Stanford's Sapolsky On Depression in U.S. (Full Lecture)

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  • Опубликовано: 23 дек 2024

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  • @crashburn3292
    @crashburn3292 5 лет назад +5740

    I'm listening to Sapolsky, on RUclips , for FREE. Amazing world we live in...

    • @thedudegrowsfood284
      @thedudegrowsfood284 5 лет назад +208

      almost no excuse for not learning these days.

    • @leefithian3704
      @leefithian3704 4 года назад +67

      Don’t credit RUclips , with today’s tech and without RUclips ...someone else would do it , and with the same ease , never give a world Corp that redefines definition of words too much power , although it might be too late

    • @Fddlstxx
      @Fddlstxx 4 года назад +17

      with all due respect to him, for which I have loads, there is nothing that he is sharing here that is either highly technical or new data that you couldn't have found from another source.

    • @jimlong2469
      @jimlong2469 4 года назад +19

      @@leefithian3704
      Yes, this.....
      The same can be said about "professional" sports teams and players who the general public is stupid enough to pay millions of dollars apiece.
      There are hundreds of other individuals who could make up a "team" who could beat the "superbowl winners" but they just aren't known about.

    • @crashburn3292
      @crashburn3292 4 года назад +45

      @@leefithian3704 I didn't credit RUclips, I credited the world. I just said that RUclips is where I'm watching him.

  • @gibsos00
    @gibsos00 10 лет назад +1151

    Excellent, no frills, no bull, no fancy language, explanation of depression.
    It even has humour.

    • @mattm7715
      @mattm7715 5 лет назад +40

      He is a Kage-level lecturer who turns the dry literature of experimental evidence into story-telling.

    • @numbersletters2920
      @numbersletters2920 5 лет назад

      @@Bingewatchingmediacontent 3➗19= solve if you want. I know this sounds odd but i consume energy drinks Because of lethargy

    • @marlies8140
      @marlies8140 5 лет назад +14

      The humor - okay fine - but the people in the back laughing about it is part of the problem - it feels like it is not taken seriously - for someone who is depressed this is not a laughing matter.

    •  5 лет назад

      @@anonymouseovermouse1960 wow did you even read what you put out there? you do realize it's not a delusion to suggest depression is 100% curable, some people who are truly interested in UNDERSTANDING depression have found the cure. Maybe look for better understanding, if you look like a con trust you are a con

    • @judithf8885
      @judithf8885 4 года назад

      @ Okay, tell us about the cure. I'd love to hear about a cure! Depression is so complex, what with the interplay of neural and hormonal dysregulation, genetics, individual experience, individual coping strategies, immune dysfunction and structural changes to the brain. Not to mention information yet to be unearthed and possible spiritual imbalance (if you approach health holistically). A cure would be incredible. Tell us about the cure. Share your knowledge with us all.

  • @thumbscrews
    @thumbscrews 4 года назад +8973

    I'd like to thank Stanford and Professor Sapolsky for making their educational materials like this lecture open to the public. This lecture was quite eye opening for me.

    • @Stret173
      @Stret173 4 года назад +21

      join communists.

    • @mrcheesemuffin7668
      @mrcheesemuffin7668 4 года назад +5

      @MrQlevert I

    • @KristenHammerback-pk5wy
      @KristenHammerback-pk5wy 4 года назад +1

      Me too. Thank you for saying this.

    • @selinavillarreal3288
      @selinavillarreal3288 4 года назад +80

      "It's a strange poverty of the English language, and indeed of many other languages, that we use the same word "depression" to describe how a kid feels when it rains on his birthday, and to describe how somebody feels the minute before they commit suicide."
      Andrew Solomon, TED Talk Depression, the Secret we Share.

    • @ILikeGuns1992
      @ILikeGuns1992 4 года назад +4

      What did you learned? How it helped you? Anything remotely practical you never heard before?

  • @John-mf6ky
    @John-mf6ky 2 года назад +1081

    It's honestly a beautiful thing that any old average Joe can listen to this without being enrolled in Stanford. Probably the coolest thing about the Internet imo.

    • @nilepax8168
      @nilepax8168 2 года назад +17

      Agreed. Genius. Perfect. And the guy looks like he could just as easily design and build a log cabin we could only dream of......

    • @LittleOne1111
      @LittleOne1111 Год назад +9

      Totally agree!! I'm good at med terminology.. but who he is and his teaching technique.. they are why I know what's up.. i especially like how he moves allot. I was the kid in the back next to a window and I usually ended up staring out that window watching grasshoppers mate lol .. but not because I wanted to get an entomology degree. Lol I was stone cold bored . He keeps me focused ... Wish he was ALL my teachers All through school!

    • @sheilabrennan4481
      @sheilabrennan4481 Год назад +3

      Agreed

    • @magichobbiest3425
      @magichobbiest3425 9 месяцев назад +1

      I've always searched knowledge. Stanford was the first university to allow or do this and it's awesome 😎

    • @joemarsden68
      @joemarsden68 7 месяцев назад +5

      College education should be free imo

  • @EverlyChris
    @EverlyChris 7 лет назад +8915

    "It's a biochemical disorder with a genetic component with early exposure experiences that make it so someone can't appreciate sunsets"
    Nothing has hit me harder than this

    • @lisasmith4823
      @lisasmith4823 6 лет назад +300

      Christopher Everly can anyone else relate to the “too exhausted to do the “too tired to do laundry” scenario?

    • @tomhannah3825
      @tomhannah3825 6 лет назад +157

      I'm realizing that I seem to have major depressive disorder. Talking to my kids lately, they'd suggest going or doing something, all i could think about were the problems... Um, i haven't done laundry in a couple months... Fortunately, I'm in that state where everything is too much trouble. So i'm confident i won't commit suicide anytime soon, that would be way too much effort... :)

    • @lupelicious822
      @lupelicious822 6 лет назад +78

      "The meat and potatoes of human medical misery."

    • @anhedonianepiphany5588
      @anhedonianepiphany5588 6 лет назад +86

      The inability to derive pleasure from _anything_ - it's called _ANHEDONIA!_
      I only move from this bed if there's absolutely no other choice.
      I use the sunrise/sunset analogy also, and music, nature, any hobbies I once enjoyed etc. (just smoking myself to death, really).

    • @stupidtreehugger
      @stupidtreehugger 5 лет назад +62

      Dr Mark Tarnapulsky - if exercise were a drug it would be the most valuable one developed

  • @davidhemi8587
    @davidhemi8587 3 года назад +3152

    It’s always nice to listen to a teacher who has passion for their calling.

    • @opaljk4835
      @opaljk4835 3 года назад +55

      Yeah, this guy fucking rules

    • @atomede2507
      @atomede2507 3 года назад +3

      @Quetzalcoatl agree. show respect to the man

    • @NamFlow
      @NamFlow 3 года назад +4

      @Quetzalcoatl Holy hell mate.. like you were paying attention to all classes in primary school and other schools you went to. Some people just don't care about some subjects and it's alright. People who never experienced depression or don't know anyone who experienced it might not care about this topic. There are people like that who live their entire life without experiencing it themselves. All they experience is sadness, so this topic might not interest them.

    • @NamFlow
      @NamFlow 3 года назад +6

      @Quetzalcoatl It's good then that they recorded this lecture and uploaded it publicly for everybody to see. Maybe some of the people who attended it back then will watch it again with different "set of eyes".

    • @NamFlow
      @NamFlow 3 года назад +2

      ​@Quetzalcoatl Of course. It make sense that in 10 years we would know more, but it looks like it's still not enough to figure out how to get rid of or reduce depression in people. At least in those who got depressed due to imbalance in brain chemicals, not other factors like something external.

  • @mariagramieri9290
    @mariagramieri9290 2 года назад +1231

    I’m 71 and I’ve been dealing with this since I was about 9. I’ve have countless therapists, physiatrists and more meds than you can imagine. No one ever really got it but this guy gets it. Someone gets it!

    • @tyler.walker
      @tyler.walker 2 года назад +58

      I’m 23 and scared of dealing with it for 50+ more years. Recently, it’s really felt hard to imagine myself dealing with it for even 7 more years; I doubt I’ll live to 30… Any advice?

    • @AL-up3zb
      @AL-up3zb 2 года назад +55

      @@tyler.walker travel outside the US the best advice i can give you.

    • @j.w.r.i2910
      @j.w.r.i2910 2 года назад +2

      @@AL-up3zb why ?

    • @WIllz2GOTA
      @WIllz2GOTA 2 года назад +90

      @@j.w.r.i2910 there is some wisdom to what he says, the shallowness of American culture and to some extent the whole of western culture is a large factor in why so many of us are depressed

    • @Coastpsych_fi99
      @Coastpsych_fi99 2 года назад +9

      Omg wow don’t know how you made it. I’ve had it for about 10 years and I’m only in my early twenties.

  • @bob110088
    @bob110088 3 года назад +737

    All the years I've spent in therapy I never heard depression explained to me, this was very healing for me. God bless this man.

    • @halloweendancing
      @halloweendancing 2 года назад +7

      Me neither, isn’t that wild?

    • @yarly3180
      @yarly3180 Год назад +10

      @@halloweendancing no it isn't: it's a business, an industry: I heard a group therapist say once she had to 'make production'. Guess who are 'the product'? The clients. Not saying therapy is bad/useless per se but the way it's organized it's not really set up for success IMO because it's run as a business from the top and a business benefits from more (returning) clients.

    • @bfuryy
      @bfuryy Год назад

      ​@@yarly3180i feel like it's for us to ask and question About. Like it's for us to find out.

    • @LakesideTrey
      @LakesideTrey Год назад

      @@yarly3180L take. Therapy save my life and unless your therapists are evil people they want to help you. Same logic as saying all doctors don't help because they make money when you get sick again.

    • @SonyaBladesBooty
      @SonyaBladesBooty Год назад

      Don't worry the depression will come back

  • @corb5654
    @corb5654 6 лет назад +3855

    "It's a strange poverty of the English language, and indeed of many other languages, that we use the same word "depression" to describe how a kid feels when it rains on his birthday, and to describe how somebody feels the minute before they commit suicide."
    Andrew Solomon, TED Talk Depression, the Secret we Share.

    • @Mrafif23
      @Mrafif23 5 лет назад +11

      WORD!

    • @sbFreakinxRican
      @sbFreakinxRican 5 лет назад +51

      @Levi Brennan true but we colloquially lump together meanings under a same word all the time which really gets in the way of understanding nuances especially with something like depression. Without the understanding of the nuances problem solving is flawed because which kind of "depression" is it this time? Or is it even depression?

    • @gnuPirate
      @gnuPirate 5 лет назад +43

      ​@Levi Brennan You say :
      "Can't blame the language for the ignorance of its speakers."
      Unless "the ignorance of it's speakers" as you say, is a direct corollary of the in-exactitude and non-specificity of the majority of it's terminology and definitions.
      I think maybe we should do what the Germans do, and jam words together to make a new word that is highly specific.
      In this case, maybe something like "StrongKillSelf-HateLife-Feeling-Motivation" might work okay.
      Then again, people still might get these concepts mixed up....

    • @alexandraaikonika
      @alexandraaikonika 5 лет назад +7

      Guess what - this is the case in other languages too, although there are other words to describe this. Like Russian “тоска“.

    • @ceruleanblue7
      @ceruleanblue7 5 лет назад +27

      I have a friend that is always saying, "but everyone gets depressed sometimes." She just doesn't understand the difference. Like I am being over dramatic or exaggerating. It frankly makes me mad when she says that.

  • @oneworld4all412
    @oneworld4all412 3 года назад +991

    My son had crippling depression and anxiety. Great guy…he overdosed and died thanksgiving eve. Great guy…I’ll miss him all my days left in this world. God bless you son

    • @almalm3397
      @almalm3397 3 года назад +87

      im sorry for your loss. till you meet again ♾

    • @oneworld4all412
      @oneworld4all412 3 года назад +34

      @@almalm3397 ❤️

    • @lindakautzman7388
      @lindakautzman7388 2 года назад +51

      Thank you for sharing your grief. It helps all who hear you.

    • @yllk1944
      @yllk1944 2 года назад +15

      Sorry for your loss!

    • @zuutlmna
      @zuutlmna 2 года назад +28

      Lost mine last Oct. He was miserable. Had been self-medicating for years.

  • @tpeterson9140
    @tpeterson9140 4 года назад +5210

    ive never seen someone look more like a professor than this guy.

    • @chrischoir3594
      @chrischoir3594 4 года назад +7

      he looks more like John Kalodner the famous A&R snake

    • @consuelabistiaux7873
      @consuelabistiaux7873 4 года назад +8

      @@chrischoir3594 exactly! he got all my attention! i like him a lot.

    • @v1das007
      @v1das007 4 года назад +31

      I'm sure that's the effect he tried to achieve on purpose.

    • @catlady8324
      @catlady8324 4 года назад +26

      Really? He looks like an unkept bum.

    • @TheJeremyKentBGross
      @TheJeremyKentBGross 4 года назад +87

      You mean a wizard but without the robe?

  • @josephfinds
    @josephfinds 9 месяцев назад +67

    About 12 years ago we listened to this and it changed me life.
    It helped me to realize I needed help.

    • @TeresaCook-de6jo
      @TeresaCook-de6jo 2 месяца назад +2

      Bless you! You inspire me.

    • @josephfinds
      @josephfinds 2 месяца назад +2

      @@TeresaCook-de6jo thank you. I was just speaking with someone today about how much better I’m doing these days because I got help and keep guard railed in place to keep me healthy and supported. I’m proud of what I’m achieving and the direction I’m headed in life.
      The best days are ahead of us. You are capable.

  • @niftybman
    @niftybman 3 года назад +13312

    “Yea, I went to Stanford for a bit.”

    • @jecky82
      @jecky82 3 года назад +404

      Hey what's up classmate?

    • @matejpesl1
      @matejpesl1 3 года назад +317

      @@jecky82 Good, I'm just chillin' and studyin' depression and human behavioral biology from my friend Sapolsky here; the usual stuff, you know how it goes 🥱
      Wbu classmate?

    • @nikiyen6
      @nikiyen6 3 года назад +102

      The people in the room could say that too. From their ages, looks like this is some kind of special presentation for non-students.

    • @PeteNalty63
      @PeteNalty63 3 года назад +6

      Yeah.

    • @matejpesl1
      @matejpesl1 3 года назад +6

      @@nikiyen6 Yep

  • @TheSean7564
    @TheSean7564 4 года назад +3408

    The man speaks for hours, never says "um" and is coherent throughout, truly amazing. I like very much what he says, but LOVE how he says it,

    • @wiredog771
      @wiredog771 3 года назад +139

      Yep. I had a history teacher at Bard who went on to lecture at Harvard that I always noted did the exact same thing - never searched or stammered to explain. She repeatedly told me that it was because she knew the material so well for so long but what made her towering intellect even more awe striking was her equal surplus of humility. Really, really smart people are quiet; sans boast. I think it’s because they can see into the darkness so much further than us mortals and know of the vast complexities that we can only dream of.

    • @ryanrohauer5940
      @ryanrohauer5940 3 года назад +27

      speak for your whole life and speak about the same things it becomes second nature. like riding a bike

    • @Joaocruz30
      @Joaocruz30 3 года назад +9

      You don't know many people do ya?

    • @huntersmith8733
      @huntersmith8733 3 года назад +278

      0:41

    • @xtldc
      @xtldc 3 года назад +25

      @@huntersmith8733 of course he says it when he’s trying to find people places to sit - not when actually discussing the subject of the lecture.

  • @davidthomson1529
    @davidthomson1529 9 лет назад +2815

    "You can't shame me out of feeling depressed. If shame worked, then I would have shamed myself out of it long ago."
    So smart, and so right. I hope you find a path that lets you deal with the negativity. CBT did a lot for me, but it's still a struggle.

    • @davidliddle949
      @davidliddle949 6 лет назад +10

      I encourage you to read Taming Your Gremlins I believe by JD Carlson . Very simple read at first blush but has many different levels.

    • @jackthompson1382
      @jackthompson1382 6 лет назад +49

      WORD!!! I had everyone telling me to “get over it” and “it’s been a year...” it’s like thanks, I’m cured.

    • @anhedonianepiphany5588
      @anhedonianepiphany5588 6 лет назад +17

      If CBT helped then there's hope for you, as there's likely significant psychological factors. If you've been a chronic lifelong sufferer, without any environmental justification, and all psychological as well as pharmacological interventions have failed... well, join my lost cause group (if it actually existed).

    • @demiurge8480
      @demiurge8480 6 лет назад +3

      could someone give the time stamp for that line ? i seem to have missed it.
      Thanks :)

    • @Royal-cr1zq
      @Royal-cr1zq 6 лет назад +4

      Actually people can shame you out of depression.

  • @ddelarosa96
    @ddelarosa96 Год назад +267

    So glad to live in the age where educational material like this is free to the public and that there are those who would also freely share it. Thank you!

  • @guhanpurushothaman9313
    @guhanpurushothaman9313 4 года назад +913

    Lecture objective: Reconciliation between the biological and psychological facets of depression
    1:19: Sapolsky discusses the pervasive state of depression today
    2:33: Sadness is distinguished from reactive and major depression, since one is transient, the other, seasonal, and the last one, chronic.
    4:15: Sapolsky argues that depression, or anhedonia (inability to feel pleasure), is the worst illness one can be crippled with.
    5:28: The vehemence of retrospective guilt and grief can take on a delusional quality in the depressed (explained with an anecdote).
    7:40: Self-injury, psychomotor retardation (visible slowing of physical and emotional reactions, including speech and affect), and the counter-intuitive truth that patients are far less likely to mutilate themselves when severely enervated out of depression than right at the termination of the phase are presented (invaluable tip for anyone with depressed friends or family members).
    9:20: The reason it isn't possible for some to get over it while others can isn't to do with will, but biology. The struggles of the depressed are as strongly founded on biology as that of a diabetic and it isn't prudent to expect them to snap out of it.
    *Part 1: The exploration of the biological facets of depression; namely, general physiological, neurochemical, neuroanatomical, and hormonal:*
    _General physiological:_
    10:32: Vegetative symptoms that indicate the very real, biological roots of depression: early morning awakening, sleep cycles (slow-wave sleep, REM sleep, deep sleep etc) markedly disordered, deceased appetite, elevation of stress hormones, etc. The point being that the bodies of the major depressives work differently.
    12:36: Psychomotor retardation is often misconstrued as inaction, when in reality, underneath the semblance of inaction, the depressed individual's body is having a humongous stress response 24/7; there's a huge battle brewing inwards all the time.
    13:46: Rhythmic patterns of onset of depression as a function of internal biological clocks is discussed, say, individuals who are affected only in winters or every January and so on.
    _Neurochemical:_
    14:55: Neurons, separated by microscopic gaps called synapses, communicate with each other using chemical messengers known as neurotransmitters, of which a handful are relevant to us.
    16:15: A) Norepinephrine: First implicated in depression in the early '60s, evidenced by the role of first-generation anti-depressants (called MAO inhibitors) developed at the time in inhibiting the enzymes responsible for the breakdown of Norepinephrine (allowing more frequent stimulation) in order to alleviate symptoms of depression.
    17:58: The late '60s saw the discovery of a new class of antidepressants called tricyclic antidepressants, which had a similar effect on Norepinephrine, although realised through a different mechanism.
    18:30: Further supported by the observation that a class of drugs named reserpine, typically used to manage high blood pressure by disintegrating Norepinephrine, induce symptoms of depression, the "Norepinephrine hypothesis" was formed, which correlated depression with a decline in Norepinephrine release.
    19:15: It has been observed in rats that stimulation of Norepinephrine receptors makes them blissful, so much so they're drawn to triggering the stimulation more than food or sex. This was then called the pleasure pathway and is found in humans as well.
    21:55: The problem was that Norepinephrine signaling usually changes within an hour upon consumption of the drug; however, may take weeks to help a depressed person.
    22:25: B) Dopamine: Another neurotransmitter even more useful in the pleasure pathway.
    22:40: C) Serotonin: The introduction of Prozac, belonging to a family of antidepressants called SSRI (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor) that works by increasing Serotonin signaling, brought Serotonin to the limelight, causing people to view Serotonin as the "new Norepinephrine".
    23:23: In reality though, all the three neurotransmitters have important roles to play. Norepinephrine has to do with psychomotor retardation; dopamine, with anhedonia; while the absence of Serotonin ensues in an obsessive sense of grief and guilt (interestingly, drugs like Prozac that encourage Serotonin stimulation are also used to treat other obsessive disorders like OCD).
    24:30 D) Substance P: A neurotransmitter that is an important element in pain perception, when curbed, was discovered to provide relief to the depressed. This is evidence that psychic pain isn't merely metaphorical, since the human body is using the same chemistry to feel the psychic pain of depression as it would physical agony.
    _Neuroanatomical:_
    25:26: Triune brain concept: A formulation that emerged in the 1940s discusses the human brain in terms of the reptilian complex, the limbic system, and the neocortex. The reptilian complex is the nuts and bolts of the brain in charge of regulatory functions like keep blood pressure, glucose, etc in check. The limbic system sits on top of the reptilian complex (which is rather exclusive to mammals and deals primarily with emotions, like fear, lust, rage, etc) and can communicate with it too, for instance, secrete stress hormones if circumstances demand so. Finally, up on top, lies the cortex, a hugely expanded area in primates, involved in several important functions like sensory perception, generation of motor commands, spatial reasoning, conscious thought, and in humans, language.
    27:38: However; something more interesting happens when the neocortex works in conjunction with the reptilian complex and the limbic system,. If one is overwhelmed with sad thoughts, the neocortex has the other two parts functioning the same way they would if a person were being physically assaulted by a predator (stress response).
    29:00 On a very simplistic level, depression is the cortex having sad thoughts and having the brain go along with it; and therefore, an equally simplistic recourse would be to just cut it off. This medical procedure is called cingulotomy, reserved for people who do not respond to any type of medication, therapy, electroshock interventions, etc.
    29:29 The worry is that the neocortex is equally crucial in conjuring up abstract pleasurable thoughts that influence the rest of the brain, but Sapolsky argues that it is an essential intervention nonetheless since the patient in question wouldn't be a candidate for this procedure to begin with if they had the capacity for uplifting thoughts.
    _Hormonal:_
    31:31: A severe shortage of thyroid hormone can induce major depression.
    32:43: Women have a higher incidence of major depression than men (around twice as much) and are the most vulnerable at certain points in their reproductive life: after they give birth (post-parturition depression), during their monthly cycles, and at menopause.
    33:16: Sociological factors like general lack of control on account of societal norms are also associated with the higher occurrence of major depression in women.
    33:38: On average, women tend to ruminate more on emotionally upsetting things than men do, but it is untrue that that makes them more prone to depression.
    34:55: The secretion of estrogen, progesterone, and their ratio in women can influence the number of receptors and re-uptake characteristics of the neurotransmitters implicated in depression.
    35:37: Adrenaline is the most well-known stress hormone; however, Sapolsky asserts that there is a much more important stress hormone in humans known as glucocorticoids (that come out of your adrenal gland during stress) since about half the people diagnosed with major depression have elevated levels of glucocorticoids.
    36:41: Major stress can pre-dispose one to depression. This can be seen epidemiologically: usually, the precursor to a person's first major depressive episode is a stressful event in their life. They can eventually conquer it; however, succeeding experiences of such episodes of stress-induced depression can permanently predispose one to it with or without a stressor.

    • @guhanpurushothaman9313
      @guhanpurushothaman9313 4 года назад +126

      *Part 2: The exploration of the psychological facets of depression*
      _Freudian perspective:_
      38:28: If this is all one ever knows about the subject, one can not make any meaningful contribution. Hence, we must talk about the psychology of depression.
      39:10: Freud refers the process of grief as mourning, while the term that characterises depression is melancholia.
      39:56: In the Freudian view, after losing a loved one, most people are able to mourn and come out the other end; but some are unable to relegate the vehemence of the loss and the feelings brought along with it to the background, which is melancholia.
      40:44: For a regular person, losing somebody indicates the only thing wrong is the loss; however, for a person with melancholia; two things are wrong: one is the loss and the other is having forever lost the opportunity to make things better with them. Hence, the aggression arising as a consequence of the loss is turned inwards -which is depression.
      _Experimental psychology:_
      41:59: The difficulty of interpreting Freudian views within the framework of modern science is contemplated as a premise for foray into experimental psychology.
      42:29: The literature shows that for the same external misery, one can feel more stressed and be more at risk for stress-related disorders, if one doesn't have outlets, feels powerless and doesn't have anyone's shoulders to cry on. The pathological extremes of this is depression and cognitive psychology defines it as "learned helplessness" (learning to be helpless). The ability to identify that their current predicament is not their whole world is lost in the depressed and as a consequence, they dismiss any prospect of imminent help.
      43:33: This behaviour is replicated in rats, where in one setting, they are subject to uncontrollable shocks until they learn helplessness; and then transported to another setting where they can avoid getting shocked by pulling a lever but don't bother to.
      44:30: One of the most reliable findings in the epidemiology of depression is that if one loses a parent to death under 10 years of age, they are more at a risk of major depression for the rest of their lives. This makes sense, since these are the formative years of one's lives where one is learning about the effect they have on the world (cause and effect) as a way of gauging how much control they generally have in life, and losing a parent then might mean having to directly contend with the feeling of helplessness and loss of control for the child, pushing him/her that much closer to the edge of the "learned helplessness" cliff.
      *Part 3: Reconciliation*
      45:32: The critical point of intersection between the two aforementioned schools of thought is "stress".
      45:36: Depression has a genetic component, and runs more reliably in closer and closer relatives. In identical twins, if one has depression, the other has a 50% chance (25% for regular twins).
      46:28: However; this also implies the other twin has a 50% chance of not getting depression; which shows as important as genes are, they are not more important than any other component.
      46:52: Genes and depression are not about inevitability, rather, vulnerability, which is tied to a gene discovered recently that is relevant to whether or not one is likely to have depression. The gene comes in two versions, one of which bad (linked positively to the likelihood of depression).
      47:50: A group of researchers studied 17,000 kids growing up in New Zealand to conclude that inheriting the bad version of the gene doesn't set one up for depression; however, if such individuals have a history of exposure to major stressors (parental divorce, physical abuse etc), their risk of depression goes up much quicker than their counterparts with the good version of the gene with a similar history.
      49:46: Turns out, glucocorticoids regulate the function of this gene, causing all the pieces to fall naturally into place here. Thus, using stress as the link, it becomes possible to reconcile the psychology of depression with its biochemistry to create a wonderfully integrated model.

    • @eannec
      @eannec 4 года назад +29

      thank you so much for this. I hope you are having a great day

    • @anderson1966
      @anderson1966 4 года назад +10

      Thank you so much!
      I was looking for it through aaall the comments

    • @utkarshme9630
      @utkarshme9630 4 года назад +9

      @@guhanpurushothaman9313 thank youuu

    • @mitzu4744
      @mitzu4744 4 года назад +8

      I sincerely hope you are having a great day, thanks a lot for this!

  • @brooke26019
    @brooke26019 5 лет назад +3540

    "Depression is aggression turned inward."
    Wow. That got me.

    • @czernm20
      @czernm20 5 лет назад +32

      Not always, he was on some point and you (others did same) miss that point cuting his speaks on tiny quotes. Listen it to end.

    • @joelandrews2845
      @joelandrews2845 5 лет назад +28

      Sopranos quote lol

    • @merosi1234
      @merosi1234 5 лет назад +16

      Freud said it 100 years ago

    • @michaelwilliams1747
      @michaelwilliams1747 5 лет назад +5

      I've always heard that the quote is... Depression is
      Anger is Depression
      Turned inward.

    • @transsexual_computer_faery
      @transsexual_computer_faery 5 лет назад +17

      gotta be right.
      most of (if not all???) my depression i can trace back to my seething sorrow and hatred for humans, and the fates we have constructed for our own species.

  • @MrDragomere
    @MrDragomere 3 года назад +1380

    Worse part is crying and having a complete breakdown at random and not knowing why. It just hits and you don't function again for days, weeks. That's the disarming part, I hope everyone who's suffering keeps fighting.

    • @MrDragomere
      @MrDragomere 3 года назад +27

      @task force whisky what does politics have to do with clinical depression ? 🤦‍♀️🤷‍♀️

    • @BigHugeDank
      @BigHugeDank 3 года назад +20

      @task force whisky hey man. Genuine question: Why do you want to be this way? It's the internet, so I figure its just to get a rise, clicks, a laugh etc. But...why do you want to make people feel so badly about themselves? Is this who you were called to be? What traces of yourself you want to leave behind to strangers?

    • @BigHugeDank
      @BigHugeDank 3 года назад +4

      @task force whisky That's about the answer I expected sadly.

    • @BigHugeDank
      @BigHugeDank 3 года назад +3

      @task force whisky Why do I drive you nuts?

    • @BigHugeDank
      @BigHugeDank 3 года назад +4

      Whisky, i gotta thank you bud. This exchange was so silly that it cheered me up. Thanks, have a good one!

  • @Tastiest-of-Cakes
    @Tastiest-of-Cakes 2 года назад +191

    I don't remember a time when I didn't have major depressive disorder. Not only did I learn some important new information from this video, I received something I didn't realize I needed so badly: validation.
    Thank you for also addressing the semantics of words like "depressed". I often get asked why I'm depressed and then I realize they don't know what I'm talking about.
    Thank you for this. Sincerely.

    • @JRush374
      @JRush374 Год назад +3

      Watch his entire Human Behavioral Biology lecture series

  • @PollyGammy
    @PollyGammy 7 лет назад +942

    This made me openly weep. I’ve struggled with major depressive disorder for 20 years, and to know that there is one person who completely understands exactly what I have felt is unreal. Thank you for doing this work.

    • @eidsongregory5795
      @eidsongregory5795 5 лет назад +11

      amen, amen

    • @fr8fr6dr69
      @fr8fr6dr69 5 лет назад +37

      Depression and obesity. I've had both forever. They are also the two diseases where everyone, including doctors, says "just get over it." Interesting. You can't "will" your hair to change color any more than you can take your metabolism and turn it into that of a person who has never been, and never will be, overweight. Same with depression. The diseases themselves are bad enough, but when the bumbling hordes step in and say "eat less, move more" and "just feel happy", it is 1,000 times worse. Do you tell someone having a heart attack "now, use your willpower to make it go away"? I feel your pain.

    • @tedpreston4155
      @tedpreston4155 5 лет назад +18

      That's how I felt too: he described some of the elements of my depression so well that I had never even made some of the connections myself. He is a fantastic professor.

    • @Happys_Art
      @Happys_Art 4 года назад +2

      I’m sorry to hear that. Leave everything to god my friend. I pray you’re forever happy and all your dreams come true. I’m here if you ever want a friend to talk to.

    • @hbekele
      @hbekele 4 года назад +7

      Doctors are good for organs, bones, skin and body part issues. When it come to mental health they have no clue.

  • @PingSHU10
    @PingSHU10 3 года назад +2283

    It's encouraging to see that, 12 year after this lecture, depression is widely accepted as a biological disease, is often seen in public discourse on general health, and not longer carries the same kind of stigma as it used to (along with PTSD and other mental diseases), all thanks to the tremendous efforts from medical workers and researchers like Prof. Sapolsky in their tireless education to the general public. Salutation!

    • @hejnye
      @hejnye 3 года назад +11

      @@capybarawithanorangeonitsh4190 I have to exercise to extremes in order to be normal and outside at least 4 hours a day in sunlight, Sunbox saved my life along with medications. First time I felt the effects of Prozac was a major experience for me, wow this is how other people feel all the time?! And I am grateful for ECT, it has saved my life a number of times.

    • @bbbbbbb51
      @bbbbbbb51 3 года назад +17

      @@hejnye nah. Most people don't experience life high on Prozac.

    • @FREE_WILL_DEFENDER
      @FREE_WILL_DEFENDER 3 года назад +2

      Only because white people deal with it 🤷🏾‍♂️ yup I brought race into it. But it's true

    • @oopalonga
      @oopalonga 3 года назад +31

      perhaps it's widely accepted, but there's no evidence to suggest depression is a biological disease

    • @zachmorris4659
      @zachmorris4659 3 года назад

      ogga mup da didda BIX NOOD mufugguh.

  • @youngdreamer8425
    @youngdreamer8425 4 года назад +353

    In addition to the lecture, he is a great human. I just noticed how he was emphasizing through the whole lecture that depression is not a “pull yourself together thing” because he must’ve felt the pressure and pain depressed people feel from their families and friend’s constant demanding of “pull yourself together”
    which in many cases makes the person feels that his pain is not real or is not worth the validation and that drags the person to increase the aggression inward thus worsening things. i applaud him for having this much wisdom and compassion for others

    • @nickdag2006
      @nickdag2006 3 года назад +9

      I just finished his book “Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers”, and I was left with the same impression - what a great human.

    • @a_fellow_human
      @a_fellow_human 3 года назад +5

      Yeah, I'm glad he kept emphasizing that it is not a case of "pull yourself together."

    • @nikid3690
      @nikid3690 3 года назад +10

      agreed. there is almost nothing more damaging than being told to "get over it" or "try harder" when you're in a depressive state. The guilt is internalized and the person suffers even more, sinking further into depression.

    • @youngdreamer8425
      @youngdreamer8425 3 года назад +1

      @@nikid3690 totally agree

    • @brunobarua4400
      @brunobarua4400 3 года назад +4

      It is terrible - had a wife yell, ‘Snap out of it!’ after her leaving me, 5 months after purchasing a home, taking my 7 year old daughter with her; lose kid brother to suicide, she moves back in, but doesn’t understand my depressive state… like who the heck wants to feel constant despair and languish?

  • @DesiranKehendak
    @DesiranKehendak 2 года назад +175

    "Depression is agression turned inward because you got nobody else out there to have these arguments" ~ well said

  • @astitched
    @astitched 3 года назад +950

    Speaking as someone who's been depressed for the last 10 years (I'm 26) I watch this everytime things get particularly dark and it makes me feel better understood. As much as I cherish my loved ones; who are more than understanding of my faults, there is only so much I think they can truly empathize with.

    • @billiboussmith3700
      @billiboussmith3700 3 года назад +40

      I watched this for the first time just now and Im in tears I cant believe that someone just so eloquently just described I am the way I am. I cant believe it.

    • @___ooobodybagooo___
      @___ooobodybagooo___ 3 года назад +2

      Lol

    • @jontyhood
      @jontyhood 3 года назад +1

      @@billiboussmith3700 me too

    • @dancegod1691
      @dancegod1691 3 года назад +4

      Aw hold on to hope guys

    • @danieldoucet9121
      @danieldoucet9121 3 года назад +15

      That's what makes depression so insidious. It's like severe depression makes some want to kill themselves and mild to moderate depression makes people (almost) wish they would because of the negativity and lousy attitude, etc. that even low grade depression causes. 40 + years I've been dealing with it now. Recent studies have shown that depression in people is more likely to make them be more realistic than most people because we tend to focus on preparing for the worst so if plans fall apart it's easier to process disappointment. Many victims of suicide never experienced clinical depression until something in their life acutely falls apart and they can't deal with it. Not trying to simplify this in any way because it is not simple.

  • @PapaValhalla
    @PapaValhalla 3 года назад +989

    This lecture gave me 3 things i have never had my whole life about depression, Education, Validation, And Compassion. If more people were like this man, the world would be a much better place.

    • @voidinheritant
      @voidinheritant 3 года назад +8

      @task force whisky this has to be a joke bro wtf are u on 😭😭😭

    • @freakyfreshwater7680
      @freakyfreshwater7680 3 года назад +9

      @task force whisky What you're describing are sad thoughts. Everyone naturally has sad thoughts when faced with difficulties in life.
      But depression is a different ballgame. Some people don't have those happy times you speak about. Constantly sad, anxious, self-doubting, and don't feel any reason to live. It's more complicated than just being happy or sad. These people need to revisit their past and reevaluate their lives by talking with a therapist about what's causing them pain. This takes time to fix.

    • @Wandering_Owl
      @Wandering_Owl 3 года назад +2

      @task force whisky Low IQ detected. Just saying.

    • @terra7145
      @terra7145 3 года назад +1

      @task force whisky youre pathetic.

    • @Wandering_Owl
      @Wandering_Owl 3 года назад +2

      @task force whisky First off all your spelling is laughable, second of all I am a Muslim woman, I don't drink, don't do drugs and don't have sex outside of marriage. And yet I suffered from depression since I was 13 after my mother passed away. I am more conservative than you'll ever be, and STILL I BELIEVE IN SCIENCE !!!! "Task force of whisky" telling to a Muslim woman she party too hard. I don't even know if it's stupidity or a disability at this stage 😂😂

  • @kikiperry4924
    @kikiperry4924 7 лет назад +289

    One of the statements that impressed me : genetics is not about inevitability, it is about vulnerability. This is such a profound statement on so many levels. Acknowleding our vulnerability is the key to valuing our strenghts and ability to hold each other well and caringly.

    • @anascarlet
      @anascarlet 5 лет назад +4

      It's true for a lot of diseases, but not for all... for some, it is about inevitability.

    • @Liusila
      @Liusila 4 года назад +9

      Yep, that was an excellent point, and encouraging for those who did end up having depression - you’re not MEANT to have it, you developed it because your body was more vulnerable to it by no fault of yours.

    • @dyuthig9518
      @dyuthig9518 4 года назад

      Yes my friend 😊

  • @Errcyco
    @Errcyco Год назад +100

    It’s really special that Stanford made this available to the general public.

  • @johnnybravo5726
    @johnnybravo5726 3 года назад +1020

    I lost my father to a brain tumor when I was 11 years old. I'm 16 now and still haven't lost in my battle against depression and I'm determined to never let it win.

    • @ashwanimalhotra493
      @ashwanimalhotra493 3 года назад +33

      More power and strength to you

    • @DJHAM7A
      @DJHAM7A 3 года назад +42

      Keep your head up bro. I lost my father, the greatest person on earth for me, at the age of 9. I'm 27 now, still keep him in my prayers every day. Try to focus on the good and be thankful for every new day you live and the fact that you have other family around and that you can look forward to being a great day one day too.

    • @chetdudeguy
      @chetdudeguy 3 года назад +5

      Well I'm glad you're winning dude. Jia you!

    • @amywebb1455
      @amywebb1455 3 года назад +7

      Keep fighting, I promise you you will feel better some day!!! never lose hope of that. things WILL get better.

    • @Dan0TheMano
      @Dan0TheMano 3 года назад +17

      I lost my father when I was 10, he died at the dinner table one night. I’m 39 and still treating it. I had two really major depressive episodes in my life, but I’ve been ok for a few years. Three pieces of advice for what sounds a lot like a younger me. 1. Don’t pour alcohol on it. It’s a short term fix to a long term problem ultimately makes it much, much worse. 2. Never stop going to therapy. It’s hard to find a therapist that you will gel with but don’t stop looking until you find one and don’t stop going once you do.
      3. Be careful with the amount of medications they want to put you on. You may need them sometimes but a lot of meds ended up just making it worse for longer for me.
      I’m really sorry about your father. Things can be ok. Every feeling is temporary, even though it may not feel like that at the time. Good luck.

  • @bentyreman5769
    @bentyreman5769 10 лет назад +1460

    this is genuinely one of the best lectures I've ever seen/heard

    • @joelboone1751
      @joelboone1751 6 лет назад +18

      I could listen to this guy for hours even though I don't understand half of what he's saying.

    • @radyafiramadhan4317
      @radyafiramadhan4317 6 лет назад +13

      In my opinion, the best explanation on depression on this site. And also a good video

    • @clubadv
      @clubadv 6 лет назад +10

      You should watch His behavioral biology course from Stanford on RUclips it is life changing in my opinion

    • @AndriiMuliar
      @AndriiMuliar 6 лет назад +3

      Are you having major depression?

    • @jenmorricone4014
      @jenmorricone4014 6 лет назад

      +David Geffeney Thanks, will watch .

  • @Russellsagecline
    @Russellsagecline 3 года назад +793

    This man is a true TEACHER. He believes that his message shouldn't be contained to this classroom and projects it to eternity, through this medium. Thank you, Professor.

    • @pravkdey
      @pravkdey 3 года назад +3

      Word

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB 2 года назад +1

      Lies again? DMP DEP

  • @Lopfff
    @Lopfff Год назад +71

    I saw this video for the first time in 2013 when I had been diagnosed with major depression, and it meant so much for me. It really helped, and I’ve gone back to it over the years. Thank you Doctor Sapolsky

    • @Lopfff
      @Lopfff Год назад +5

      @Larry Koopa It took a lot of time, like another seven years, but I finally pulled out of it, I’m happy to say. Therapy and the right combo of meds and, well, time.

    • @Lopfff
      @Lopfff Год назад +1

      @Larry Koopa You too man

  • @ToaHHH
    @ToaHHH 4 года назад +2232

    he hasnt looked at a single note, great lecturer

    • @shadowplayish
      @shadowplayish 4 года назад +110

      I was thinking this guy has a massive sponge like brain. Its astonishing

    • @1spore2
      @1spore2 4 года назад +78

      Probably been doing it for a while

    • @fenriswolf3589
      @fenriswolf3589 4 года назад +70

      Does not looking at your notes make you a great lecturer?

    • @fenriswolf3589
      @fenriswolf3589 4 года назад +195

      @@shadowplayish That is not about the having a galaxy brain, it is about being familiar with your content and having talked about it many times previously. Even doing this takes a lot of effort and the lecturer's relaxed body language while talking in his course shows that he is incredibly experienced and well versed on his subject.

    • @CM-eg3gl
      @CM-eg3gl 4 года назад +10

      @@fenriswolf3589 Well said. Agreed.

  • @sweeney8845
    @sweeney8845 8 лет назад +824

    I just want to curl up in a blanket and listen to him talk forever

    • @innabobilova4620
      @innabobilova4620 6 лет назад +14

      ......,from sunrise till sunset.......

    • @naftalibendavid
      @naftalibendavid 6 лет назад +9

      I’m with you

    • @danielt.4330
      @danielt.4330 5 лет назад +24

      I secrete so much oxytocin when I listen to Robert Sapolsky ...

    • @damian.gamlath
      @damian.gamlath 5 лет назад +12

      Wow! That's what I'm doing right now

    • @darwinvinci7744
      @darwinvinci7744 5 лет назад +6

      @@damian.gamlath Same. my back hurts tho.

  • @BigBendBlues
    @BigBendBlues 5 лет назад +181

    Suffered from it most my life. I have never heard or read anyone explain it like Dr. Sapolsky. When I feel depressed, I watch this video. Dr. Sapolsky is so knowledgeable and articulate. God bless all of us that live with what he describes so well.

    • @jarryd8167
      @jarryd8167 4 года назад +3

      Sending you love, friend

  • @MultiVeika
    @MultiVeika Год назад +60

    Damn, as a MD I really envy the students in this class and wish my teachers were this good. He managed to convey a great summary of the literature of depression in such an easy way to understand for even a layperson and with great eloquence. This was an amazing lecture and I'm thankful this is free for anyone to watch

    • @qMartink
      @qMartink 11 месяцев назад +1

      its a class offered to laypersons

  • @callmemc6
    @callmemc6 3 года назад +829

    This is why I hate that when someone commits suicide they're considered "selfish" and they "didn't think of the people around them" when they're literally talking about a person whose mental state was in such a bad place that they were willing to take the most extreme measure to end their own suffering.

    • @SW-fn7cl
      @SW-fn7cl 3 года назад +124

      It's missing the point that seriously depressed people get into the mental state where they believe the people around them would be better off if he/she was gone.

    • @lorraineclark4413
      @lorraineclark4413 3 года назад +72

      @@SW-fn7cl Exactly! They believe it is more selfish to stay alive when they are "worthless" and just dragging their loved ones down. Then they hear others say they're "just selfish" and feel even MORE worthless. There's nothing like a shame spiral to really guarantee a depressive will go through with suicide.

    • @marywintourable
      @marywintourable 3 года назад +64

      I once read this as an explanation for understanding suicide and it really helped me: the depression is like being inside a burning building and jumping out to a certain death beats being consumed by the flames.

    • @JaimeMartinez-uo1bu
      @JaimeMartinez-uo1bu 3 года назад +2

      Yes!

    • @vato7251
      @vato7251 3 года назад +3

      It’s literally the most selfish thing…

  • @fungussa
    @fungussa 10 лет назад +512

    Heck, he has such clarity of thought.

    • @daveyineluctable5525
      @daveyineluctable5525 6 лет назад +7

      sort of, it’s much less difficult to sound articulate when he so grossly glosses over “stress”.
      He claims to divide the lecture into two parts and that “understanding biology only explains 30-40% of depression” and then proceeds to lecture the entire hour on strictlt biology.
      Also he used the phrase biological psychiatry, which is a redundant phraseLol, what does he think psychiatry is??? Psychiatry is both an MD/PhD, it by definition already includes biology. Does he also call doctors “biological doctors”?
      But the initial point is that he clearly glossed over stress by trotting out some lame mid-1900s description of learned helplessness as a general descriptor of stress.
      This scans more like a feature-length Ted Talk, somewhat slick and quick-paced, and completely glossing over the mount everest dilemma which has yet to be scaled and is currently baffling modern thinkers.
      Cool that he can announce the current state of research fimdings (but to be honest anyone can recount his narrative and its convenient he has to bolt out the door), and he has a trusting delivery, paternally soothing even, but this ends like a Malcolm Gladwell book or a Fat-Free dessert, no substance upon inspection, no filling, and not even close to satisfying (especially if you ever cracked on single book in literally any single psychological field).

    • @SpenserRoger
      @SpenserRoger 6 лет назад +15

      Davey Ineluctable Well Davey I think this was only a primer lecture on the subject, not only that but I don't really understand your frustrations. What more would you have added or taken away from this piece?

    • @jamesgerard9330
      @jamesgerard9330 5 лет назад +3

      @@daveyineluctable5525 Almost all his other talks are about stress and different pathology, which is essentially the best place to be when so little progress has been made. It would seem to me that in spite of the question existing for a long time, according to what you are saying, it is still cutting edge. He explained that depression is grossly underappreciated as well with his example about wishing your senator's wife would get this disease so a foundation would be set up. It didn't strike me that there was more he could expound on without teaching you about a lot of other separate diseases first.

    • @jamesgerard9330
      @jamesgerard9330 5 лет назад

      ​@@stupidtreehugger Firstly, I don't imagine that Robert Sapolsky's lectures are given to suit pharmacy interests. Maybe they are , but not for the reasons you are presenting. You say diet and lifestyle, but that is essentially what a pharmacy mediates with as an over-generalization to keep things conventional and stagnant. Look up Dr Jack Kruse and his work with Quantum biology. To say that the type of link you are sharing about exercise and robert sapolsky's work are mutually exclusive is a huge mistake. I think the point of him bringing up the "belt up and get over it" notion was to mock it's use by professionals who are ignorant that are forced to deal with depression people.

    • @TheHergeea
      @TheHergeea 4 года назад

      Ha! So succinctly elegant

  • @itsmentalhealthcomedyberli7649
    @itsmentalhealthcomedyberli7649 4 года назад +1462

    I really love the analogy about diabetics "You don't ask people with diabetics to stop babying themselves and stop having diabetics". I come from China, in my society, they call people with depression "weak".
    A few years ago, a celebrity committed suicide due to depression. Instead of rethinking what we could have done to save his life, people saying things like "what a coward", "if he has the courage to die, why didn't he man up to live?"
    Nowadays, depression got more attention and care. But most depression awareness related "success stories" are about "someone realized the situation and snapped out from it". Psychotherapy is highly uncommon and unaffordable and medication is so stigmatized. There is a long way to go.
    I hope eventually the understanding of depression is more well spread so more lives can be saved.

    • @johnchappell9232
      @johnchappell9232 3 года назад +21

      Theres that assumption that inside us all there is this center of calm rational thought. A higher mind. A higher self.
      I think that might be an illusion,
      Perhaps the true self, the soul if you like is not a godlike transcendent entity of immense power but a lonely scared child, when our biology or social structure is supportive we appreciate the power and confidence that support gives us. And we mistake the structure for the self, then when the structure collapses instead of accepting that work needs to be done to rebuild the structure, we think the individual is at fault.

    • @ethanstump
      @ethanstump 3 года назад +16

      from my own experiences of talking to these sort of people and trying to explain to them what bipolar disorder is in an objective way and my experience suffering with it, it quickly becomes an ideological discussion versus a fact and mathematic based discussion. as for why that is, he is exactly right in that rather than it being viewed as a medical issue, it is seen as a moral and emotional issue. and sure, there are moral and emotional components to it, as well as any other disease. my understanding is that just as Hansen's disease was a moral issue until modern initiatives, mental health will be viewed as the same until the societal understanding around mental health has changed. and that will only happen with repeated contact with the wider community, and a community effort of giving no credence to those who would seek to stigmatize such issues.

    • @northstar92
      @northstar92 3 года назад +2

      “The intensest light of reason and revelation combined, cannot shed such blazonings upon the deeper truths in a man, as will sometimes proceed from his own profoundest gloom. Utter darkness is then his light, and cat-like he distinctly sees all objects through a medium which is mere blindness to common vision.”
      ― Herman Melville

    • @jaws6307
      @jaws6307 3 года назад +13

      In the United States, we call people weak and make it very difficult and expensive to find mental health care. It’s a death sentence.

    • @N8D79
      @N8D79 3 года назад +11

      Yup we both have terrible governments and lack of real leadership. It's sad that American and Chinese governments work against each other because together we could be a massive force for good in this world.

  • @michaelhorn4540
    @michaelhorn4540 3 года назад +42

    I can totally relate, I actually tried to take my life and I can remember times when I prayed to God that I wouldn't wake up in the morning. I was going through a divorce and had recently lost both of my parents and through my divorce I lost everything and eventually found myself homeless. There is nothing worse than just existing and not living. Today I have a great job, a home, and the best life I've ever had, but I still deal with depression every single day of my life.

    • @user-mo8ti6kl9o
      @user-mo8ti6kl9o 2 года назад +8

      I'm so proud of you really, I can't imagine what that time must have felt like, I'm happy you managed to get better, it takes so much strength to get back up after all you've gone through. I hope you have a depression-free future.

    • @NMDecember1
      @NMDecember1 Год назад +2

      I'm so glad things have improved. Well done for struggling/fighting each day.

  • @michaelborek378
    @michaelborek378 5 лет назад +454

    This one hour lecture helped me more with my depression than years of counseling. Once I understood where my depression originated, I was able to find a step by step coping process. I can’t thank Dr. Spolasky enough for helping me change my perspective of my disease. I loss my mother a year ago, I return to Dr Spolskys lectures and it makes me appreciate how wonderful we are as humans and the beautiful mechanisms of our anatomy and physiology. I think his lectures have made me more intelligent in the process.

    • @Liusila
      @Liusila 4 года назад +43

      Julia O'Dell It’s just typos, man. I’m sure they don’t mean to change the name on purpose.

    • @mariesoto569
      @mariesoto569 4 года назад

      Michael bless you.

    • @lakelandruion3231
      @lakelandruion3231 4 года назад +1

      That's so beautiful.

    • @dontbothermeimjust12
      @dontbothermeimjust12 4 года назад +5

      You had bad counselors. But don't spread this as if counseling doesn't work. You're probably unaware of the benefits that counseling did for you. And disregarding a method that is based in science is the opposite of the message being spread by this professor.

    • @suhaibqasim48
      @suhaibqasim48 4 года назад +4

      @@dontbothermeimjust12 While counseling certainly works for many, or maybe even the majority, of people, I do believe that it severely lacks in its ability to truly get to the physiological and philosophical core of what is experienced. I personally benefit more long-term from videos on RUclips of scientists and philosophers talking about what I'm really experiencing as opposed to a therapist I'm paying hundreds of dollars for telling me essentially what I want to hear. Understanding the illusion of self and the vulnerability to thoughts through vipassana has helped me quite a bit in that regard.

  • @nightmoose
    @nightmoose 3 года назад +321

    He knows this lecture backwards and forwards like a great actor. It's informative, entertaining, and hypnotic.

    • @seasonalsnap3846
      @seasonalsnap3846 3 года назад +1

      @task force whisky you need to get better at trolling my guy, it’s too obvious

    • @jeremyc9593
      @jeremyc9593 Год назад +5

      Watching this does give a bit of a dopamine kick, as we get lost in a lecture given by someone who understands us, and we think maybe there is hope after all. Then, of course, once the video is over, we snap back to a reality where no one really cares that much. Welp, time for my Cymbalta. Maybe the third time will be a charm.

  • @ryankenyon5010
    @ryankenyon5010 3 года назад +456

    My sister and best friend was working on her Doctorate in psychology in September 2002 when she took her own life. So many things that confounded and frustrated her, both professionally and personally, are so eloquently addressed here. She would have been thrilled.

    • @devora4386
      @devora4386 3 года назад +31

      I’m so sorry for your loss

    • @bipedalbob
      @bipedalbob 3 года назад +34

      From what I've seen of psychiatrists it appears that many go onto the field to try to figure themselves out, there are some doing more harm than good.

    • @bipedalbob
      @bipedalbob 3 года назад +5

      @@jh0720 I think most would be just ad effective with dart board for diagnosis, you can tell you've found one worth their pay when they actually listen to you, usually they assume because of their education they know you better than you do.

    • @drkristajordan
      @drkristajordan 3 года назад +5

      I’m so sorry for you loss. So painful.

    • @laurendefonte9450
      @laurendefonte9450 3 года назад +4

      I’m so sorry for you loss. My heart is with you

  • @herecomemacOnTT
    @herecomemacOnTT 2 года назад +10

    I have Major Depressive Disorder and have since I was 8. Whenever I have an episode (like now) I watch this video. The clinical way of explaining it makes me feel understood and better in a way.

  • @thesisypheanjournal1271
    @thesisypheanjournal1271 3 года назад +680

    People try to cheer depressives up. "Think of your lovely family!" Or "Why don't you play your guitar? You love to play the guitar." That just makes it worse because you're reminding the person that they lack the capacity to enjoy the things that they know they used to enjoy. You'd never walk up to somebody who just lost both hands in an accident and say, "Why don't you work on your model airplanes for a while? That always cheers you up." Um... Because I CAN'T!

    • @Virjunior01
      @Virjunior01 3 года назад +10

      Yes. This.

    • @DurkDiggler
      @DurkDiggler 3 года назад +3

      sounds tough bud

    • @mtxumi
      @mtxumi 3 года назад +7

      so what am I supposed to bring them down instead

    • @BaseballPlayer0
      @BaseballPlayer0 3 года назад +5

      What about those who have no skills

    • @bills689-7
      @bills689-7 3 года назад +10

      Yeah let’s compare someone losing their hands to someone being a whiney little bitch because they’re sad

  • @southgecko3653
    @southgecko3653 4 года назад +432

    This guy is literally one of the best lecturers I've ever heard

    • @NatronGG
      @NatronGG 4 года назад +3

      then you probably haven't seen many lectures.

    • @je6874
      @je6874 4 года назад +38

      @@NatronGG I’m a student at a university like Stanford (world league tables) and I agree with the commenter... what lecturers have you seen that are better than this guy? As a final year medical student, watching hundreds of lectures, I can easily say that I’ve never been more engaged in a lecturer than I have with him.

    • @NatronGG
      @NatronGG 4 года назад +1

      @@je6874 Ah, you will certainly appreciate this ruclips.net/video/ubczoEAv5is/видео.html

    • @je6874
      @je6874 4 года назад +2

      James Reed fair

    • @veganworldorder9394
      @veganworldorder9394 4 года назад +2

      @@je6874 Watch out "Gary Yourofsky" on youtube, might disagree with the guy but he is the best orator I ever heard.

  • @SwampySalamander
    @SwampySalamander 4 года назад +154

    Man, he explained the feelings i've been trying to explain to friends and family for about 15 years, in just under an hour. From now on when someone want's more information on depression I am going to reference this lecture.

    • @mickeywicked478
      @mickeywicked478 3 года назад +1

      That’s how propaganda works. Now go take the chemicals that they assigned you...see if they make you feel better...

    • @greenchilaquiles
      @greenchilaquiles 3 года назад +11

      @@mickeywicked478 nice fallacy, dork

  • @willo7734
    @willo7734 Год назад +11

    This is one of the greatest one hour lectures anywhere. Sapolsky has a tremendous gift for distilling tons of complexities down into an hour that is digestible and understandable.

    • @mita6010
      @mita6010 9 месяцев назад

      Then….you should read his book “Determined”. It’s phenomenal.

  • @billgates904
    @billgates904 10 лет назад +502

    Holy crap, this is like the opposite of my childhood memories of church. I was not bored for a *second* listening to this guy, and that's rare. A riveting presentation.

    • @robertstan298
      @robertstan298 10 лет назад +18

      I thoroughly enjoyed your comment, haha.

    • @PrincipedelFuorigrotto
      @PrincipedelFuorigrotto 7 лет назад +14

      Generally speaking, I tend to get just as bored if not more with the majority of (pseudo) intellectuals as i do (pseudo) religious teachers.....just saying.

    • @kosk11348
      @kosk11348 6 лет назад +22

      Real knowledge will always be intellectually satisfying in ways that hogwash cannot.

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 6 лет назад +2

      +kosk11348 Well said!

    • @janosk8392
      @janosk8392 6 лет назад +1

      kosk11348 Amen.

  • @keldraalpine7091
    @keldraalpine7091 6 лет назад +572

    Thanks for this. I don't think depression will ever become socially acceptable like other disorders are. Behavior gets too mixed up with personality, and people get demonized for being weak, sad and self-absorbed/narcissistic. The symptoms are too nebulous, too blurry with character flaws, and people make the attribution error where they blame character over situation. It's always going to be a double bind for the depressed person.

    • @evanurena8868
      @evanurena8868 5 лет назад +37

      I thought of something similar but I couldn't describe it as adequately as you did. Not only do these cultural beliefs of character and personality affect depression, but anything that's neurological like OCD, ADHD, or Autism because as you said, it's a fundamental attribution error.

    • @gargomell91
      @gargomell91 5 лет назад +5

      @@evanurena8868 Great thoughts! I believe much of the stigma is Fear.

    • @naiIzz
      @naiIzz 5 лет назад +16

      Evan Urena you cant separate the person from these mental diseases. That is how they are distinct from things like diabetes, Parkinson’s, ext. I understand depression is a biochemical disease but I still feel like the insulin argument is a false equivalency. There is not CBT for diabetes, only medicine. That equivalency makes it so depressed people feel like they can only get better through medication, but that just isn’t at all true.

    • @Liusila
      @Liusila 4 года назад +13

      Liam Tomas You don’t get better per say. I see where you’re coming from but in comparing the diseases he purely meant it’s proven a biological issue, not a temporary mood or an affectation, or laziness. The treatment options are of course different.

    • @damienpol5215
      @damienpol5215 4 года назад +4

      This type of thinking reinforces depression and makes it worse.

  • @thebatman330
    @thebatman330 4 года назад +106

    Anhedonia- (absence of dopamine)
    Obsessive Grief (absence of serotonin)- Prozac
    Psychomotor retardation (absence of norepinephrine) - everything becomes too difficult, paralyzed by the absence of positive emotion (low risk for suicide, risk emerges after recovery)
    Symptoms- early morning wakening, disordered sleep stages, decreased appetite, rhythmic patterns (seasonal affective disorder, yearly)
    Neurotransmitter of which the absences are associated with depression: norepinephrine , serotonin, dopamine
    Aggression turned inward (guilt),
    stressors produce cortisol/stress, though if one lacks outlets of frustration/aggression (via exercise, friends, healthy relationships, hobbies, a productive work life), distorts itself into depression
    Type A personality is correlated with worse mental health, increased levels of anxiety/depression. Likely because of increased interaction with and obsession over stressors, overactivation of the sympathetic nervous system, and underactivation of the parasympathetic nervous system.
    Learned Helplessness- if a child loses a parent, they are at a much higher risk of depression for the rest of their life. this shows that certain thinking patterns in response to harsh/tragic stressors (deep sorrow--> this happened to me, it will keep happening to me, I have no locus of control in my life, anything and everything in my life that began good will slowly sour into nothingness)
    genealogy of depression: a certain version of a serotonergic gene increases your risk of depression thirty fold IF one grows up surrounded by major life stressors

    • @jpatel74
      @jpatel74 4 года назад

      The

    • @s_h_u_a_n
      @s_h_u_a_n 4 года назад +2

      Thank you so much i m just in 12th grade and this was quite helpful otherwise I had to Google them one by one ^^

    • @christinet6336
      @christinet6336 4 года назад

      Thank you for the breakdown. Very helpful!

    • @beelzemobabbity
      @beelzemobabbity 4 года назад

      Thank you, it’s nice to have them here instead of trying to type them out.

    • @mitzu4744
      @mitzu4744 4 года назад

      Legend

  • @nathanfoss2838
    @nathanfoss2838 2 года назад +13

    12 years ago (right around the time this video was posted) I took my first psychology class as undergrad, and fell in love with the subject. Today I discovered this video, and once again I'm enamored. Thank you Dr. Sapolski.

  • @MentSageM
    @MentSageM 3 года назад +113

    It blows my mind, the no physical guideline walk through, from biology, to neuroscience to Freud...all from the top of de dome. Like a beautiful construct all put together and spoke without a single flaw or hesitation... this is more than science... this is art! I would sell a kidney to just be present at a presentation like this! What a beautiful mind.

    • @MentSageM
      @MentSageM 3 года назад +3

      And even i, with only 1 year of psychology, could follow every single word... and guessed cortisol lol.

    • @marias13850
      @marias13850 3 года назад

      As someone who has suffered from depression for most of my life, I got a list of mental illnesses. I totally understood everything he was saying in this lecture. I would love to learn so much more about psychology & how brains work, chemical imbalances, it’s really a giant computer IMO. Each part plays a huge role.

    • @jcomm120
      @jcomm120 3 года назад

      gratitude for this video sharing is easier than parting with a kidney♡

  • @jimbarrofficial
    @jimbarrofficial 3 года назад +353

    The cadence of his voice can have you ensnared in his lectures for hours.

    • @jimmy5634
      @jimmy5634 3 года назад +1

      Makes me nauseous.

  • @Drnardinov
    @Drnardinov 4 года назад +25

    I fell asleep a lot in college but not with professors like this guy. Man he's got a captivating delivery.

  • @TIOLIOfficial
    @TIOLIOfficial 8 месяцев назад +31

    I added this video SO long to my "Watch Later" playlist. This was uploaded back in 2009. and I added this probably around 2016. It is now April of 2024. and I have just now gotten around to watching this finally...

    • @joemarsden68
      @joemarsden68 7 месяцев назад +3

      What the hell have you been doing the last 8 years lol

    • @jesse5518
      @jesse5518 6 месяцев назад +5

      You’re not alone in that sense

    • @bakmaratya1963
      @bakmaratya1963 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@joemarsden68 he was probably depressed lol

    • @bobsiddoway
      @bobsiddoway 6 месяцев назад +1

      Same. Oddly. 🙌

  • @GothBlocked
    @GothBlocked 10 лет назад +242

    "-everything is exhausting-" ....... this man gets the "hang" of this. all my respect

  • @anms_brk
    @anms_brk 3 года назад +368

    This is crazy. I am being treated for major depression that is treatment resistant, and have been off work for almost 6 months now. I feel like this guy is talking about me. I wish I could figure out how to "come out the other side".
    Barely eat, sleep 4ish hours on a good night, go multiple days without sleep other times, hurt in major muscles and joints nearly 24/7... fly off the handle in a sudden fit of rage brought on by the tiniest things... walk down a flight of stairs, move laundry from the washer to the dryer, back upstairs, and nearly collapse from exhaustion. Do the dishes, nearly collapse. Mow the lawn, actually collapse. I obsessively dive into my hobbies to at least...try...to enjoy something.
    I feel like... I'm homesick for a place that does not exist, I have lost a loved one that I don't know, I am suffocating and uncomfortable and it just goes on and on to the point where I stop complaining about it because people around you can only take so much complaining, but I can't fix it and it never stops.
    I'm getting disturbingly good at pretending to be "ok".

    • @Munniradams
      @Munniradams 3 года назад +15

      Hi Anti, I do hope you're doing better, healing is a struggle and a hectic journey, just know you're not alone, you're amazing and I hope to be here when you begin to see the beauty of the sunshine again❤❤❤❤❤🤗.

    • @evelina.gukasyan
      @evelina.gukasyan 2 года назад +9

      The answer to your depression is Jesus Christ! I promise! Nothing else helped. I almost killed my self .. Jesus saved me. God of the universe who created you and who gave you life! A building has a builder , a painting has a painter, you being the creation, you have a creator ! You’re here for a reason . Invite Jesus into your life! He will cure your depression , no one and nothing else will!

    • @evelina.gukasyan
      @evelina.gukasyan 2 года назад +2

      And I’m not talking about some fake Jesus that the Catholics portray. Jesus is not white blue eye guy with long hair. That’s a false image. The real Jesus, Yeshua, was born in Israel . He was Jewish.

    • @rheinnabi5052
      @rheinnabi5052 2 года назад +11

      @@evelina.gukasyan Pretty shitty thing to say to someone. Join my cult or you’ll never get rid of your depression? You were better off not commenting at all.

    • @anniecrouch7779
      @anniecrouch7779 2 года назад +4

      @@rheinnabi5052 she did not say to join any kind of cult. Jesus brought me outta depression. She is right. She didn't say GO TO CHURCH. Jesus does save. It's the truth. Not shitty at all.... very kind and true. With peace and love!!!

  • @hoyavp2236
    @hoyavp2236 4 года назад +74

    I’m highly depressed. But I got some good news yesterday and listening to this helped. Thanks

  • @willmpet
    @willmpet Год назад +22

    My father lived through a lifetime of depression and still was able to raise a family. I suffered a minor version (Dysthymia) and it was extremely painful and difficult to get through.

  • @goodtalker
    @goodtalker 4 года назад +54

    Anxiety and depression have been with me since my teens. I BELIEVE I was born with some sort of predisposition, BUT I KNOW, that the home I grew up in, and its daily dose of stress, impaired my ability to become a healthy adult. One thing that happened is that I never developed the skill set of being appropriately assertive when dealing with bullies. It was like a "learned helplessness" situation. By and large, I have overcome much and improved who I am by learning from Dr. Sapolsky and others and using antidepressants to "boost" me into a healthier direction. Thank you.

    • @maxresdefault8235
      @maxresdefault8235 3 года назад

      Reading stories on how people overcome their shitty life circumstances warms my heart. Thanks for sharing this.

    • @goodtalker
      @goodtalker 3 года назад +1

      @@maxresdefault8235 You are more than welcome....IMO an overload of stress hormones on men, for example, whose brains continue to grow well into their twenties, causes a kind of continuous, or constant, state of anxiety....and feeling this way all the time, in many, many people JUST GETS DEPRESSING. Thus, often, an addict is produced.

    • @ranbymonkeys2384
      @ranbymonkeys2384 3 года назад +1

      Anxiety attack = depression soon after. You know and you get ready for it like clock work. My attacks come out of nowhere, no rhyme or reason. Ten minutes in panic then one week in hell.

    • @goodtalker
      @goodtalker 3 года назад

      @@ranbymonkeys2384 I've told people that long bouts of anxiety feel very depressing and that the pain is like a vice on your head.

  • @alexnetick1834
    @alexnetick1834 3 года назад +328

    As someone with major depression, I want to thank this guy for not minimizing the condition. I've found the typical reaction of health care professionals is "so what," or "tough it up." The end result is that you don't get any help. It's the only disease where you get ostracized for your symptoms.

    • @deatsbybre7162
      @deatsbybre7162 3 года назад +14

      I wish everyone had to experience depression for just one day so they wouldn’t be so tactless about it.

    • @astrobiojoe7283
      @astrobiojoe7283 3 года назад +1

      The last line, so true!

    • @mypud4068
      @mypud4068 3 года назад +8

      I have chronic fatigue syndrome and believe me talk about being dismissed or just talked to like I made these symptoms up, I have depression to as a result and after your blood tests are normal and since they have no way of measuring it you quickly start to realize real help is hard to find and I stopped going to doctors

    • @shyaaammeneen63
      @shyaaammeneen63 3 года назад +6

      @@mypud4068 You need to meet a good therapist. In life there are only 2 problems--mind and the body. To feel better reduce negative thoughts with a simple practice. Your breath and mind [brain] are closely related causing stress-anxiety. For a better life sit on a chair, neck straight, eyes closed and observe the sensations of your incoming--outgoing breath at the entrance of the nostrils for 5-10-15 minutes or more. Don’t fight your thoughts. With daily practice the mind will relax. No deep breathing needed. Do the practice without any expectations. Change happens from within by itself. Day or night, when taking a walk, at office, sitting in a park, when reading, before sleep etc sit or lie down and observe your breath. Like me, make this a lifetime daily habit to have a good life. Reduce negative social media. Avoid constipation as it affects the mind instantly. Best wishes. Senior Counsellor.

    • @Zoomo2697
      @Zoomo2697 3 года назад

      @@shyaaammeneen63 “All our anxieties relate to time. The major problems of psychiatry revolve around an analysis of the despair, pessimism, melancholy, and complexes that are the inheritances of what has been or with the fears, anxieties, worries, that are the imaginings of what will be.” Fulton J Sheen

  • @shannonhadfield7482
    @shannonhadfield7482 3 года назад +87

    I lost my dad when I was 8 years old. I am now 24 with major depression. The description of "learned helplessness" could not be anymore accurate. Thank you for posting this lecture as people like me try to make sense of this debilitating disease.

    • @LukeJ2023
      @LukeJ2023 2 года назад +1

      Have you tried deliverance by the power of Holy Spirit? Look up John zavlaris. Please don't rule this out before you really look into it. That's how Jesus healed me completely from this sort of things that nobody seem to understand

    • @small_fries7573
      @small_fries7573 2 года назад

      @Alison James Wish u accept Jesus Christ as your Savior so u can go to heaven after this life. God doesn't expect you to be perfect nor sinless. He just wants u to believe in Him as your Savior for your sins so u can go to heaven after this life.
      Tragic. Hope u can somehow slowly cope with this. God loves ❤️ you. He is testing people. It's not easy. Feel 4 u. Ong.

    • @small_fries7573
      @small_fries7573 2 года назад +1

      Learned helplessness is in da black hoods 2. They keep hurting each other n creating unsafe environment always blaming da feds n govt for their downfall. If they became better peeps especially da men, they hood wouldn't be a war zone. 💯

    • @small_fries7573
      @small_fries7573 2 года назад

      U deserve to enjoy ya life thru da struggles. Struggles will always be there no matter rich or not. I'm sure rich folks issues r different than us poor folks.

  • @edwardkostreski6733
    @edwardkostreski6733 9 месяцев назад +33

    FYI, they released a 13 years later updated lecture version of this just recently.

    • @mysticskexis7459
      @mysticskexis7459 8 месяцев назад +2

      Do you have a link?

    • @alexleighton7587
      @alexleighton7587 8 месяцев назад

      @@mysticskexis7459 ruclips.net/video/fzUXcBTQXKM/видео.htmlfeature=shared

    • @limestones1072
      @limestones1072 8 месяцев назад

      @@mysticskexis7459 ruclips.net/video/fzUXcBTQXKM/видео.htmlsi=3L1jB8OnySdkpNoA

    • @limestones1072
      @limestones1072 8 месяцев назад

      @@mysticskexis7459 ruclips.net/video/fzUXcBTQXKM/видео.htmlsi=3L1jB8OnySdkpNoA

    • @limestones1072
      @limestones1072 8 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/fzUXcBTQXKM/видео.htmlsi=3L1jB8OnySdkpNoA

  • @TrulyBadTiming
    @TrulyBadTiming 4 года назад +165

    I actually started crying when he said "it's not just a metaphor of depression as psychic pain." It was like my entire experience of life over the last ten years was validated.

    • @jellibeans4440
      @jellibeans4440 3 года назад +5

      i hope you're doing well dude. i know its hard,but please keep going. sending love

    • @TrulyBadTiming
      @TrulyBadTiming 3 года назад +7

      @@jellibeans4440 thank you! I'm actually in a pretty good place lately, hoping I can keep it up :)

    • @jellibeans4440
      @jellibeans4440 3 года назад +2

      @@TrulyBadTiming im glad!! I believe you can

    • @ChristopherT_
      @ChristopherT_ 3 года назад +2

      @@TrulyBadTiming how are you doing?

    • @TrulyBadTiming
      @TrulyBadTiming 3 года назад +4

      @@ChristopherT_ My girlfriend and I bought a house and are moving this weekend, so I'm very stressed right now but still doing well! I was also diagnosed with ADHD pretty recently and I'm finding that life feels a bit more manageable now that I'm treating the root cause of my depression.
      Thank you for asking!

  • @domy2584
    @domy2584 4 года назад +50

    I have suffered depression, anxiety all my life. Thank you for making me feel like a respected , valued patient. Prof Robert Sapolsky you are a Rock Star 💫

  • @AlisaDavis315
    @AlisaDavis315 2 года назад +22

    Boy you nailed this regarding how a patient with MDD feels compared to someone who doesn’t have it. I cried watching this because it really hit home. You gave excellent insight that I hope more people understand. Thank you. Best lecture so far! ❤️

  • @andreizaharie9261
    @andreizaharie9261 4 года назад +85

    I watch this whole course every few months and it has been such a positive force in my life. thanks for keeping this stuff up. at my most depressed, when I can do or feel nothing, the one thing that does not fail to make me happy and hopeful is listening to Sapolsky talk about behavioral biology. Thank you.

    • @michellamberg3230
      @michellamberg3230 3 года назад +1

      Did actually anything change, and how exactly, what happened? And be real honest.

    • @jh0720
      @jh0720 3 года назад +2

      @@michellamberg3230 stfu she doesn’t owe you anything 😂😂

  • @ECjpg
    @ECjpg 4 года назад +26

    lost my best friend almost 7 years ago to the day and have since struggled with both meds and my own head.... this is the only person I've heard discuss the topic that really understands what it's like

  • @8698gil
    @8698gil 5 лет назад +595

    This has helped me to understand my sister’s suicide 12 years ago.

    • @iSwiftectioner
      @iSwiftectioner 4 года назад +74

      I'm sorry for your loss. I hope you and your family are doing better now. Sending love your way.

    • @mijuajua4820
      @mijuajua4820 4 года назад +18

      So sorry Karen for the loss of your sister:'(

    • @Septiviumexe
      @Septiviumexe 4 года назад +19

      It's a shitty illness, I'm glad some people never have to experience it

    • @Doidoi119
      @Doidoi119 4 года назад +12

      Sorry for your loss 🙏 ❤️

    • @tallon3925
      @tallon3925 4 года назад +4

      Very sorry for your loss, i couldn't imagine what that's like to go through. All the best, and sending love to you and your family

  • @sierra9713
    @sierra9713 10 месяцев назад +10

    This man is a gift to the world.

  • @kayvee256
    @kayvee256 3 года назад +582

    I'd love for Stanford to do another one of these for 2021.

    • @Eduardo1007
      @Eduardo1007 3 года назад +11

      YES.

    • @djtjpain
      @djtjpain 3 года назад +16

      Instead of 15% it would be 30-40%

    • @BennyOcean
      @BennyOcean 3 года назад +9

      The government 'covid' response has been a mental health disaster. These psychopaths can convince themselves that what they are doing is for the greater good but they seemingly have no regard for the collateral damage of these policies.

    • @djtjpain
      @djtjpain 3 года назад +4

      @@BennyOcean pretty easy to declare lockdowns and increase restrictions etc when you set your own salary.

    • @BennyOcean
      @BennyOcean 3 года назад +3

      @@djtjpain It might be easy but it's tyrannical and millions of us are not ok with being governed this way.

  • @savvasemexides6557
    @savvasemexides6557 5 лет назад +16

    Mind blowing. It's the first time I sit fully concentrated on a lecture so long, not losing my interest for a single moment.

  • @EllaRose-hx1ok
    @EllaRose-hx1ok 2 года назад +6

    this lecture made me cry multiple times but it also made everything feel so validating for me

  • @ghostblade2154
    @ghostblade2154 10 лет назад +141

    By far the best lecture on depression. Detailed and honest.

  • @nicolecui3214
    @nicolecui3214 4 года назад +211

    Sapolsky is a genius, I never thought someone who didn't get depression could understand depression so accurate.

    • @charlesren8377
      @charlesren8377 3 года назад +12

      Well u never know....

    • @janetmcarthur5257
      @janetmcarthur5257 3 года назад +11

      I like that he doesn't talk above people's heads. He speaks so people can understand.

    • @mchagnon7
      @mchagnon7 3 года назад +6

      How can you be so certain that he doesn't experience depression?

    • @OneTyler2Many
      @OneTyler2Many 3 года назад +6

      You missed a huge point. He literally said everyone experiences depression. He's experienced and analyzed it with his own mind and probably studied the thoughts of other educated people to understand it better.

    • @michellamberg3230
      @michellamberg3230 3 года назад

      @@OneTyler2Many He also said 15% get depression (MDD) before that 00:01:40 or 01:40 . Wiered me out with the "everyone gets depression" sentence he said also. I don't think his meaning of MDD and depression differed, but I guess it's like MDD = diagnosed and depression = non-diagnosed + diagnosed.

  • @tallulahraccoon3832
    @tallulahraccoon3832 3 года назад +46

    I have C-PTSD and often trouble with executive dysfunction. These videos help me getting day to day stuff like washing dishes done. The knowledge presented paired with his calm voice makes me feel kinda safe. Thank you for that ❤️

  • @sulehan1
    @sulehan1 11 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you so much making this lecture public. It felt amazing listening to Dr Sapolsky at work. I am truly grateful. 🙌🏻

  • @drmabeuse
    @drmabeuse 5 лет назад +32

    Sapolsky's an absolute treasure. His other lectures on RUclips are just as good.

  • @kennaj6080
    @kennaj6080 3 года назад +63

    this made me cry, i hope he understands how validating this lecture is

    • @mickeywicked478
      @mickeywicked478 3 года назад

      Here’s some validation: depression doesn’t exist. What you’re experiencing is the normal response to a degenerating society. Feelings don’t equate to words. Words are assigned chemicals aka drugs aka pharmakeia aka poison, sorcery, alchemy, spells, aka WITCHCRAFT.
      They want you on chemicals do that your spirit goes away. “They” is a reference to who rules society from the top down.

    • @kennaj6080
      @kennaj6080 3 года назад +5

      @@mickeywicked478 Depression is much easier to grasp, the people that control our society don’t want people to be depressed because
      depression=unmotivated=less money for them

    • @mickeywicked478
      @mickeywicked478 3 года назад

      @@SoftServeSalad hi, peanut gallery, nice to meet you

    • @travis3754
      @travis3754 3 года назад +1

      He personally struggles with it - he definitely does.

    • @shyaaammeneen63
      @shyaaammeneen63 3 года назад

      @@kennaj6080 In life there are only 2 problems--mind and the body. To feel better reduce negative thoughts with a simple practice. Your breath and mind [brain] are closely related causing stress-anxiety. For a better life sit on a chair, neck straight, eyes closed and observe the sensations of your incoming--outgoing breath at the entrance of the nostrils for 5-10-15 minutes or more. Don’t fight your thoughts. With daily practice the mind will relax. No deep breathing needed. Do the practice without any expectations. Change happens from within by itself. Day or night, when taking a walk, at office, sitting in a park, when reading, before sleep etc sit or lie down and observe your breath. Like me, make this a lifetime daily habit to have a good life. Reduce negative social media. Avoid constipation as it affects the mind instantly. Best wishes. Senior Counsellor.

  • @m0byy
    @m0byy 3 года назад +38

    I would like to thank Stanford for making all those fantastic lectures open to public. I wish my teacher was like Sapolsky. Instead of that she just starts a powerpoint and lets it run through.

  • @k_a_bizzle
    @k_a_bizzle Год назад +13

    This video, this lecture, this professor did more for validating me and my depression than I can even begin to explain. Probably saved my life.

  • @alpur214
    @alpur214 3 года назад +27

    Watching this video many times has actually helped me battle my depression. Kudos to Stanford and Professor Sapolsky for making this lecture available to all of us.

  • @Stadtpark90
    @Stadtpark90 5 лет назад +377

    19:14 happy rat, the pleasure-pathway and the role of neurotransmitters
    29:00 the cortex dragging the rest of the brain along and a radical surgical solution
    31:24 the role of hormones (thyroid hormones (lack of), estrogen and progesterone (-ratio), glucocorticoids (after the 4th or 5th event not receeding))
    38:14 biology is only half the picture / drugs only work 30-40% of the time
    40:52 the psychology of turned-inward aggression and learned helplessness
    45:31 genes as a vulnerability factor

    • @n.b.zingerle212
      @n.b.zingerle212 4 года назад +3

      Thanks!!

    • @thegud7738
      @thegud7738 4 года назад

      what is this course, i wanna go to this

    • @thegud7738
      @thegud7738 4 года назад +2

      @Walter Clements alright done thanks for the advice

  • @nh7226
    @nh7226 8 лет назад +547

    wow...the accuracy of the exhaustion. it's so true, I literally have to push with EVERYTHING I have just to shuffle around, with my head down, sighing. I literally can't do shit.

    • @johnny_eth
      @johnny_eth 8 лет назад +74

      Julia Ross is another quack selling diet as cure for everything. If you have a real diagnosed problem, consult with a real doctor with real responsibility.

    • @johnny_eth
      @johnny_eth 8 лет назад +42

      Any time. My life expectancy will be higher.

    • @jakesanchez3552
      @jakesanchez3552 7 лет назад +2

      Agreed! I definitely seeing results practicing self awareness throughout the day and meditating when i can ( which only happens maybe once a week and for just a few minutes). I have found that if you can somehow find just 1 good emotion in yourself towards the begging of the day, grab that puppy like you just found $1000 on the ground, let go of whatever thought brought this emotion on but try to keep the feeling and also try and amplify/cultivate/multiply the feeling. It is hard to describe exactly what i mean here but this method has given me some amazing days i didn't think i would ever have again after years of depression. The most important thing to remember is you are guaranteed pain and suffering in life, you cannot do much about that but you can practice methods such as meditation that change your perception and generally seem to give a person a sense of contentment and much more. I would also recommend giving Buddhism a look, the methods are straight forward and you can keep your religion, or keep being an atheist and still practice Buddhism.

    •  7 лет назад +8

      If I found $1000 on the ground, I would pick it up of course, but other than that it would not effect me in anyway, 10 thousand a little bit, 100 thousand, a fair amount. The point is, depression means u don't care one jot for $1000!

    • @davisjohn-d6h
      @davisjohn-d6h 6 лет назад

      N H Just don't be depressed, it's very simple

  • @pauladeoliveira5529
    @pauladeoliveira5529 Год назад +13

    He is nothing less than a gift to humanity.

    • @edwinmccain8911
      @edwinmccain8911 10 месяцев назад

      I had that exact same thought. Why can’t he be ultra famous?

  • @AlexFeature
    @AlexFeature 3 года назад +43

    Robert is an incredible teacher. The tone of his voice and the way he delivers his arguments is mesmerizing.

  • @europarising1112
    @europarising1112 8 лет назад +470

    "This screams biology". Thank you so much for this.

    • @watching99134
      @watching99134 8 лет назад +10

      Why? Because you perceive the only alternative to biology as perhaps being self-blame? What if there are more possibilities?

    • @Krazydave9
      @Krazydave9 7 лет назад +25

      I think more as a point of reference or people who have not experienced depression first hand and are skeptical of it authenticity as a debilitating disease.

    • @vixxcelacea2778
      @vixxcelacea2778 7 лет назад +13

      Biology is everything having to do with the body and how it is affected. That means ANYTHING a human thinks or does is biology, be it your hormone levels, communication between body parts and the brain or the chemical structure. It's still biology.
      So what other possibility is there for a human to do anything? Biology is the umbrella term. But people take biology to mean something you can't help and therefore take it seriously, which they should because that's exactly what it is, out of your control.

    • @jivee7861
      @jivee7861 7 лет назад +11

      "Thank you" because depression is deemed a moral failing, and a fault of character, and an embarrassing threat in that it might point at the observer being vulnerable as well; rather than a physiological malfunction amenable to medical treatment. Major depressive disorder has very little to do with normal conceptions surrounding the word "depression." Dr. Sapolsky didn't mention the cognitive dysfunction that can be associated with major depression; the memory problems, or the trouble concentrating, or the inability to apply logic to problems. These are devastating. How to explain that waking up exhausted and getting up and brushing one's teeth is like climbing a steep hill? This is much more basic than his laundry analogy. I'm left feeling, however, like this theoretical framework leaves me in the same old position; if it's the bad gene working with glucocorticoids, then why shouldn't I be able to -just snap out of it- if I/we now understand what's really going on?

    • @BubbasMeisa
      @BubbasMeisa 6 лет назад +6

      No it doesn't. It screams INHUMANE SYSTEM leading to INHUMANE LIVES!!!!

  • @hermes5456
    @hermes5456 3 года назад +116

    The worst thing is depression goes in both ways for some people they imagine that everything is getting worse and they also see it because they can't do anything by themselves. It feels like a beast devouring your entrails and feeding on every spark on happiness in your heart.

    • @elliotthannam8374
      @elliotthannam8374 3 года назад +4

      I remember saying to myself once, "Sadness is a mercy compared to nothingness"
      I don't know if I suffer from major depression, but I'm definitely somewhere on the depressed scale. For me, it feels like my body wants to be dead, and tries to be as close to dead as possible in the meantime. It feels like it can't get worse but you don't take that to mean that it can only get better. Simply put, it sucks, and I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy.

    • @kathymagnus5681
      @kathymagnus5681 3 года назад

      I‘m so sorry for your pain. Please look for help. You will find it.

    • @deaj8450
      @deaj8450 3 года назад +4

      @@elliotthannam8374 Wish I could agree with you that sadness is better than nothingness but I wonder man. If I didn't have some amount belief in the possibility of the afterlife I probably could've gone through with suicide but I'm fearful I'll kill myself and wake up in some form of hell to more misery.

  • @billyzoom1
    @billyzoom1 2 года назад +2

    Incredible. I’ve suffered from this for decades and learned quite a bit. Thank you…incredible lecturer

  • @HalJikaKick
    @HalJikaKick 8 лет назад +114

    THIS guy is one of the most brilliant human beings alive!

  • @Mathrubhootham
    @Mathrubhootham 3 года назад +33

    Thank you Stanford for keeping this comment section open.
    These discussion threads are like home for us.

  • @jewelssylva3738
    @jewelssylva3738 5 лет назад +24

    Thank you for offering your class instructions with us.
    I am 68 years old & I was told that my chronic depression & PTSD were developed due to childhood trauma. I am glad to hear your more biological explanation.
    I have, over a lifetime, developed coping mechanisms to manage my depression & anxiety. I still take two meds for depression. But stress management, nutrition, & good sleep have long term improvement.

    • @samnur6957
      @samnur6957 4 года назад +1

      exercise helps too.

  • @beverlykandraceffinger3764
    @beverlykandraceffinger3764 9 месяцев назад +3

    ...Please check out the updated version of this RUclips lecture from Dr. Sapolsky. (Posted very recently).Very much worth viewing.
    The basics in research and understanding of depression are still there, but new developments are always coming to light.
    ...and thanks, once again, for the ready availability of these lectures from Stanford. You remind me how much I miss working with people in the Sciences.

  • @davidf.flores903
    @davidf.flores903 4 года назад +34

    Unequivocally the best lecture I've heard on the subject of Depression!

  • @SevenRiderAirForce
    @SevenRiderAirForce 6 лет назад +25

    I just found this guy this week. I am so amped I found another brilliant person to listen to! Gonna add his books to my list, too. This guy is a total gem.

  • @sharonbeepath248
    @sharonbeepath248 8 лет назад +139

    Dr Sapolsky is amazingly informative engaging and seamless on his talks on human behaviour

    • @radanv2535
      @radanv2535 8 лет назад

      just enough information to deliver the structure and concepts, amazingly accessible presentation. *****

    • @willmpet
      @willmpet 7 лет назад

      I first heard him on "The Infinite Mind" and was able to understand so completely the problems that had plagued me for years, thank goodness for not having even a mild version any longer.

  • @kerryfrontino914
    @kerryfrontino914 2 года назад +8

    I have suffered from depression for years ... Thankyou Robert for finally explaining it in terms that make sense. Your passion for this subject is evident. Both of my adult daughters also have this problem.
    Thankyou again.

  • @KayFlowidity
    @KayFlowidity 3 года назад +1137

    8:00 Psycho Motor Retardation
    19:15 Pleasure Pathway
    23:35 Obsessions
    24:45 Psychic Pain
    26:00 Limbic system
    27:00 Cortex
    28:00 Thoughts become Things
    29:00 👌👌👌
    31:30 Hormones
    32:45 Women & Depression

    • @Zoomo2697
      @Zoomo2697 3 года назад +46

      “All our anxieties relate to time. The major problems of psychiatry revolve around an analysis of the despair, pessimism, melancholy, and complexes that are the inheritances of what has been or with the fears, anxieties, worries, that are the imaginings of what will be.” Fulton J Sheen

    • @muditafeeler8271
      @muditafeeler8271 3 года назад +2

      +

    • @sakariaskoivisto1471
      @sakariaskoivisto1471 3 года назад +12

      @@Zoomo2697 God forbid if you decide to live in the present moment, where past or future does not exist. Here, your ego cannot exist either, and it will do everything it can to prevent you from severing the identification with it. It feeds on the rubbish of the past, and the future that can be.

    • @seven7upndown241
      @seven7upndown241 2 года назад +2

      You wont believe me but Jesus Christ cured me of severe depression. I could not speep, eat, walk, talk except to think about how worthsless i am. It lasted for 2 days and it was gone coz i stayed away of weapons. One day it came after self imposed shame and guilt and the depression came and it happened few times in my life. I started listening gospel preachers and repeating scripture. After 3 minutes the depression was completly gone like a cloak of my body and mind all at once and the energy and good mood came back.
      I say there is nothing that is beyond Christ thats how i dealt with ADHD so i dont have it anymore. It can also be about spirit of fear, lies, worry, murder and any demon. Drugs dont cure Jesus does. Also the commandment is not to fear, be angry or worry so dont open door for those shits.

    • @shawnblondin
      @shawnblondin 2 года назад +3

      Thank you!

  • @bigcam34woods92
    @bigcam34woods92 3 года назад +158

    I always appreciate professors that don't use a projector and slide shows. All the material comes straight from the source of their knowledge. It makes the lecture much more meaningful and genuine.
    I'll say it 100 times. No one learns from a slide show.

    • @ranbymonkeys2384
      @ranbymonkeys2384 3 года назад +8

      That's why we don't NEED more money for schools, we need more chalk. The late Tim Wilson said he can teach math with a stick in the damn dirt.,

    • @godofdogs6198
      @godofdogs6198 3 года назад +30

      My nigga, you can definitely learn something from a slideshow, it’s a useful tool, just the teacher can’t be reliant on it.

    • @ranbymonkeys2384
      @ranbymonkeys2384 3 года назад

      @Competition Sports 2021 If you want to impress me, tell me you bought real estate with no DEBT. What are you going to do with a bunch of boarded up houses here in a couple of years?

    • @ranbymonkeys2384
      @ranbymonkeys2384 3 года назад

      @@clarissak.4587 What do you teach?

    • @ranbymonkeys2384
      @ranbymonkeys2384 3 года назад

      @@clarissak.4587 Thousands of species have gone extinct and the world is a different place since I asked hahaha