Daniel's Schizoaffective & Borderline Diagnoses | Dr Syl's Analysis (SBSK)

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  • Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
  • In this video, Dr Syl watches one of the most viewed mental health videos on RUclips. He discusses the presentation, the challenges in dual diagnoses (personality vs psychotic illnesses), the reported symptoms and tips on managing cPTSD, Schizoaffective, BPD and other mental illnesses. He also reflects a bit about the challenges of being a Junior Doctor.
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    ** The information in this video is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information, contained in this video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a consultation with your own doctor/health professional. If anything in this video was distressing please consider calling LifeLine 131114 **
    Timestamps
    00:00 - Introduction
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 196

  • @DrSyl
    @DrSyl  9 месяцев назад +17

    Link to video: ruclips.net/video/GU8VmJsX6-s/видео.html

    • @asiyaheibhlin7297
      @asiyaheibhlin7297 8 месяцев назад +1

      His explanation about logically knowing he's being irrational makes perfect sense to me:
      I use the terms "logical brain" and "emotional brain"
      Like if I am about to have a panic attack I feel like the world is literally ending and my life is over- that's my emotional brain
      I know I am safe. I know the world isn't ending. And that I am worrying over nothing and there are no triggers at times- that's the logical part
      However my logic and emotional states are so disconnected that I cannot talk myself, or be talked, out of my panic and emotions.
      My only choice is to ride it out and eventually calm down or crash from the event and then pick up and move on.
      Well, now that THAT'S over, let's get on with life, shall we?
      I feel like I am both a big sister and little sister at the same time- or I am my own mother and a child.
      The little sister/child is my emotions- which have been stunted due to many traumatic situations since childhood
      The big sister/ mother is my logic- because I am logically very mature and am decently intelligent (VA mandated testing to get done for my IQ when I was claiming disability).
      It's hard to be intellectually intelligent while also being emotionally immature....

    • @MinkasTNR
      @MinkasTNR 8 месяцев назад

      Daniel is actually a writer, poet and creator. He is an excellent writer.

    • @kristaqualey8302
      @kristaqualey8302 7 месяцев назад

      During a mental evaluation, what's the puzzles and "games" they have you try to complete in a specific time frame? I've always wondered what that was for

    • @asiyaheibhlin7297
      @asiyaheibhlin7297 7 месяцев назад

      @@kristaqualey8302
      I was given:
      Clinical Interview
      Mental Staus Examination
      Test of Memory Malingering
      Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) Repeatable Battery for the Assesment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS) Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale- IV (WAIS-IV)- selected sub-tests
      Wide Range Achievement Test-4 (WRAT-4)- selective sub-tests
      Trail-Makin Test (TMT)
      Verbal Fluency
      Wechsler Memory Scale-IV (WMS-IV; Logical Memory and Visual Reproduction)
      This was all to test my cognitive capacity and to decide whether or not I could be repainsible for my VA compensation benefits or if I would need a caretaker for my financial benefits.

    • @mblohm7337
      @mblohm7337 4 месяца назад

      It made sense to me also. I experience what he is describing. He is saying that even though he knows metacognitively that what he is thinking is incorrect, for all practical purposes he acts and thinks like it is.

  • @singingsam40
    @singingsam40 9 месяцев назад +250

    Daniel Nepveux has his own RUclips channel and I've been following him for a while. He's incredibly articulate, creative and honest. He's well worth checking out on here.

    • @shalacarter6658
      @shalacarter6658 9 месяцев назад +8

      And our dear Daniel is doing so poorly!

    • @bfran2283
      @bfran2283 9 месяцев назад +18

      he really is an incredible person. i’ve been following for years and it seems like every time he updates the channel, something terrible has happened….it makes me so angry that so much awful shit keeps happening to such a good person. i’m glad he at least knows he’s got internet strangers rooting him on.

    • @TipToeZebra
      @TipToeZebra 8 месяцев назад +5

      ​@bfran2283 Rooting for him so much! 💞

    • @iluvmyhusband-3-
      @iluvmyhusband-3- 8 месяцев назад

      @@shalacarter6658 fufufuGigi hoops jxi

    • @_.WildMoonChild
      @_.WildMoonChild 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@shalacarter6658He posted and is doing quite well at the moment! 💜

  • @pinheadlarry2921
    @pinheadlarry2921 9 месяцев назад +114

    Oh my god. When he talked about knowing it’s insane and irrational but still believing it i literally started crying. Me too. It frustrates me so much. so many mental health professionals think the key to getting better is awareness. I can be aware and still sick. maybe this is the difference between schizoaffective and classic schizophrenia, maybe that’s why i feel like this is so overlooked, as schizoaffective is generally less known about.

    • @InvertedGoblin
      @InvertedGoblin 9 месяцев назад +5

      Me too! I thought I was the only one but am so glad I'm not. It makes total sense to me. I don't know why it doesn't to others.

    • @gigahorse1475
      @gigahorse1475 9 месяцев назад +14

      I don’t know if this is a thing that differentiates schizophrenia and schizoaffective. I have what’s best described as mild schizophrenia. I’m extremely analytical and skeptical, so some of my delusions I was completely aware of and yet couldn’t get it out of my head for any reason. Psychosis isn’t something one can “think themselves out of.” You can have differing levels of insight, but no matter what you think the experience is still there and it’s very strong.
      It’s confusing the way some psychologists talk about it. There are tests that say “do you feel like thoughts are being inserted in your head?” Yes I feel that quite often, but I don’t actually think they are thoughts from other people. And yet they are asking that question about a delusion.

    • @pinheadlarry2921
      @pinheadlarry2921 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@gigahorse1475 I appreciate this! It was just a guess tbh. I honestly think i’m gonna show the original interview to my therapist because she definitely figured it was abnormal that i could recognize my delusions. I might show her these comments too, just to say maybe it’s more common than she figured. Unfortunately most professionals are not well educated on the schizo spectrum at all, and schizo specialists are rare. I relate a lot to the “insert thoughts” question and not being sure how to answer.
      Weird question but are you an INTP?

    • @gigahorse1475
      @gigahorse1475 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@pinheadlarry2921Close. INTJ 😆. I’m also autistic (common for INTJs).
      Every time I have looked at comments, talked with people, or been in online spaces where there are people diagnosed with schizophrenia or schizoaffective… they often talk about their delusions with a lot of awareness, even while experiencing the delusion. It is very fascinating and seems to be a common experience. The only way to brush this off as a professional is to say all those people are lying. But why would they do that? And I don’t think it’s intellectually honest to call us all liars. A good professional would not do that.

    • @klown83
      @klown83 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, so much. I become the universe like clockwork every 6 months or so. Logical me knows it's not real but in that moment, it's very real and it's hard to pull out of it.

  • @cuhweenuh
    @cuhweenuh 9 месяцев назад +88

    SBSK is one of my favorite channels, the amount of compassion and willingness to listen that Chris displays in each and every interview is so amazing to see. I'm so glad he's able to give so many people a platform to tell their story

  • @harrisonlopes7003
    @harrisonlopes7003 8 месяцев назад +19

    I had the opportunity to work with Daniel, and we became friends. He is one of the kindest people I have ever met!

  • @Christine__D
    @Christine__D 9 месяцев назад +85

    I have been following Daniel for some time. He is honest and vulnerable about his illness. He is also an amazingly talented poet.

    • @Christine__D
      @Christine__D 9 месяцев назад +12

      Is a wartime veteran and if I remember correctly he developed his mental illnesses following combat.

    • @nancyneyedly4587
      @nancyneyedly4587 9 месяцев назад +8

      @@Christine__D Yes, he had a couple head injuires that may have contributed to his difficulties.

  • @juliannaking4473
    @juliannaking4473 8 месяцев назад +13

    We are VERY Protective of Daniel . He has a piece of our Hearts

  • @glasslilacs
    @glasslilacs 8 месяцев назад +28

    I've followed Daniel Nepveux on RUclips ever since I saw this interview, and his journey has been incredible. He's a really talented writer and makes vlogs about the things he goes through. Big trigger warning on his vlogs, he talks about very heavy things, but he's so incredibly sympathetic and wonderful as a person. I'd really recommend following him.
    The video Syl is watching was recorded about 3 years ago at this point. A lot has happened since then.

  • @sarahlamoureux1454
    @sarahlamoureux1454 9 месяцев назад +45

    From what I've read, the issue of insight in psychosis is more complicated. And, just speaking from my personal experience (diagnosed with unspecified psychosis), it is possible to experience something like paranoia -- thinking people are monitoring me through devices, talking about me, lying to me, giving covert signs to one another about me -- while being aware it's not based in reality. It's distressing: it feels like I'm fighting my own mind. Fortunately, it's been a while since I've had bad symptoms like that.

    • @zippy10256
      @zippy10256 4 месяца назад +8

      Iv had episodes of "OCD" where I was fairly certain I was experiencing a delusion but I couldn't stop thinking about whatever I was thinking about because It became a compulsion and it made the fear feel very real. For example I felt the TV was talking to me, so I avoided TV. I became obsessed with the fear that I was going crazy, would google symptoms and ruminate, but because OCD is all about doubt, I knew somewhere I'm not experiencing thoughts based in reality but it didn't make the thoughts feel less real.. very strange space to be in

  • @gigahorse1475
    @gigahorse1475 9 месяцев назад +45

    Like a few other people here I disagree with Dr. Syl’s take on the “rationalization defense.” I think Daniel explained very well what it’s like to have your senses and experience contradict the reality we commonly take for granted.
    Although irrational thinking is part of schizophrenia, I strongly believe that if you take the most rational person in the world and give them the mere feeling that they are being watched, they will eventually start to believe they are being watched. From my own experience, I don’t think much irrationality is required for delusions. A lot of people experience both delusions and at least some level of awareness at the same time.

    • @minimushrooom
      @minimushrooom 9 месяцев назад +6

      Yeah I agree. I think he missed the nuances of what a delusion actually is here. Daniel is clearly questioning if what he believes is real, most probably because others have questioned it and told him he is unwell. He is trying to convince himself he doesn't believe in it to get better, but he clearly still very much believes his delusions are true.

    • @zippy10256
      @zippy10256 4 месяца назад +2

      With OCD I feel delusional but I can be aware of it somehow at the same time.

  • @angeliaparish
    @angeliaparish 8 месяцев назад +12

    Daniel's first brain injury was in military when his parachute had an issue. He said it in one of the interviews. In a video a few days ago, he seemed better.

  • @canislupus7421
    @canislupus7421 8 месяцев назад +12

    Daniel is also a brilliant poet, truly gifted with words and invoking emotion.

  • @mishi144
    @mishi144 16 дней назад +2

    I didn't find him talking about how he understands logically he is experiencing psychosis but for him it is a very real experience hard to follow at all. I understood what he was saying quite clearly.

  • @franktherabbit42
    @franktherabbit42 9 месяцев назад +29

    I have Schizoaffective disorder. I've had 3 hospital visits in the last year. It's pretty rough at times. Thanks for the videos Dr Syl.

  • @aspidoscelistigris
    @aspidoscelistigris 9 месяцев назад +9

    The other side of the boundaries issue is-when someone says they'll try to help you, and then they don't, it destroys trust. Sometimes trust in that person, sometimes trust in other people, generally. And people usually don't follow through. In the moment, they want to; in reality, they have lives and other responsibilities.

  • @haloedge2829
    @haloedge2829 9 месяцев назад +16

    I've followed Daniel ever since this interview and it has been emotiona,l to say the least. He still doesn't have the help he needs and deserves. He's tried and tried again. The facilities that take him in after are particularly terrible episode only increases his sense of hopelessness. He deserves so much. He deserves to have light again. To laugh and sing again.

    • @dominicaaaaa5547
      @dominicaaaaa5547 3 месяца назад +1

      Yes I watch Daniels videos too I really hope that one day he can get to a good and more balanced place because he seems like a great guy 🙂

  • @InvertedGoblin
    @InvertedGoblin 9 месяцев назад +44

    I completely understood what he meant by logically knowing that it's wrong but still believing something. I feel it's a bit dismissive to just call it a rationalization defense. (I know you didn't mean it to be.) 10:24
    It's like living in two worlds and having to choose every day which world you want to believe in based on your actions. It's like having a foot on each train track and deciding which to lean on more today.
    One says that logically, based on everything you've ever learned and all things rational, it is not real. The other says "Yeah, but..." and won't let go of the idea. Then you have to choose one or the other and based on your mood it's sometimes harder to choose the rational one.
    I thought I was weird for falling into that space in between which no one ever confirms. Now I know someone else has the same thing!

    • @gigahorse1475
      @gigahorse1475 9 месяцев назад +9

      You are so right. I think people who haven’t experienced psychosis have trouble grasping this, even if they are experts. I had good insight but strong psychotic experiences for years, and it pretty much made me feel like I was two people, where one person believed the delusion and the other did not. I was trying so hard to be rational! I don’t think non-psychotic people ever experience this kind of divorce from experience/feelings and your own beliefs.

    • @flyingfranky
      @flyingfranky 7 месяцев назад +4

      i know most people who haven’t experienced it have difficulty understanding, but i truly understood how he described his rationalizing. maybe because i experience ocd, perhaps? intrusive thoughts happen so often that you believe it’s true even though you know rationally it’s not. idk maybe

    • @idesireahimbo
      @idesireahimbo 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@flyingfranky good lord, i was reading the original comment going "ive never experienced psychosis, i wonder why relate to this so much" and then i read your comment and i was like "oh yeah i have ocd" 🤦‍♂️
      intrusive thoughts are truly one of the most vile things in the world. i think its a similar experience, once youre out on the other side, of having to separate what your brain is telling you from what reality is. and for me, there is almost always that voice there going "yeah, but".

  • @mistymac9345
    @mistymac9345 Месяц назад +2

    Following Daniel I find him so likeable. It must be told that he is a Veteran and has had many serious head injuries. He suffers from PTSD , he wouldn't access any VA services because he didn't feel worthy, he thinks his illness is minor compared to ex military who have lost limbs, sight etc.

  • @Collan-D
    @Collan-D 7 месяцев назад +2

    The most brilliant quote I’ve ever heard from a medical professional “the patient is the textbook. I’m learning from my patients.” Seeing how the patient symptoms manifest and how treatments effect those symptoms is a sign of a caring and knowledgeable doctor!

  • @jean2479
    @jean2479 9 месяцев назад +5

    My son has schizophrenia and this video is heart wrenching.

  • @musochickburns8212
    @musochickburns8212 9 месяцев назад +6

    I agree that at the end of the interview he shouldn't have said what he said to Daniel unless he plans to actually be friends with him in real life. And I mean a real friend!

  • @emberronas617
    @emberronas617 8 месяцев назад +6

    At around 8:15 in the conversation, the speaker points out that it's challenging to understand what someone experiencing psychosis goes through unless you've been there yourself. He mentions that when you're losing touch with reality, you often don't even realize it's happening. This is a crucial aspect of his discussion, emphasizing that during such episodes, individuals might not recognize their own detachment from reality.
    He goes on to explain that he has learned to identify some signs and symptoms of psychosis, which enables him to apply reasoning to determine if he might be slipping into an irrational or psychotic state. He also mentions how things can suddenly shift from normalcy to a state of disconnection from reality, echoing his earlier point about the difficulty of recognizing one's own psychosis.
    In his discussion, he touches on the common tendency to search for triggers when facing mental health issues. Initially, he denies any specific triggers, but later acknowledges one. He then delves into the presence of delusions during episodes of psychosis and provides examples from his own experiences. He admits that even though he logically understands that these thoughts are not based on reality, they still feel completely real to him, which is something many people can relate to.
    One powerful insight he shares is the idea that during psychosis, everything one senses or experiences feels undeniably real. Despite being aware of the illogical nature of their thoughts, it doesn't matter - the experiences are real to them. The speaker highlights the profound impact of these moments, where no amount of reasoning can break through the altered perception of reality. Even if you repeatedly tell yourself that it's all in your mind, the memories-- even though he doesn't say he remembers much-- of those experiences remain, making them feel as real as actual events.
    In summary, the speaker's discussion sheds light on the challenges of comprehending psychosis from an outsider's perspective and the disconcerting nature of losing touch with reality. He shares personal experiences and insights that emphasize the stark contrast between logical understanding and the overwhelming sense of reality during a psychotic episode.
    Of course, this is all just thought. I suffer strong CPTSD and have breaks from reality and I found it really interesting that you felt that he was changing topics when to me, it sounded like he was directly answering the question in a very artful and well thought out way. I think its just hard to relate to if you've never had it happen.

  • @Bruuba
    @Bruuba 8 месяцев назад +4

    Daniel is such a sweet man. He’s really struggling.

  • @Internet_user777
    @Internet_user777 8 месяцев назад +3

    I love daniel, he’s been through a lot recently, pls send him lots of love

  • @LauraVervaart
    @LauraVervaart 9 месяцев назад +17

    About the promise of helping him with the treatment: in the US treatment is not affordable at all. So I interpret it more like I’ll help you with the financial burden instead of setting no boundaries. I am fortunate to live in a country where there’s a good health insurance system and good treatment is available. In the US it is just impossible to get good psychotherapy when you’re not rich af.

    • @user-cc8ht3im4h
      @user-cc8ht3im4h 5 месяцев назад

      This is not true. Medicaid pays for psychotherapy in my state .

    • @jgnmtz
      @jgnmtz 2 месяца назад

      @@user-cc8ht3im4hpsychotherapy = not authorized to prescribe . You’re actually not helping in this scenario. Calif resident here. 42+ years in seeking mental health . 80’s = impossible without lots of money for psychiatric. 90’s = still impossible. 2000’s = very hard . Flash forward 2024 = you can get half a$$ psychiatry within a 20 mile radius of any major city . But the good ones only take the expensive insurance now . Medicare , you have to jump through hoops , call a dozen , most don’t want you due to 1) insurance doesn’t pay 2) diagnosis requires too much paper 3) the pre auths are hassle 4) the kickback (oops I mean supplemental compensation) from prescriptions are lower under Medicare and harder to scam . Same system m different dysfunctions

  • @stevebob240
    @stevebob240 8 месяцев назад +4

    For how difficult it is for him to describe his experience, he is very articulate. He seems like a resilient guy going through some difficult things.

  • @mentalitydesignvideo
    @mentalitydesignvideo 9 месяцев назад +17

    The words "Rationalization defense" should never be uttered by a mental health professional. All it means is, "the patient has a clearer view of what is happening to him (or her) than I do and possesses an intellect more powerful than my own, and is having to explain to me in accessible terms (albeit not the professional jargon I'm used to) what he or she experiences. I, the professional, am discomfited and feel diminished, so I will now pathologize it." If that's not an admittance of professional inadequacy, I don't know what is.
    That poor guy conveyed very precisely how his senses (what we ultimately rely upon to construct the world around us) generate data that does not withstand rational scrutiny. Since by age of maturity we've learned that our seemingly logical conclusions, theories etc often fail in the face of reality (on account of imprecise thinking, insufficient data, biases, etc), we fall back to relying on senses as the ultimate arbiter of what's true and real. Yet, reality is perfectly logical and rational (even though that logic and rationality is often staggeringly complex and obscure), else we'd be living in a nightmare. "The rational is real, and the real is rational." That's Hegel.
    And so he's damned to live in a conundrum, where sense data (hallucinations), instead of being the ultimate arbiter of what's real, disagree with his rational thinking, the foundation of his self-understanding as a conscious human being. Hell, truly.
    Yet, I think there's hope for him. His cognition seems intact, his emotional reactions are appropriate to the predicament he fell in, there seems to be an integrated personality (in extreme distress, admittedly), yet a sound, amiable personality behind the veil of affliction.

    • @mentalitydesignvideo
      @mentalitydesignvideo 9 месяцев назад +7

      p.s. I also think he's probably not getting the care he needs.
      I think a lot of what we see are side effects of improperly selected antipsychotics, I doubt his brain injuries are being cared for in any meaningful way (do they put him in the oxy bari chamber? does he receive large doses of nootropics? ETC.
      If he was a retired American football player with chronic brain injuries, he would likely be cared for along these lines, rather than having a teddy bear to clutch onto.

  • @tirzah9929
    @tirzah9929 9 месяцев назад +8

    ‘He’s just being nice, and I’m being jugdemental’
    Me all the time

  • @Aster_Risk
    @Aster_Risk 9 месяцев назад +10

    I really appreciated your take on this. I hope you always keep this respectful and educational tone on your channel. So many mental health professionals on RUclips have let entertainment become the focus, and I can't support that.

  • @delaneyandersson2423
    @delaneyandersson2423 3 месяца назад +2

    I have a traumatic brain injury, where I had to re-learn how to walk, talk, read, write, etc) and Daniel’s mannerisms are very similar to mine (stimming, grimace, difficulty with eye contact, overstimulation, and expressive aphasia)

  • @ariahathaway5517
    @ariahathaway5517 9 месяцев назад +9

    Thank you dr Syl for making year videos on schizoaffective disorder. It helps to normalise these things. Also for people to understand that when you have the illness your not a monster but struggling and how they can support best. It also helps me get better insight

  • @pigeondance687
    @pigeondance687 6 месяцев назад +9

    9:29 I'm not sure what you mean by saying that it was hard to follow what he was saying because it seemed completely comprehensive to me. he said that psychosis was horrifying, then explained how he can't always tell that it starts, but he's learning to recogize the symptoms more, then said that the first time he experienced it there was a trigger but decided to not go into detail, and then explained one of the symptoms he experiences which is delusions, and how he know logically that they are delusions but his senses try to convince him otherwise. it's clear that he's nervous but i think he explained it quite comprehensively

    • @dorukokbay606
      @dorukokbay606 4 дня назад

      it's clear that the doctor understands what daniel said, as he is able to summarize what he said. he's referring to the disorganized speech, which is definitely present here even though one can understand him. this type of lateral connections and disorganized speech is one of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia.

  • @juliannaking4473
    @juliannaking4473 8 месяцев назад +2

    We Love Daniel ...we keep up w/him on his channel

  • @henk-3098
    @henk-3098 9 месяцев назад +8

    I really like this type of videos. It really showes you the full spectrum of humanity. We all experience reality and react to it in many different ways. And it can be difficult to understand it and be empathetic as a bystander, be it a family member or even a medical professional. I'm a nursing student myself and I hope that these videos help me to empathize and care for my future patients.

  • @sharonthompson672
    @sharonthompson672 9 месяцев назад +9

    I'm so sorry for this man. My brain has always been my refuge, an active, entertaining "inner life", this poor man appears to be tortured by what should be his refuge. 😔❤️ But the insight he has into his illness gives me hope he can be helped. He's working terribly hard to understand his illness. Also, I've had one concussion, this poor man has had at least eight???!!! Feeling yourself at death's door eight times? Nightmare.

  • @deborahbasel184
    @deborahbasel184 9 месяцев назад +3

    I follow Daniels channel as well as SBSK channel. Both really good

  • @Kaalyn_HOW
    @Kaalyn_HOW 8 месяцев назад +3

    I work with a charity that focuses on helping complex childhood trauma survivors access treatment - and man what we wouldn't give to have someone as clear and differential of symptomology in our arsenal....for awareness and explanation. While I personally think we do a great job, we have so many other tasks as a team that another professional voice goes so far - particularly to diversify internationally as well. If this is you with a hangover, ha, your best is even better! If ya ever wanna lend a charitable hand, feel free to reach out and I'll send ya our way ;)

  • @johndray2326
    @johndray2326 9 месяцев назад +2

    Loved hearing your analysis of the video.

  • @tammyhines1585
    @tammyhines1585 9 месяцев назад +3

    I found this to be very interesting. Thank you for doing these.

  • @JulieLorraine1
    @JulieLorraine1 9 месяцев назад +8

    So insightful. I thoroughly enjoy your speculations Dr Syl.

  • @VT_kannagi
    @VT_kannagi 9 месяцев назад +5

    Thanks for the video, I have recently found your channel and I have been really enjoying watching watching your videos!

  • @justb4769
    @justb4769 8 месяцев назад +2

    There is an old video of Daniel before his disorder and he was a complete different person. I wish he could find happiness again. Its so sad

  • @no2402
    @no2402 9 месяцев назад +4

    "If you weren't seen, you cant develop a self"
    I was diagnosed with everything under the sun until i hit 33 and flashbacks from childhood I forgot suddenly started coming. Along with the constant dialogues in my head starting to introduce themselves. Losing time, doing stuff and saying things i had no recollection of. Turns out I had a dissociative disorder nearly my entire life 😂
    I've been previously diagnosed with bpd cptsd, bipolar, early this year i experienced weed induced psychosis heh. A least ten more, all official diagnoses. The healing started properly in leaps and bounds after 23 years in the system, endless hospitalisations, treatment that only half worked until almost a year ago when a specialist confirmed I had OSDD. I definitely have BPD, although age and awareness has made that very tolerable. Just like with BPD, OSDD means my self of sense was unable to form and instead fractured into lots of personalities to cope with trauma and life and unravelling that to get to who I am is intense but so cathartic. I relate to Daniel a lot ❤

  • @Bookiebaby17
    @Bookiebaby17 9 месяцев назад +2

    I love your channel....I watched this video years ago, and I really like him, and I think Daniel's channel is cool. I love to hear a professional view on what's going on. Hung over, you are funny. You must have been freezing when you started this video, lol. ❤️🤣

  • @asiyaheibhlin7297
    @asiyaheibhlin7297 8 месяцев назад +11

    @Dr Syl
    His explanation about logically knowing he's being irrational makes perfect sense to me:
    I use the terms "logical brain" and "emotional brain"
    Like if I am about to have a panic attack I feel like the world is literally ending and my life is over- that's my emotional brain
    I know I am safe. I know the world isn't ending. And that I am worrying over nothing and there are no triggers at times- that's the logical part
    However my logic and emotional states are so disconnected that I cannot talk myself, or be talked, out of my panic and emotions.
    My only choice is to ride it out and eventually calm down or crash from the event and then pick up and move on.
    Well, now that THAT'S over, let's get on with life, shall we?
    I feel like I am both a big sister and little sister at the same time- or I am my own mother and a child.
    The little sister/child is my emotions- which have been stunted due to many traumatic situations since childhood
    The big sister/ mother is my logic- because I am logically very mature and am decently intelligent (VA mandated testing to get done for my IQ when I was claiming disability).
    It's hard to be intellectually intelligent while also being emotionally immature....

  • @DavidBowman-mq1bm
    @DavidBowman-mq1bm 9 месяцев назад +1

    Will share. Thank you again.

  • @elnaragulieva5842
    @elnaragulieva5842 9 месяцев назад +1

    Dr Syl is so charming that I keep watching those videos even though I don’t relate to the topic😄

  • @kimberlypayetta3476
    @kimberlypayetta3476 8 месяцев назад +1

    Daniel is an extremely talented poet.

  • @jgnmtz
    @jgnmtz 2 месяца назад +1

    I think the reason you found his answer to psychosis hard to follow is your practicing on a hangover . You’re literally experiencing what I experience on a daily under the influence of 1000 mg of depakote to treat bipolar. Cloudy , slow , unable to experience in real time .. not quite sharp . That’s depakote . That’s also your hangover . He explained his psychosis so well . He knows it’s insane but when his senses , his brain if you will, are giving him the actual signals that represent ‘this is reality ! This is what you need to believe !’ Even though he can later recognize ‘it’s insane ‘. That was the best description of psychosis I’ve ever said or heard . Dude ! Don’t come on hung . You dropped the ball . Hope you’re not treating people in this condition. It’s like being mentally ill . Welcome to the team

  • @averyrainarts
    @averyrainarts 7 месяцев назад +1

    Unrelated to schizophrenia, I’m on the spectrum and have ADHD and when i was a kid and got super dysregulated or overwhelmed my parents would push and push and ask and push and it would send me into a complete melt down which led to “temper tantrum” where i would get super agressive and unmanageable. So i can confirm sometimes you need different kinds of interactions or comfort or whatever.

  • @madeleinehargrave3503
    @madeleinehargrave3503 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is the earliest I’ve ever been holy cow

  • @netty9534
    @netty9534 9 месяцев назад

    Fascinating.

  • @NickeyVamp
    @NickeyVamp 8 месяцев назад

    On the last comment you made.. usually when someone is going through a mental situation I tend to say. " I will help you with what I can when I can." It sets up some boundaries but also lets them know I am there for them.

  • @lolly5657
    @lolly5657 9 месяцев назад +2

    I'm going to say it's because I may have a similar mind set and that is why I understood what he meant by delusions... And also maybe why people don't always understand what I'm saying. And I get so frustrated because I feel I make sense... Anyway, this is how I feel when I'm in a bad emotional state, I have, sensory overloads, Alexithymia, emotional dysregulation, and mirror touch Synesthesia .. Which is not the best and results in a lot of confusion and darkness in my head when it gets too much. Even though I know what I'm feeling isn't logical all of the negative inputs feel important and overwhelming. I thought I was bipolar originally as my aunt is, but never felt safe to look for help... finally did last year and turns out I have ADHD and Autism.....
    Oh you bring up Alexithymia, very good 🙂 I wrote this comment when you were talking about his delusions.

  • @dualityofself
    @dualityofself 9 месяцев назад +2

    In reference to your question at the end, I've been diagnosed with schizotypal p.d., avoidant p.d., C-PTSD, and clinical depression. Schizotypal on it's own can be pretty debilitating and disruptive. I guess it depends on what your symptoms are and their severity, but it's still not easy to live with. I can kind of see why you said you'd might pick it if you had to choose, but it's not all fun and whimsical, though again, everyone's experience is different. It's caused me a lot of problems and has gotten me into some bad situations and is one reason why I am unable to work. Some people I know who also have it seem to do ok for the most part, others not so much. And then you throw the other things into the mix, and well, yeah. Fun times...

  • @eastcoastswiftie
    @eastcoastswiftie 9 месяцев назад +3

    I love Daniel!! I first learned about his story from this SBSK video, then went to his channel and watched some of his content. He’s is very smart, introspective, and self-aware when it comes to understanding his mental health. I can see his personality through the way he talks, and he goes even deeper into his thoughts on his channel. He’s such a sweet guy and I can see that he wants to enjoy life, especially because he has in the past, and knows what it feels like to be happy.

  • @salvadoroliveira6632
    @salvadoroliveira6632 9 месяцев назад +2

    Grretings from Brazil!😊

  • @Vardagsvegan1
    @Vardagsvegan1 8 месяцев назад +1

    Do you have any video of people suffering with ocd with pure o and intrusive thought about taboo theme? So many needs to hear about this!

  • @tracywhipple4364
    @tracywhipple4364 7 месяцев назад +1

    Yes, the interviewer's offer of support comes from a place of empathy, however, right after Daniel spoke of attaching in an unhealthy way to someone, it could lead to major problems. For the layperson, please be so careful about how involved you can be for someone struggling with these issues.

  • @sasukeigarai1993
    @sasukeigarai1993 9 месяцев назад +3

    I love videos on schizophrenia as I have it myself and recently it was switched to schizoaffective disorder depressive type

  • @rachelk2457
    @rachelk2457 9 месяцев назад

    Yeah I shared it with one of my old coworkers. 😊 great video, borderline pd I heard is hard to treat. I suspect that my mom has it but she hates labels so will deny it or get angry.😅

  • @helentaylor4207
    @helentaylor4207 9 месяцев назад +1

    Not sure if you've read it, but Pete Walker's book, Complex PTSD from surviving to thriving might be really helpful in understanding this man. It seems as though he's read it. When he's talking about his senses telling you one thing but logically knowing that these things aren't true, it seems that, yes, he's intellectualising his condition, but that in itself is a grounding technique. Our memories consist of more than thought processing. For example, smells elicit an emotional response. This is to do with the amygdala in the brain processing, not only the sense of smell, but also emotion. What happens, however, if you are in an environment where a scent elicits an emotional memory when you were a baby? Perhaps your parents were yelling at each other and you could smell the cut grass in the garden. Now every time you smell cut grass, you have an emotional response, but logically you don't understand why. This can happen with all our senses. This would be pretty much impossible to medicate. So the patient has to start to learn that often our emotional states are beyond our understanding or control. Dissociation often happens in these circumstances. Grounding techniques are very important in CPTSD. CPTSD is also not only about childhood trauma, it can be about repeated, ongoing emotional trauma. Not being able to 'learn to love', as far as I'm aware is not a diagnostic criteria for CPTSD and I found that comment offensive. I think people have an inbuilt capacity to love, but it can become fragmented when this ability is not nurtured. Please don't comment on disorders that you don't know much about. It could be very damaging to people who are suffering from them. Sometimes when you don't understand something, it is in fact you and not the patient.

  • @jgnmtz
    @jgnmtz 2 месяца назад +1

    Daniel would likely benefit from specialized therapy validating and soothing his inner child .. using his talents (poetry , flowers , baths etc..) he could love his inner child into expressing healthy love , first for his child, his teen, his young adult and eventually who is his now. If he can develop empathy for who he is and what he is experiencing, he can perhaps develop that ‘third eye’ is what my former therapist used to say. That ability to see from a wholesome , healthy loving ID?

  • @marinacallejas5904
    @marinacallejas5904 8 месяцев назад +1

    Could you, please, make a video about histrionic personality disorder? It's not easy to find content about it...

  • @thewonderfulworldofkatushya950
    @thewonderfulworldofkatushya950 2 месяца назад

    Things get real fun when you're dealing with these types of people, they accuse you of something, and then when you ask them about what evidence they have to back everything up, they just say, "I don't know, I just know you're doing something."

  • @michaelford3391
    @michaelford3391 9 месяцев назад +3

    hi Doc... could you do a piece on MAIOs? I'd be interested in your views - Tranycypromine is the only AD I have success with these days, and the side effects are negligible (although starting up would probably lead to insomnia) . I also take Lithium in case my Bipolar takes off. It's till an unfashionable drug, and Phenelzine is completely unavailable now.

  • @user-ut3dc2iz1x
    @user-ut3dc2iz1x 27 дней назад

    Hey Dr Syl hope everything is well with you, maybe you don’t reading this.. but thx for your channel and you warm ❤
    I have deep down period, so it’s helping me to see your videos, thanks makes me feel that I feel alone 😊
    but my question is..would you doing a interview like that??
    Take care Syl 🙏💫👋// J 🇸🇪

  • @honeyartstudios
    @honeyartstudios 9 месяцев назад

    What headphones are those? I see them often and they’re quite colorful

  • @sopherl33
    @sopherl33 9 месяцев назад +2

    Easy to follow his thoughts, maybe it was the hungover listeners fault this time and not a symptom of the patient.

  • @too_tired_for_this
    @too_tired_for_this 8 месяцев назад +1

    Is CPTSD a diagnosis in Australia? Here in the US it’s still in limbo.

  • @caitm8209
    @caitm8209 8 месяцев назад

    How do psychs actually differentiate between CPTSD and BPD?

  • @katyalexandria3291
    @katyalexandria3291 8 месяцев назад

    For me, in regards to depression, it’s a hot shower. It feels like a warm, giant hug and snaps me out of feeling sad.

    • @AaronHendu
      @AaronHendu 8 месяцев назад +1

      That isnt depression then...just saying. You can feel sad, or negative, without being depressed. If a simple shower gets you outta depressiom, it wasnt depression. Depression is more than just feelong sad or having a bad day...you do knownthat, right?

    • @katyalexandria3291
      @katyalexandria3291 8 месяцев назад

      @@AaronHendu it doesn’t go away, it lessens it

  • @HeyLetsTalkAboutIt
    @HeyLetsTalkAboutIt 5 месяцев назад

    I have ADHD and PTSD. I tend to wander with thoughts that are connected in my brain. I eventually come back to the first thought. I told my therapist to stop me if he can’t follow where I’m going with my point.

  • @ZestySea
    @ZestySea 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hi, where’s the link to the original video? Shouldn’t it be in the notes?

  • @amyjones8613
    @amyjones8613 9 месяцев назад +1

    I feel weird when i experience joy. I been diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder depression type.

  • @BritPopSnob
    @BritPopSnob 4 месяца назад

    Absence of joy is also one of the side affects of taking antipsychotic medications.

  • @donnaburden.dip.d.analysis2148
    @donnaburden.dip.d.analysis2148 8 месяцев назад

    Hi, can you cover sleep deprivation and what happens to the brain under long-term sleep deprivation? Thanks.

  • @Xxbubbly10
    @Xxbubbly10 8 месяцев назад

    I thought I had bpd but I think now that I have avoidant personality disorder and maybe a touch of magical thinking

  • @xanthus8699
    @xanthus8699 9 дней назад

    I see Schizophrenic with BPD and all I can seem to think is "how are you alive?". That is an Everest to climb in terms of symptoms.

  • @Madison.CRUZ.
    @Madison.CRUZ. 7 месяцев назад

    Or people like you tell us were wrong and tell us what we're feeling isn't what we are feeling. I completely understand him.

  • @nicolasmichetti1485
    @nicolasmichetti1485 Месяц назад

    What do u think about his concussions having an impact on his “lack of ability to feel happiness”, and a lot of the personality experiences hes been experiencing?

  • @RosalindCosta-vj1zq
    @RosalindCosta-vj1zq 8 месяцев назад

    I found this video (the interview, specifically) really difficult to follow. Mental health is indeed a complex subject, and I struggle to understand all of the complexities. My current diagnosis is Schizoaffective disorder (with bipolar disorder components). I have found this diagnosis very difficult to swallow, and have disputed it, at times. I found the bipolar disorder diagnosis more believable and easy to swallow (that was some thirty years ago) - perhaps I have become too seated in that definition of my mental health status? At the time of the bipolar diagnosis, I was also diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder, which I have heard used to be known as Emotionally Unstable Personality Disorder. Is it true that you cannot have both of these diagnoses at the same time?? Is it also true that it is very difficult to differentiate between the two disorders?? In the past, I have ALSO been diagnosed with Complex PTSD. Is it really possible to have a diagnosis of Schizoaffective, Bipolar, Borderline and CPTSD, all at the same time?? I would be fascinated to know, and at this point in time, I wouldn't be at all surprised. During my very short (15-20 minute) appointments with psychiatrists, it is very challenging to receive answers to such questions, and usually the dialogue is dominated by a conversation about reducing the dreaded medications, which produce significant weight gain, anhedonia and such. How I wish I didn't have these diagnoses to live with!

  • @mysmirandam.6618
    @mysmirandam.6618 8 месяцев назад

    I have bipolar 2 CPTSD and MS masking is getting more and more difficult as I age I'm 45 because I'm so tired I'm sooooo tired. Trying to get on disability 😢

  • @howiedavis2316
    @howiedavis2316 9 месяцев назад +2

    If I had a diagnosed mental disorder, it would unfortunately be a Superiority complex. Fortunately, I'm aware of it, and try to ground and humble myself.

    • @aspidoscelistigris
      @aspidoscelistigris 9 месяцев назад +2

      Man, I'm awesome at grounding and being humble. Better than anyone, actually!

    • @kellz6266
      @kellz6266 9 месяцев назад +2

      narcissism?

    • @howiedavis2316
      @howiedavis2316 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@kellz6266 Close. Those with a superiority complex tend to be less concerned about what others think about them and may be haughty and dismissive. People with narcissistic traits often need a steady stream of admiration and attention and may behave in manipulative and harmful ways to get it.

    • @aspidoscelistigris
      @aspidoscelistigris 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@kellz6266 I assume you're talking about yourself. 🙂

  • @stacylee8429
    @stacylee8429 Месяц назад

    I had extremely similar symptoms and it turns out I had Neuroboreliosis (Neurological Lyme). Basically, brain swelling can cause this! And he admits he’s had multiple concussions. The medical industry has a problem with not looking for the causes of psychiatric symptoms like this, and I really feel for people who have to live this way and may not need to with the right doctor. Find a naturopathic or holistic and get checked for brain swelling!!

  • @bretwaldablahblahblah3578
    @bretwaldablahblahblah3578 Месяц назад

    Was the guitar a Gibson SG?

  • @Maverick_Mad_Moiselle
    @Maverick_Mad_Moiselle 8 месяцев назад

    Was pre-diagnosed with schizotypal and while I have many of the SPD symptoms, I don't have the uncommon beliefs associated with it. So yeah, I don't believe in magic or otherwordly entities etc and I would genuinely hate to lose my ability to think rationally. I already hate giving in into the magic thinking of OCD.
    It does happen that I sometimes worry that people can read my mind event if an ocean separates us. But I also don't actually believe it, I just notice a coincidence in the topic and I have a mild feeling of worry that they know what I've done or thought somehow. It's not something that I'm absolutely convinced of, I know as I worry that it is irrational.
    I struggle a lot with illusions and sensory issues/overload. Sometimes get hallucinations, very rare.
    I have that unhealthy kind of love Daniel has, I hate being like that. It's absolutely miserable. It's my only reason to live, the only thing keeping me alive but also driving me insane.
    Btw aren't SPD supposed to be creative? I'm absolutely terrible at that lol. During my ADOS interview, the psychologist told me to describe the book and I proceeded to describe the pictures individually, listing the things I see on them, not realising I was supposed to tell the story 😂 I would have sucked at that too if I knew I was supposed to tell the story.

  • @whispersinthedark88
    @whispersinthedark88 3 месяца назад

    The medications can make you depressed, with intrusive thoughts, feeling suicidal, dead inside, angry ×, and all the physical stuff...they are often worse than the starting condition in my experience.
    I have bad back issues and CPTSD, a dr put me on a medication that was supposed to be for my nerve damage in my back. After being on it for awhile as he raised the dose I was having a bunch of new issues so I told him, but he ignored me, he told me it wasn't dependancy forming but then messed it up and I didn't get my refill...guess what was actually physically addictive, yep he had lied and I was in withdrawal. He also never mentioned that it was basically the same medication that I had a bad reaction to years before.
    Abusive relationship = Prozac, so fucked I couldn't even cry and my friends funeral, totally dead inside.
    Its ridiculous, they just throw pills at everything and hope something sticks. I'm in worse condition than when I started with the medical system.

  • @ayyyy_lmao
    @ayyyy_lmao 8 месяцев назад

    you can have both, I am diagnosed with BPD and 'refractory' schizophrenia and they give me clozapine.

  • @private755
    @private755 8 месяцев назад

    May not surprise you but to answer your question at the end narcissistic people tend to think it’s a huge advantage over everyone else so when/if they discover they have it they aren’t really surprised and they don’t consider it to be something bad, because the disorder itself means everything they perceive about themselves is better than everyone else anyway. Unfortunately for everyone else.

  • @katieeasley3945
    @katieeasley3945 9 месяцев назад +3

    Having insight has to be a better thing than not? Stepping stones to work from? Very interesting video - the "I'll be your best buddy" part at the end was very cringey though!

    • @monicaclasener
      @monicaclasener 9 месяцев назад

      Yes, it is a sort of reward for Daniel sharing his thoughts, but it seemed to make him uncomfortable.

  • @CYRINTHIA212
    @CYRINTHIA212 8 месяцев назад +1

    i was diagnosed with Bipolar 1, depression

  • @sophcw
    @sophcw 9 месяцев назад +1

    I'm interested in the distinction between illusion and hallucination. Say if you are on LSD, most of the hallucinations you see are in fact based on real world stimuli, such as the floor moving or patterns on an object moving or changing. Does that mean these are not actually hallucinations but illusions?

    • @thesaxophoneboy
      @thesaxophoneboy 8 месяцев назад

      A lot of it depends on whether you have insight into your changed perception; are you aware that the floor isn't actually moving, or is it real to you and you have no insight into it?

  • @shaynaharris3861
    @shaynaharris3861 8 месяцев назад

    I was able to follow him but I feel like we r kind of on the same wave length 😅

  • @clairek-s8918
    @clairek-s8918 9 месяцев назад +2

    I have been diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder and at one time in the past, BPD. There is such a horrible stigma around BPD that this video made me very nervous. What if i am just BPD without the schizoaffective piece? I would be so ashamed.

    • @gigahorse1475
      @gigahorse1475 9 месяцев назад +2

      Either way you shouldn’t feel ashamed. Both are serious. Having BPD doesn’t make you a bad person.

    • @ellamaria9547
      @ellamaria9547 9 месяцев назад +1

      Bpd is real and debilitating ! I hope you’re okay!!

    • @AaronHendu
      @AaronHendu 8 месяцев назад

      I would question your bpd disgnoses...many docotrs use that as a way to tag you as "untreatable nuisance" and wipe their hands of you. I was diagnosed as BPD...turns out i dont even have it and am just autistic, with ocd, adhd, and severe depression / anxiety. Not accepting the bpd diagnoses was the key to being able to properly address my mental health and, without doctors, and stopping all meds...i have been 5 years free of most of the issues i used to struggle with. I self isolated (life full of absusers) and that action was the biggest factor in my ability to "recover". Doctors only wanted to lock me away even though inamma danger to no one but myself. Funny thing about my BPD diahnoses...i dont even like to be aroujd people or be close with them...a prettt key componet to bpd. Docs dont care if all they want is to label you and wash their hands of you...

  • @brooke3343
    @brooke3343 8 месяцев назад

    Most of my psychotic episodes were triggered by smoking weed. Unfortunately I worked as a budtender and let it be an everyday routine for me.

  • @sierraforever2954
    @sierraforever2954 5 месяцев назад

    I wish that people in general would not be so judgemental. You don't get to pick what you believe. It's programmed into you. Not all realities are the same.

  • @Alchemicalprincess
    @Alchemicalprincess 4 месяца назад

    I'm a diagnosed psychopath with shitzoaffectuve disorder. I want to eat people and make things with dead bodies so I called the police and signed myself in to hospital the Dr said I had aspd and shitzoaffectuve disorder, then said I'm a psychopath and dangerous but I'm on meds and getting therapy as it's such a huge thing to bury and ignore when your being fed this constant craving for eating people

  • @sharonthompson672
    @sharonthompson672 9 месяцев назад +2

    I read years ago if a schizophrenic prefaced the sentence with "I dreamed last night that......" the hallucinations they're describing would make perfect sense.
    So is his dreamworld encroaching into his waking world? 🤔

    • @gigahorse1475
      @gigahorse1475 9 месяцев назад

      That is a theory on why schizophrenia happens… the brain confused between the dream state and waking state.

    • @AaronHendu
      @AaronHendu 8 месяцев назад

      That is almoat exactly what psychosis feels like to me...including the way large gaps of time can pass in a dream...like years...or even the opposite where it seems nothing had happened but weeks had passed IRL. In retrospect, it becomes difficult to decipher what was real and what wasnt. I have been mostly 5 years free now of it...and i think self isolating from the mass of absuers in my life was what got me out of it after experiwncing it for about 20 years...since as long as i can remember.

  • @johnromano3427
    @johnromano3427 9 месяцев назад +1

    Really THAT cold in AUS? We're in South America and our winter down here is warm as heck

    • @DodderingOldMan
      @DodderingOldMan 9 месяцев назад +2

      Ha, well, depends on what part of Australia you're in... some parts of the country have had nearly record low temperatures lately. Got down to -10 degrees C not too far from where I live the other day. Where in South America are you from?

    • @johnromano3427
      @johnromano3427 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@DodderingOldMan Sht -10?? wow. I'm in Lima, Peru...El Niño is making it feel like spring, not even fall; let alone winter

    • @DodderingOldMan
      @DodderingOldMan 9 месяцев назад

      @@johnromano3427 Ah, Lima, interesting. I had a look at Lima's climate on Wikipedia, I have to admit I had no idea you had such small variation in temperature. It's easy to forget Lima is basically in a desert, but also right on the ocean.
      Well, easy for someone who's never been outside of Australia to forget, I bet you tend to remember :P

    • @johnromano3427
      @johnromano3427 9 месяцев назад

      @@bob60087 omg 8C, now that's cold, or at least it would be where I am due to the extreme humidity that makes the cold seep into your bones, and yeah that's rough, I know all about keeping that light bill in check

    • @johnromano3427
      @johnromano3427 9 месяцев назад

      @@DodderingOldMan lol yeah it's a wet dessert, the humidity is nuts and the microclimates from one part of the city to another keeps you on your toes. But we're def not supposed to have a winter in the 20s-C