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If I Had SOCIAL ANXIETY, I'd Do This First...

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  • Опубликовано: 7 авг 2024
  • Most people ignore this, but they really shouldn't... This video reveals the #1 cause of social anxiety!
    ►►► APPLY HERE FOR A FREE COACHING SESSION: application.julienhimself.com...
    JULIEN's INSTAGRAM: / julienhimself
    Julien Blanc (AKA JulienHimself) is a Swiss-born, U.S.-based self-help speaker, entrepreneur and transformational coach.
    Since 2010, he has been traveling around the world and has personally coached tens of thousands of clients face to face... Empowering them to create massive success in their lives!
    His record-breaking programs Transformation Mastery, Transformation Mastery Live, Transformation Mastery Live Advanced, Transformation Mastery Academy & Transformation Mastery Mentoring help people around the world achieve the HEALTH, WEALTH, RELATIONSHIPS & HAPPINESS they deserve!
    ===================================
    If I Had SOCIAL ANXIETY, I'd Do This First...
    How to be confident in any situation! In this video, Julien Blanc (AKA Julien Himself) reveals how to stop caring about what others think about you... This will allow you to feel confident and be confident in any social situation!
    Discover how to be confident in any social situation, how to be confident around people and how to be grounded during social interactions!
    #julienblanc #julienhimself
    ===================================
    Subscribe to JulienHimself’s RUclips Channel: / @julienhimself

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @JulienHimself
    @JulienHimself  11 месяцев назад +71

    👉 BOOK YOUR FREE COACHING CALL: application.julienhimself.com/?l=t6jxtm8eed
    Comment your top takeaway from this video here below! I personally read through EVERY SINGLE COMMENT!!!
    🚨 WATCH ME NEXT
    - How to boost your self esteem: ruclips.net/video/w27nenP7fsQ/видео.html
    - How to stop being needy: ruclips.net/video/DDmqrbSdzPo/видео.html
    - How I healed from childhood trauma: ruclips.net/video/Wa-PhDMhEVQ/видео.html
    - The cause of social anxiety: ruclips.net/video/V6lwwZX7nfw/видео.html
    👉 BECOME A COACH ON MY TEAM: certification.transformationmastery.com/?l=yqokxvap7b

    • @HarelAvital
      @HarelAvital 11 месяцев назад +3

      I'm glad I found your channel Julian

    • @elizabethCorkins83
      @elizabethCorkins83 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@HarelAvital
      Me too 😊

    • @gamtoszinios1336
      @gamtoszinios1336 11 месяцев назад

      Fake scam only looks and health can fix everything look he are model some girls get crush wtf social anxiety its because diet if i eat regular food i got paranoya and almost endes up died now im on raw primal diet

    • @DT.2024
      @DT.2024 11 месяцев назад

      Julien light the blunt!

    • @KennyMkay88
      @KennyMkay88 11 месяцев назад

      @@DT.2024 Trump Punk he will never be president again dum dum

  • @spencerdunn2313
    @spencerdunn2313 11 месяцев назад +251

    if you cringe while watching this you're the kind of person that needs it the most

    • @hans8656
      @hans8656 11 месяцев назад +41

      I stop the video every few seconds because I get second hand embarrassment and feel uncomfortable.

    • @gnatdagnat
      @gnatdagnat 4 месяца назад +14

      i read the comments to distract myself

    • @daphne3132
      @daphne3132 4 месяца назад +5

      ​@@hans8656 same here I can't even watch hilarious and embarrasing scenes because of that

    • @markquazar5135
      @markquazar5135 3 месяца назад +7

      @@hans8656 It took me about 2/3 weeks to finish this video because I kept on pausing and delaying.

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne 3 месяца назад

      I'm cringing at all the gullible idiots falling for this obvious con

  • @Jasonic_Youtube
    @Jasonic_Youtube 11 месяцев назад +1966

    This man's helping 100 people in a room but also hundreds of thousands who watches him in youtube.

    • @JulienHimself
      @JulienHimself  11 месяцев назад +232

      🙏🙏🙏

    • @josephmarzullo
      @josephmarzullo 11 месяцев назад +42

      We are helping him with google adsense revenue and promotion.

    • @izicwindsor7987
      @izicwindsor7987 11 месяцев назад +6

      Your right

    • @sleepsmilemusic
      @sleepsmilemusic 11 месяцев назад +43

      @@josephmarzulloThere’s always one of you lot in the comments section 😅

    • @joelgutierrezz5954
      @joelgutierrezz5954 11 месяцев назад +11

      @@JulienHimself Thank you Julien for these videos and for helping to transform lives 🙏

  • @shushinfushin1312
    @shushinfushin1312 11 месяцев назад +1007

    Doing what anders did in this video takes an immense amount of bravery, good for him

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +29

      Social anxiety has nothing to do with "bravery" or being "weak" or not being "strong".
      That is neurotypical false explanations of trauma.
      We are not our feelings. If we feel scared and panicked - this does not mean who we are as person and what are our traits.
      When we decide to fuse our emotions with our worth it is called Emotional Fusion - and it leads to mental illness.
      Our emotions will become our masters - and we will be at the mercy of our emotions and feelings to feel good or bad about ourselves, about who we are as person at the core. Then toxic shame has reign of tyranny over us - it simply releases inner critic and we will be neurotic all life about anything in life.
      All social anxiety issues stem from ACoA - it is complex trauma - we were programmed into self hatred and toxic shame. Our emotions are not problem, our triggers are not problem - we are suppose to have trauma when we experience abuse and Coercive control. True problem are narcissists and predators and abusers - not our emotions nor our reactions to toxic people who choose to be evil.

    • @shushinfushin1312
      @shushinfushin1312 11 месяцев назад +38

      @@ranc1977 my comment really wasn't that deep, it did take a lot of bravery to stay up there after he took the step to even get up in the first place and actually commit to do what Julien asked, instead of just leaving/not doing it which would have been oh so much easier.. confronting your fears does take bravery, whether you believe that's a real thing or not lol

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +12

      @@shushinfushin1312 If you look through life from the prism of "bravery" - you will be obsessed with fears and anxiety and panic, and you will live in survival mode all the time - since you must be "brave". You will start to notice other people and then judge them for being "brave" or "not brave".
      That is now OCD issue - since it involves obsession and rigid mindset.
      When people are not "brave" - that is not because they are cowards or because they are weak.
      There are billions of reasons why people do or not do something.
      Polarizing thinking, judging the people from the binary mindset of being brave or not being brave is rigid mindset - and any rigid thinking leads to mental illness, paradoxically to more fears and more of feeling of not being brave.
      You will simply get stuck like hamster in wheel - turning it around, hoping if you spin it enough time, you will become brave and accepted and validated by others and by yourself.
      That is all toxic shame, and it stems from AcoA exposure . narcissistic abuse.

    • @personalaccountcraciuncarm1048
      @personalaccountcraciuncarm1048 11 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@shushinfushin1312He analyzing like Einstein, truth is that even tho English isn't even his first language, he stepped forward in front of that huge crowd, very brave and handsome guy

    • @5Akecheta4
      @5Akecheta4 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@ranc1977 You really tryna sound smart like you know

  • @thelir2023
    @thelir2023 11 месяцев назад +1122

    This is a proof that physical appearance and attractiveness has nothing to do with anxiety

    • @hunterinfected6
      @hunterinfected6 11 месяцев назад +313

      When you’re attractive people expect a lot more from you so it’s actually common for attractive people to be reserved

    • @ThePeacePlant
      @ThePeacePlant 11 месяцев назад +52

      @@hunterinfected6 great perspective. But anxiety is not about looks leading the mindset

    • @prabytqpking4621
      @prabytqpking4621 11 месяцев назад +19

      @@ThePeacePlant ok? still a big fuqin part of it tho

    • @woodywolf0309
      @woodywolf0309 11 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@hunterinfected6so fking true man

    • @P.Aether
      @P.Aether 11 месяцев назад +26

      it does in cases, and it does not in others. stop thinking in black and white

  • @KAZXRU
    @KAZXRU 11 месяцев назад +669

    Personally if I were to be on staged like this man, I would honestly cried. Can't handle the pressure even if the audience is with me.

    • @ThePeacePlant
      @ThePeacePlant 11 месяцев назад +51

      I hope you get better as soon as you can. Don't worry about what society says you should be, just be yourself. If people don't like you than they can go on with their lives. You don't need to be popular to be cool. Be you! Social hierarchy is mainly immature high school B.S and the world Instagram users live in, social media is fake, dudes are on steroids and girls are prostitutes on Instagram, nobody lives by Instagram in real life and if they do then just take them out of your group because they are no where near the majority

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +12

      Stage is small incident, something that we won't experience much in life.
      Real problem are narcissistic abusive toxic predators - which Julien does not mention at all, you know -real life.
      He does not mention ACoA at all, he does not mention socio-economic aspect at all - lack of money. That contributes to anxiety issues, too.
      What he is teaching is Fight Response. We can respond to trauma in 4F: Fight- Flight - Freeze or Fawn.
      Neither of these responses are "better" nor healing - they are trauma responses.
      IF our personality is agreeableness - and if we decide to hate it and scapegoat it for being abused by someone that causes panic emotions - we will develop personality disorder if we decide to suppress agreeableness.
      Agreeableness is Big 5 persona, personality - it is not sickness nor abnormality. The true problem are toxic predators, abusers - not our reactions to sick and evil people who choose to harm others.

    • @mimichuchu3267
      @mimichuchu3267 11 месяцев назад +8

      This reminds me an episode in highschool, it was my fist solo harp in a theater, never been on stage especially with stage light pointing at you, big crowd, parents/ teachers, cameras watching, I didn't know what going on stage (alone) felt like...cried 2 minutes before going on stage....damn I learned that I have social anxiety the hard way to be honest 😅
      Stopped playing harp after that, it was too much.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@mimichuchu3267 This is performance anxiety. it is not social anxiety.

    • @mimichuchu3267
      @mimichuchu3267 11 месяцев назад +12

      @@ranc1977 nah bro if I can't even look at people, if I can't talk to them even if I buy groceries, if I'm uncomfortable around other people, I'm pretty sure, it's social anxiety bro
      And it all started with that.

  • @oguziliyekaracoban3725
    @oguziliyekaracoban3725 11 месяцев назад +181

    man i couldnt watch the video further at a certain point. I feel a physical pain just by imagining myself in his position. He is so brave

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +17

      This physical pain is trauma. It is a signal that there is unprocessed shocking events that are stored and waiting in our body and they create damage there and come up to surface as anxiety.
      This is not abnormality - toxic people who scream and who are hysterical caused this trauma.
      This means - trauma is not associated with braveness.
      Toxic society is giving us wrong messages and wrong explanations, toxic masculinity is doing incredible psychological damage since it makes us feel toxic shame for feeling trauma.
      Toxic shame is deep core self hatred and self disgust buried deep inside us at the core of who we are.
      When we have this toxic shame inside us - we will make bad decisions in life and we will attract criminally insane psychopaths around us.
      Healing the trauma and toxic shame means that we realize that our emotions such as feeling weak, vulnerable and fear are not our self worth.
      When we are abused and traumatized - other people will consciously and unconsciously do more damage by giving us wrong explanations and telling us that we suppress our emotions and that we build fake narcissistic image of "strength". That fake persona is path to mental illness.

    • @achilles8356
      @achilles8356 10 месяцев назад +8

      Yeah watching him made me feel as if my blood pressure raised. A part of me weren't too sure although this Julien seems to be here to help. Putting myself in this poor lads shoes, I would be thinking "ok he seems to be trying to help me but I'm wondering if he's also trying to get a rise out of me secretly or is this whole exercise purely for my own benefit."
      That's what I was thinking when he made him squat down to pretend was taking a crap.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 10 месяцев назад

      @@achilles8356 It's called Mathew Effect - when we are down on our knees we will be robbed too (quote from New Testament where it got its name).
      When we are traumatized and when we have shy issues - when we have any kind of problem in life and need and when we need help - there will ALWAYS be psychopaths and narcissists who lurk in shadow to abuse and take advantage of anyone in need. Toxic people will present themselves as Knight on white horse, our fantasy that there is some kind of perfect person who will be Superman and resolve our issues quickly. That does not exist.
      We need to be aware that unfortunately we live in psychopathic world where society protects and worship psychopaths - and they will exploit us when we ask for genuine help.

    • @nicolad100
      @nicolad100 10 месяцев назад +1

      I felt the same

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@nicolad100 The goal of regulating emotions is not to make feelings go away...the aim is to help clients build their capacity to ride the waves of big emotions and sensations.
      Dr Arielle Schwartz

  • @350zKingz
    @350zKingz 11 месяцев назад +439

    Social anxiety absolutely derives from the fear of being scrutinized and judged by others. People who aren't confident in who they are or hold themselves up to impossible standards, they build up social interaction in their minds as a one-sided audition where they have to say the perfect thing or look the perfect way and that's just an incredible burden you are placing on your shoulders.
    It doesn't help that we live in such a superficial culture where we have the false impression that looks and clout and money are the only currencies that matter as human beings. This journey of self help though is all about shattering those misconceptions and you are doing yeoman's work bringing that message to a new generation who are being taught all the worst and most harmful lessons by the internet.
    If you had to build a machine solely for the purpose of crushing a person's soul and decimating their humanity and their empathy, their sense of inner peace and love for their fellow man, you could do no better than building the internet.
    So it takes a pretty formidable force to even begin to push back against that hellscape, especially trying to educate the younger generations who don't even know of a world outside of likes and clicks. But you Julien will definitely go down as one of the good guys when the story is written.

    • @Stringingbear9299
      @Stringingbear9299 11 месяцев назад +17

      Couldn't have said it any better

    • @indianscience5858
      @indianscience5858 11 месяцев назад +1

      True

    • @Keralite29
      @Keralite29 11 месяцев назад +7

      Great comment. The "one-sided audition" line really describes my past approach to socializing.

    • @evewrubel3000
      @evewrubel3000 11 месяцев назад +1

      Round of applause 👏🏻
      So insightful really

    • @Es0terick
      @Es0terick 11 месяцев назад +2

      Shakespeare couldn’t have said it better, well done friend.

  • @arturinpadilla1402
    @arturinpadilla1402 11 месяцев назад +438

    I remember that as a child I was always extroverted and authentic, the school made me a different person, the teachers were very strict, giving opinions in class and being made fun of conditioned me to be SHY or with SOCIAL ANXIETY , now I have felt like I was in an imaginary prison in a cage without being able to get out without feeling the freedom of before, such simple tasks turn out to be a challenge, a few months ago I discovered this channel of Julien and it inspired me to improve that part of me. that does not let me be free, I thank Julien for his valuable content, I hope and everyone who identifies with SOCIAL ANXIETY can regain their freedom. 🙏🏻

    • @erenyeeagah204
      @erenyeeagah204 11 месяцев назад +25

      same exact story for me too. i forgot how to act how i used to be it felt so weird realizing the person i had become wasnt even me, i was just playing a character thinking that if i avoid all confrontation and discomfort in my life, my life would be happy and peaceful but it turned out to be the most depressing years of my life. i was living in fear for nothing.

    • @alicephoenixpoetryjournal9062
      @alicephoenixpoetryjournal9062 11 месяцев назад +9

      Hi! Same here with playing a character in school. Going to kindergarten and school were not the coolest experiences. Broke my authentic spirit combined with traumatic environment at home and later in life in experiences. I am still me inside or with close ones but the sum of it all appears to hinder me from really fitting in sometimes.
      Well, I think that in all situations you lose you also win some things.
      An astrologer told me that I have an aspect that might cause me to not have many friends or to be accepted in the same way others are. Probably because the past left some scars that are still there and it probably makes others uncomfortable. Well, I get that in some way. Maybe it's destiny. I just hope I will be of help to some in this life because of what I have been through. Despite of it all, I am lucky and grateful, because I gained value and meaning in other aspects.
      Hope you all will get all the joy you didn't have as a kid and teen in your adult life! And hope you will become your most authentic selves, as no one is looking. Because even if they are and you feel judged, you probably are awesome!

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      We did not become socially anxious due to toxic teachers. They added the fuel into fire - but the true cause is narcissistic abuse at the home, called and known in psychology as ACoA and ACE.

    • @goldenwookie1015
      @goldenwookie1015 11 месяцев назад +1

      Sounds like me rn ngl

    • @literally-nobody242
      @literally-nobody242 11 месяцев назад +1

      yeah the exact same thing happened to me when i changed schools when i was 8

  • @lilianazuluaga6504
    @lilianazuluaga6504 11 месяцев назад +267

    Psilocybin saved my life. I was addicted to heroin for 15 years and after Psilocybin treatment I will be 3 years clean in September. I have zero cravings. This is something that truly needs to be more broadly used in addiction treatment.

    • @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU
      @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU 11 месяцев назад +1

      Psychedelics definitely have potential to deal with mental health issues such as anxiety and depression, I would like to give them a try but haven't found any legit grower to get it.

    • @eddiejohn8506
      @eddiejohn8506 11 месяцев назад

      @@APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEUYes, dr.sporesss

    • @steceymorgan814
      @steceymorgan814 11 месяцев назад +3

      A lot of people have testified about this and I really want to give it a shot. I put so much on my plate and it definitely affects my stress and anxiety levels

    • @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU
      @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU 11 месяцев назад

      @@eddiejohn8506Is he on instagram?

    • @twinfred3160
      @twinfred3160 11 месяцев назад

      The Trips I've been having have really helped me a lot,I finally feel in control of my emotions and my future and things that used to be mundane to me now seem incredible and full of nuance on top of that I'm way less driven by my ego and I have alot more empathy as well

  • @Frank7489
    @Frank7489 11 месяцев назад +321

    The guy in front of the crowd is in a tough spot. I know when I’m feeling anxious is when I’m the least articulate. Meanwhile he’s being asked these deep questions. If it were me I’d have a really hard time even thinking through these ideas and not just dissociating. I think this guy did great under the circumstances and he should give himself more credit. Also, he’s quite handsome 😊

    • @ThePeacePlant
      @ThePeacePlant 11 месяцев назад +20

      Remember at the end of the day, no one gives a fvck if you tripped over your words that day. Just be yourself, but you do need a bit of discipline to do your best in the public in the USA. You don't need to follow trends are anything, just be yourself, no one really cares about trends after college, it's child's play

    • @jonasc1221
      @jonasc1221 11 месяцев назад +25

      I know he most likely felt breathless up there, so if YOU are reading this (guy in the video) you have my deepest respects. It's not easy to keep yourself upright and still when your entire body is telling you to run for your life. Good job.

    • @sozusagenMabaru
      @sozusagenMabaru 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@jonasc1221man i shed tears as i saw how good he did

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +11

      His male audience is very attractive.
      Male empaths and HSPs usually are.

    • @fueg00nyxxx
      @fueg00nyxxx 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@ranc1977 HSP

  • @xCaptainChloex
    @xCaptainChloex 11 месяцев назад +129

    What I realized is that by constantly keeping your true self hidden and trying to act cool, you actually make things worse for yourself and those around you. They won't understand why you're behaving this way, and by seeing that, you're going to cause more anxiety to yourself, resulting in even more hiding...So everyone, I wish the best and be yourself! 👊

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      "keeping your true self hidden and trying to act cool, you actually make things worse"
      That is called Masking.
      it is absolutely devastating for anyone with Neurodivergent mind, like spectrum on Autism and ADHD where natural brain activities are symptomized, mocked, pathologized and bullied into hiding. Then parts of our personality become suppressed - and this leads to mental illness.

    • @aesthetic.destruction2341
      @aesthetic.destruction2341 11 месяцев назад +1

      true... I was bullied for that throughout my highschool and I didnt understand why. Juliens videos are so powerful, eye opening

    • @xCaptainChloex
      @xCaptainChloex 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@aesthetic.destruction2341 I'm sorry you got bullied.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@aesthetic.destruction2341 What Julien is talking about is a mere 0,5% of social anxiety information and data, very surface level information. Yet it is impressive to learn that our "shyness" is based on trauma and it is not personality defect as ableist CBT describes it.
      There is a whole lot which he never mentions in his videos - even though he has medium and mass attention.
      Hopefully he will use my comments to broaden his research and data and step back from his Toxic Masculinity approach that he is promoting here.

    • @Mr.Cold777
      @Mr.Cold777 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​​@@xCaptainChloexI was bullied so much,had to change school.

  • @Idont8225
    @Idont8225 11 месяцев назад +20

    He is the one standing i front of the crowd but seeing myself in him , my heart is pounding very fast.

    • @e.t926
      @e.t926 10 месяцев назад

      Me too!

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne 3 месяца назад +1

      i think it would be nice for anyone else on earth to know i exist for a few moments

  • @Frankya92
    @Frankya92 11 месяцев назад +145

    I’m not going to lie, I barley found you recently. However, as a socially awkward person these videos have been extremely therapeutic. Thank you for what you do and the empowerment

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +5

      He is teaching us to become narcissistic, to become jerk and insensitive.
      That is great if someone is really jerk - but it won't work with HSPs empaths - anyone with social anxiety - because we have high moral and ethical standards. When we suppress who we truly are - we will develop personality disorder and more of anxiety.
      When we really accept our high moral and ethical standards - we will put a price tag on ourselves and start to cut off toxic people and narcissists who parasite on our Negative politeness - as Negative politeness is one of facets of high moral and ethical standards.
      Negative politeness is trying not to harm and hurt anyone with our actions nor our words to such extent that we put our own needs and interests aside - and this attracts narcissistic predators to exploit us and our high standards of not harming other people.

    • @5Akecheta4
      @5Akecheta4 11 месяцев назад

      @@ranc1977 Oh now you wanna gaslight

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@5Akecheta4 You also abuse other commentators here. You are serial abuser.
      Social anxiety is not an issue of weak will. IT is trauma unprocessed and stuck inside our body. Trauma needs healing - and the only way to heal trauma id to validate and accept ourselves. as a we are.

    • @esothetics
      @esothetics 9 месяцев назад

      such a lamb of the flock thing to say.@@ranc1977

  • @Nordruben
    @Nordruben 11 месяцев назад +328

    Hi everyone! I wanna share a simple yet very powerful advise that helped me boost my confidence a lot just over 2 nights!
    I used to be the shy and quiet introvert who felt his only mission in life was to please and care for others. And whenever someone thought they said something funny i felt forced to give them a fake smile. Or the classic noding and agreeing to what they saidf even though i didn´t hear a word. Just because i was scared of showing them my authentic thoughts and face expressions. being fake and hiding our authenticity is a sad and painful trap that i think a lot of us fall into :/ so hopefully i can make your hearts atleast a little more whole. My advise to you is to go through all the old photos and videos from the day you were born to this very day. it will hopefully remind you of who you are and where you come from. For me it also gave me much more appreciation and love for my parents to see what they had to go through raising me and it made me proud to be their son. Much love to all of you and remember that the longest stored pupae becomes the most beautiful butterfly!

    • @Tamtudy
      @Tamtudy 11 месяцев назад +17

      Nice story and lovely that you appreciate your parents even more! I agree that going back to your roots and even talking with your parents about your past, how you were when you were growing up and so on.

    • @aurostar9805
      @aurostar9805 11 месяцев назад +6

      Thank you ! I really apprecciate your advice , I'll try it out . ❤️

    • @me.shyann
      @me.shyann 11 месяцев назад +4

      Aww this is amazing :)) I’m glad it helped. I soon will be that butterfly in Jesus name amen

    • @pa3io843
      @pa3io843 11 месяцев назад +1

      I don't have any

    • @ThePeacePlant
      @ThePeacePlant 11 месяцев назад +1

      I love this post! I hope you are doing well in life

  • @frankydottir8762
    @frankydottir8762 11 месяцев назад +81

    Im scared of attention because of childhood experiences in my family. I unconsciously associate attention to being picked on and in general being in trouble.

    • @annalieb2075
      @annalieb2075 11 месяцев назад +3

      Very much the same. I have a hard time doing normal shores with people around. Love exercise but never set a foot in a gym.
      In childhood being able to be invisible or meek was a life saving trait. Hard to let go of.

    • @thefloorcloorchorebore
      @thefloorcloorchorebore 11 месяцев назад

      @@annalieb2075I’m the exact same. Do you think it’s possible to let go of it? I’m halfway through high school and want to enjoy it

    • @evewrubel3000
      @evewrubel3000 11 месяцев назад

      Wow this helped
      Me a lot
      I have this trait of hating being celebrated and what not that involves all eyes on me and I never put two and two together

    • @evewrubel3000
      @evewrubel3000 11 месяцев назад

      My mom was a strict single parent so when I did something wrong it’s all she would ever talk about and was blow up with nothing else going on or other interactions to clam the storm

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Adult children of alcoholics guess at what normal behavior is.
      🟨Janet G. Woititz
      Adult children of alcoholics constantly seek approval.
      🟨Janet G. Woititz
      Adult children of alcoholics lie when it would be just as easy to tell the truth.
      Adult children of alcoholics over-react to changes which they have no control.
      🟨Janet G. Woititz
      Codependents in general and Adult children of Alcoholics tend to expect others to make them happy. When I don't get validation, my victim mentality will kick in - because that's what Mum did. She would complain if not validated. Negative thinking is learned behavior
      🟥Lisa Romano
      10 Common Struggles for Adult Children of Alcoholics
      1. Being rigid and inflexible
      2. Difficulty trusting or being closed off
      3. Shame and loneliness
      4. Self-criticism
      5. Perfectionism
      6. People pleasing
      7. Being highly sensitive or reactive
      8. Being overly responsible...

  • @DestinyAwaits19
    @DestinyAwaits19 11 месяцев назад +16

    I had eye contact anxiety. I was scared to look people in the eye, cause somehow they could see into my soul. I realized it was me who feared the darkness in myself. It's something I embraced. All conversations are a form of combat, now I want them to see into me.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +3

      I have autism so I have difficulty reading faces. So unless it's like an obvious smile I have no idea what you're thinking of or feeling. With RSD I will going to assume negative, I can't define smile - I'll go with: you're angry.
      YT PurpleElla

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne 3 месяца назад +1

      lol you sound like an anime character

    • @DestinyAwaits19
      @DestinyAwaits19 3 месяца назад +1

      @@mrosskne Lol true. I just realized haha.

  • @Grassphobic
    @Grassphobic 11 месяцев назад +34

    My issue is returning to my loud expressive self, and being seen as obnoxious and annoying. I feel like i'm just being an asshole when I let go, say what I want to say and speak up, and people would rather I just stfu.

    • @JulienHimself
      @JulienHimself  11 месяцев назад +7

      It’s about being authentic while also being relatable… Watch this: ruclips.net/video/Pn00Fdy7k3Q/видео.htmlsi=-4hhGpMdbcCuysmu

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Most people are fake and narcissistic - since they applied techniques suggested by Julien. That is why they see you as obnoxious and annoying - they don't like mirroring - they don't like to see their true face. They would rather stay in narcissistic fantasy of grandiosity. So when you are authentic - fake people will hate it. Since they hate their true self. Problem are toxic evil narcissists - not you. Not your truth.
      To say what you feel is to dig your own grave
      Album: I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got
      Black Boys on Mopeds
      Song by Sinéad O'Connor

    • @joshbowling3736
      @joshbowling3736 6 месяцев назад

      This so much. Anytime I get to feeling confident, my mouth gets me in trouble fast

  • @bronsomccor2642
    @bronsomccor2642 11 месяцев назад +40

    The way to be confident is to have no ego an ego is your identity or image you live up to expectations of being liked and cant really let go and be who you truly want to be the ego is scared of being disliked judged or lesser its insecurities is what holds it back this is what spiritual wisdom talks about is just letting go of your identity cayse your identity is your ego

    • @abuDA-bt6ei
      @abuDA-bt6ei 11 месяцев назад +2

      your ego is attached to your self-worth or lack thereof, and trauma is what damages your self worth.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Moral relativism leads for narcissists to become leaders, tyrannic. Like Putin or Trump being in charge - since nobody would care about ego.
      Any rigid mindset is sickness. It leads to anxious avoidant attachment style - and it is learned in ACoA abusive ambient - where there is black and white thinking. If something is black , you simply replace it with white. In real life - binary thinking leads to bad and catastrophic decisions in life. We live in fuzzy logic, everything is in spectrum. Everything in life is not rigid - it is in the state of flow, it asks for us love and care and protection, not cold narcissistic hysterical fake mask which Julien is programming you to believe in.

  • @memesouls8653
    @memesouls8653 11 месяцев назад +81

    I think school systems of grading and being strict about speeches has ruined people’s self confidence when it comes to public speaking. Worrying about messing up in front of your teacher which could affect your grade and also the entire classroom of kids judging you and taking notes about how bad your speech is doesn’t help anyone.

    • @InfiniteCookie3-jo2bb
      @InfiniteCookie3-jo2bb 11 месяцев назад +2

      This!!!! I was constantly making mistakes and teachers always made it seem like a crime 🥲 I’d get so upset about not being able to accomplish something and be good at something because I was constantly being told off or constantly being told that my work is satisfactory and everyone else’s was better if that makes sense😔 totally ruined my confidence

    • @Iuffycs
      @Iuffycs 11 месяцев назад

      I agree with this

  • @wissal6469
    @wissal6469 11 месяцев назад +29

    All people with social anxiety are beautiful ❤

    • @JulienHimself
      @JulienHimself  11 месяцев назад

      🙏

    • @johnqa
      @johnqa 11 месяцев назад

      Lovely and true

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Social anxiety is not sickness to overcome nor cure.
      Quote:
      They see us as timid, shy, weak, or unsociable. Fearing these labels, we try to be like others. But that leads to our becoming overaroused and distressed. Then that gets us labeled neurotic or crazy, first by others then by ourselves.
      The Highly Sensitive Person, Elaine N. Aron
      Learning to see our trait as a neutral thing-useful in some situations, not in others-but our culture definitely does not see it, or any trait, as neutral.
      Be careful about accepting labels for yourself such as "inhibited", "introverted", "shy"
      The Highly Sensitive Person,E. Aron
      "Sooner or later everyone encounters stressful life experiences, but HSPs react more to such stimulation. If you see this reaction as part of some basic flaw, you intensify the stress already present in any life crisis.
      This deeper processing of subtle details causes you to consider the past or future more. You "just know" how things got to be the way they are or how they are going to turn out. It can be wrong, but your intuition is right often enough that HSPs tend to be visionaries, more conscientious, cautious and wise people.
      It is important not to confuse arousal with fear.
      And often we think that our arousal is due to fear. We do not realize that our heart may be pounding from the sheer effort of processing extra stimulation.
      I really suggest trying to view it as neutral.
      HSPs must spend far more time trying to invent solutions to human problems just because they are more sensitive to hunger, cold, insecurity, exhaustion, and illness.
      Since most non-HSPs do not seem to enjoy thinking about such things, they assume we must be unhappy doing all that pondering.
      Spend enough time putting yourself out there in the world - your sensitivity is not something to be feared.
      Carl Jung believed that when highly sensitive patients has experienced a trauma, they had been unusually affected and so developed a neurosis.
      Preferring toughness, the culture sees our trait as something difficult to live with, something to be cured. HSPs differ mainly in their sensitive processing of subtle stimuli. This is your most basic quality."
      The Highly Sensitive Person, Elaine N. Aron

    • @fueg00nyxxx
      @fueg00nyxxx 11 месяцев назад +1

      W cope

    • @luminisant
      @luminisant 5 месяцев назад

      @@fueg00nyxxx L + didn't ask + stay mad

  • @evidemment14
    @evidemment14 11 месяцев назад +110

    I could look as gorgeously attractive as this person, and yet be socially anxious. This idea is selfishly relieving. I am not proud of this feeling tho; I would not wish social anxiety on anyone. I hope he overcomes it soon. I just wanted to be genuine about my defect. Anyhoo, an insightful conversation as always, thank you

    • @Nothing-lr3dt
      @Nothing-lr3dt 11 месяцев назад +8

      Do semen retention and a bit of dopamine detoxing and you'll be good, all types of anxieties and fears will be gone within 2-3 months

    • @v.v.v.v.v.7273
      @v.v.v.v.v.7273 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@Nothing-lr3dt Semen retention is very powerful, but this is simply not true. I speak from experience. However, it will at least reduce anxiety.

    • @Nothing-lr3dt
      @Nothing-lr3dt 11 месяцев назад

      @@v.v.v.v.v.7273 i mean i also speak from experience but fair, i personally don't have anxiety anymore at all, same with fear, of course if you were to put me in a cage with a lion or any extreme example like that i would still feel fear but i mean when it comes to normal day to day life it's completely gone for me

    • @richardtrofimov2828
      @richardtrofimov2828 11 месяцев назад +1

      I consider myself good looking and I am suffering from terrible social anxiety very often. Its something that I constantly have to try to suppress. I am semi functuioning :/ Me on the avatar

    • @serenagilbert1483
      @serenagilbert1483 11 месяцев назад

      @@Nothing-lr3dt dude what ? 😂 what’s with this trend of alpha bros & their semen retention?? Also there scientifically no way not jerking off gets rid of all your problems/trauma/anxiety/does your inner shadow work for anyone. Youre literally not getting to the root of any of your problems that way; maybe it’s helping you with adrenaline or something but then again boxers don’t jerk off for a long time before fights because it builds up testosterone which i believe acts similar to adrenaline/fight or flight (anxiety) so ?

  • @Larka11037
    @Larka11037 11 месяцев назад +44

    I have social anxiety, and I respect this individual working to get out of his comfort zone like this. It took me years to feel comfortable talking to strangers, talking on the phone, and other strenuous social tasks. I still occasionally have difficulties at large social gatherings and talking on the phone, but I have exponentially improved in these tasks over the years. I now work a job that focuses on helping others with their speech and language skills which requires a lot of client and parent engagement that I would not have been able to do when I was younger. It just takes time and a willingness to attempt challenges despite the way it makes you feel. While the feeling may be rough at first, it will definitely get better with practice. It always helps to start out at the smallest level and go up from there. At least that is what helped me improve. I eventually even got to the point where I felt comfortable singing around a group of 60+ people. It was a fear I would never forget, but it was also a milestone that I will never forget. Have plenty of patience and resilience, and you will definitely improve in your social skills! It is difficult, but it is possible!

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      " to get out of his comfort zone "
      When you get out of comfort zone with trauma unprocessed - we will get imploded like carbon fibre submersible in deep depths of ocean.
      Look at 3rd world countries - they are living outside their comfort zone - and they are not getting rich at all - in fact they swim in feces, corruption, cocaine mafia and poverty.

    • @dianavandevalk3714
      @dianavandevalk3714 11 месяцев назад

      Wow you really worked hard and grown so much! That's so inspiring. I hope you are proud of yourself and can feel that inside. Awesome 👍

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@dianavandevalk3714 " really worked hard and grown"
      Denial and suppression is not growth at all. IT is Regression and it leads to mental illness and building a fake persona of grandeur and superiority.
      The key to understanding Narcissistic Personality Disorder is that the entire formation of the personality is based around a false self. So they have a hyper idealized vision of themselves that protects them from the realities of the world. So basically all of these are a reflection of when reality creeps in, it defies the reality of the false self and causes the narcissist to wake up to the fact that they're living inside of a delusion. And this created mortification and can spiral the narcissist into complete crisis.
      YT 7 Things That Frighten Narcissists To Their Core
      RICHARD GRANNON

  • @omojciastkowy4498
    @omojciastkowy4498 10 месяцев назад +12

    That exercise reminded me of this one primary school teacher who saw through me and asked me to scream in front of a class. It was after I answered the question correctly but with a silent and choking voice. I didn't manage to do it but I remember it till that day. I relived that moment with Andreas, so proud of him!

  • @baauf
    @baauf 10 месяцев назад +4

    Andre's eyes said it all. He will remember this event for the rest of his successful life.

  • @hyemuhyemu8221
    @hyemuhyemu8221 11 месяцев назад +16

    I stopped caring about people staring and what people thought about me when girls passing by me in a car yelled 'Woo! You're hot!' I thought i looked like sh*t but those girls just gave me a huge confidence boost

    • @jolieusher
      @jolieusher 11 месяцев назад

      😂

    • @serenagilbert1483
      @serenagilbert1483 11 месяцев назад +2

      so wild how women HATE cat calling but men love it 😂

    • @xanmancan
      @xanmancan 11 месяцев назад

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne 3 месяца назад

      they were being sarcastic.

    • @millie9814
      @millie9814 Месяц назад

      You don’t know that

  • @goe333
    @goe333 11 месяцев назад +17

    Bruh, Julien is absolutely amazing! The kid looked like he was fainting 100 times but he still did it, mad respect!

    • @NavesNiche
      @NavesNiche 11 месяцев назад +3

      He's not a kid, he's a man!

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +1

      Lobotomy and dissociation, toxic masculinity - the quickest way to handle social anxiety is to become abuser and jerk and narcissist.

    • @coaiemandushman1079
      @coaiemandushman1079 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@ranc1977 you said toxic masculinity - all of your credibility is gone.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@coaiemandushman1079 Living in your delusions is your own choice and nothing I can say can snap you back to real life, reality.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@coaiemandushman1079 Grammar Nazi.

  • @7Chikchan
    @7Chikchan 11 месяцев назад +108

    Sometimes in the moment I don't know what to say. I feel like sometimes people expect fast responses and I need time to parse my thoughts and how I feel about things. So I'll kind of freeze up and say nothing, getting anxious at the same time. I also feel this when I'm with a group of people and one or two are constantly cracking jokes and saying funny things. And it seems like people are constantly trying to one up each other in saying the most witty thing.

    • @sahgahndeezbahls1536
      @sahgahndeezbahls1536 11 месяцев назад +16

      Yeah I’ve been going through this as well man. Always like some sort of game isn’t it. Don’t worry. You’ll gain the information you need and you’ll realize what Kanye said is right. “We’re all unpaid actors in this giant script”

    • @indianscience5858
      @indianscience5858 11 месяцев назад +26

      Most people do not put much thought into talking. You need to do the same. Practice talking without thinking too much and see where it leads you.

    • @LeFFFFFUUUU
      @LeFFFFFUUUU 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@indianscience5858to say pathetic dumb shit I regret

    • @MrBubbyG_Official
      @MrBubbyG_Official 11 месяцев назад +7

      If you speak slow it down. Don't speak quickly, speak slower. If you talk fast you sound desperate and underconfident. If you talk slower you seem more relaxed. It will help you come up with what to say next without blanking. Don't talk like a sloth though. Be relaxed. As for cracking witting jokes, if you don't have one then you don't have to find one. It probably doesn't matter as much as you think.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      That is because they are Neurotypical - their brain is not much deep, it runs on surface level as most of people. They are dumb.
      Neurodivergent, HSP mind takes time to process information. That is not sickness. Without ability to process information we would make irrational hysterical bad decisions in life.

  • @feel-the-rain85
    @feel-the-rain85 10 месяцев назад +18

    Julien is so freaking cool just being himself. He helps a lot of people. His speeches are always inspiring and motivational. Anders is the bravest man. I'm so proud. There was a massive difference from the beginning to the end. Keep on going Anders. You're even more cool being your true self 🫶

  • @stinawatson6327
    @stinawatson6327 11 месяцев назад +18

    It's not socially acceptable to tell people you're afraid. I always try to be real, but it usually ends up with me feeling dumb i even opened up.

    • @tearex8688
      @tearex8688 11 месяцев назад +1

      I'm the same way bro. Just now i did that exact same thing typing this comment.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +5

      "People expect the quiet one to adapt to the loud people but not the other way around"

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne 3 месяца назад

      ​@@ranc1977yeah, the loud people are the correct ones. if you want to be a buzzkill, stay home.

    • @DarkCor38744
      @DarkCor38744 2 месяца назад

      @@mrosskne you cant just stay at home and die. Even if you want to. What you are saying is the exact thing quiet people are afraid of and that will make them even more quiet.

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne 2 месяца назад

      @@DarkCor38744 good.

  • @Cande__T0m3i
    @Cande__T0m3i 11 месяцев назад +47

    Me sentí muy identificada con el chico del video asique quiero compartir un poco de mi historia:
    Desde que tengo 6 años siempre fui denominada la niña callada y timida de la clase. Con el tiempo termine aceptando que era timida y diferente, esto duró 11 años aproximadamente y realmente me afectó muchisimo creer que era diferente que los demás y que nunca iba a ser "Normal" perdiendo oportunidades de hacer las cosas que me gustaban. Desde los 13 años empece a ver contenido para ELIMINAR la ansiedad social, pero solamente me ayudaron temporalmente y volvia a caer en el mismo pensamiento de que no era normal. Hace unos dias a mis 17 años encontré el canal de Julien, el cual gracias a él logré descubrir que nunca tuve algo malo o que era diferente y que la unica forma de lograr mejorar, poder ser yo misma era aceptarme tal y como soy. Hoy siento que no tengo que demostrar nada a los demás y me siento mucho más comoda conmigo misma.
    Solamente quería recordarles a las personas que están pasando por algo similiar, que es totalmente valido sentirse mal por vivir con una etiqueta que nisiquiera te pusiste a ti mismo y que se puede salir de esa jaula aunque parezca no tener una salida. Les deseo lo mejor en su recorrido a sentirse bien devuelta con ustedes mismos. Saludos 🫂♥

    • @arturinpadilla1402
      @arturinpadilla1402 11 месяцев назад +8

      Te comprendo completamente la ANSIEDAD SOCIAL es un problema súper limitante yo eh desperdiciado muchos años con esa Ansiedad sintiéndome como atrapado en una jaula sin poder salir y sentirme libre, también gracias a Julián eh mejorado aún me cuesta un poco socializar pero ya voy mejorando es un proceso espero y que también todos los que tengan este problema puedan sentirse libres de nuevo

    • @brunobrasil3419
      @brunobrasil3419 11 месяцев назад +1

      Felicidades, amiga! Que logres todo lo q quieras! El mundo es TUYO!!!

  • @hsinyang473
    @hsinyang473 11 месяцев назад +10

    Embrace yourself, give yourself permission, and back yourself up like Julien and the audience in the event. These all help me to express my inner self more confidently with people around me. Thx Julien.

  • @Nebularnoodle
    @Nebularnoodle 5 месяцев назад +3

    This is the best content ive seen in RUclips. It made me sweat, it made me nervous and it made me feel a huge feeling of stress release when Anders scream with all his strength. This is truly inspiring and the authenticity is really fresh air.

  • @kamehamedouken8869
    @kamehamedouken8869 11 месяцев назад +10

    Take the power back that you've given to others over how you see yourself. They do not get to decide that anymore

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      If you follow Julien advice - you are seeing others as superior and yourself as inferior. When we put others as a measure about our worth - that we must scream and be narcissistic - we are placing other people as our measure - we will become depended on other people's reaction and approval and validation.

    • @tearex8688
      @tearex8688 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@ranc1977 i think the messege was we need stop self-sabotaging ourselves into misery and not being able to function.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@tearex8688 " i think the messege was we need stop self-sabotaging ourselves into misery and not being able to function."
      Well flash news - nobody can stop sabotaging themselves by developing toxic shame and toxic masculinity and narcissism.
      Creating fake image of Viking will end up as narcissism and mental illness. Hating your weaknesses leads to mental illness and personality disorder.
      Look:
      Deficiency motivation doesn't work. It will lead to a life-long pursuit of try to fix me. Learn to appreciate what you have and where and who you are.
      Wayne Dyer
      "Any attempt to dictate what thoughts, feelings, and sensations are proper or improper creates a breeding ground for guilt and shame"
      Peter Levine
      Carl Rogers: “The curious paradox is that when I accept myself, just as I am, then I can change.”

  • @kyladomienik937
    @kyladomienik937 11 месяцев назад +3

    I love this guys outfit, he doesn’t care what anyone thinks and stays true to himself

  • @ZhangWenting
    @ZhangWenting 11 месяцев назад +2

    This really helps! I cried. The talk about authenticity really moves me. Life seems to have more hope now. Thank you very much

  • @constantthought6082
    @constantthought6082 11 месяцев назад +15

    It is absolutely insane what social anxiety and anxiety in general has done to my life. For a little more than a decade now, (I’m 24), it truly has made my life a living hell. It feels like a poison or a disease in my body and mind and spirit, where everything gets tainted with this theme of misery. I try and try and try again and again to live my life but anxiety has never once failed to interfere.
    The amount of medications, supplements, even electro shock therapy I’ve done most people wouldn’t even believe, yet here I am, present day, and I just had a pretty severe panic attack due to social anxiety in public just an hour ago. It’s so extremely debilitating and after you have it for enough time, it starts to shape every single part of your life and personality and identity

    • @Hevvvyyy
      @Hevvvyyy 11 месяцев назад

      Hope things will get better. Sometimes wishing for that "better tomorrow" helps ease things

    • @Vel_Plays_2.0
      @Vel_Plays_2.0 11 месяцев назад

      You've tried TRT?

    • @gamegamesnldegameszijnop
      @gamegamesnldegameszijnop 11 месяцев назад

      The only way is too push forward. What has helped me ALOT was solo travelling. It was the most scariest thing I have ever done at first. But as soon as I stepped on that place and went to an hostel where i noticed and learned how many people are alike and just like me. You are not alone. Go out there and be your self. If someone doesn't like you or no one likes you for your self than they are not worthy of your attention. Choose what you want to do and become in life and pursue that all the while being your self. Go out there bro don't give up. I still from time too time struggle a bit but i always remind my self that most have some form of anxiety or are scared of judgement and push trough.

    • @constantthought6082
      @constantthought6082 11 месяцев назад

      @@Vel_Plays_2.0 no, it is something I’ve thought about but I’ve never tried it. Im only 24 and i don’t think my value is low enough to get a prescription.

    • @constantthought6082
      @constantthought6082 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@gamegamesnldegameszijnop I struggle so much with “being myself” because so many years have passed where I have, at least in front of others, been this fake, anxious version of myself that I don’t even know what my “true self” is. It seems my brain doesn’t allow me access to it except for sometimes when I’m alone I feel it from time to time. I hope I’m making sense with that.
      The solo travel idea is a very good one. It’s something I haven’t really explored

  • @kianadiykia4914
    @kianadiykia4914 11 месяцев назад +15

    You are helping so many people, including myself. Thank you so much for all the work you do!

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      He is not helping at all - he is teaching narcissism and to become hysterical and Karen. Fake and annoying person.

  • @Allplussomeminus
    @Allplussomeminus 11 месяцев назад +11

    27:15 ooooooooo! What a finale. Most solid yell from him. That speech about ancestors and gods before hand is what did it.

    • @JulienHimself
      @JulienHimself  11 месяцев назад +3

      He did amazing, yes! Massive respect to him! 👊

  • @arthurmurfitt7698
    @arthurmurfitt7698 9 месяцев назад +2

    The most important thing I’ve gotten from Julien in all the talks I’ve seen is to not be fearful of my uncomfortable thoughts and emotions. Lean into them, and experience them fully to learn from them. I can actually imagine a time in my future being virtually free of negative self talk. 💪🏼🧠

  • @jegorarefjev544
    @jegorarefjev544 10 месяцев назад

    Maaan Julien, oh my god. Just found your channel and it's.. I have no words, i'm hugely impressed. Big respect for the confidence without a tiniest flavour of arrogance, I'm eager to study your content and teachings more. And huge thanks for helping guys like Anders and myself!

  • @radioktiver_boomerang
    @radioktiver_boomerang 11 месяцев назад +7

    This made me realize that I'm scared of not being understood. Because I got misunderstood (and judged) all my life. So now I'd rather stay quiet so there is nothing to misunderstand. I used to be a theaterkid in school. The difference of me, being around people I barely know but feel comfortable with ( where I show the expressive me) versus me around people I know way longer, even family, but where I hide and stay silent, even distancing myself at times, is mindblowing. Knowing that is really helpful so I can work on this and letting go of worrying that people misunderstand, especially because most people would make an effort to understand, If it is something they themselves care about. Thank you

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Quiet BPD.

    • @radioktiver_boomerang
      @radioktiver_boomerang 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@ranc1977 what?
      Never crossed my mind, I should look into that, it might fit me.
      If so, thank you.
      After looking into it, BPD doesn't seem to fit me.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@radioktiver_boomerang Yes. We are not being told crucial information about Social anxiety - such as Complex Trauma, ACoA, RSD and Quiet BPD , HSP.
      Then we get stuck with Julien-type toxic videos where we are explained that we are weak coward sissy feminine freaks that must become screaming Viking Karen lunatic.
      Learn more about :
      We didn't know until recently that c-PTSD is an injury to your brain and nervous system. And a lot of therapist and clinical professionals still don't know this.
      YT Crappy Childhood Fairy
      Preferring toughness, the culture sees our trait as something difficult to live with, something to be cured. HSPs differ mainly in their sensitive processing of subtle stimuli. This is your most basic quality."
      The Highly Sensitive Person, Elaine N. Aron
      Symptoms of Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria
      (when criticism hurts)
      - Being easily embarrassed
      - Heightened fear of failure
      - Unrealistically high expectations for self
      - Assuming people don't like you
      - Avoiding social settings
      - Perfectionistic tendencies
      What triggers RSD?
      Everyone's RSD triggers are different, but they may include:
      - being rejected or thinking you're being rejected, like not getting a response to a text message or email
      - a sense of falling short or failing to meet your own high standards or others' expectations
      - being criticized for something you can't control
      Characteristics of Adult Children of Alcoholics
      - struggles with maintaining interpersonal relationships
      - struggles with codependency
      - impulsive or dangerous behaviors
      - anxiety and hypervigilance
      - fear of abandonment
      - conflict avoidance/fear of conflict
      - constantly seeking approval
      - struggles with authority figures
      - poor communication
      - struggles with emotional regulation
      - poor self-esteem and self-image, or constantly feeling "different"
      9 Signs if Quiet BDP
      1. You are calm on the outside but suffer on the inside
      2. You have a high need for control, and hate uncertainty
      3. You withdraw from people and shut down very easily
      4. You mentally retreat or dissociate, as coping mechanism
      5. You have an unclear sense of self, resulting in low self-esteem
      6. You always blame yourself for everything, and self sabotage a lot
      7. You avoid conflicts and anger at all cost, and check yourself as not to offend anyone
      8. You are extremely fearful of both abandonment and intimacy
      9. You look 'perfect' from the outside, but deep down inside you keep on isolating yourself more
      -
      Quiet BPD subtype
      Also known as High-Functioning BPD
      One of the subtypes of BPD, people living with "quiet" or "discouraged borderline" live in extreme emotional turmoil because they don't show their distress.
      - not easily detectable
      - those with the disorder often struggle alone because they feel like a burden
      - common people-pleasing behavior
      - withdraw when upset
      - feel detached from the world to cope
      - fear of rejection and abandonment
      - fear of being alone
      - social anxiety and self isolation
      (Healthline, 2020) ; thebrightbabe
      -
      QuietBPD
      A person living with quiet BPD will typically internalize their emotions, which creates invisible feelings of turmoil that can make life extremely difficult. While quiet BPD is not an official diagnosis, the use of this term denotes a subtype of BPD that tends to turn symptoms inward rather than outward (which makes it less obivious).
      As a result of this, quiet BPD often tends to go undiagnosed, misdiagnosed as something else (eg depression, social anxiety, autism), or takes longer to diagnose because of the lack of classic symptoms.
      -
      These are all interchangeable:
      RSD (Rejection Sensitivity Dysphoria) = Social anxiety = Emotional Dysregulation = Complex Trauma = Toxic shame = After-effects of ACoA & ACE = After-effects of narcissistic abuse, emotional abuse, psychological abuse, mental abuse = Hypervigilance/hypovigilance = PureOCD = Unfavorable power dynamics = Trauma response = Trauma bonding = Neurodivergence = Spectrum, not binary thinking = Amygdala hijacking = Trauma triggers and flashbacks = being criticized for something you can't control = having high moral and ethical standards and enforcing them = someone random complains about our errors when we done superhuman efforts to avoid ALL mistakes which 98.5% percent of people never invest neither physically nor mentally = toxic person complaining and expecting us to know something for the first time without mistakes = Perfectionism = Protesting: someone toxic complaining without fair assessment and basing their protest on bias and prejudice and oversimplification = Protesting: to express OUR OWN judgement and negative evaluation and holding criminals narcissists accountable for their crimes and hidden selfish agenda of exploiting others = Not conforming = Conforming (fawning) to unreasonable standards and neurotypical norms = Conforming to narcissistic abuser and psychopath who would punish us if we don't conform to their Coercive control, hidden agenda and manipulation and pathological lying = Being authentic true speaking the truth to fake people and toxic people who have hidden covert agenda to exploit others = being Agreeable (Big 5 personality trait) = being Open (Big 5 personality trait) = Being Neurotic (Big 5 personality trait) = being healthy, friendly and open to life and people = Attachment issues = Codependency = Listening to our gut feeling = Quiet BPD (PureBPD) = BPD Splitting

  • @user-rl8gs3nl8g
    @user-rl8gs3nl8g 11 месяцев назад +32

    Hello guys.
    I used to be a happy kid but I was getting bullied by the other kids for being awkward as they were telling me. As the years went by I became more and more introverted. When I went to the Army (Mandatory in my country) it was the same the other guys were picking on me and I told our superiors but they sided with them instead. After I finished my Army services I chose to remain there and work. I was always criticised by my superiors, ridiculised in front of many, wronged,punished. Everybody makes mistakes I guess, but what if only your mistakes matter? I decided to quit after a major disagreement. I went on to seek a career in aviation. I got the highest mark of my class at the test but still I dont view it as an accomplishment and my confidence didnt increase at all. I applied for multiple airlines to hire me but to no avail. I also got rejected at an open day for a specific airline. They favoured some other guys from my group who weren't as invested as me. Recently, I've been ruminating. Were all those guys right about me? I'm I an idiot? I'm I always wrong?

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Adult children of alcoholics did the best they could do to survive as children. Their behaviors, coping skills and personalities were shaped by chaos and trauma. As adults their inner child is still exiled and terrified lead to compensatory.
      🟥Doc Snipes
      Sooner or later, if they are to be healed, they must learn that the entirety of one's adult life is a series of personal choices, decisions.
      M. Scott Peck
      We don't realize as adults that we are now capable of meeting our needs so we don't need these advanced strategies for keeping people close. Pink cloud: We want all things that go well in our life to continue and new things on top of that.
      🟥Heidi Priebe
      It is considered advantageous in society. School likes it better when children are traumatized. Other people, other adults, society can like the child better when they develop this “persona”. “This is healthy, this is better person”.
      🟥Daniel Mackler
      Being an adult means having options. We can push back against bullies, move away when it gets too much, and tell other people what we need from them.
      Hypervigilance and How to Overcome It
      YT The School of Life
      'Having someone mad at you/being misunderstood.'
      We are adults now. We don't need to give toxic people the power to tell us who we are.
      YT Patrick Teahan LICSW
      Our parents didn't see us as children. Toxic parents see their kids as selfish adults who are making choices at their expense, which is super messed up.
      YT 6 Unknown Childhood Trauma Triggers
      It’s easy to take advice from wealthy, wellknown people who seem to have their shit together. The things that privileged selfhelp authors need to overcome their troubles don’t cut it for most of us. Money, power, prestige allow people to be oblivious to the inner lives of others
      "How to draw an owl" karlastarr.substack
      The devil loves unspoken secrets. Especially those that fester in a man's soul.
      Herman Melville
      Of all the preposterous assumptions of humanity over humanity, nothing exceeds most of the criticisms made on the habits of the poor by the well-housed, well-warmed and well-fed.
      Herman Melville (August 1, 1819 - September 28, 1891)
      Things autistic people get judged for
      - Asking in-depth questions on a content area that get perceived as challening the authority
      - Working harder than expected on tasks and projects can get perceived as "brown-nosing" or "being weird"
      - Asking clarifying questions to understand what is being said to them
      - Over-explaning in an effort to be understood and out of anxiety of not getting their thoughts across clearly
      - Being focused on a task and not on chatting/socializing
      - Caring deeply about the quality of work they produce and giving in their full effort
      Yulika Forman, PhD, LHMC

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@jessemartin1876 Maybe we could start to validate our emotions and feelings instead of putting ourselves down?
      How about that radical revolutionary idea? Self validation. Self acceptance. Not shaming ourselves.

    • @tescobakery1927
      @tescobakery1927 11 месяцев назад +2

      Sounds like a classic confidence issue. People bully insecure people who don't put up a fight. Confident people get hired because that's what recruiters see. Fake it till you make it

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@tescobakery1927 "Confident people get hired because "
      Because toxic society thinks that being confident means being competent.
      This is what is happening in Balkan in Eastern Europe - people get hired because they are abusive and narcissistic. Then Balkan Europe is avoided by foreign investors since they know there is corruption and that they will be devoured by predators who are incompetent and basically stupid and that they must bribe the police and judge to handle the crime there.
      Toxic corporations too - poisoning the planet because monsters in charge do not have empathy.
      Dunning Krueger tells us that super-confident people are stupid, while those with imposter syndrome are competent.
      The question is - are your life goals to work for criminals and sell yourself for few bucks more and to abuse other people?

    • @pointbreak2811
      @pointbreak2811 7 месяцев назад

      Keep trying man. I'm rooting for you.

  • @Usersunited
    @Usersunited 11 месяцев назад +1

    A lot of what taking action doing those things in a public space does also is that, it shatters the imagination and perception of what you think is going to happen to you.
    Everything you were afraid of, everything you thought people were going to do, say, or how they were going to look at you: It blows all those things up.
    living with, or actiing despite discomfort, taking action in spite of the fear, So many little things that all help chip away at the core and change in long lasting ways.
    Good video.

  • @Ah0yProductions
    @Ah0yProductions 11 месяцев назад +23

    This video hit me hard, i have extreme social phobia and im struggling to even go out the door sometimes,l and when i saw this video it brought me to tears, he described exactly how i felt, i always have to look and feel cool, im always using shades everywhere i go cause i freak out otherwise

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +1

      9 Signs if Quiet BDP
      1. You are calm on the outside but suffer on the inside
      2. You have a high need for control, and hate uncertainty
      3. You withdraw from people and shut down very easily
      4. You mentally retreat or dissociate, as coping mechanism
      5. You have an unclear sense of self, resulting in low self-esteem
      6. You always blame yourself for everything, and self sabotage a lot
      7. You avoid conflicts and anger at all cost, and check yourself as not to offend anyone
      8. You are extremely fearful of both abandonment and intimacy
      9. You look 'perfect' from the outside, but deep down inside you keep on isolating yourself more
      -
      Quiet BPD subtype
      Also known as High-Functioning BPD
      One of the subtypes of BPD, people living with "quiet" or "discouraged borderline" live in extreme emotional turmoil because they don't show their distress.
      - not easily detectable
      - those with the disorder often struggle alone because they feel like a burden
      - common people-pleasing behavior
      - withdraw when upset
      - feel detached from the world to cope
      - fear of rejection and abandonment
      - fear of being alone
      - social anxiety and self isolation
      (Healthline, 2020) ; thebrightbabe
      -
      QuietBPD
      A person living with quiet BPD will typically internalize their emotions, which creates invisible feelings of turmoil that can make life extremely difficult. While quiet BPD is not an official diagnosis, the use of this term denotes a subtype of BPD that tends to turn symptoms inward rather than outward (which makes it less obivious).
      As a result of this, quiet BPD often tends to go undiagnosed, misdiagnosed as something else (eg depression, social anxiety, autism), or takes longer to diagnose because of the lack of classic symptoms.

    • @upbeyond671
      @upbeyond671 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​​​@@ranc1977sounds like I have all 9 signs 😢. What does BPD stand for?

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@upbeyond671 Borderline personality disorder.
      In faulty CBT (therapy which studies personality disorders) there is a wrong description of borderline disorder. It is described as narcissistic, loud screaming Karen.
      While in reality there are many spectrum subtypes such as Quiet BPD: which is social anxiety. We shut up, we are silent, we fawn, we are pushovers, we self censor ourselves, we live in fears and panic mode all the time and we are convinced that we are abnormal for having these trauma symptoms which toxic society and video like this one explain away as being cowards, sissy, feminine, weak. Society is lying to us, they are feeding us with wrong explanations and we stay stuck in Quiet BPD as the result of toxic society.
      Google it. Education is our only (legal) weapon against psychopaths who keep us trapped in panic mode and self blame and self pathologizing mode.

    • @teoni8765
      @teoni8765 10 месяцев назад

      Borderline Personality Disorder, but i wouldn't recommend self diagnosing psychological isses on the internet. It is recommended to contact a professional.

  • @Teej.jay_
    @Teej.jay_ 11 месяцев назад +26

    Julien, love your content bro! Your videos have honestly taught me more than my university degree. Your content is so much needed in our society. Thank you for doing what you do 🙏🏽

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      He is teaching people to develop narcissism, hysteria and to become Karen.

    • @fosminclorin
      @fosminclorin 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@ranc1977by that logic everything can be bad if gone to extreme, but his advice taken with a grain of salt helps the introverts' self esteem. You can't say everything he does is bad, he has some good points.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@fosminclorin "helps the introverts' self esteem"
      No it doesn't.
      What he is teaching is Masking. Dissociation. Making anxiety Functional.
      All these three concepts lead to mental illness.
      With Masking - introvert is taught the lesson that their brain is abnormal and it must be hidden away from light and exposure. This leads to toxic shame. More anxiety.
      Dissociation when we decide to shift focus from our natural neurodivergent brain operations into fantasy that we are screaming at others at whim. -this will end up as being anti-social and isolated from others. More anxiety.
      Making anxiety Functional means becoming zombie, background character without own preferences and desires and goals in life. More anxiety. We need to have negative and difficult emotions - this tells us when someone pushes our boundaries and when we are being hurt by unfair actions of others.
      Why is it so hard to validate and accept ourselves as we are?
      From early age, anyone who is slightly introverted will be mocked and ashamed by society. Toxic society needs fixing - not our brain. Toxic society lacks education in diversity and acceptance of anything that appears different than the norm.
      If we are not serial killers - why on earth you would decide it is healthy to nitpick and fix your brain? As if you are a mass murderer!
      Carl Jung | Psychology and Philosophy 🧠, TWITTER:
      The most terrifying thing is to accept oneself completely.
      Defend Survivors, TWITTER:
      Survivors don’t need anyone else telling them what the ‘should do’ or ‘have to do’ to heal. The last thing they need is someone else trying to control them again. Survivors need to know they are in control and that they are the experts in their experience and healing.
      Defend Survivors, TWITTER:
      There are so many “positive” messages that are aimed to inspire and help survivors. But when you really listen to these messages, they often guilt or blame survivors for either how they responded to the abuse, or for how they are healing now.
      Make sure the messages you share with survivors are honoring and respecting them, their courage, and their choices.

  • @LindaBTP
    @LindaBTP 10 месяцев назад +2

    Love it!! When I was a teenager, I was actually "developing a program" for people with social anxiety, and the main tool was to get people yelling with all of their hearts. That is more than 20 years ago now, and I still haven't made that program real yet, but now I see that I wasn't far off :-D This is really an eye opener!

  • @towardsuniverse
    @towardsuniverse 3 месяца назад +1

    After coming into the College I have progressed into embodying myself and my flaws. The change is small but I know it's going to multiply soon. The most important thing for a person to work on themselves and their inner self is solitude. No matter you thrive in social world or in the dreaming world. Solitude is needed

  • @9290SC
    @9290SC 11 месяцев назад +4

    👏👏you got it, Anders. Keep going!!!! Be encouraged

  • @noctethales
    @noctethales 11 месяцев назад +59

    Giving speeches about personal growth appears to be your comfort zone, are you able to show the same amount of confidence on the topics that you are not so familiar with or in unfamiliar environments? I'd like to watch you speaking about this specific topic. Thanks for the content 🙏🏾🙏🏾

    • @ImLehwz
      @ImLehwz 11 месяцев назад +10

      I think there is always growth somewhere for everyone. I think the most important thing is being comfortable at the life you really want to live. That’s my goal at least. And from there you can always grow more in other directions

    • @brucewayne2184
      @brucewayne2184 11 месяцев назад +7

      Why would he do that? This is his thing. Lol.

    • @indianscience5858
      @indianscience5858 11 месяцев назад

      Don't try to show. Just focus more on your perspective of the topic. It need not be accurate.

    • @Rosyandguildy
      @Rosyandguildy 11 месяцев назад

      He's also a comedian so I am sure he has

    • @JonnyMcJonFace
      @JonnyMcJonFace 11 месяцев назад +4

      There’s a clip of Julian doing stand up comedy in a bar, where all his jokes fell flat. Tough crowd. He uses this as one of his examples in one of his conferences.

  • @LoveMyZJ
    @LoveMyZJ 10 месяцев назад +1

    I wish, I so BADLY wish, seminars like yours were available at high schools and colleges everywhere. I wish I had access to this seminar when was in high school, a struggling 16yr old unable to figure out why I felt alone and so different from anyone else. I'm 35 now and I'm still working on this, making a little bit of progress day by day.
    This might be rather bold to say, but with more seminars like this, I genuinely believe it could make an impact on potential school shooters and other deadly forms of young people acting out. Julien, your ability to help others reach into their own souls, into those uncomfortable dark spaces we push down and avoid, bring that darkness to the surface, the pain and the emotion that comes with it... even though crying was frowned upon when I was a young boy growing up, I get emotional watching it, it just takes over and moves me. You do this while making it okay for them and making them feel safe.
    You have a gift Julien, and I sincerely thank you for sharing your gift with all of us. If we ever cross paths, I hope I have the opportunity to see you and bring it in. Thank you :}

  • @BeauI
    @BeauI 11 месяцев назад +2

    You spoke so eloquently about this topic . Thank you for sharing this!

  • @Gloriaglo0502
    @Gloriaglo0502 11 месяцев назад +6

    This was by far the best presentation of social anxiety. This guy is amazing 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      It is presentation of Dissociation and Dysfunctional ego defense mechanisms.

  • @Nerino
    @Nerino 11 месяцев назад +4

    Even I know it's just a feeling, but everytime I'm in a room full of people, I have a feeling everyone is judging me, everyone is looking at me.
    I always try to look "normal" but inside my head, it's a mess.

  • @christeder
    @christeder 10 месяцев назад +1

    Love that new content! Valuable and powerful... It's a big massive difference he had there

  • @dillondonnelly1108
    @dillondonnelly1108 10 месяцев назад

    Bro thanks so much. You inspired me to take action today and face some of my fears. Your videos are so important to me man.
    I’ve been following you for many years off and on now bro, and I’ve been putting off my social anxiety for awhile, just playing the “waiting” game for things to get better while knowing deep down I had to face it head on eventually.
    I think today was a crossroads for me man. Thank you bro 😎

  • @kieranwhite4856
    @kieranwhite4856 11 месяцев назад +25

    Been putting together a communication guide/list over the past month (doing vocal warm ups, having eye contact, varying my tone, implementing more pauses, etc). Trying to be more authentic was on my list, but near bottom. It's number one in my list now 😂👍

    • @350zKingz
      @350zKingz 11 месяцев назад +4

      You can never go wrong being your true self, warts and all. People will tune into you on a different level entirely, one that you could never achieve putting on even the "coolest", most perfect front you could construct.

    • @oPatrickVico
      @oPatrickVico 11 месяцев назад

      @kieranwhite4856 Post the rest! Seems like a good list

    • @katsuki420
      @katsuki420 11 месяцев назад

      What and how are you doing all that? I need to know, my college life is starting n I'm shitting my pants! Pls I need to know

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Screaming at other people is not authentic - it is personality disorder.

  • @chezy8148
    @chezy8148 11 месяцев назад +11

    He was so brave 👏

    • @JulienHimself
      @JulienHimself  11 месяцев назад +7

      Agreed! Massive respect to him for having the courage and willingness to do the work! 🔥👊

  • @alexanderd1653
    @alexanderd1653 9 месяцев назад +2

    This remembered me what I could do without effort, but I lost it. Now, I take over again! Thank you for your videos!!

  • @nanda432
    @nanda432 7 месяцев назад +1

    Man you literally changed me alot. No psychologist made these much changes in me. I felt like someone understood what I'm really

  • @gamingclips3368
    @gamingclips3368 11 месяцев назад +19

    Why don’t we do this tipe of lessons at school, I think it’s the first thing to do to feel accepted.
    We need more people like u! Love this video❤😃

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +6

      "People expect the quiet one to adapt to the loud people but not the other way around"

  • @robertogenova6217
    @robertogenova6217 11 месяцев назад +6

    Hi Julien, here to tell you i honestly find your videos really scientific, and that's something i value immensely. I've been self-help tricks user, then critic after i realized the partial nature of many ultra-sponsored quick fixes but, even thought i was skeptical at first, your videos surprised me for their solid psychological foundation. So good work! I think you really are doing an act of good with this channel! Also, i was curious, did you studied Jungian psychology or your seminars come just from life experience, or both maybe? Because your thinking actually crosses many of Jung's themes while still remaining unique in expression and vibe. Anyway, thanks for reading this, keep it up! ^^

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      " surprised me for their solid psychological foundation"
      He uses 10% of psychology.
      The quickest way to destroy social anxiety is to become narcissists - hysterical screaming person who is made to believe in his own grandiosity and superiority over others. This is personality disorder and it leads to abuse and crime.
      Social anxiety is not sickness - it is alarm system that we are detecting toxic and fake people.

  • @Adrian16Z
    @Adrian16Z 11 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome to see all the nuances in conditioning. Really helps to see what I need to work on as well.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      That is the core problem - there is nothing to work on at all.
      You are not sick. You are not abnormal. You are not defect.
      Think more of it like skinning of onion layers to come to the core.
      If you believe you must improve and become fake and "strong" - this leads to fake persona, narcissism.

  • @kirkrammsy
    @kirkrammsy 11 месяцев назад

    WOW. Great vídeo. Takes the issue deep inside. Like a psychological group of questions that makes you try to find the real origin of it

  • @talithahope4779
    @talithahope4779 11 месяцев назад +15

    Thank you Julien for your work, you're a real inspiration for so many people! 😁 I've been laughing more and feeling so much more confident and outgoing ever since implimenting some of your advice, combined with therapy for anxious attachment. My therapist told me she's never seen someone heal from anxious attachment so quickly and most of her older clients never get to my point, maybe i should tell her I've been following your videos!!! Also, your authentic essence tends to rub off on people.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +1

      " she's never seen someone heal from anxious attachment so quickly"
      Perhaps because she is unexperienced newbie -- or because she is really a bad therapist?

    • @talithahope4779
      @talithahope4779 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@ranc1977 She is not a newbie and specializes in attachment and PTSD. She is also clearly a very professional therapist given just how helpful she was to me and how easily she knew what I needed to process, when. I simply said what I said because I feel very proud of myself for my own work in healing from anxious attachment and it brings me joy to talk about it at this point in time, since my attachment issues have been holding me back in life. Take care stranger ♡

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@talithahope4779 My comment got automatically deleted by Julien filter algorithm.
      When we receive the wrong information and half information by quacks and fake people who are not experts at all but narcissistically present themselves as superior and strong - it is domino effect to wrong decisions, to making wrong decisions in life and usually t self pathology and self blame.

  • @GhostBoyVT
    @GhostBoyVT 11 месяцев назад +4

    Ooo Caught this 40 seconds after publishing! Lucky me. Thank you Julien!

  • @vedantgaikwad6356
    @vedantgaikwad6356 10 месяцев назад

    Julien this video is far better than anything I have read or watched or taught by anyone on social behaviour. Amazing!!❤❤❤

  • @filipivan5125
    @filipivan5125 5 месяцев назад +1

    I have now watched several of these videos and I like how we are very alike. We cant scream because we are trying to stay in control and afraid to let go. It feels good seeing people like me let go at the end.

  • @Omarshmallow
    @Omarshmallow 11 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you Julien. I needed to see this today.

    • @JulienHimself
      @JulienHimself  11 месяцев назад +2

      You’re welcome! Glad this was helpful! 🙏

  • @FinnersBinners
    @FinnersBinners 11 месяцев назад +3

    The last time I was on a stage, I passed out completely. 10 years later and I have never been on stage since.

  • @sfg206
    @sfg206 6 месяцев назад

    This is some of the most powerful content on youtube, bravo Julien you are a blessing!

  • @idrinklotsofcoffee
    @idrinklotsofcoffee 9 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing content! Not overly touchy or preachy or far reaching, just good advice

  • @SteezyWondah
    @SteezyWondah 6 месяцев назад +3

    That last scream 💪

  • @wahablacag1384
    @wahablacag1384 11 месяцев назад +6

    I love this channel it’s beautiful what ur doing for people I have social anxiety myself and it’s really bad but I’m working on it

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      He is teaching empaths to become narcissistic and violent and dangerous. And you thank him?

    • @wahablacag1384
      @wahablacag1384 11 месяцев назад

      @@ranc1977 how?

    • @luminisant
      @luminisant 5 месяцев назад

      EXPLAIN PLEASE @@ranc1977

  • @christopherpeterson4224
    @christopherpeterson4224 5 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve always tried so hard to be a people pleaser, and I could never figure out where it began or why! When this young man literally verbalized consciously what he was afraid that they would think(That they would feel he doesn’t add up too much)! I realized at that point that has always been my soul fear! That reduced me to tears instantly🥲🙏

  • @tylereubanks2053
    @tylereubanks2053 3 месяца назад

    I love the fact that you use extreme examples to make your point, you see the visual of the references and then are normally able to laugh and overcome your hindrance 💪🏼
    I appreciate your knowledge and how You go about teaching others.
    teaching others

  • @rijd2304
    @rijd2304 11 месяцев назад +21

    Julien: "How does it feel to be right up here upfront, being stared at and being judged by this entire crowd?"
    Me: "I have to go." (walks away)
    (What's helped me cope with social anxiety is finally realizing that 100% of people are in their own heads at the end of the day. Even if someone judges me, their judgement doesn't last more than a few minutes because their brains have a thousand different distractions and thoughts going on...that one thought of me gets pushed out by the next thought, etc. Mindfulness helped me with this stuff. I used books like "30 Days to Reduce Anxiety" by Harper Daniels and "The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook" by Bourne - both books are on amz, i recommend getting both together, to calm and observe my thought patterns and let go of anxiety as best I can. Perspective is everything.)

    • @Tamtudy
      @Tamtudy 11 месяцев назад

      The thing that happened to you? It happened to me too! :D The realisation that nobody gives a fuck...

    • @klmrk9961
      @klmrk9961 11 месяцев назад +1

      I've watched many of Juliens videos and that's what stuck with me the most. People don't care about me. My entire life I've always felt that everybody is looking at me, judging me, but that is not at all true. It's a relief to know that.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      "100% of people are in their own heads at the end of the day. Even if someone judges me, their judgement doesn't last more than a few minutes"
      This is not true at all.
      Narcissists think all the time - they are predators.
      They abuse others and think how to be evil to others.
      Socially anxious empaths and HSPs will attract narcissists. So yeah - other people are toxic and evil -
      there is nothing sick inside your brain that must demand brainwashing and convincing yourself that your alarm signals are malfunctioning. Lobotomy is not necessary - you will only develop toxic shame when you suppress your natural instincts and common sense and gut feelings.
      There are toxic and evil people out there -and we have ability to sense and detect them due to exposure to ACoA in childhood - which gave us ability to detect toxic people quickly, hence social anxiety.

  • @baneenauday
    @baneenauday 11 месяцев назад +4

    I'm an introvert and this got me laughinnnnn but big respect though because this is the right way we all quite people need it 💯👏🏻

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +1

      "People expect the quiet one to adapt to the loud people but not the other way around"

  • @TheNecromancer92
    @TheNecromancer92 11 месяцев назад +1

    The screaming speech about the bugs... It realy touched me. Even tho I was not in front of Julien. The ,,enough of the bugs" realy pierced throu me. I rewatched that part 2 times...
    Thank you.

  • @peacefist4413
    @peacefist4413 11 месяцев назад +1

    Beautiful speech and great natural presence on stage! It is my second time watching you using same technique and I am blown away by how this humbles everyone, truly amazing!
    Thank you Julian, I always believed in staying true to myself, you doubled or tripled that belief.
    Cheers and god bless for the deeds you bring into lives of many❤

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Becoming hysterical screaming Karen is not authentic . it is rigid mindset and mental illness and narcissism,

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@godspeed4390 "he wont lose his “coolness” for being loud, or himself, he will stop being “cool” the moment he stops being real/himself."
      If you check out the medical description of Personality disorder - it is inability to regulate yourself in social situations.
      "I also don’t understand why you’re on every comment "
      So now you are stalking me?
      If you don't like my comments - skip it.
      Enjoy your delusions, your life your choices.
      " but you sound more like a karen than anyone else."
      You sound like primadonna Karen yourself.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@godspeed4390 "People expect the quiet one to adapt to the loud people but not the other way around"
      In society if you have behavior that is much healthier than a commonly accepted delusion, you're gonna probably be called crazy.
      🟥 Daniel Mackler
      When people told me “Let it go, move on”, “Don't focus on the negative” is these were people who were pretty dissociated. Really strongly disconnected from dealing with the painful things that happened to them. I had to be under the authority of people who didn't really treat me well. The way I survived was by letting it go, trying to be positive, put on a happy face, be “normal”, not talk about painful stuff, not grieve.
      🟥 Daniel Mackler

  • @Shuabvv
    @Shuabvv 11 месяцев назад +5

    man his eyes watering is so relatable

    • @JulienHimself
      @JulienHimself  11 месяцев назад +4

      What's most personal is most universal... 🙏

    • @user-lo9sx3vq3e
      @user-lo9sx3vq3e 4 месяца назад +1

      Sometimes i forget to blink when im anxious

  • @mattk751
    @mattk751 11 месяцев назад +4

    Damn. This looks like a room where you get sold a time share. This monologue is so well put together. Subd

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +1

      In a way, he is selling time share. NArcissistic fantasy of granduer and self improvement.

  • @PragyaBhatt-mz4yg
    @PragyaBhatt-mz4yg Месяц назад

    Andres is extremely brave to do all that he did. i am so proud of him . that man is gonna make his ancestors proud.

  • @justin-time9630
    @justin-time9630 11 месяцев назад +1

    It is insanely interesting. Although I dont really struggle with social anxiety or needing to be "cool" or other things that can pressure somebody, your examples and or ways to get peoples mental state above their personal highscore is just nice to see!

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Children who feel unloved and unprotected try to please others, give to others, and care for others in a desperate hope that they may make themselves worthy.
      🟦Beverly Engel

  • @samuelepelisseri
    @samuelepelisseri 11 месяцев назад +3

    I have always been the “fun kid” or even the “class clown” till the end of middle school. Then in high school I started going out more frequently and eventually started hanging out with like “the bad guys” because of mutual friendships and I couldn’t really connect with them. Not that I was bullied or something like that, but the experience of not being the centre of the attention or the most outgoing person made my young brain think that I wasn’t a good person to be around. Since then there has been times where this feeling went away but it always comes back.

  • @annalieb2075
    @annalieb2075 11 месяцев назад +4

    The guy with anxiety sounds and look Swedish. A lot of us feel that way, it's in large part cultural. Not healthy or nourishing but that's the Swedish society to a t. "Don't stand out. Don't think you're worth anything"
    Kudos till dig Anders! 💜

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      Yet in the same time Sweden is prosperous and civilized country with high moral and ethical standards.
      At the Balkans there is opposite mentality - to stand out, to not care about other people, to push others and to abuse them and that other people are not worthy. Look the economy and statistics and quality of life there. It is not healthy nor sane to be narcissistic, evil predator devoid of empathy.

  • @Iridium.
    @Iridium. 11 месяцев назад

    That was so great ! Love it !

  • @PolskiOlympia
    @PolskiOlympia 11 месяцев назад +1

    I love your authenticity man! Keep posting amazing content!

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      He is not authentic at all. He is insensitive. Big difference.
      Authentic person would be vulnerable and accept what herd mentality labels as "shyness".
      He is afraid of being shy and vulnerable and weak - so he builds fake mask of narcissism and superiority - which is not authentic at all - it is rigid mindset. Any rigid thinking is polarizing and it leads to mental illness - and it destroys contact with other people.

  • @mortennnnn
    @mortennnnn 11 месяцев назад +4

    Julien i just want you to know you changed my life, thank you for all the knowledge you shared

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      How did he "changed your life"?
      Is this a cult now?

    • @mortennnnn
      @mortennnnn 11 месяцев назад

      @@ranc1977😹😹😹

    • @cerberus8054
      @cerberus8054 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@ranc1977no offense but why do u take the time to reply in every single comment people give in this video with random bs and copy paste quotes from internet?

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@cerberus8054 Because information given to us is BS and we are not told the real truth about social anxiety.
      It seems as BS to you because you do not have social anxiety at all. You have narcissism and impulsive BPD which you interpret as social anxiety.
      All the rest of us are abused by people like you and we self blame ourselves and we think we are sissy and abnormal and sick and that our brain is weak and feminine.
      While in reality it is abusers like you who are projecting abnormality into our brain through projection.

    • @abinvarkey2331
      @abinvarkey2331 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@cerberus8054he's just a Julien hater it seems

  • @Keralite29
    @Keralite29 11 месяцев назад +36

    8:10
    _"Everything you don't like (about yourself), that's holding you back...a part of you thinks is helping you."_
    Wow, so true.

  • @ashleyirvin3389
    @ashleyirvin3389 11 месяцев назад +2

    Happy for you Andres!

  • @uhhFez
    @uhhFez 11 месяцев назад +4

    I wouldn't have social anxiety either if I had on sunglasses and a Gucci shirt. I don't know what it is but having on sunglasses inside around people just makes you feel more secure and confident

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +1

      Masking.
      Compensation = finding ways around things that are naturally difficult. Example: Forcing yourself to make eye contact with someone
      Masking = hiding parts of your autism. Example = Not talking about something you are really interested in
      Assimilation = trying to fit in with everyone else so people don't notice you are different. Example: Talking to a stranger in a shop even if you don't want to
      (TherapyWorks- What it Means to be Neurodiversity Affirming)
      Examples of ADHD Masking:
      - staying too quiet and being overly careful about what you say
      - obsessively checking your belongings
      - reacting as you are expected to instead of how you feel inside
      - developing perfectionistic tendencies
      - suppressing stimming behaviors like leg bouncing
      - mimicking or copying other people in social situations
      (verywell)

    • @e.t926
      @e.t926 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@ranc1977yeah when have sunglases i dont have as much anxiety when walking

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 10 месяцев назад

      @@e.t926 "when have sunglases i dont have as much anxiety when walking"
      That is shyness.
      You get regulated when you hide yourself - with sunglasses, with hats, make up, stand aside, not making focus of yourself.
      True social anxiety when you do NOT wear sunglasses because one is afraid of judgment and criticism of others because of bullying from the past and living in shame culture where you are told by others and your inner critic that wearing them:
      1) sunglasses are stupid
      2) they are ugly
      3) they are cheap
      4) they are sissy
      5) they are ridiculous
      So truly social anxious person will not have anything due to criticism. That is social anxiety, true form. So one cannot hide, one is dysregulated all the time, there is no way to escape criticism.

  • @David28311
    @David28311 11 месяцев назад +5

    When he said about what happened in school it brought me back to 3rd grade when I got yelled at and sent to detention for playing around I remember crying and being punished to not be loud looking back ever since then Ive always been quiet before 3rd grade I would talk to all my classmates i just don’t know how to get out of that mindset now

  • @rosaliebosma
    @rosaliebosma 10 месяцев назад

    love how his body language changed so much! from hands together on the mic to loosly hanging beside him

  • @mydadletsmeshootatcats6754
    @mydadletsmeshootatcats6754 8 месяцев назад

    Amazing. Not only did Julien help me deal with childhood trauma, he also cured my constipation.
    10/10, would let go again.

  • @ponpon3173
    @ponpon3173 11 месяцев назад +8

    Massive respect to Anders!

  • @weirdlookingcloud053
    @weirdlookingcloud053 11 месяцев назад +5

    When Julien mentioned the whole "We're all trying to look cool and here's how to not do that" I started noticing how much my perception of him could change in just a few seconds every time he did something "weird" and then back to "cool". But imo they actually seemed more approachable and likeable as they did increasingly weirder things as compared to when they were "being cool". I think being cool is basically just about being predictable.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад +3

      Herd mentality, conformism and groupthink sets the norms for what is cool.

    • @zeddwulfen7737
      @zeddwulfen7737 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@ranc1977 Exactly this! Well said.

    • @ranc1977
      @ranc1977 11 месяцев назад

      @@zeddwulfen7737 People like Julien have the stage- have the opportunity to spread the message about neurotypical dangers in society- and he does not mention this crucial information which most people suffering from social anxiety are totally unaware - because of conformism and Juliens toxic masculinity where anxiety is explained as feminine sissy problem and we are suppose to be "strong" and "macho" and "alfa" confident.
      That explanation of being "strong" is neurotypical concept itself.
      Neurotypical (NT) personality:
      - strong social and communication skills
      - navigates socially complex situations with ease
      - makes friends and establishes romantic one with ease
      - ability to participate in loud, crowded, or visually overwhelming settings with ease
      (verywellmind)
      "neurotypical individuals often assume that their experience of the world is either the only one or the only correct one"
      Even with label ADHD, so many of us believe we should be able to just tough it out if we use enough willpower. This is one of the big myths of our society: “is that anybody can convince their brain to do anything of they just try hard enough”.
      "ADHD, Self-Esteem, and Rejection Sensitivity Dysphoria"
      Neurodiversity describes the idea that people experience and interact with the world around them in many different ways; there is no one "right" way of thinking, learning, and behaving, and differences are not viewed as deficits.
      What is neurodiversity? - Harvard Health
      Dr James Davies (PhD), TWITTER:
      What *we* consider to be 'neurotypical' behaviour isn't universally 'typical', as every culture has its own idea of what 'typical' behaviour is. In this sense, 'typicality' is not a product of neurological design, but of adapting to a culturally specific form of socialisation.

  • @PSYFIGHTER_
    @PSYFIGHTER_ 9 месяцев назад +2

    This was the most helpful video i ever saw

  • @taracassidy
    @taracassidy 9 месяцев назад +2

    Omg love Anders so brave … i love how he said “the protector is the stifling energy wow❤

  • @impulse_raps
    @impulse_raps 11 месяцев назад +3

    your the Best!! thank you fr

    • @JulienHimself
      @JulienHimself  11 месяцев назад +2

      You're so welcome! Glad this resonates! 🙏