle. It's also hard to fight against widespread early, unregulated access to technology. Kids are exposed to new behaviors, language and situations they don't understand and end up bringing that into real life.

    • @CariMachet
      @CariMachet 2 года назад

      Wonder no more > the parents don’t teach the children the skills because they don’t have them in their tool box AND it’s all by design > elites try to make the masses crazy through various means in order to control them

  • @watsonwrote
    @watsonwrote 2 года назад +420

    I truly can't imagine not having empathy or anxiety. These experiences are such a fundamental part of how I experience life that it's harder to comprehend that even blindness. My existence must be just as foriegn to people who lack these.

    • @1amSam
      @1amSam Год назад +40

      As someone with this disorder I thought it was just normal and everyone was masking to fit in. Once I got diagnosed I realized that I in fact was different and have to actually think about right and wrong a lot more than “normal people” and the way the anxiety thing was explained to me is I do have anxiety but it shows up differently on me than how other’s experience it

    • @chaytonhurlow840
      @chaytonhurlow840 Год назад +4

      @@1amSam everyone “masks” to a certain extent.

    • @allinaday9882
      @allinaday9882 Год назад +5

      Especially the empathetic, masking empathy prevents borders being purposely crossed to manipulate an empathic.

    • @tupakkaonhyvaa
      @tupakkaonhyvaa Год назад +2

      @@1amSam You are not a psychopath, not even close. 🤣 Nice try though, you got 9 gullible people to like your comment so far.

    • @katelynbarone5256
      @katelynbarone5256 Год назад

      @@tupakkaonhyvaa 1.2% of men and .3-.7% of women are psychopaths so idk why you think it is impossible that this person is a psychopath.

  • @alaynjones2209
    @alaynjones2209 2 месяца назад +2

    I learned this when I went into Security. Many people like the feel of being in charge of others but abusing their power. I saw it a lot and I’m not in security anymore

  • @attheranch873
    @attheranch873 2 года назад +741

    I had a dad with ASPD, so my siblings and I suffered a tremendous amount of abuse. Even with all that I turned out to be compassionate and very concerned about the suffering of others. One of my siblings turned out to have ASPD. So, it takes more than abuse to cause it. I ended up with depression and other problems, but not ASPD.There are plenty of kids that have been severely traumatized that don’t have antisocial personality disorder.

    • @riverafamily7
      @riverafamily7 2 года назад +26

      I have a mom with ASPD. I have CPTSD and AfDD.

    • @cellgrrl
      @cellgrrl 2 года назад +35

      I too had a father with something like ASPD. One thing about him was that there was no such thing as being a child, and he had 5 of them. We were expected to behave like fully grown adults. We were supposed to be able to function like an adult, be as smart as he was, and he was very smart, and not to express emotion. Our mother OTOH, was our saving grace but she died when we were all mostly teenagers. Enter major trauma. As a result I think we all ended up with various neuroses.

    • @LilaCerullos
      @LilaCerullos 2 года назад +30

      Ah yeah, this. I had a really rough childhood/adolescence, i was mentally and physically abused in horrendous ways, but still I have always been a very sensitive person to the feelings of others, I try to understand others and i care about how i make them feel, so i think so yeah, ASPD goes beyond being just abused. Some people just likes to use their tragic backstory as an excuse for their poor behavior, some ppl are just bad because they choose to.

    • @e_i_e_i_bro
      @e_i_e_i_bro 2 года назад +16

      Both of my siblings aspd, I have no personality disorder. They're male and I'm not. That makes a difference.

    • @Im_A_LumberJack_n_Thats_OK
      @Im_A_LumberJack_n_Thats_OK 2 года назад +6

      That's basically what he said in the clip. It isn't just one thing.

  • @LunaRealized
    @LunaRealized 2 года назад +687

    At age 14 I began testing for ASPD, with a diagnosis at 20. Specifically for standard psychopathy. However, mine was a strange case as I have never been abused or mistreated by others. Echoing/adding onto another comment, we do feel emotions just like everyone else. What makes us different from people like you is that we don’t feel bad for anyone, we don’t care when someone is hurting, we have no ability to feel these things because we don’t become attached. A great example of this would be the death of my mother. She died my junior year of college, I remember after I got the call I thought “oh, that sucks” and went back to my homework. All of her effort & love was wasted on me, as my condition prevents me from feeling appreciation for these things. One of the funniest things I’ve seen on the internet is people tagging “psychopath” in their biographies on social platforms. What they don’t understand is this condition prevents morality & social development, so is contradictory to actually being psychopathic. This is not to say these things are impossible, just that we see them differently. For instance, I was popular in High School & College, i joined a fraternity. The difference is that I did these things not for social enjoyment, but because I felt like it. I would apologize for the disjointed comment, but I hope this helps shed a small light on what living with ASPD is like.

    • @alexthesecond3278
      @alexthesecond3278 2 года назад +35

      oh? im a little similar to you, but i actually create social attachments and have the same reaction as you when the thing or person dies

    • @WeloveTrump2024
      @WeloveTrump2024 2 года назад +3

      Thank you

    • @LunaRealized
      @LunaRealized 2 года назад +91

      @@oldschoolkarate-5o thanks. I mean I would consider my biology an advantage, because I don’t get tangled up in relationships/forced into emotional contracts, it makes me an ultra pragmatic person, + I am lucky enough to be intelligent. Despite this, I’m not going to act like on of those tiktok sob stories where “you don’t understand” or “woe is me”, my social skills all had to be learned and I was literally the most awkward loser until I started reading behavior patterns and learning how to be funny. Ego is also a huge problem for me, as may appear apparent, and I’ve often ruined some of the most beneficial relationships in my career through my own selfishness. There’s also a nihilistic paradigm that comes with it, realizing that everything is temporary, I was never able to understand religion. So take risks because why not, life is far too short. At least I don’t get self esteem issues lmao

    • @meltedWax169
      @meltedWax169 2 года назад +11

      @@LunaRealized damn i'm really starting to think i should get myself checked for apd.

    • @oldschoolkarate-5o
      @oldschoolkarate-5o 2 года назад +2

      thanks🙏🏽

  • @gabiluch87
    @gabiluch87 2 года назад +490

    Brilliant
    My late husband's mother definitely has a disorder like the ones you are describing, I think she's a sociopath at this point, raised by one from what I've heard. She's against therapy, psychotherapy, medicine in general tbh.
    She's very manipulative and cruel and she tells you "I did this to see what your reaction was" or "I said it to push you to do what I wanted"
    When my husband died his dad was obviously distraught and he said "I had my son for 29 years and now he's gone and I can't do anything about it". She made a face and said "I had him longer because he was in MY womb"... That's the worst thing I've heard her say and I've heard her say a lot of cruel things.
    My father in law is a loving person, he's the compassionate parent that thankfully was always there to keep my husband and my sister in law with a beating heart. They both turned out to be extremely empathic, sensitive young people.

    • @godnyx117
      @godnyx117 2 года назад +19

      I'm sorry for your loss! Hope you can be with you father in law with a long long time and with any individual in your family that you love. And I hope that your mother in law can get better and accept medicine at some point! Lots of love!!!

    • @arcosprey4811
      @arcosprey4811 2 года назад +23

      My dads mom is like this. Same exact story you told, cold mother. My grandmother never came to visit my dad let alone his children when they were born or anything, and to this day she only has called once 4 days after my dads birthday to tell us shes getting rid of some birds she doesnt want and if we wanted.

    • @godnyx117
      @godnyx117 2 года назад +6

      @@arcosprey4811 At least she asked you if you want the birds, lol! But outsides jokes, poor people! It's a shame there isn't a cheap, one-shot cure for this.

    • @ondreacounts2556
      @ondreacounts2556 2 года назад +2

      @@arcosprey4811 Is she German or have direct German ancestry?

    • @Portia620
      @Portia620 2 года назад +5

      Thank God for that and I’m working on that with 2 kids and my ex is extreme sick! I was gaslight and so many messed up things and he turned my friends family agaismy me and had no idea what was going on. I had ptsd when met him so didn’t trust many people! Worst person I could trust was him now I have complex PTSD but I’m healing and trying to drag one of my kids out of tremendous amounts of trauma from it and she’s very confused as he manipulates her. Said I’m the problem. She is very sick mentally. Thank God she’s getting better and talking to me now because she wasn’t talking to me and pushing me away.

  • @leealpalazzolo8024
    @leealpalazzolo8024 9 месяцев назад +2

    This video opened my eyes! I’ve lived for the past 20+ years knowing my Ex husband was a psychopath but your explanation of why he didn’t and still doesn’t feel bad about the things he did to me AND to our kids has really helped me to understand. Thank you for this video!

  • @danni9136
    @danni9136 2 года назад +822

    I think that if we had the ability to go in and "fix" the hardware that was "wrong" with a person's brain it would become a slippery slope of who to "fix". If a psychopath doesn't think there is anything wrong with their brain, do we have a moral obligation to do nothing because we don't have their permission to "fix" them? Or do we have a moral obligation to society to go ahead and "fix" their brain anyway?
    I love the videos and learn a lot. Thank you.

    • @ColonelSandersLite
      @ColonelSandersLite 2 года назад +157

      The answer is - "we have a moral obligation to do nothing because we don't have their permission to "fix" them".
      The reason is simple. He have been down the other road before. That's how we got eugenics. Hard pass, thanks.

    • @humanleader184
      @humanleader184 2 года назад +31

      they're psychopaths. not robots. i feel like someone who is aware that they suffer from some kind of psychopathy would prefer to have it changed.

    • @tengonadacluewhatsgutsprec1419
      @tengonadacluewhatsgutsprec1419 2 года назад +31

      @@humanleader184 with all the pain in the world why would anyone who doesn't empathize want to feel all that? Sounds great to at most think "huh that sucks for them" then move on knowing some crappy things are right and not having to be bothered by the emotional parts. Imo humanity as a whole would be better off if psychopathy was the norm...

    • @neglectfulsausage7689
      @neglectfulsausage7689 2 года назад +7

      Ya we should start with OP he sounds like his brain is programmed for gay and we can fix him.

    • @wickedcabinboy
      @wickedcabinboy 2 года назад +10

      @Danette Fehringer - Not without consent. Would that it were so easy as fiddling with the brain. It's not a structural problem, it's a biochemical problem. And the biochemistry of the brain is extremely complex.

  • @cheenythegreat
    @cheenythegreat 2 года назад +468

    I experienced a lot of trauma as a kid. I have never had my brain scanned for these hardwire defects that you describe, but I have no reason to believe I have a different than normal brain. However, due to the trauma I endured, I absolutely had no empathy, no conception of right or wrong, and little to no remorse or guilt as a young child. My mother definitely had to instill these values into me. I had to learn empathy and guilt, etc. Now I think most people would describe me as a good person and I don't believe I portray traits of sociopathy. But even to this day, my first inclination to certain situations is not empathy, I may not be drawn to the 'right' choice naturally. I have to take a second to remind myself to do the right thing or to feel a certain way. I definitely agree with another commenter that empathy, moral values, remorse, and so forth can be learned.

    • @8thsheet407
      @8thsheet407 2 года назад +9

      So do you really "feel" (like rage or orgasm) bad when you hurt someone you care about? Or you pretend?

    • @mustang8206
      @mustang8206 2 года назад +14

      Glad to hear that you still work to do the right thing even though you don't feel like it. Also as was pointed out in the video psycopaths believe that there this nothing wrong with them, so even though you believe your brain is normal that doesn't account for much

    • @NeonCicada
      @NeonCicada 2 года назад +9

      @Brandy Balloon *[ just going off your comment ]*
      I can understand why you might think the way you do about empathy...
      - However, empathy has multiple forms _(with the two most basic forms being: cognitive empathy, and emotional empathy)._
      - Unlike emotional empathy, cognitive empathy isn't something people are just handed at birth. That means we all have to actually put in the effort to learn about things like: society, moral philosophy, and humanity.
      *Fact Check Me* ✅
      _...because random people online tend to hold intellectually narrow and emotionally shallow views on human psychology (including myself)_

    • @NeonCicada
      @NeonCicada 2 года назад +18

      @Brandy Balloon
      - *Cognitive empathy* - is the ability to understand where someone else is coming from, which gives people a perspective sense of what something *could* be like for them.
      - *Emotional empathy* - is the experiential mirroring of the emotional states being displayed by others; potentially extending into physical sensations.
      - *Compassionate empathy* - is when both cognitive and emotional empathy are equally expressed.
      When someone experiences compassionate empathy they aren't intellectually distant observers (purely affective empathy), nor are they overcome with emotions (purely somatic empathy).
      Working in the hospital has taught me a hard life lesson about maintaining healthy emotional boundaries with people. We can keep our empathy for others -- without actually _feeling emotional_ for them. 🙂

    • @fleetskipper1810
      @fleetskipper1810 2 года назад +3

      @@NeonCicada Thank you for this explanation, it makes a lot of sense.

  • @foxxie1702
    @foxxie1702 2 года назад +136

    I wrote an essay version of this video for those who find reading helpful. You can read it or add to it if you'd like, but I did this because I found it very helpful for me personally.
    There is no official diagnosis of psychopathy and sociopathy. These are both just terms that communicate behavioral symptoms. Theses terms fall under the category of antisocial personality disorder (APD). APD itself is categorized by impulsive, irresponsible and often criminal behavior and is only one of four personality disorders that fall under the broader Cluster B category. This category includes borderline, narcissistic, and histrionic personality disorders. APD could be seen as the worst of these four disorders because it can involve some of the traits associated within the other disorders on top of its own unique characteristics.
    Psychopathy can be seen as the end result of physical conditions (such as the nervous system) combined with environmental conditions, while sociopathy is almost purely a product of environmental conditions. It's important to note that experiences like childhood trauma can alter the nervous system to produce these more psychopathic traits.
    To understand the brain of a psychopath we need to understand serotonin. Serotonin is a monoamine neurotransmitter or neuromodulator. When it’s released it causes, stops, or changes a signal or how it works. When serotonin is released at the synapse (the location where two or more neurons communicate), it leaves the pre synaptic neuron first (the first neuron) then enters into a space between the neurons called the synaptic cleft. Serotonin then leaves the presynaptic neuron and goes into synaptic cleft where it binds into receptors on the post synaptic neuron.
    Depending on location, type of neuron and other factors, serotonin initiates something, inhibits something, or alters activity within that synapse. Now the serotonin is reabsorbed into the pre synaptic neuron (a process known as reuptake), but some remains in the synaptic cleft, so the body breaks that down with monoamine oxidase. This combination of reuptake and breakdown takes serotonin out of the synapse temporarily, once the synapse needs to fire again you get the proper response because you know how much serotonin is going to be present.
    Activity of this enzyme (monoamine oxidase) is coded by the MAOA gene on an x chromosome. There can be different versions or alleles of this gene, MAOA-H or MAOA-L, the h stands for high activity and the l for low activity. Most psychopaths have the low functioning variant of MAOA gene, which is more associated with aggression and violence. Sometimes entire family lines have the gene knocked out so they don’t breakdown serotonin on the synapse at all. So as we discussed psychopaths tend to have the lower functioning version of the MAOA gene means less serotonin is being broken down or degraded after its reuptake.
    Some may be confused because serotonin is seen as happy neurotransmitter. After all, SSRIs are the go to anti-depressants which limit how much serotonin is reabsorbed into presynaptic neuron. As we discussed, the low functioning MAOA produces less of the enzyme needed for serotonin to be broken down, so shouldn't the psychopath be happier? Biology isn't that simple, it's a complex system and no single neurotransmitter is solely responsible for anything. They simply play roles in different behaviors and emotions by working with other hormones and neurotransmitters.
    Back to the MAOA gene: The MAOA gene is located on X chromosome. Females have two X chromosomes, and males have XY. You get one X from your mother, and either an X or Y from father. If you're following, you see that the father determines the sex of child because he can either give you an X or Y chromosome. Most psychopaths as you can imagine are male. If a female has the low activity variant (MAOA-L, the warrior gene) on one X chromosome and not the other, then they cancel each other out and aggressive behavior won’t display.
    Because males only have one X chromosome if they have the warrior gene passed down from the mother there won't be another X chromosome to cancel it out, so females appear less likely to become psychopathic because both of their X chromosomes must have this variant. Although of course, simply having the MAOA-L gene doesn’t make you psychopathic and aggressive. The combination of environmental conditions along with brain alterations that are likely a product of serotonin alterations during brain development play very large factors.
    The best data we have surrounding APD comes from pet scans which scan the "metabolism" of brain, displaying which areas are metabolically active while experiencing specific types of thoughts and emotions. When people with APD are given pet scans and asked questions about moral dilemmas, they found low activity in their prefrontal cortex and in the limbic system (containing the amygdala and hippocampus). When patients are asked about for example, a scenario involving a young child losing both parents, 99% of people would see areas responsible for morality and empathy light up in the anterior cingulate cortex and ventromedial prefrontal cortex which are strongly linked to morality and empathy, but with sociopaths and psychopaths these areas in the brain are underactive to the point where you can argue they may not feel any empathy at all.
    The Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) is the last region in brain to develop in a human being. This involves rational decision making and is our risk assessment center. Other regions in the brain give feedback to the DLPFC, helping us learn how to respond to ethical issues. When the brain is developing and serotonin is reduced, if these areas that relay information to the DLPFC aren’t active that is going to change how synapses are formed in this region. This means to a psychopath their behavior does not seem irrational. They don’t feel bad when they do something wrong like stealing or hurting someone because their brain is processing the information the way it would for a regular person.
    But of course these are just specific factors that can contribute to psychopathy. You need something else on top of all these factors to be a psychopath. To crumble to the ground you need environmental conditions to cause that devastation. This can be caused through factors like childhood trauma which can shift the DLPFC to cause aberrations in other areas in the brain to where they become low functioning, so you can get the result of psychopathy based purely on environment.
    Both psychopaths and sociopaths lack empathy but have little to no anxiety (resulting from a low functioning amygdala), although sociopaths may feel greater levels of anxiety or rage than psychopaths who typically feel none. Their lower fear of risk coupled with lowered ability to feel empathy and shame along with their ability to still experience the euphoric highs produced by dopamine and adrenaline and other neurotransmitters cause the sociopath or psychopath to be much more willing to engage in behaviors that harm others.

    One major difference between psychopaths and sociopaths are that psychopaths are typically more calculating and less reactionary. They try to blend in with those around them. CEOs are often psychopathic. Sociopaths are more abrasive and reactionary, and are more willing to do things just to do them. They may not mind showing that they’re cruel or manipulating. There are also other genes that haven't been discussed that may play a role in sociopathy and psychopathy.

    • @MarkShinnick
      @MarkShinnick 2 года назад

      Well.. they threaten society.

    • @osku6025
      @osku6025 2 года назад +2

      Thank you so much for this! :)

    • @MarkShinnick
      @MarkShinnick 2 года назад +1

      @@christensenkey7512 That would leave your mark on the world in a cool way for many to forever behold.

    • @DocBree13
      @DocBree13 2 года назад

      Great job!

    • @jenniferholden9397
      @jenniferholden9397 2 года назад

      Thank you for that, I think that I must re read and try to put all the information into the right boxes for me to assimilate all your insightful info a way for me to get to grips with that “spaghetti” bowl (I’m looking for the start of the spaghetti). Sorry, I’ve always had a problem with comprehension. Having said all that I’ll have to read again until I find the start of the spaghetti, a bit like getting a peek around the curtain of Normal. But I will try to get back to you when I’ve unscrambled my spaghetti, but thank you for that.

  • @margareturquhart5641
    @margareturquhart5641 4 месяца назад +1

    I’m a baby boomer and an enthusiastic women’s libber. When thinking about a career as a teenager, I discussed my attitude with an ‘uncle’ who I greatly respected . He sAid that being a good mother was the most important job I could ever do. I took this to heart and, not only did I respect my own mother much more, I chose to be a full time mother to my own 4 children, until the youngest was 9 years old. I worked part time after that and believe teenagers need a great deal of support too. I appreciate that few women now have this option, but I believe that I made the best choice. I am so proud of my adult offspring who also put their own children at the centre of their lives.

  • @airheads1012
    @airheads1012 Год назад +486

    Small correction: antisocial personality disorder is more commonly abbreviated as ASPD, and APD is commonly used for auditory processing disorder.

    • @williamlongjon9649
      @williamlongjon9649 Год назад +1

      As well as autism spectrum disorder

    • @rwnmrr
      @rwnmrr Год назад +58

      ​@@williamlongjon9649that's ASD

    • @zyyl1949
      @zyyl1949 Год назад +17

      Even more importantly only 5 or 6% of people diagnosed with ASPD would qualify for a diagnosis of psychopathy (>30 PCL-R), the correlation between the 2 is very low

    • @emiliasapalo9456
      @emiliasapalo9456 Год назад +2

      I appreciated that small correction.

    • @stellarwind1946
      @stellarwind1946 Год назад +1

      I’ve seen it used for both.

  • @thecarouselpitch
    @thecarouselpitch Год назад +293

    You absolutely hit the nail on the head about parenting. We desperately need more education for current and future parents in child development and emotional self-regulation. I believe it would 100% change the world for the better. Great video.

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Год назад +5

      he's playing with peoples brains again

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Год назад

      @@chopholtz4950 here have a cookie and some porn

    • @SemekiIzuio
      @SemekiIzuio Год назад +2

      Too bad there are just as many parents who dont care how their children grows up or putting time and effort in being there for them

    • @fluffytail6355
      @fluffytail6355 Год назад +4

      @@chopholtz4950people aren’t even learning the basics anymore (reading, writing, grammar, spelling, math) and you expect psychology to be offered? What about those parents who “home school” their kids? They have NO formal education with instruction let alone a strong grasp of specific subject matter, so how would those people teach that topic?

    • @pyrosupreme4473
      @pyrosupreme4473 Год назад +1

      @@chopholtz4950Most wars are actually logical in that governments want resources and are willing to sacrifice their population to obtain those resources. Wars starting is almost always anything but emotional

  • @seriouslyreally5413
    @seriouslyreally5413 2 года назад +38

    As a nurse caring for medical patients affected in various degrees by hastily drawn up misclassifications, yours by far has been the clearest in describing the differences that I have ever heard. Thanks for the tutorial!

  • @melanieeyquem1250
    @melanieeyquem1250 Год назад +15

    I’m in my 3rd year of a psychology degree and we study this All The Time!! Lol I love the way you explain it and IMO better than others on RUclips 😊

  • @coutureleotards
    @coutureleotards 2 года назад +269

    I study psychology for this, all this right here. Antisocial Personality Disorder is not about being afraid of being around other people, it's about breaking rules, and laws and destroying boundaries. Not following social rules at an uneven or abnormal level. There are a few words in Psychology that are confusing but make since when the behaviors are explained with the title. When I saw this pop up on my feed, I went .....oooohhhhh I gotta see this one. Thanks guys for all the great videos you do.

    • @RisaPlays
      @RisaPlays 2 года назад +19

      The anxious and fearful one that most people don't know about is Avoidant Personality Disorder. I'm not antisocial, I just tend to avoid. Even my dad, a psychologist, called me antisocial once because I preferred to stay in the safety of my room than spend time with people. I have other issues too, none of them in Clusters A or B.
      And if you're wondering how someone who's avoidant is managing to comment.... I usually feel instant regret every time I do, but I still try to push myself.

    • @manib.
      @manib. 2 года назад +5

      @@RisaPlays thought I had something like this, but I’m just extremely asocial. I avoid as well, however I don’t feel anxious, I just really don’t like being around other people except a couple family members.

    • @wolfzmusic9706
      @wolfzmusic9706 2 года назад

      @@manib. That is not what avoidant personality disorder. Schizoid sounds more like what you're describing, although I highly doubt you're schizoid

    • @hellogoodbyeforever
      @hellogoodbyeforever 2 года назад +1

      You basically described me here. I don't drink but when I do all these traits come shinning thu....

    • @mortonmorton6083
      @mortonmorton6083 2 года назад +3

      We get a high breaking boundaries learning and studying others reactions and putting that information into our everyday lives to try blend in with the world because we feel like an alien don't think the same as others there's active being in the world and not active being a hermit reading watching videos etc we just don't feel like the normies just numb so we go to the extreme trying to feel just trying to coexist feel lonely not lovely rush makes us feel human like the adrenaline is a drug of choice nothing else works and playing with risks is very rewarding

  • @ace.l.w
    @ace.l.w 2 года назад +69

    The parenting being a key thing here resonates with me so hard. I feel like if I had different parents, I easily could have developed ASPD because of my childhood trauma. While I don’t think I experience “empathy” in the traditional sense (I don’t feel anything bad when seeing another person in trouble or in pain), I DEFINITELY experience sympathy and feel an obligation to FIX THINGS. In my adult life I’ve encountered a number of crises involving myself or others in imminent danger, and I’ve always been told that my ability to remain calm and think clearly in a situation is a good thing.
    How my brain developed after my trauma and around ongoing sources of trauma was entirely down to parenting, and I’m very grateful to my parents for that.

  • @BlueContact125
    @BlueContact125 Год назад +213

    your authenticity, intelligence, and ability to effectively communicate (either in academic or personal) is the reason I love this channel. I have been able to actively learn far more from this channel (mostly your episodes) than I did in college level A&P classes. As you said the education system is terrible, I memorized enough to pass the test and it wasn't until I med school that I really was able to fully appreciate the subject matter .

    • @theanatomylab
      @theanatomylab  Год назад +31

      This was a fantastic comment to see upon waking up this morning. Truly, thank you for the kind words and support. This is why we do what we do.

    • @vanman757
      @vanman757 Год назад +8

      @@theanatomylab 🙏🏻🙂👍🏻

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 Год назад +6

      @@theanatomylab
      I appreciate the way you respectfully handle the organs, because even though they are a teaching tool, they were after all once a part of a living human being. I realize there’s a level of _HAVING_ to do that, to preserve them as long as possible in good condition, but still, it is comforting.
      My biology AP class in high dissected a human cadaver, and each day we would have a specialist doctor/surgeon come in a dissect a part of it with us, and show off the body to us. Nothing _TOO_ in depth like what you do on your channel.
      The brain surgeon that helped us dissect the brain I found to be really disrespectful the way he went about it. I understand that by his stage in the game he’s very cold and detached from the awe of what he’s doing, but it was still fucked up for a 16 year old to watch. He sliced the brain up like a freaking meatloaf, real quick-like, and no good reason. All I could think of when I was watching that was everything that made up this man - his character, his memories, his knowledge, etc. were all encompassed in this organ, and it was sliced up like a damned meatloaf!
      This channel is awesome, and helps me come to terms with how somewhat traumatic that class was. I stayed home “sick” when it came my turn to dissect the body part I was assigned for, because I was just having way too hard of a time with the whole experience.
      I was even on the front page of the local county section of the newspaper because it was such a big deal at the time (first year ever for our high school getting a cadaver, which unfortunately the program didn’t last too many years because kids started acting too immature and disrespectful in the class).
      Anyways, the newspaper took a picture of me with a horrified squeamish look on my face and plugging my ears with rubber kitchen gloves on as I watched the surgeon cracking the man’s rib cage open to get into the body cavity region. It was very loud!
      The newspaper interviewed a bunch of us, but they put one of those big text quotes next to my picture, saying _”This class changed my mind about everything… I don’t want anything to do with biology ever again.”_ Lol.

    • @tracyg5993
      @tracyg5993 Год назад +1

      well said!

    • @cockeyedoptimista
      @cockeyedoptimista Год назад +1

      This is my first experience with this guy but he's great! You're great, narrator Sir! I love this!

  • @eden1588
    @eden1588 9 месяцев назад +5

    I’m continually amazed over how much information this man can retain. I did psychology in university fifteen years ago and find the subject of brain chemistry fascinating. Still, I had to watch this documentary about four times before I was able to grasp this perfectly and be able to explain it with some competence to another.

    • @bonnytaylor7558
      @bonnytaylor7558 6 месяцев назад

      Omg I was thinking the same thing.. I am amazed.

  • @electrominded8372
    @electrominded8372 2 года назад +134

    I felt so much empathy/compassion for others as a child that others took advantage of me, regardless if they were antisocial personalities or not.

    • @Soitisisit
      @Soitisisit 2 года назад +3

      Sorry that happened to you and hope it didn't make you jaded or overly paranoid.

    • @tylerbrianmiranda9674
      @tylerbrianmiranda9674 2 года назад

      Same here...

    • @slumville1655
      @slumville1655 2 года назад +3

      Force positive affirmations, you’ll see improvement

    • @BeholdAlphaAndOmega
      @BeholdAlphaAndOmega 2 года назад +10

      Narcissists and empaths are drawn to each other. You might want to check out information available on that dynamic. It is the foundation of many abusive relationships.

    • @noracola5285
      @noracola5285 2 года назад +1

      Me too but then I immediately started plotting my revenge on them all so idk maybe it canceled out 😕

  • @tarnyaattwell4841
    @tarnyaattwell4841 2 года назад +340

    My kids and I have autism, I often hear people say that we don't feel emotions. We do feel an awful lot, we just process it differently. We also may react differently. I think that the people with autism that are more based within their own world may seem to not notice what's going on around them, but things do impact on them, they may just not show it in the same way. We certainly have a lot of anxiety. So we are not in any way like psychpaths. Love this video, really interesting and taught me a lot more about how psychopaths and sociopaths are created.

    • @lekiscool
      @lekiscool 2 года назад +40

      I think the analysis behind autism is starting to lean toward autistic people being overly empathetic/emotional to the point of shutting down. Which is probably where the “lack of emotion” came from.

    • @brandonwiechert9948
      @brandonwiechert9948 2 года назад +27

      @@lekiscool incredibly insightful, and correct. My Aspergers diagnosis, and the typical social problems that are so common in Spectrum disorders. I personally have auditory over stimulation problems, while also displaying what appears to be antisocial behavior. My retraction from social situations was not because I disliked all communication with people, it was more an inability to regulate my response to over stimulation, which manifested itself as antisocial behavior. With external overstimulation and the subsequent retraction into oneself, came an avalanche of emotions and feelings, contrary to the no emotion/feeling that psychopathy exudes. Same antisocial behavior, with two antithetical reasons for said behavior. Not all appearances of similar behavior, have the same root cause. Learn, don't stigmatize!

    • @levi_octavian
      @levi_octavian 2 года назад +13

      I've always called the lack of emotion bullshit as someone with Aspergers. Some of us have trouble displaying it but a few can properly show it. Some may have trouble understanding and relating sometimes but we know when someone is upset. I can recognize when someone is upset and my mind goes how can I help them or at least make sure they are alright. It's how I am with my good friends when I see them struggling. Although my ASD gives some barriers I am capable of feeling emotions and empathy like any neurotypical. However I don't have alexithymia so that helps me in the long run.

    • @lotto5813
      @lotto5813 2 года назад +8

      As a biopsychology student with ASD, I suggest you to look into the difference between cognitive and emotional empathy. While people with aspd lack emotional empathy and do have cognitive empathy, meaning they can't feel emotions but can understand them, it's the other way around for people like us. We do have emotions but struggle with understanding them.

    • @pineapple365
      @pineapple365 2 года назад +1

      @@lekiscool that is very accurate for me, this is how I always described it as.

  • @dlo111
    @dlo111 2 года назад +23

    I've said it for years, and do my best all the time, Be good to your kids! Don't be the reason they snap, be the reason they calm down. It's hard. It's worth it. And don't shame those that don't want kids, it is NOT for everyone.

  • @ilovekaeya
    @ilovekaeya 6 месяцев назад +22

    My professor is a psychopath. We are pretty close because we both are into spirituality. What you said is true; he appears to be intelligent, charming and can literally make anyone swoon even if he is 35+ and married. Speaking about marriage, once I overheard him talking to someone about his married life.. He said both he and his wife weren't interested in a "physical" relationship when asked about kids and that he was not interested in marriage, but his family persuaded him to marry. I've noticed his mask slipping sometimes when I was taking his classes. He'd stop teaching five minutes before the hour ends and would let us do whatever we wanted (talk to others, study etc) and one such day, I noticed him analyzing everyone. Almost like he was studying us. I thought it was the light playing tricks on me.. But it wasn't. One of my classmates also felt the same. We obsevered him for a few months and came to the conclusion that he was indeed a psychopath. He'd observe how people act, and adapt accordingly. He intrigued us so much that this classmate of mine became my best friend and we decided to write a book about our journey lol.

    • @DianaTerapii
      @DianaTerapii 3 месяца назад +1

      ROG, LA CE SE UITA CÎND VĂ STUDIA? CE VICLENIE ASCNSĂ AVEA, SĂ NU MAI PREDEA SĂ AIBĂ TIMP SĂ VĂ STUDIEZE!!!WOOOOW, CE PERICULOS!!!😮😮😮

    • @Tdawg-b2b
      @Tdawg-b2b 2 месяца назад +2

      You so want this guy lmao

  • @DanBeddow
    @DanBeddow 2 года назад +435

    Even without empathy, teaching people what is the right way to do things, can at least lead to a thought process regarding some sort of decency. As someone who could be described as a psychopath, the real reason why I am not a dangerous individual, despite being an extremely aggressive and violent child, is because the parents who adopted me at less than 5, even though due to my behavioural problems they later put me in a children's home at 11, they gave me great examples of what a human is supposed to be. This resulted in a mental paradigm shift for me after much thought until the age of 13, to the degree where I decided that acting in society as a "good person" was of significant value to me, regardless of how I felt personally. After years of volunteering and now working as a charity employee, I can say that the grandiose narcissist part of my superego seems to be fully satiated by those who know me saying that I am a decent person, so clearly, if people want psychopaths to do something useful other than being saviours in live fire military scenarios, teaching them what a good person is before the age of 6 and pushing them towards some sort of self sacrificial endeavour at a very young age through personal demonstration and then praising them directly for positive action is probably a good plan.

    • @tiramisu7544
      @tiramisu7544 2 года назад +61

      I think people have to change their wording when talking to someone with sociopathy or psychopathy
      instead of saying “sharing your things is good for others!” I think we should say “if you share your things, you will get good boy points from society”

    • @lillyyana9910
      @lillyyana9910 2 года назад +12

      Yes.Even people without psycho trait can be violent if we dont teach them properly. So,good upbringing is very important.

    • @finallyforfeited
      @finallyforfeited 2 года назад +7

      @@tiramisu7544 I don't think we should be telling people with a disorder how to talk about their disorder. They were advocating for good upbringingd to counter the effects of their genetics.

    • @carb_onated
      @carb_onated 2 года назад +6

      @Rose Hirstius re-read their comment

    • @SwayTree
      @SwayTree 2 года назад +4

      You are not psychopath if you care if others call you a good person. The concept of "good" or "decent" doesn't exist for them. They can explain what it means, sure. But without moral compass it has no value. In ASPD an image is important only to be able to manipulate people. I think your problem rather is that you lacked attention as a child and got a label of an agressive and destructive, which made you believe that you are. And now you are trying to compensate for that.

  • @psychmatisa
    @psychmatisa Год назад +410

    As a child psychologist in my opinion it’s about creating logical thought but very honestly EMOTIONAL regulation is the way out of this. For most children, they KNOW the right thing to do, they are just too impulsive or angry to do them. Making a child conscious, and improving their MENTALIZATION is what will make a good emotionally and psychologically stable adult.

    • @bloodstripeleatherneck1941
      @bloodstripeleatherneck1941 Год назад

      I think you are right. It seems like the biggest issue with narcissists is a lack of self awareness. The malignant kind seem like they can't/won't grasp/accept the concept that their ego creates a blindspot to their perception. They have the, "God complex". Like how a talented surgeon can fall into the, "Dunning Krueger effect" and just assume they have just as much psychological insight as say, someone like yourself. That is until someone like yourself sits them down, and points out what they are missing in no uncertain terms.

    • @lumikkihusu7259
      @lumikkihusu7259 Год назад +2

      Hear, hear!

    • @Telesgoooo
      @Telesgoooo Год назад +2

      Its weather your mentalization help reaches thru the years of beatings and abuse....wish it was as simple as this.

    • @gimygaming8655
      @gimygaming8655 Год назад +11

      Okay, now you say, "All they have to do is," but nobody can ever say HOW to do that

    • @alexcisneros2980
      @alexcisneros2980 Год назад

      ​@@gimygaming8655all you have to do is get on your knees. I'LL show you how to do that.

  • @michaelshannon9169
    @michaelshannon9169 2 года назад +384

    As someone with depression I can, unfortunately, understand how someone could lack a psychological capacity to experience some state - Empathy for psychopaths and, in my case, happiness. I have never understood happiness, joy, elation. I have felt hedonic satisfaction such as food, music etc but the actual state of happiness is a mystery to me. I see ppl happy about slaving to a job, a house, a family and so on and I think what a nightmare. This applies to psychopaths but in their case empathy. Ppl think I choose to be depressed which is so nonsensical. No one would choose depression, at least not for a significant amount of time (some accuse depressives of taking on a victim personality) and I dont think psychopaths choose to lack empathy.

    • @wildanimus2559
      @wildanimus2559 2 года назад +26

      I know. People can be so ignorant.

    • @amarketing8749
      @amarketing8749 2 года назад

      Actually studies have shown psycopaths can feel empathy and use that part of the brain.
      They "choose" not to. It's easier NOT to feel bad for other people. It's easier to live without a single care how your actions affect others.
      The question is how can we treat this disorder by making someone feel empathy? How do you force someone to feel empathy?
      Empathy naturally means feeling bad sometimes about other people's situations. How do you get someone to willing feel bad by being empathetic?
      The answer is you don't. You can't cure a psycopath, period. Dangerous ones that enjoy killing or raping deserve life sentences at the minimum. Consequences like prison mean nothing. All you can do is protect the rest of society.
      Those "good" psycopaths are the extremely toxic people that cause other people mental trauma.
      Avoid them at all costs. Toxic work environments often have at least 1 psycopath. No job or money is worth the damage they cause.

    • @ShowMeYoBoob
      @ShowMeYoBoob 2 года назад +27

      "I see ppl happy about slaving to a job, a house, a family and so on and I think what a nightmare" i have the same problem and i dont even have depression anymore. In my case is because i am highly intelligent and have existential crisis, for people with average iq is easier to be happy because they dont question existence,where life came from, the universe, death, and live like robots
      depression: find the best drug(s) that work for u. I can tell u a few that worked for me after testing a lot of antidepressants seroxat and wellbutrin
      psychopaths: they don't choose to lack empathy (i lack empathy too but yet im one of the kindest people u will ever meet) but they choose to be horrible people and most psychopaths have below average iq and don't ever think theres something wrong with them and that's because the low iq brain has poor self awareness

    • @michaelshannon9169
      @michaelshannon9169 2 года назад +6

      @@amarketing8749 But still, they're able to choose not to feel bad, right? This is a defect quite likely related to the part of the brain illustrated in the video. I, likely you, dont have this capacity to choose not to feel remorse and that part of our brain is likely 'lighting up' when we do something bad. As with depression, I dont choose not to enjoy a sunset, a bike ride, a movie, a trip somewhere, I simply dont enjoy things anymore where I once did. Although the science is not exact, they are zeroing in on commonanilities in brain patterns and locations of ppl with depression that indicate deficiencies.

    • @bennnyboekwurm
      @bennnyboekwurm 2 года назад +52

      @@ShowMeYoBoob this comment is so laced with superiority. I often have existential thoughts but can appreciate the fact that we have to work and earn a living in the world we live in. In fact, to me, it’s idiotic to use existential crisis as an excuse to not do anything.

  • @veramae4098
    @veramae4098 9 месяцев назад +17

    I worked in a state prison briefly as a librarian.
    One day a guard told me, an inmate had asked him, why do people when they're about to be killed always talk about their kids?
    Still gives me shudders.

  • @NairobiPerry78
    @NairobiPerry78 Год назад +57

    Your baby should be about 3 months old right now. Congratulations!!! And thank you for being a positive addition to society by doing your absolute best to not only educate others, but to improve your own well being so you can raise excellent beings to the world! THANK YOU AND YOUR WIFE! God bless you both. 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾

  • @SLKnoxx
    @SLKnoxx 2 года назад +144

    What's scary is that we have very little control over what happens inside our brains. I think so much of what we tend to think is with in someones control is actually about how the brain was made and how it developed.

    • @raiden306
      @raiden306 Год назад +18

      That's why I try not to judge anyone. You never know what people are struggling with.

    • @SLKnoxx
      @SLKnoxx Год назад +5

      @@raiden306 Very good point. I do try to keep that in mind. Sometimes its not easy.

    • @G5rry
      @G5rry Год назад +2

      I think the point near the end of this video is that you can control the environment. That affects the bran development.

    • @tupakkaonhyvaa
      @tupakkaonhyvaa Год назад +2

      Yeah so scary. Eek

    • @gandoff7840
      @gandoff7840 Год назад

      We humans are complex configurations of matter. We have no more control over our biology than we do the stars in the night sky.

  • @libbylandscape3560
    @libbylandscape3560 2 года назад +201

    This described my sister, no empathy, no problem hurting someone, no problem using people for her ends, no problem lying & making up stories, enjoyed public shaming others for giggles, extremely smart and well educated, happy to damage property, would sed**uce the boyfriends & fiancé’s of her friends for fun, not a drop of remorse for anything.

    • @meredithheath5272
      @meredithheath5272 2 года назад +21

      I also know of a female such as this, who has caused a great deal of pain: I would go further and observe a touch of sadism in her. After all, since psychopathy and grandiose narcissism is on a spectrum, so is sadism and other evil traits. Very much learned, since they see others getting away with so much (And "family culture".)

    • @freerangeboogie7293
      @freerangeboogie7293 2 года назад +17

      Wow - my sister is similar. Reactive attachment disorder (environmental in her case) No empathy and she will do anything for money or bully people with lawsuits.

    • @sarahbelle2140
      @sarahbelle2140 2 года назад +5

      Sounds like my sister in law to a t.

    • @Lyachos
      @Lyachos 2 года назад +14

      This is just normal women behavior

    • @shrutis
      @shrutis 2 года назад +66

      @@Lyachos sorry that you've always had psychopathic women in your life

  • @JMFSpike
    @JMFSpike 4 месяца назад +1

    I think it's even more complicated then what we know. I have a very dear friend who is apparently a sociopath. He was diagnosed as one anyway. There are definitely times when he shows that side, but I've known him for over 10 years and he's more like half-sociopath then fully sociopath. He does care about his family and friends, but he doesn't feel anything for people he doesn't know. But the most interesting thing about him is that he absolutely loves animals. He has always had a ton of empathy for them, even more so then almost every other person on Earth as it even applies to bugs like mosquitos and ticks.

  • @milhousevanhoutan9235
    @milhousevanhoutan9235 Год назад +533

    I'm a neuroscientist and what's interesting is recent discoveries in regards to regret in people with ASPD and "Psycopathy". We've been able to determine that they do, in fact, experience regret, which means that they HAVE to feel empathy because one is a prerequisite for the other. Where the breakdown lies is in the cingulate, because it seems to effectively "block" the ability for what activity does exist in the VMPFC to take into account feelings of regret in the moment. In short the proper connections between the VMPFC and the cingulate, and/or the cingulate to the limbic system is simply not there or functioning at such a low level the emotional intelligence doesn't get a say in decision making.
    What is so interesting about this is various nuclei in the cingulate are implicated heavily in conditions like ADHD where the aMCC, MCC, pACC, dPCC are all implicated in specific aspects of the derangement of attention, motor, and executive functioning network circuits. The cingulate is somewhat criminally understudied because for so long people have viewed it as sort of this interconnection space and looked for origins of problems either outside of it (PFC, all the surface corticies) or inside of it (the limbic system) and it's only recently that the idea of "the origin is in the interconnect" is becoming a serious topic of discussion.

    • @justinw1765
      @justinw1765 Год назад

      As a neuroscientist how do you explain cases such as found in Dr. Hare's book, "Without Conscience", where two females, identical twins, raised in a non traumatic, supportive, and relatively well adjusted household, and one is clearly and strongly ASPD and the other is not? This crosses out both the genetic/chromosome/brain aspect, and the trauma aspect, which are the two most mentioned causes.
      What is left? Science will not fully understand some things until it opens up its mind to the possibility of the nonphysical and that of consciousness being primary and matter being derived from consciousness and not the other way around. When one understands that this physical reality is but one dimension within a larger reality of many dimensions, and understands that quantum entanglement strongly/obviously implies data/info connection between everything, then one can account for every so called "woo woo", mystical, spiritual, etc type experience and belief system known to humanity. (Interestingly, most of the founding fathers of quantum physics actually held such so called "woo woo" beliefs and leanings of one kind or another, and some of them expected the "spooky" and so called irrational findings ahead of time).

    • @vegetossgss1114
      @vegetossgss1114 Год назад +7

      Okey, but what if you give to a psychopath (I mean someone with an altered nervous system) a very happy childhood, with both his / her parents, full attention, and love?

    • @snowyhudson975
      @snowyhudson975 Год назад +37

      @@vegetossgss1114 if you do this, then you get someone who was exposed to a rich emotional environment, but who simply can't experience the full range of what has been presented because their brains aren't wired for it.

    • @omaxshendy5732
      @omaxshendy5732 Год назад +35

      regret is not the same as guilt or remorse. regret is feeling bad for choices that have a negative impact on oneself. for example, "I regret being honest with you".

    • @ruqaiyatasneem8594
      @ruqaiyatasneem8594 Год назад +3

      Im planning to do my PhD in neuroscience as well

  • @MrShazaamm
    @MrShazaamm 2 года назад +285

    Wow, I was diagnosed as APD (also PTSD) but I'm definitely empathetic, I just prefer being alone and work alone. I don't mind small interactions or working with others but I do shy away from friendships and relationships. I did grow up in a very violent environment and myself can act out violently if provoked w/ violence or threatened. That being said, I find joy in being kind/polite and helpful to others I just don't hold back when threatened and do have a certain amount of regret.

    • @jauume
      @jauume 2 года назад +48

      Yeah not all people with ASPD are bad evil american psycho people ive met a bunch and they can b pretty chill. Cluster B disorders are soo stigmatised, it annoys me a lot having BPD myself

    • @sonice9020
      @sonice9020 2 года назад +6

      @@jauume Who cares? Its much more profitable to stigmatise these things

    • @leahcompton2522
      @leahcompton2522 2 года назад +9

      This is a brilliant way of describing the dilemma. Nature vs nurture.
      I have two adopted son (same biological mother).
      There are many things that I'm having to teach them that just came "naturally" to my older children.
      Being a well informed parent makes the why of behavior a bit easier to handle.
      Early childhood trauma sure does suck.
      I'm so glad you had a good outcome.

    • @leastonhill7689
      @leastonhill7689 2 года назад +18

      I have borderline personality disorder and I have empathy, I am kind/ polite to people but if a person comes at me a certain way I will match their same energy. With BPD I don't have alot of close friendships because I have a severe fear of being abandoned. I agree with you as well I do have a certain amount of regret too. My BPD is the result from Continued Complex PTSD. It is a survival instinct my brain developed to protect me as a child.

    • @blade7506
      @blade7506 2 года назад +2

      @@sonice9020 these are ppl

  • @963ag
    @963ag Год назад +659

    It is interesting to note that nearly every serial killer had a traumatic brain injury - and many occured in their childhood. Also, research on CTE ( like in professional athletes) shows the link between brain abnormalities and violent behavior. I believe that in many instances if CT scans were done on the brains of people in maximum security prisons/ death row and regular citizens HUGE differences would be found.

    • @matthewclaridge8063
      @matthewclaridge8063 Год назад +53

      Brian injury/damage is definitely not a prerequisite. I mean there's definitely an evolutionary advantages to psychopathy.
      It's "technically a good thing" (for the tribe) to have a group of people that are ready and willing to go to other unrelated tribes and raid, kill, burn and pillage.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Год назад

      @@matthewclaridge8063 ANYONE can do that. It doesn't require a special brain injury. Psychopathy is purely a negative, it's a defect in perception, like autism.

    • @matthewclaridge8063
      @matthewclaridge8063 Год назад

      @@Sheseasyouthere LoL. People do tend to switch off when the words "burn and pillage" pop up....
      Let me try and rephrase.
      Brutal individuals (and their groups) are at an evolutionary advantage in desperate circumstances where there is violent and bloody competition for survival and reproduction.

    • @DEBH-i4d
      @DEBH-i4d Год назад +24

      The guy who developed the list of psychopathic traits did do his research in prisons with a mobile scanner. His book is fascinating. I remember it as Psychopaths are born. Sociopaths are made.

    • @zakaria600
      @zakaria600 Год назад +12

      Traumatic childhood most of them had , but not traumatic brain injury. That's 2 different ones ,, one is emotional, the other is physical injury.

  • @PurpleStar22
    @PurpleStar22 9 месяцев назад +2

    This explains a lot about a family member of mine. They show all the signs of a sociopath, and it's done nothing but destroy every relationship they have ever had. They've broken the law, harmed people, stole money, been to jail multiple times, but they just never learned.

  • @throwmeaway5248
    @throwmeaway5248 Год назад +145

    I've been wondering something for a long time, always too afraid to get an answer. When I was a child, I never experienced remorse or guilt when doing something deemed quote on quote 'bad'. My only feelings were anxiety and fear over someone finding out, or treating me badly because they found out. This changed a few years ago when I changed environments and met a lot of different people. It almost felt like empathy got sort of 'unlocked' in my brain.
    I don't know for sure why this is, I'm genuinely questioning it. Before I 'gained' empathy, I felt like a textbook sociopath. I often get depressed thinking about my past behaviour and how I treated others. I truly have no idea what I may have been.

    • @punxie89
      @punxie89 Год назад +19

      I felt similarly during my childhood. But I was also being mistreated at home and bullied by many at school, so I didn't feel like anyone cared about me or was on my side anywhere I went. It made it hard for me to care if I did something that pissed them off, because in my mind it was just karma hitting them back. But I do care now that I've gone out into the world and have met decent people, and have been removed from that toxicity. I'm not sure what the answer is for your experience, but thanks for sharing

    • @Elikazul15
      @Elikazul15 Год назад +42

      They don't experience anxiety or fear, so you don't really fit into this description. You may have been disassociating, which is why you didn't feel it at that moment.

    • @YardsaleAbsurdity
      @YardsaleAbsurdity Год назад +7

      This is because you use British English

    • @lumikkihusu7259
      @lumikkihusu7259 Год назад +13

      Did you perhaps have a narcissistic or otherwise inconsistent parent? Adopting some of the narcissistic behaviours and communication styles is a common and even often recommended survival tool. Which, when it happens unconsciously, regrettably leads many people who carry this armour to believing that they are the narcissist, not that other person.

    • @postnutclarity7382
      @postnutclarity7382 Год назад +6

      Sounds like a environmental factor that you adapted too. Then slowly let your "mask" or "persana"down, learned authenticity and self reflection and came to the conclusion you have empathy.
      P.s. I'm no professional, just trying to demonstrate the process.

  • @ronelstapelberg7151
    @ronelstapelberg7151 Год назад +61

    I really like your ideas on parenting. Parents have to stay in contact with their own emotions and realistic thoughts. Give the child clear boundaries and apply it consistently. It is so important to teach the child the logic of course and effect without hydterics and abuse.

  • @nichmon3221
    @nichmon3221 2 года назад +76

    My siblings and I have known for years that our oldest sister was either a psychopath or sociopath. Her daughter (my niece) thinks it's sociopathy and this video has clarified for me that she is correct. My sister was treated badly when she was small, by our alcoholic mother. Thank God my dad divorced quickly and I didn't experience any of the cruelty and neglect. My dad wasn't very nice either though. In fact, when I was 13 years old, I had to be hospitalized with debilitating anxiety due to his anger and overbearingness.

  • @alimarie67
    @alimarie67 6 месяцев назад +6

    Having a psychopath brain doesn’t excuse them from a moral compass.

  • @greendeane1
    @greendeane1 2 года назад +316

    I had a boss once who in hindsight I think was a psycopath. He changed management jobs every two or three years. People were like throw-away lighters, to be use and tossed away. He also decided the way he wanted something to be and then would go to amazingly extreme lengths to make that so. Such as impregnating a subordinate and deciding he did not want to be the father so he investigated her life to find someone who could possibly be the father even though he knew with no doubt he was the father. When he called me years later and accused me of being the father -- of this coworker' child -- I said if that if I'm the father there is a new star in the east. Then DNA testing came along (and he was the father though it took eight years of legal work to get him tested. That proved it. The selfish bastard never saw the child, even when he was on his death bed with cancer.

    • @jameshersom2536
      @jameshersom2536 2 года назад +52

      That sounds more narcissistic than anything

    • @herrrobert5340
      @herrrobert5340 2 года назад +14

      That's a sad story. Personally I'm very paranoid and refused to sign the paternity paper until the DNA-test was done, but abandoning your own flesh and blood like that is just sickening.

    • @janbadinski7126
      @janbadinski7126 2 года назад +27

      He didn't deserve to be involved with a child. Guys like him truly don't care about their children.

    • @TelecasterLPGTop
      @TelecasterLPGTop 2 года назад

      There's a new more descriptive term for the disorder we call them "assholes"

    • @FlexSPJ
      @FlexSPJ 2 года назад +16

      Glad his child got spared of his abrasive personality, I don't think it would have benefitted in any way from getting to know this man.

  • @menosproblemos6993
    @menosproblemos6993 Год назад +126

    I agree that we should talk logic and tactics with children.
    They might not understand at first, but similarly to not being able to speak when being born but after a while of hearing what you don't understand you learn to understand.
    I also want to pointiate that hearing a kid out helps a LOT, I think.
    My friends that where neglected as children have gotten so slow to try new things... That's not it... some have adhd. I can't put my finger on it.

    • @aardvarkhole
      @aardvarkhole Год назад +3

      A book I found called, ‘’Feelings Inside and Outside, Too’’ written by a developmental psychologist at CSUN. It has page-sized black and white photos of children with no captions. One that I remember vividly is of a lone little girl in an airport, looking frightened and lost. The photo is meant to elicit empathy in the child viewing the photo. It’s pretty diagnostic.

    • @insomniacraccoon
      @insomniacraccoon Год назад +5

      As someone who was consistently pressured (via various forms of punishment and negative responses) to hide and minimize my natural emotional responses to things and had my emotions repeatedly invalidated... You're right on the money. Listen to kids. Doesn't matter if they're upset because the icecream shop was out of their favorite flavor. Doesn't matter if they're mad because they couldn't go to McDonalds or they didnt get the happy meal toy they wanted. Validate those emotions because they are real and exist. Not saying to let kids be brats and let them have their way when they throw a tantrum but let them know it's okay to cry or be mad or sad. Teach them how to process these emotions in a healthy and proper way. Don't teach them to suppress it. That's how you end up with troubled individuals like me who cannot regulate their emotions and express them in an acceptable way. i display almost every BPD trait but my therapist has not diagnosed me at this moment. i can trace back a majority of these traits to childhood experiences.

  • @sallybalkin8507
    @sallybalkin8507 Год назад +211

    I had a conversation with a diagnosed psychopath who was sick of being lumped in with violent sociopaths. She had had therapy and , kudos to her therapist and parents, could rationalise the benefits of social behaviour., even kindness, without emotions. I have heard before that psychopaths behaviour can be greatly influenced by their upbringing. Their learned behaviour. It would be nice to see society value kindness more than things we used to see as vices, in the common people. Like narcissism, vanity, greed and materialism. The world's moral compass is not just broken, it has been smashed to pieces. We are allowing unchecked psychopaths and sociopaths to run things. We willingly make them rich and powerful, we even vote for them to define whole countries' ethics, And this, I believe, is why most of the world wonder at least once a day who has been putting crazy pills in the water. Kindness, compassion, community (tribal) spirit over constant self gratification. If these are not priorities for someone, or if they can't even comprehend these things, that person needs to be tested for an ASPD. If you're reading this and it rings true of you, get help. Be better.

    • @Amadeus_2061
      @Amadeus_2061 Год назад +23

      You nailed it. Best commentary on the cause of this insanity. In the past, there were codes of conduct that were expected from people in positions of authority. Breaking that code revealed character flaws that rendered the person to be undeserving of that position. Today, vices not virtues, are glorified. The same traits that were once shunned are celebrated. And as you pointed out, this collective celebration, instead of rejection, has put the psychopath on top of the social pyramid. And their psychopathic values are rippling down into every sector of society - politics, entertainment, justice, medicine, etc. I advocate for a zero tolerance policy for narcissistic and psychopathic behavior. Setting boundaries and consequences is key to stopping these behaviors early on.

    • @arcturus4067
      @arcturus4067 Год назад +2

      Agree! You nailed it.

    • @arcturus4067
      @arcturus4067 Год назад +3

      @@Amadeus_2061 agree with you.

    • @metal6948
      @metal6948 Год назад +13

      No amount of therapy will change them. They will just have a better understanding of what they can exploit to get what they want. Psychopaths shouldn’t be in society, let alone leading it. They’re animals feigning humanity. We should do with them what we do with other aggressive rabid animals

    • @Amadeus_2061
      @Amadeus_2061 Год назад +4

      @@metal6948 I agree with your sentiments 100%. I would argue the same for narcissists.

  • @jimmyamico4713
    @jimmyamico4713 7 месяцев назад +1

    This truly helps with understanding these types of disorders while researching cognitive behavioral psychology❤

  • @andrea4246
    @andrea4246 2 года назад +445

    You're method of teaching is wonderful. Articulate, emotions, and delivery is spot on and so natural. Thanks much for the info.

    • @definitelynotjasonmomoa
      @definitelynotjasonmomoa Год назад +4

      Your**

    • @sarahcouture24
      @sarahcouture24 Год назад

      I absolutely agree

    • @svendbentjensen5512
      @svendbentjensen5512 Год назад +1

      What do you mean when you say that he is a method of teaching?

    • @tupakkaonhyvaa
      @tupakkaonhyvaa Год назад

      I am not a method.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 Год назад

      @@svendbentjensen5512
      Are you joking? You’ve never been to school and noticed that teachers can have different styles of teaching and different success rates of students tuning in/paying close attention?

  • @rocks1012
    @rocks1012 2 года назад +352

    The first part was really interesting to me.
    I’m not a psychopath, but I had unregulated type 1 diabetes for a good chunk of my life. My blood sugar was above 11.0 constantly, which boosted up my serotonin, making it unnaturally high. Not only that, but I was given SSRIs for my anxiety caused by my high serotonin levels, just making it worse.
    I just remember feeling nothing for anyone. I always struggled in relationships since I never actually felt any care for the other person. My dad got colon cancer and I was only bummed because I’d have to spend more time with my mom. I tried to fake it, for myself too because I wanted to be someone who cried or felt strong emotions, I just wasn’t able to.
    It’s only been recently that I’ve been fixing my blood sugars and taking Wellbutrin with Vyvance and trying to figure out how tf to deal with stress and genuine love and all this shit I never had. It’s kinda sick, I love bawling my eyes out to an even mildly sad movie now.

    • @luluuu9096
      @luluuu9096 2 года назад +8

      That's soo great!! Hope you get even better 🌈🌈🌈

    • @andersoncapa
      @andersoncapa 2 года назад +1

      Tambem.nao consigo chorar ou sentir emocoes desde meus 13 anos , com 15 desenvolvi desrealizaçao. Tenho 40 e uma vida muito infeliz

    • @fredjones554
      @fredjones554 2 года назад +11

      Wow thanks for sharing. Your explanation make so much sense.

    • @nikibronson133
      @nikibronson133 2 года назад

      Wow It’s crazy how other medical issues could affect how your brain secretes chemicals that influence your behavior

    • @bizzy1648
      @bizzy1648 2 года назад +4

      good for you! i hope you have many more tears of all kinds to come.

  • @Kimmie6772
    @Kimmie6772 2 года назад +213

    When people talk about psychopathy, I find it interesting how people talk about it like it is being almost superhuman. However, when you describe behaviors and how the brain is affected I'm more reminded of the cases of when children are born without feeling pain. In small doses, people would view it as a godsend, but in actuality you are missing one of the many senses utilized for survival. ASPD would not be classified as a disorder if it did not affect your wellbeing. Same would be people who can't feel fear. Risk taking behavior works when it works, but there are reasons why we have the ability to risk assess in the first place. Some risks are more illogical than others. Empathy also enables us to emotionally understand each other better and serves to benefit a group rather than an individual. Neurotypical people get the same mental response from social rejection as they do from say stubbing your toe. Now, this isnt a problem if you're able to reason your way to understanding others and working within a social society, but it's not like every psychopath will be the next Albert einstein. Communication/morale breakdown in professional settings from being too overly crass would also not be too good. It depends on the environment for whether or not these aspects are favorable and to what degree they are felt.

    • @smartass0124
      @smartass0124 2 года назад

      What he described as a psycho path and from what I analyzed in people. Its the norm
      In fact it's detected in men but men more risk taking. But maybe the difference is the psycho path is just bad at hiding it .
      Most are good at hiding it.
      Look at the left

    • @odst2247
      @odst2247 2 года назад +16

      I feel like research on ASPD is too much skewed by studying those who are violent, criminals or those who can’t function in Soceity. We have to see and research those who thrive just fine and don’t have problems in Soceity to understand full picture.
      There is evolutionary arguments for why psychopaths may exist, and considering there’s 8 billion of us it just makes sense with how diverse humanity is. Psychopathy is a thing that can have ‘pros’ and ‘cons’ same as being so called, neural typical

    • @erikziak1249
      @erikziak1249 2 года назад +6

      I got a very different sensation between social rejection and stubbing my toe. Both were unpleasant, but stubbing my toe was way less personal. You can learn and avoid stubbing your toe fast. But social rejection is much harder to deal with, until you withdraw yourself and sink into depression. And you cannot learn if you are not "cool", if you are not "desirable", if you are "not worthy of love by a member of the other sex".

    • @Kimmie6772
      @Kimmie6772 2 года назад +9

      @@erikziak1249 different types of social rejection are felt differently and are caused by a variety of different circumstances. I chose stubbing the toe because it's a sensation everyone has felt at some point and I wanted to under reach for an example rather than overreach. That being said, I'm sorry you've been hurt by rejection and I hope you can find a mental version of an ice pack to help soothe the anguish. Sometimes doing what you love or just staring up and the clouds and taking a deep breath can help me reset.

    • @ThomasDoubting5
      @ThomasDoubting5 2 года назад

      Humans have long held psychopaths as leaders and role models they love em, they love them way more than any Saint. In a natural tribe situation psychopaths are eradicated as they threaten the existence, but we are living in psychopath land the idea of civilisation and grandiose visions of power in the world and empires etc, only born in the mind of a perverse human.

  • @leepoerio4602
    @leepoerio4602 8 месяцев назад +1

    You describe me and its 110% true. I think childhood trauma and environment is the key, my temper is ridiculus. And the emotion isnt there because ive learned to switch it off. Also i always say im missing the fight and flight response in certain situations.

    • @X564M
      @X564M 8 месяцев назад

      Yea I feel this it’s like you’re so used to suppressing your anger you can’t summon it or other emotions when you need to cause it’s so suppressed/ burnt out

  • @katrinatomczak4214
    @katrinatomczak4214 2 года назад +199

    As for the parental aspect, this is one of the many reasons why it is SO IMPORTANT for a person to be MENTALLY, EMOTIONALLY, PHYSICALLY and FINANCIALLY prepared before raising a child. It is never going to be what you expect it to be, there will always be huge curveballs and the parent needs to have the resilience to push through anything, to make sure their child's wellbeing is at the forefront

    • @nattaloane
      @nattaloane 2 года назад +2

      THIS!!!

    • @m3ntyb
      @m3ntyb 2 года назад +11

      or have social systems and communities that can work together to ensure a child’s needs and development are being reached. placing it all on just a few people to be or quickly become better and well adjusted when fertility and generational trauma are already an established reality, would be impractical and irrational. building systems and communities that can cooperatively provide and ensure all children have adequate development would be more effective going forward.
      especially now with established and looming abortion bans. idk what your knowledge is on it, but forced birthing (along with banning contraceptives) will guarantee rearing in unstable environments where generational trauma will continue to pass down through all inevitable birthing and rearing scenarios.

    • @virginiamoss7045
      @virginiamoss7045 2 года назад +7

      That's why it takes a village to raise a child. In the US we don't have government (the village) structures that support child-raising. Mothers are forced to go to work and dump their babies in low-quality day care at one or two months of age. And it costs more than many can even make if they have more than one young child. Women and mothers both need way more outside support to properly attend their families, including full education in parenting and child psychology. Fathers also need support in terms of parenting and child psychology education and workplace flexibility as well as time to be fathers. It's really more about parental support by society than mother/father or women/men separate support. It's about child support in the broader sense.

    • @slopraglopra2590
      @slopraglopra2590 2 года назад +9

      This truth is one more reason why I am pro choice: a child should be wanted by parents who are prepared to do the job adequately. And there simply aren’t enough adoptions occurring to cover the number of unwanted children that will be born should abortion be banned. Banning abortion will hurt children.

    • @virginiamoss7045
      @virginiamoss7045 2 года назад

      @@slopraglopra2590 Yes it will!

  • @LilsyCat
    @LilsyCat Год назад +80

    my first relationship was with an individual with ASPD and letting myself get pulled into that is the worst decision of my life. he isolated me from everyone in my life and even convinced me to drop out of school and move in with him. there are a lot of awful details that i won’t get into, but luckily my parents intervened and took me out of that terrible situation. it’s kind of heart-wrenching knowing that he will never feel bad for all of the pain and long term negative effects he’s had on me.

    • @oc4goal
      @oc4goal Год назад +9

      So sorry about your experience, and more thankful to your parents for pulling you out.

    • @Badass_Brains
      @Badass_Brains Год назад +1

      I'm glad you escaped that situation. How long did it take before you realised he was a psychopath? Or was it only afterwards that you realised that something was very wrong?

    • @Lyrielonwind
      @Lyrielonwind Год назад

      I feel you. I know my mother won't ever feel accountable or sorry she has brought into my life. I will always be the bad daughter and she the poor mother. She's such a great actress, no one will ever believe me.

    • @jennylou2
      @jennylou2 11 месяцев назад

      You took away his abuse supply, take comfort in that!

    • @Tailionis
      @Tailionis 10 месяцев назад +1

      Don't diagnose others. I could say many things about my ex fiance but in the end I'm not therapist.

  • @rita1869
    @rita1869 Год назад +126

    It's hard to be a non reactive parent when you've gone through so much childhood trauma yourself. I'm a person that believes once you become an adult, you're responsible for your traumas and how it presents itself in your life. I've been going to therapy since I got out of my traumatic childhood. Around 19 years old is when I started and I'm 31 now. I scored an 8/8 on that trauma scale test with a trauma specialist and it just seems like it's never going to be enough. I love my children so much. I regret yelling as much as I do. I hope I can continue improving for them as well as myself.

    • @Kathleen-p1l
      @Kathleen-p1l Год назад +9

      Oh momma. Grow and learn. I am the same as you w having had the childhood traumas. I guess it’s a good thing to feel badly about yelling but you will soften and mature. My best to you ❤

    • @rita1869
      @rita1869 Год назад +2

      @K Thank you for your kindness. 🙏🏽 my well wishes to you as well.

    • @grass5496
      @grass5496 Год назад +2

      Pffft

    • @carollane8694
      @carollane8694 Год назад

      Time to grow up and stop using your own childhood as an excuse for being a shit abusive parent.

    • @rita1869
      @rita1869 Год назад +3

      @Carol Lane You're not going to make me feel bad. As humans being we can continue to just do the best we can and try harder everyday. I made a promise to my kids that I will be a better parent today than I was yesterday and so on and that is what I'm doing. You can call that abusive if you want to, but it's a lot more than I got. On the bad days we sit down and talk about it and how we can handle things better going forward so that we are all happy. 😊 there's been a wonderful amount of progress. Good luck to you. Compassion is a wonderful trait.

  • @saritasinha3115
    @saritasinha3115 Год назад +14

    My brain is looking at someone's brain and processing itself to understand itself

  • @iseultmackinnon8197
    @iseultmackinnon8197 2 года назад +50

    I volunteer as a support worker for parents who are struggling, with young children and it is so hard seeing toddlers with mental health problems because of their parents. Society needs to put supporting parents as their top priority.

    • @lasalletxnurse1
      @lasalletxnurse1 2 года назад

      LOL….you are pyschotic…..my mom had 5 chikdren…..she arranged molestation or rape in all of them. She even arranged her own shooting which i witnessed when i was 2. It isnt about being their friend….it is about parenting……whipping their ass and providing guidance culturally and the teasons for these boundaries. All of you people are fucked up in your idea of oarenting……whip their ass but protect them. Such a simple concept that no one can comprehend……who cares if your kids hate you….they will appreciate you later…..i hate my mom, and i hope she dies a violent deth for what she did to us

    • @omoriref
      @omoriref 2 года назад +1

      No, society needs to put supporting children as their top priority. Society already supports parents more than the children, because everyday, kids cry for help that they are being abused by their parents but are ignored and people even laugh out of ignorance, taking those children's confessions of being harmed as jokes.

  • @TsurenaiYoru
    @TsurenaiYoru Год назад +101

    a lot of serial killers also have a history of brain trauma to the prefrontal cortex during childhood, and when patient's have frontal lobe strokes they become irrational, inconsolable, and extremely agitated.

    • @bloodstripeleatherneck1941
      @bloodstripeleatherneck1941 Год назад +1

      Have you heard of any helpful treatments for this?

    • @raphaellavictoria01
      @raphaellavictoria01 Год назад +6

      true. It releases their inhibitions, in a way. They always wanted to do what they wanted to do, and this is the last straw.

    • @yourmother7755
      @yourmother7755 Год назад

      I’m sorry

    • @vrsce0178
      @vrsce0178 Год назад

      ​@@yourmother7755 ?

    • @yourmother7755
      @yourmother7755 Год назад

      @@vrsce0178 what’s it done is done brother I am sorry

  • @rebeccaboudreau7589
    @rebeccaboudreau7589 2 года назад +283

    I am floored that you covered what you did in this video. I have come to the same conclusion as you about how we should be putting way more energy into creating better parents in order to raise better humans. The critical difference between my son and his father, who had very similar family traits, I believe was parenting. My ex husband was raised by parents from boomer generation with little real consequences - they had no idea how to address lack of empathy in him. When my son showed this and a school psychologist said when he was 8 that most autistic kids like him never have empathy, I refused to accept it. So many people seem to think that empathy is an automatic thing, but I’ve found that with some people it isn’t. It can be learned but with a lot of hard work, proper training (of parent) and consistency. I worked on myself first - reactions, judgements and beliefs - before I could successfully implement new strategies with my son. A year after they said he would never have empathy, we had a life changing moment when he cried over a consequence for the first time ever in his life. He had to feel empathy for himself first. The teachers saw a huge change in him within a few months. 2 years later the next school couldn’t believe his file because after having him there for a few months he seemed like a completely different child. The rigorousness had to continue. But the problem in society is the lack of funds and training. I had access to both - money and I didn’t work. Most people don’t have that ability and a larger support system within the health care system needs to be created, along with making stronger child rights and protection laws.

    • @jodironey9814
      @jodironey9814 2 года назад +14

      Great parenting! Keep it up!

    • @Zedigan
      @Zedigan 2 года назад +32

      Adult with ASD here. From my experience, one thing that definitely plays into it in my opinion is how strongly people on the spectrum feel emotion. Sometimes when experiencing something intense or traumatic (especially in childhood) my brain will either go full emotional meltdown mode, or "turn off" then the emotions will hit me like a ton of bricks later.
      A lot of parents could take a page or two out of your book.

    • @aikofujita2420
      @aikofujita2420 2 года назад +14

      Former Montessori director of a preschool. We’ve had students up and down the spectrum . We modeled empathy in front of students and had pets that they had to learn to take care of. I remember a child threw a stone and hit another child on the chest . The hurt child cried. I asked the perpetrator to say sorry. She did but it was just words. So, I called her and said see your stone hurt the other child and to comfort her by rubbing her back and to hold hands as we walk back to the classroom from the field. The child never threw a stone again.

    • @libbyholt3863
      @libbyholt3863 2 года назад +6

      I find your story compelling. Would you and your son, when he's old enough, consider writing a joint memoire about your experiences? I think you have an important lesson to teach and illustrate for all humans, not only those dealing with the banes and blessings of autism. To my mind, you just described how your empathy for your son, expressed in this case as faith IN him and fierce parental love FOR him, drove you to help him find it in himself. Further, because you were blessed with time and, obviously, intellect, you were able to persist in pursuing a deeper connection with your son, a connection, compared to what most of us offer our children, which was supercharged, focused on enriching the life of your son to include his own, genuine, subjective experiences of empathy. I think that connection and empathy feed each other. Connection fosters curiosity about others, a desire to know them better, feelings of empathy toward them; empathy fuels a desire for connection. It is pleasurable to be in community with others. We are hard-wired for it. Your son deserves to have that in his life. I would assert that, likewise, we all collectively are suffering for lack of it. You fought for your son’s birthright in the same way we all need to be fighting to save the human race - radically pursuing connection and empathy and creating environments, philosophies (as opposed to religions), and systems that foster both. Can you imagine helping to create a better, world-wide culture, in which, rather than “othering” each other, we respectfully pursue connection with one another, healthy curiosity about each other, better communication, a shared respect for facts and logic, a focus on values we hold in common, and an open acceptance of our superficial differences. Actually, you already have. Good job, mom.

    • @zlinky1111
      @zlinky1111 2 года назад +10

      The commonalities between psychopathy and autism are very interesting and not very well documented.

  • @RbBr-q9l
    @RbBr-q9l 4 месяца назад +1

    I have some psychopathic traits. There were times in my life when i couldn't feel much, all the spectrum of normal emotions was blunted. Unfortunately i have been forced to resort to physical voilence, especially when was younger. What i noticed is that people black out during an intense physical altercation, they do not remember much of what happened after the incident. Here is were i stand out, during an intense physical altercation i feel nothing , not even pain in my fists, on the contrary , my thinking becomes crystal clear. It's like my amygdala shuts down. The lack of anxiety, it's not a thing for me, i has it plenty, anxiety, that is, not the lack of it.

  • @user-nu8in3ey8c
    @user-nu8in3ey8c 2 года назад +198

    I remember one psychology professor explained the difference between a psychopath and a sociopath in the following way: A psychopath lacks emotional effect, is Machiavellian, and has little ethics. A sociopath is someone that lacks ethics and may be Machiavellian, but is more affected by emotions and consequences. That professor further explained that psychopaths tend to be born, while sociopaths are made. That explanation has made far more sense than any other explanation of the difference between those two personality types(which both fall into the diagnosis of APD).

    • @begforspaceheaters9119
      @begforspaceheaters9119 2 года назад +9

      This reminds me of the difference between sociopath and psychopath as it was explained to me: a psychopath has no concept of morality, a sociopath does know the difference between right and wrong but doesn't care.
      What does that mean, 'is Machevelian'?

    • @samirkattel9386
      @samirkattel9386 2 года назад +1

      @@begforspaceheaters9119 absolutely wrong😂.... Psychopath are born that way... You can't say what a person is just by knowing he/she is psychopath....

    • @fleetskipper1810
      @fleetskipper1810 2 года назад +8

      @@begforspaceheaters9119 “machiavellian” means extremely cold and manipulative. The name is taken from a centuries-old Italian text-“The Prince”-describing in detail how to practice political might to dominate others, regardless of social, economic, physical, or emotional cost .
      The author was Niccolo Machiavelli. It is a chilling read. But it demonstrates that people who seek power over others haven’t changed much in the last 500 years.
      When I read “The Prince”, I think more of psychopathy than sociopathy, although it could be argued that either applies.

    • @muhcharona
      @muhcharona 2 года назад

      These are just self serving stories, and can be applied in less flattering ways to those telling them. Just look at the new proponents of the new progressive forms of virtuous anorexia.

    • @acxezknightnite1377
      @acxezknightnite1377 2 года назад

      My son is a sociopath. What can be done? He’s 15.

  • @potatomatop9326
    @potatomatop9326 Год назад +533

    Props to the psychopath who handed his own brain for our knowledge.

    • @holotrout
      @holotrout Год назад +7

      Right

    • @UHFStation1
      @UHFStation1 Год назад +22

      Not sure if that was specifically a psychopaths brain. He didn't really compare normal to psychopathic brains.

    • @MisaMisaIsOnTop
      @MisaMisaIsOnTop Год назад +2

      @@UHFStation1 woosh

    • @KamilSupinski41
      @KamilSupinski41 Год назад +14

      @@UHFStation1He needs to do a video on the brain of somebody with autism. Mind handing your brain?

    • @FerrariF108
      @FerrariF108 Год назад

      @@UHFStation1funny you have 7 upvotes and the others have 0

  • @OrderOfTwisted
    @OrderOfTwisted 2 года назад +109

    My dad has ASPD (he’s in prison) and I have BPD and I’m freaking terrified. Therapy has helped substantially but it’s always in the back of my mind. Makes me over analyze everything I do/say. It’s exhausting and I’m always anxious about it. Again, therapy is definitely helping! :)

    • @luluuu9096
      @luluuu9096 2 года назад +1

      Hope you feel much better ❤

    • @0lovely_bpd0
      @0lovely_bpd0 2 года назад +7

      I also have BPD, it's so exhausting lol..

    • @klarabarunovic9841
      @klarabarunovic9841 2 года назад +3

      OMG SAME, LITERALLY SAME!

    • @maiden4meldin69
      @maiden4meldin69 2 года назад +5

      keep at it honey, therapy saved my children from becoming seventh generation of physical abuse, I never even spanked them for fear I would go too far and actually harm them aka break bones etc. They never had to deal with a screaming mother either, I chose daily to speak to them with respect even while they were behaving badly. I also tried to get them to feel loved, even though for me that is an elusive feeling to this day. I also stopped sexual abuse, and mental or emotional abuse. I did not lay down guilt trips on my children, preferring to discuss their behaviours and how to move forward, using the tools I was also learning in therapy made a huge difference in how I behaved with my children. They grew up in a smokers household, but no drugs, no booze. I did drink occasionally but not to excess, so they had good role models as far as I could be a role model. What I did not see coming , was my husband's emotional abuse of me, then to my children as well. That was devastating for me to come to terms with, and when the therapist told him to stop, he did not, so I walked with the kids in tow.
      Now my very articulate very manipulative ex husband, hs returned to the kids lives, he has managed to point all their problems at me. Now my kids who experienced first hand emotional battery from him, have decided I am the abuser, and that is a pain, I cannot forgive them for. They have raged and raged at me, despite, their father leaving the country for close to twenty years, we did not know if he was alive or dead, zero contact whatsoever. My kids have drank his koolaid, and laid the blame on me, as he did while we were married. It sickens me. But I have to do what is for my mental health, and I have no contact with my children now, because they spew venom at me, make me feel worthless, and I can't take it any more of it. I did take it for twenty plus years, I took it, and I just can't anymore. Even my psychiatrist, and mental health team agree upon this one. But continuing to take their abuse is just not an option anymore for me. And that hurts daily.

    • @distracted5767
      @distracted5767 2 года назад +5

      Got bpd too. Dbt does help manage the disorder. But i wish after 10 + years of therapy and meds idd have a more productive life. Sure there is lots of progress, but when do i get to normal. I just want to be normalling like everybody else.

  • @josiah5776
    @josiah5776 Год назад +15

    I was married to a woman who was later diagnosed as a psychopath. To say she destroyed my life is a massive understatement. I would almost believe these people cannot control what they do because of their brain structure ... except for one thing that I witnessed repeatedly. They are very selective in what they do, when they do it, and to whom they do it. This means they know the difference between right and wrong. They just don't care. They will do wrong when they feel they can get away with it, causing tremendous harm and suffering to others. That makes them monsters. Period. The personification of evil.

    • @clintthurman4359
      @clintthurman4359 11 месяцев назад

      Depends on the definition of evil. Your evil could be another person's good.

    • @josiah5776
      @josiah5776 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@clintthurman4359 Nice try, but I don't believe in moral relativism.

    • @theeguy9022
      @theeguy9022 11 месяцев назад

      I'd say I'm sorry you feel this way, but it'd be best to keep the mask off here, else you might not get the idea right?. If this woman really did come after you, then she didn't care for you in any way and you were an easy target with learned triggers. We are not inherently evil however, it's simply that we do not care and yet we have an overwhelming boredom that is present with us constantly, many of us learn to lie and otherwise manipulate others because it's a fast and easy way to relieve this boredom.
      I don't care to justify my existence to you, but I want you to know that being so absolute is invariably flawed. We are people and come in all shapes and attitudes.

  • @lauren1779
    @lauren1779 2 года назад +40

    In my field I always remember when writing papers in college id say psychopaths are born while sociopaths are made. I myself have bpd with antisocial tendencies that ive grown out of(mostly, nobody is perfect, thats what therapy and doctors are for). Not all of us are horrible people. Thank you for making this video.

    • @erikziak1249
      @erikziak1249 2 года назад

      This just confirms that we are all just walking meatbags carrying inside our heads all sorts of mental conditions, many of which we probably do not even realize we have. If every single person would go through extensive evaluation by all the doctors, we might be surprised. In today's modern world, new mental disorders are discovered almost each day. The last sentence was a joke. Or was it?

    • @stevennguyen4993
      @stevennguyen4993 2 года назад

      I believe the distinction between psychopathy and sociopathy has been removed (or even, that it never existed). Still popularized, the fact that we no longer distinguish between the handfuls of sub-categories under "psychopathy" is because there were too many crossovers between biological and environmental factors. For instance, imagine someone with an abusive and alcoholic parent? If the parent has behavioral tendencies for anti-personality disorder, then they contribute to BOTH genetics and social environment. Symptoms may also appear as combinations or sets within people who may have either or both pre-dispositions.

    • @sketchtheparadigmyork1217
      @sketchtheparadigmyork1217 2 года назад

      I feel like most of what people are commenting, while well intended, are implying a lot of harmful things.

  • @BenjaminCronce
    @BenjaminCronce Год назад +33

    As a person who is highly disconnected from emotions to the point of almost not feeling them at all on top of having had to teach myself empathy, morality has nothing to do with empathy for me. For me, morality is a rational ideal, not an emotion response. Interestingly, I learned how to start to feel emotions and empathy from my sense of morality.

    • @alet1934
      @alet1934 Год назад +2

      Exactly! Morality is already established, and I believe that having full knowledge of it gives rise to make rational decisions and force yourself to have empathy and be a functional person in society.
      (Sidenote: media has fucked up people with these conditions. Not everyone has to be a serial murder or a "bad" person.
      {Sidenote to the sidenote: I think morality is something established by society itself, if you look at the past it was very different and has changed over the centuries.})

    • @jacksonh2083
      @jacksonh2083 10 месяцев назад +1

      ⁠​⁠@@alet1934sidenote to your sidnote to the sidenote: I think moral precursors (in our species) are inherent and that morality is logically determined, and that focusing solely on logic is a resolve to the issue of morality continually changing in massive ways overtime
      Sidenote to sidenote to your sidenote to sidenote: I just wanted to type this out. Nothing of value to add lol

    • @janpetra1724
      @janpetra1724 5 месяцев назад

      Surprisingly, for me, it is the opposite, my ideals are cold and rational, yet my emotions wouldn't let me follow through with them.

  • @yoltsbp
    @yoltsbp Год назад +84

    Went through alot as a child and woke up one day unphased by the things that caused stress to me. Those feelings were no longer felt anymore. Just because you become numb to some emotions doesn’t make you a psychopath.

    • @hai7189
      @hai7189 Год назад +5

      I am sorry for what you went through.

    • @odette3805
      @odette3805 Год назад

      Correct, makes you a sociopath

    • @Lizardfiz12
      @Lizardfiz12 Год назад +1

      sorry for you or happy for you, op (cuz idk if you like being empty or not), hoping my wakeup day comes soon 🤞

    • @tracyg5993
      @tracyg5993 Год назад +2

      been there too. i think once the stress becomes too much we reach the apex of what our minds can handle and we go numb as self-protection mechanism.

    • @sandramackay2575
      @sandramackay2575 Год назад +1

      Same here. And you are right numbness is not the same as being a psychopath