Catatonic Schizophrenia - Doctor REACTS (and translates!)

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июн 2024
  • An interview with a person who is suffering from Catatonic Schizophrenia - you can found the original link here: • Video
    Catatonic schizophrenia, rare severe mental disorder characterized by striking motor behaviour, typically involving either significant reductions in voluntary movement or hyperactivity and agitation. In some cases, the patient may remain in a state of almost complete immobility, often assuming statuesque positions.
    00:00 - Introduction
    01:00 - Video Title Page
    02:05 - Video Begins
    10.50 - Closing Comments
    ~
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    About me:
    Hi there, I'm Syl. I'm a Junior Medical Doctor from Sydney, Australia. I'm new to the RUclipsr space, so any feedback would be very welcomed!
    Disclaimer: These videos are my opinion only and should be treated as such. They are not medical advice. I try my best to avoid any errors but if you feel something I said was incorrect please let me know. Please remember you cannot diagnose any condition based on RUclips videos and should see a healthcare professional if you are at all concerned. Finally, if anything in the video made you feel distressed consider seeing your healthcare professional or, in an emergency (if you're in Australia), call 000 or Lifeline 131114

Комментарии • 666

  • @616thedevil
    @616thedevil 3 года назад +827

    She was actually doing a really good job communicating her experiences in a way that can be understood. Number one thing that strikes me when I hear about people’s experiences with schizophrenia is how exhausting it sounds.

    • @Psych369
      @Psych369 3 года назад +29

      I have Schizo and the only thing that Will help us Who have this is freedom. The clothes we wear, being inside. Words especially Words fk with our heads,. Traumatic expériences but like its all linked to everything. Sounds. Its like being hyponotized 24/7 in autopilot unless im outside doing meditation & when i Do méditation,its like I see the world for what IT is no Words just surroundedby trees, natural things & suddenly im mentally free. They call this mental illness but IT was created and its still going but its everything around. The material. And its getting worse everyday. I just need the courage to drop IT all and live naturally. The first time I had this intense meditation where suddenly i was out of m'y body and i could feel everything around me and m'y intuition just told me likethe physical world is and illusion.i couldnt deny what i was seeing. IT was too strong. M'y thoughts were haunting me at first until i went outside and the trees were suddenly Alive and its like I could communicate telepathicaly and i could feel the energy Everywhere going Up and down my spine. That experienced changed the way i see everything and im mostly certain that humains can naturaly communicate telepathicaly and that words were invented with the purpose of taking that away from us and adapting . Its not a human évolution. Its a d'évolution. Not only that when the out of body expériences happened. I remembered everything about being born. And IT all just clicked. Knowledge is a rumor until its Lived in the body

    • @learningtoyoutube9033
      @learningtoyoutube9033 3 года назад +17

      @@Psych369 very remarkable thoughts Psych. Me and my brother used to talk about advanced mental availabilities and communication methods. Some people develop differently or sit at different stages in the human evolution. Keep an open mind and don’t mind the people that are not as advanced as you. Sometimes the simple things are what makes us the happiest. Also remember, we love you. Always. ❤️

    • @petecabrina
      @petecabrina 2 года назад +16

      @@Psych369 yeah interesting insights, I have struggled with similar over sensitivty for a long time. It is likely that many with such 'mental illness' are just sensitives and are struggling with the parts of the brain, intuition and awareness which is switched off in most other people, and yes words/labels/constructs totally distract from a more pure experience of life. I would consider taking up something like the Wim Hof method too, get in nature and develop more of a grounded foundation, even resistance training, martial arts, focus on developing the body more and get out of the mind. Breath work can be amazing though, it can help iron out a lot of the physical stress and even potentially resolve the over activity that is going on inside.

    • @otiliocardoso9933
      @otiliocardoso9933 2 года назад

      You speak french?

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад +4

      @@learningtoyoutube9033 I stand differently when I'm away from the piano...

  • @Bluelilly40
    @Bluelilly40 3 года назад +384

    My daughter is a CNA who works for a home medical company. One of her clients had catatonic depression. This was the first time my daughter had ever had a mentally ill client, and it was by far her most difficult. She initially met her client while she was having a great response to her medication, but as time wore on she saw her wilt and disappear into herself just a little more every day, until she showed up one day to find her client in bed, staring off into the distance, with absolutely no response. It tore my daughter up to see this once- vibrant woman no longer responsive. She sat by her bed and talked to her, read to her, but never broke through. Her client was eventually institutionalized, and she never saw her again. My daughter grieved for her client. It was a tough initiation into psychiatric care. It takes a very special person to work in mental health.

    • @katherinepeace3564
      @katherinepeace3564 Год назад +21

      That's so awful 😢 seems they should have stop the medication? Maybe something else or something... 🫂😔🕊

    • @RicardoMartinez-oh9sq
      @RicardoMartinez-oh9sq 4 месяца назад +5

      I suffer from AD/HD, so this condition must be the polar opposite of catatonic, at least physically speaking.

    • @perfect.weather5933
      @perfect.weather5933 3 часа назад

      I wonder if it is the same case for Lucy Fletcher on the couch since her parents said something about her not wanting to move and leave the couch? Her parents were still so wrong to neglect her. I feel so sad about the world and how some poor souls can't deal with the harsh world. I'm an adult and the world still scares me tbh. May God help us.

  • @Erika-qk6bd
    @Erika-qk6bd 3 года назад +616

    I believe the doctor makes her walk at the beginning to show how little movement she has it’s almost robotic

    • @shadestomp7824
      @shadestomp7824 3 года назад +51

      And because catatonic schizophrenia causes odd movements in people. This is the doctor pointing out one of the symptoms.

    • @petecabrina
      @petecabrina 2 года назад +28

      Interesting it can almost be a bit like paralysis, almost like being trapped in a certain state of fight and flight/hypersensitivity. What I found really interesting just yesterday was watching the before and after of Cecilia on the Special Books for Kids channel, in the original interview she is quite tense/highly strung then in the after she looks completely different because she is far more relaxed and naturally expressive. I think this goes to show how mental illness sometimes can be just a mind/neurological/body phenomena and maybe it is retrainable by retraining the body, even just getting people relaxed properly and unstuck.

    • @susanengel-ix8bl
      @susanengel-ix8bl 2 месяца назад +2

      Yeah, really robotic, very sad.😢

  • @bumbabees
    @bumbabees 11 месяцев назад +168

    as someone with anxiety, i can understand a lot of what shes describing. feeling like everyones watching me and judging me makes it very difficult to go anywhere public, but a lot of people dont understand. its exhausting to feel constantly threatened.

    • @gothic7821
      @gothic7821 10 месяцев назад +2

      The ones who might be watching and judging you are the ones who were mostly likely to have been neglected as infants. It's sad.

    • @gothic7821
      @gothic7821 10 месяцев назад +7

      The good news is, you do not need to impress anyone, except yourself. Eventually just doing what brings you purpose and joy will naturally attract like minded people and valuable relationships.

    • @FlyingMonkies325
      @FlyingMonkies325 10 месяцев назад +3

      Yeh anxiety causes intense imposter syndrome that's what it is, because first it starts off dysregulating for some reason, then quickly either go flat emotionally or your brains filter goes down and things and people that didn't bother you before and things they do suddenly somehow bothers you cos you can't filter it out and waft it away easily like you usually can.
      Then comes quickly comes the intense imposter syndrome and the traumas start to surface and race around your mind, and you feel like an alien amongst everyone, you're scared of everyone cos you don't know who to trust, and you feel so much paranoia about people and it's transfering onto everyone, that we just can't be around people for a few days because everyone is just bothering us.
      In general with anxiety we feel these things but at a lower frequency which really sucks but during episodes, which for me happen everyone 2 - 4 months, it's SO intense that i have to just have a few days of less activity until it then disappears like nothing happened lol i'm so incredibly overwhelmed by it and i definitely go more depressed than i usually feel too.
      It certainly sucks always feeling threatened by people, although it's also totally valid cos of how much bullying and abusive behaviors we experience cos people sense something isn't quite right with us, or people just target us because they sense it just to be bullies, i attract these people like magnets and i've gone through a lot of abusive behaviors over the years, and i don't know when it started but i've always been this way as far back as i can remember and i think my hormone issues made it worse.
      I totally feel ya and tackling the paranoid feelings is definitely an inconvenience cos we have no choice but to just relax and spend some time alone until we normalize again to... whatever "normal" levels of anxiety we generally feel, to where we aren't dysregulated. The biggest culprit for me is certainly my hormone issues.

    • @smittysmeee
      @smittysmeee 10 месяцев назад +5

      It would be exhausting to believe you are constantly the center of everyone's attention. In reality, you are not. Accepting that fact is liberating. I hope you are able to get help.

    • @FlyingMonkies325
      @FlyingMonkies325 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@smittysmeee That's not what it is at all... believe me it isn't, it's connected to a number of things and can even be genetic whether the mental health condition or some kind of hormonal condition or both like is prevalent with me and so many others too.
      There's no preventing it from happening either because we don't have the medical means to fix these issues, as much as doctors try to say "do this... do that... it'll make you better" they even have women obsessed with diets and losing weight when it does nothing about how you feel and how it effects your mental health because ultimately simply "managing" symptoms doesn't cure it.
      All the traumas, neglect, abusive behaviors, being shut down and invalidated over the years is a big part of it too and going through it for years on a long term basis, your messed up before you can even understand any of it.
      So you experienced this from people your whole life so far so your nervous system is trained to feel scared and threatened by people as a result cos... people, and as much as people would like to think mental health conditions aren't effected by how people treat you and it just somehow... happens for no reason at all... it's simply not the case and so it's not invalid or "crazy" at all... it's just your mind and your body has learned to protective behaviors and mind sets from all these traumas you're going through when you're younger, and happens far more easily when you genetically have a condition.
      Trying to change that is no easy feat cos it wasn't for no reason and starts to really effect you in your adult life when you need to be fully functional and start learning to survive on your own. Fact is we humans don't respond very well to higher levels stress and pressure it's not what we're built for, but ultimately we've made to live in a very messed up world full of high stress and pressure, clearly not designed for us and anyone can also become mentally ill as we just saw with all the unnecessary lock downs and how fast that can happen, isolation for long periods isn't good for us either.
      It's a lot more complicated than a lot of people still want to believe unfortunately, and you'll still be effected by it for the rest of your life and have to live with it maybe on a lower level, but it's still always going to be there, that's the struggle of mental health and other conditions. So it's not because someone thinks they're "center of attention" it's a real fear of people cos face it... humans are scary and capable of anything.
      One thing people get taught in prisons is to not do anything to draw attention to yourself and move away when there's trouble so they don't get caught up in it, and i noticed people in general are taught to do this in schools which is why people scatter when there's trouble, but what then when you didn't do anything to draw attention to yourself? then you may be seen as the problem not the victim sooo everyone should move away from you now, even when you've been trapped in the situation and it's how you're so easily alienated. When that happens in a way you were put in that lime light and made to feel exposed and violated, having that happen on a long term basis it changes you. Humans don't like that much attention all the time directed at them negative or positive.

  • @gluteusaurusmaximus6409
    @gluteusaurusmaximus6409 3 года назад +503

    For us who don't speak French the "interuptions" is quite helpful in getting some understanding of what this young lady was going thru.

    • @terrace1
      @terrace1 3 года назад +24

      There is another channel with her interview and it has subtitles and no interuptions The channel is "Pika Grape Snack" ☮️🌈💖

    • @kova1577
      @kova1577 Год назад +2

      Wonder where she is now. If she’s still alive after so many decades

    • @alexgagnon379
      @alexgagnon379 Год назад +4

      To anyone wondering if they can trust his translation, yes you can. It's pretty accurate.

    • @creatorschild8247
      @creatorschild8247 Год назад +13

      @@kova1577
      This lady is a dear friend of mine…. We are going to lunch tomorrow…… she is now 77 & doing well.
      She went on to be a school teacher in Ontario as she is originally from Quebec & travelled the world with her mom.

    • @rogerfedererrogerfederer9007
      @rogerfedererrogerfederer9007 Год назад +1

      @@creatorschild8247 how nice for her

  • @kylieroberts1128
    @kylieroberts1128 3 года назад +270

    How she’s dressed isn’t really for clubbing or anything...pretty standard everyday women’s fashion for the time. She probably dressed like that for work, plus people did used to dress up for a doctor visit then.

    • @rsmith6366
      @rsmith6366 3 года назад +12

      I dress up for a Dr's visit now. Pulling out the nice blouse for Dr Malony.

    • @youtubingbabs
      @youtubingbabs 3 года назад +13

      Mini skirts were just in and they represented being "with it" and "hip" right?

    • @lizgaby9761
      @lizgaby9761 3 года назад +14

      They still do in Europe. Unfortunately the US has lost their ways. Imagine when we saw people in pjs going to the store😅 not common over there and unseen.

    • @billyamer9314
      @billyamer9314 2 года назад +1

      @@lizgaby9761 no one dresses up for the doctor here

    • @lizgaby9761
      @lizgaby9761 2 года назад +14

      @@billyamer9314 it's not about dressing for the doctor but to look good. You don't have the concept and it's fine but once you've seen it and experienced it, there's no going back. I can't and will never wear pjs anywhere. I do think its an american culture though and I think it's cool if you like it, but I prefer to dress good.

  • @charlesperez9976
    @charlesperez9976 3 года назад +347

    I am not a medical professional, but one of the things that I noticed is an almost absent blinking of the eyes.
    Only occasionally does she fully blink.

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад +54

      Great pick!

    • @koyaanisqatsi6844
      @koyaanisqatsi6844 3 года назад +21

      Yep, the RUclipsr here pointed that out right in the beginning and since then, I've paid attention to it. I watched her blink exactly once...

    • @kirbyjustine1
      @kirbyjustine1 3 года назад +10

      Yes that would be catatonic. But also keep note that they do not specify medication and or treatment done prior to this interview.

    • @0MoTheG
      @0MoTheG Год назад

      It is particularly interesting because it is such an automatic thing. One might think that the brain has little to do with it.

    • @markmarkyyy5632
      @markmarkyyy5632 Год назад

      He mentioned that.

  • @Improbable_Fiction
    @Improbable_Fiction 3 года назад +171

    I was in my 20s during the 60s (I'm 77 now). First, her dress style was prevalent for young women, inspired by Twiggy, who introduced the MOD fashion of the 60s. Second, patient consent in the 60s was not a practice. By walking into the office of a medical professional, you essentially were "consenting."

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад

      Who are you? I think that I went to Uni with you?!

    • @Improbable_Fiction
      @Improbable_Fiction Год назад +8

      @@barneyronnie That would not be possible as I did not attend university.

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад

      @@Improbable_Fiction Oh, I see. You reminded me of an old acquaintance from Luxembourg.

    • @Improbable_Fiction
      @Improbable_Fiction Год назад +1

      @@barneyronnie I was born, and raised and have lived in Toulouse, France, my whole life.

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад +7

      @@Improbable_Fiction Sounds like a great life! I used to vacation in Southern France -'a beautiful country.

  • @oracleonwheels
    @oracleonwheels 3 года назад +85

    Wow, it seems like she is holding her breath the entire time. My heart goes with her.

  • @Ullish1989
    @Ullish1989 3 года назад +168

    When I was diagnosed Catatonic last year I was completely mute save for occasional echolalia. It's really bizarre seeing a similar condition look so different

    • @alisonnorcross951
      @alisonnorcross951 3 года назад +3

      Our son had it. But he had not been drinking or eating and had a low body weight so who knows

    • @kiki29073
      @kiki29073 3 года назад +18

      I've seen my mom in Catatonic states when I was younger. It was very scary for me as a child not understanding what was happening. Then she would have to go to the hospital and be fine for months until she was recovered. Each time it took shook therapy to bring her out of it. She would be okay for a few years then it would happen again. She passed ten years ago from natural causes. But, I guess as she got older meds changed it after I was in my mid 20s it didn't happen anymore. I can only attribute it to meds.

    • @alisonnorcross951
      @alisonnorcross951 3 года назад +3

      @@kiki29073 did your mum stop having it then? My son had not been eating and went into that state but he had a drip feeding him with vitamins and fluids . He was much better in the morning but then they decided to retain him he still laughs to himself

    • @alisonnorcross951
      @alisonnorcross951 3 года назад +3

      What is echollia

    • @blueombre6323
      @blueombre6323 2 года назад +7

      @@alisonnorcross951 repeating the words and sentences. As if you asked him a question he won’t actually answer you, you would repeat it over and over

  • @JoyfulNerd400
    @JoyfulNerd400 3 года назад +69

    👋 schizophrenic here. It’s.. interesting to see somebody else who has it. Especially so long ago. Luckily I’ve also been seeking help for a while and I’m now on medication and relatively stable

    • @rakgadim.mohlala1324
      @rakgadim.mohlala1324 3 года назад

      Whatkind of meds if you dont mind me asking.

    • @JoyfulNerd400
      @JoyfulNerd400 3 года назад +5

      @@rakgadim.mohlala1324 it’s something I’d rather not mention on... well, RUclips

    • @adambrocklehurst4211
      @adambrocklehurst4211 9 месяцев назад +4

      Good on you! Best way of maintaining your well-being is sticking to your medication.

    • @RicardoMartinez-oh9sq
      @RicardoMartinez-oh9sq 4 месяца назад +3

      Back in college I attended a conference by a clinical psychologist who was herself a paranoid schizophrenic: She would just disregard the "voices" her mind hallucinated hearing.

    • @GedenWilbur
      @GedenWilbur 4 месяца назад +3

      @@RicardoMartinez-oh9sq Well she is very lucky then, for many the voices would only get angrier and more insistent until it becomes just shouting... If ignored

  • @WoodlandT
    @WoodlandT 11 месяцев назад +32

    One of my best friends is a therapist and has worked in the field of mental health for years, including high acuity in-patient settings. She’s seen a lot, including witnessing a coworker being stabbed by a patient. She says the scariest thing she’s ever seen is catatonia. There was a resident who’s treatment gradually stopped working and his catatonia returned. She hadn’t seen him untreated, only knew him as a friendly, lively person. But slowly over days everything slowed down until he was essentially like a manikin. He completely stopped responding to stimuli and would remain in whatever position they placed him in. They only moved him for his care & safety. I don’t mean they posed him for their amusement by any means. But that was the most frightening thing she ever saw. To watch an lovely, outgoing man slowly disappear until he was completely locked in his body & totally aware of what was happening but unable to do anything about it. It really does sound terrifying

  • @verbenabezbaruah3815
    @verbenabezbaruah3815 3 года назад +159

    please do more of these pointing out the symptoms. It's really helpful (as a med student).
    love from India :)

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад +21

      Thanks so much Verbena, that's great to hear it's helpful. I'm aiming to do one reaction a week. Last week was Mania in bipolar and i've just finished filming a reaction to OCD. Graet to hear it's helpful, please share with your colleagues if you think it could help them!
      Any conditions in particular you'd like to see reactions to Verbena?
      Love from Sydney!

    • @verbenabezbaruah3815
      @verbenabezbaruah3815 3 года назад +10

      @@DrSylgreat work. Keep it up. I've already shared to a few of my friends... 👍🏼
      Keep it coming! Would love to see depression, anxiety and related disorders...maybe neurocognitive disorders too?
      I've just started studying psychiatry and we're having vacations so it's really helpful to see cases and explanation like this. Thank you Dr.!

    • @RicardoMartinez-oh9sq
      @RicardoMartinez-oh9sq 4 месяца назад

      He is a very compassionate medical doctors, many psychiatrists here in the U.S., particularly those working in government hospitals, regard psychiatric patients as little less than weirdos.

  • @slackjaw703
    @slackjaw703 3 года назад +142

    Lol, as for her dress style, one of my earliest school memories (for obvious reasons) was of a particularly beautiful young teacher who wore outfits just like this to school every day. She was the youngest teacher at that elementary school but this was a very common type of dress among the twenty-somethings of the late sixties/early seventies. Even at a very early age I was enamored with her.

    • @slackjaw703
      @slackjaw703 3 года назад +32

      @Dach
      Unless that girl travelled backward in a time machine her dress style is most definitely from the 60s to the early 70s. Look at her shoes. That style didn’t exist in the 50s. The videos shown on his channel range from the forties to decades later. Why would you think this was in the fifties? The very first mini-skirt was invented in 1963, and didn’t spread to the masses for a couple years.

    • @creatorschild8247
      @creatorschild8247 Год назад +11

      This lady who is now 77 is my dear friend. She ended up being a school teacher & travelled the world.
      She’s doing very well 🙏🏼

    • @creatorschild8247
      @creatorschild8247 Год назад +10

      @DannyDeVito this is my dear friend… she’s 77 now….. this video was in 1964

    • @brianarbenz7206
      @brianarbenz7206 Год назад +1

      I have seen this video on 3 channels over the last few years. I have wondered who this woman was and if she is still around, and how she’s doing. Give her my best. I have long seen her a person with great potential to become better off and more contented, and I have felt great empathy for her. She has such charm, and sincerity.

    • @elroyfudbucker6806
      @elroyfudbucker6806 Год назад +3

      I remember my English teacher from my first year of high school, 1971. Angela Glover was her name. She was quite short with long, black hair, was very strikingly beautiful with a very shapely figure & used to wear very short mini dresses. I often wondered how I & all the other boys managed to concentrate enough to learn anything in her classes. However, she managed to keep order very well in class & made sure we all learned correct English. I owe my ability to structure sentences, to punctuate & to spell correctly to her.

  • @nathanhaimson
    @nathanhaimson 3 года назад +206

    It's interesting to see how different types of mental illness can have similar symptoms?? (Obvs I'm not a doctor) but I have Social Anxiety Disorder and before I was able to get a hold of it with medicine and therapy, I kind of did similar things? I was always convinced everyone was looking at me and judging me and I was so scared of being perceived negatively I would hyperfocus on every part of my body and make sure I was sitting/standing/walking "correctly" and it felt super forced. I would even refuse to speak in class even if I was called on I was just so panicked. Luckily I'm SO much better now and can do so many things I couldn't before (I even had to leave school for a while), but looking back on it now with more insight I can see how strange I must have come off. Thank god for mental health professionals, I'd be dead without them.

    • @AnxietyRat
      @AnxietyRat 3 года назад +16

      Yeah I mean ppl with schizophrenia can also have very high anxiety levels and paranoia. I have social anxiety, generalised and agoraphobia. You can have levels of paranoia and fear of judgment with "normal" anxiety disorders. For schizophrenia is very very high levels though coupled with delusions and hallucinations. Can be very scary for those dealing with it.

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. 2 года назад +7

      I have social and general anxiety, a bit of agoraphobia, and I too have felt as you have described. Now I'm on medication but I don't think I'm on a high enough dose yet. It's good to know I'm not alone. Take care

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад

      Xanax and Dilaudid will cure anything😊

    • @wyldroselee6446
      @wyldroselee6446 Год назад +4

      My son was diagnosed with social anxiety disorder around 10 years ago and it became worse. He was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia 6 months ago and finally we might get somewhere.

    • @Yomama1029
      @Yomama1029 Год назад +1

      Me too! But have not got help yet but it sounds like if I recognize and talk about it it helps. Very similar feelings! Yes thanks😊

  • @michellegray7892
    @michellegray7892 3 года назад +53

    Girl: I feel like 2 different people at work and at home.
    Every single person who works customer service: You and me both, sister.

    • @rameenahmed226
      @rameenahmed226 5 месяцев назад +7

      Not the right place for this comment

  • @marielindley3
    @marielindley3 3 года назад +62

    It’s so nice to come across a reaction video (as much as I enjoy the music reactions) where I actually learn something about a really important subject -and to listen to someone who can talk eloquently. Thank you!

  • @mollsypops2002
    @mollsypops2002 2 года назад +44

    It’s people and cases like this that helped me decide on pursuing a career in psychology (and hopefully specialising in children and adolescents, maybe even trauma response)

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад

      Please ... help me! I keep getting sicker and sicker.

  • @charliespurrier1130
    @charliespurrier1130 3 года назад +5

    Thank you from the UK! Was really fascinating to have the discussion broken down and explained

  • @creatorschild8247
    @creatorschild8247 Год назад +52

    This is my dear friend who is now 77.
    This was in Quebec not France. This video was in 1964
    She went on to be a school teacher & travelled the world.
    She currently lives on her own & is doing well.

    • @sojourn1544
      @sojourn1544 Год назад +9

      Thanks for the info..I was just wondering what became of her..I'm glad she is ok...

    • @garytennant210
      @garytennant210 Год назад +6

      I am so happy to hear this young lady went on in life. I would love to know how she did in life. One has to feel sorry for her when watching the video.

    • @creatorschild8247
      @creatorschild8247 Год назад +18

      @@garytennant210 please don’t feel sorry for her……. She went on to college, became a teacher & travelled the world with her mom.
      She is currently 77 and doing very well.
      I’m actually taking her to lunch in an hour. 🙏🏼

    • @kandgray
      @kandgray Год назад +11

      Idk if I believe you js some random person on the internet-

    • @creatorschild8247
      @creatorschild8247 Год назад +8

      @@kandgray
      I don’t care what you believe.
      I’ve been showing her some of the wonderful & positive comments…… she will have a great laugh at yours.

  • @lynn5530
    @lynn5530 2 года назад +50

    This is such a sad illness. It would be really interesting to see what happened in her future. Was she like this the rest of her life? Was she eventually able to continue working? Back then, were there any successful medications to help with this condition? I find these old videos fascinating, but they always make me want to know what the rest of their life was like.

    • @rosiebabette6682
      @rosiebabette6682 9 месяцев назад +1

      Someone posted on another RUclips channel that she killed herself. Apparently believing people were after her, she ended up jumping off a bridge to her death. Who knows for sure as it occurred so long ago though.

    • @RicardoMartinez-oh9sq
      @RicardoMartinez-oh9sq 4 месяца назад +1

      The Swiss psychiatrist Carl G. Jung saw a spiritual, not particularly or necessarily benevolent, side to many schizophrenia cases.

  • @marksmith7999
    @marksmith7999 3 года назад +5

    Thank you, Syl, I appreciated your commentary and was glad to learn about thought blocking and pupillary dilation in catatonia.

  • @Dexy83
    @Dexy83 11 месяцев назад +8

    I discovered Pika's channel years ago! She was attending medical school while posting. Ultimately, she had to stop posting because it got to be too much. She took great care and pride which showed in her channel. Glad others are seeing her work!

  • @terri2e
    @terri2e 3 года назад +7

    I had watched this video before but didn't know what to look for... commentary was very helpful!

  • @gladysbcounselingandeducen3072
    @gladysbcounselingandeducen3072 3 года назад +6

    I am a counselor in the US and these videos are very helpful. They will help me recognize things in my clients. I have always struggled with flat versus blunt affect.

  • @AySevinExEffOweBee
    @AySevinExEffOweBee 3 года назад +3

    Would be interested in seeing you explain more videos from that channel! I also recently stumbled upon it and found myself entranced for hours. Your commentary was interesting and easy to follow, please do more!

  • @freedompaisvalencia
    @freedompaisvalencia 3 года назад +1

    I was watching videos from that channel cause I found them so interesting to observe. I am a junior doctor as well (GP) and I always observe people, I love you are commenting while observing these people, we never get to do that in front of a patient.
    Nice videos!

  • @Lisasuhr47
    @Lisasuhr47 3 года назад +10

    Thank you for your translation as well as your compassion for your "patient" , and her rights under our HIPAA regulations (even though she's a French citizen lol😉 I'm an Occupational Therapist an have never seen Catatonic Schizophrenia so this was really interesting to me, and I appreciated your input and explanations! How sad that she felt such fear but it's certainly fortuitous that she at least knew how to get some help. God bless her, and I hope that if she is still living that her mental health has improved and she has had a full life.

  • @chandracox6814
    @chandracox6814 3 года назад +23

    There is another catatonic schizophrenic person interviewed in another "episode" and it's really interesting because a relative of the person being interviewed comments in the comment section regarding a bit more details on his life. For reference I believe the video is called Interview: Catatonic Schizophrenic. Very interesting interview where the patient describes being a pianist but the relative in the comment section said that he actually didnt know how to play but had this obsession over it his entire life. Very sad stuff and I also hope consent was given for that interview as well. Love these videos. Please keep them up!

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад +6

      I'll check it out! Hit the bell icon to get alerts and I'll publish it ASAP

    • @chandracox6814
      @chandracox6814 3 года назад +2

      @@DrSyl awesome! It might be posted by another RUclipsr. I'll check now and edit this comment.
      Edited: found the channel it's under and it's called "ktrypy1111"

  • @ericlawrence9060
    @ericlawrence9060 3 года назад +252

    She is hauntingly beautiful.

    • @jesuschrist6800
      @jesuschrist6800 3 года назад +34

      You're weird lol.

    • @truescotsman4103
      @truescotsman4103 3 года назад +13

      the original video of this girl has some weird comments attacking anyone saying anything about her appearance or her behavior. its as if people are somehow jealous or offended by something were saying about her. seems like other crazies attack us to get attention.

    • @jesuschrist6800
      @jesuschrist6800 3 года назад +6

      @Glenn Newton I do wear glasses. But brother... That lady is not cute.

    • @jesuschrist6800
      @jesuschrist6800 3 года назад +23

      @Glenn Newton I say you're weird. This lady has issues and you're focused on how pretty she is man. 🤔

    • @elena-lc4uk
      @elena-lc4uk 3 года назад +3

      @Glenn Newton that girl has a strange body or that outfit is so wrong

  • @tabby73
    @tabby73 3 года назад +12

    Very interesting to hear someone commenting on these videos which sadly come with little to no context and explanations. Thank you!
    Just one thing: when you were explaining while she talked I couldn't understand you at all. So that was a bit unfortunate. But still overall great insight! 🙏

  • @AP-ex6qz
    @AP-ex6qz 3 года назад +6

    This video is amazing. Thanks for the translate as well 😁

  • @jojje4352
    @jojje4352 2 года назад

    i love ur videos when u react to these ppl with Schizophrenia. i've always found it interesting and finally someone explaining!

  • @mpgfoo
    @mpgfoo 3 года назад +4

    I’ve watched pika grape videos for a long time and always wanted a medical commentary with them. Thank you.

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад

      Thank you!!

  • @avalondreaming1433
    @avalondreaming1433 3 года назад +19

    Pika Grape Snake has been doing this for a while. She's great

  • @glynharper
    @glynharper 3 года назад

    A great analysis on an very interesting subject. Thankyou for your insight.. and the translation!

  • @msconniejo7251
    @msconniejo7251 3 года назад +22

    It is good that your sharing this. I have seen several people who are schizophrenic in my life but never understood what it really was. I cannot imagine what those folks are going through. Everyone deserves a chance at life. I hope there is a cure someday.

    • @LtHarkness187
      @LtHarkness187 3 года назад

      Ms Connie Jo, will you ever, if you want to wake up, you will need an imagination! I c you. You wanted me to comment, I've seen your dream's, I've posted this comment, lucid dreaming is the beginning, admire the people that C , learn what they learn! don't pity anyone-ever! the shit they say could be warnings or advice and why we shouldn't spaz-out be "someone has divine instructions" and your too stupid to interpret them!

    • @msconniejo7251
      @msconniejo7251 3 года назад +2

      @@LtHarkness187 I don’t understand you and calling someone stupid is unkind. I watched this video to learn about this illness. I have empathy for anyone with illness no matter what kind it is. Be happy. Live your life and carry on.

  • @yuhanqin7396
    @yuhanqin7396 5 месяцев назад +1

    His commentary was very insightful and always helps people empathize with patients and erase the stigma, AND HE SPEAKS FRENCH AS WELL? You would make such a great doctor🤗

  • @azurebass24
    @azurebass24 3 года назад +15

    Just so you know, the insight I got from this video is something I'd never have gotten otherwise. It's incredible to me that are experiencing something that to me would be a thought experiment.

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад +3

      So good to hear it's useful James, comment the link to any videos you'd like a reaction video!😍

  • @Katsedits
    @Katsedits Год назад +1

    Needed this for a psych class Ty🙏 this really helped because of the little cases of catatonic schizophrenia

  • @iM3M0
    @iM3M0 3 года назад

    Your videos are really informative! Thanks for the translation as well!!

  • @mechellewinslow65
    @mechellewinslow65 3 года назад +17

    my daughter had this happen to her in the mall. Her boyfriend called and said she wasn’t moving! She could hear me but couldn’t move or answer me. She couldn’t talk or move at all like this girl

  • @BiRDiEHere
    @BiRDiEHere 3 года назад

    Damn! He's awesome at translating all of that! Good job man!

  • @tinanicolealexiou
    @tinanicolealexiou Год назад +1

    Great idea to do this, the way you put out your feedback makes it easy to remember key points. Thank you.

  • @Dreadzilla
    @Dreadzilla 10 месяцев назад +1

    I wish the video’s english subtitles were on (as it mentions in the title of the black and white video) to more easily follow along and gain more insight through Dr. Syl’s additional translations. Very impressive translations on your part though! As a Canadian, not living in a French-speaking area of Canada and having to learn French (elementary school through to university) I still struggle to understand spoken French! Not much trouble speaking or writing, but listening and understanding is where I still struggle, so good on ya!

  • @citizensallianceofaustrali697
    @citizensallianceofaustrali697 9 месяцев назад

    I have just found your reaction videos and I hope you have done more because I have hit the subscribe button. I find these videos fascinating and your analysis is excellent.

  • @waywardpony
    @waywardpony 3 года назад +9

    These are interesting, thank you for sharing your insight.
    I've read reople can sometimes have minor psychotic episodes, and I think I had one 2-day one that was medicine-induced -- when I was a teenager I took Celexa and had a *very* bad reaction to it. Not everyone has a bad reaction, but it put me off SSRIs forever. Aside from feeling like my skeleton wanted to leap out of my mouth and like there bugs all over me, I was having constant thoughts of hurting others or myself, and an agitated reaction to noise and presence other people. I got through it, but there were times I'd space out and come to in the process of doing something I didn't remember starting or want to do. That last part was probably the most scary. I'm nearly 40 now, and haven't had a problem since.

    • @jessicaparr4903
      @jessicaparr4903 3 года назад

      I was on Celexa as well and I had a VERY BAD reaction to it, like lockjaw, paranoia, and I was physically unable to eat, Frick SSRIs

  • @georgehandle5433
    @georgehandle5433 2 года назад +2

    thank you for the translation it means a lot

  • @Tia-li6ux
    @Tia-li6ux 3 года назад

    I watched this interview a few months ago and the only thing I really understood was this girl schizophrenic. So thank you for the helping us understand!

  • @JOHNDOE-gp6cj
    @JOHNDOE-gp6cj 6 месяцев назад +2

    not sure how old this video is but love to see a follow up of how she`s doing today in 2023

  • @anathardayaldar
    @anathardayaldar Год назад +1

    Its analysis like this that confirms that I have no business judging people with mental illness. And neither does the rest of the internet.
    People say "I don't judge" and with their next breath, judge a person's behavior and value.
    I had no clue about the things the doctor said until he mentioned them. If I ran across someone like this patient, I would think "well that was different" but assumed she was harmless.

  • @stephanie1733
    @stephanie1733 2 года назад

    I love your channel, I just discovered it. I actually would prefer if you paused the video more often to talk about what's going on. The pauses are actually helpful. 😊

  • @louisavevers9709
    @louisavevers9709 3 года назад

    New subbie, and really enjoying these reactions.. Please keep doing them! 😁

  • @amandajean7738
    @amandajean7738 3 года назад +22

    Her body movements are really rigid. Like her hands make a slight movement but the rest of her body is dead weight or robotic.

  • @esthermalathi3895
    @esthermalathi3895 3 года назад +5

    Hi syl, can you explain a bit more about the nature of the illness and how it presents when you start a video. That would really help lay people to understand it better.

  • @totalcontrol4205
    @totalcontrol4205 3 года назад +4

    I'm living in Sydney, diagnosed with DID. I'm studying psychology... I want to do theoretical research. The clip is rather short, we have to take it for granted that the diagnosis is correct considering the historical position of psychology/psychiatry at the time, but very interesting. I've seen a few of them, they are very interesting for educational purposes. Perhaps it's time a new series was done, with updated info.

  • @MuscleBandit
    @MuscleBandit 3 года назад +4

    I can only imagine what it feels like to have thoughts from what feels like an external force and to not be able to trust in yourself or your own actions. It must be terrifying and intrusive all at once.

  • @Ottawajames
    @Ottawajames 3 года назад +3

    Your French skills are on point... I was impressed.

  • @spcsh1936
    @spcsh1936 3 месяца назад +1

    what sucks about this illness it affects young people who are just starting in life and suddenly they're gone forever

  • @Sunwatereyes
    @Sunwatereyes 3 месяца назад

    I literally cried from how nice the interviewer sounds. Exhausting is right. It feels empty and meaningless what I have to say vs what they make me say. I cried cause it is down to how I never got rescued from my home and adopted and struggling with my health throughout the attention placed on this mental health concept makes me want a mom so bad cause mine can't be, but it's just dangerous to say that and not be adult enough. Not knowing anymore can take your life away in America today. It makes me wish I deserved that softerness still. Care is it's own alien but it's nice to hear and know someone did work like that.

  • @sivc.29
    @sivc.29 3 года назад +4

    Hello Doctor, I watched her interview previously and it had english subtitles. It would've been great to enable them during your reaction/brief analysis. Greetings!

  • @reemy8245
    @reemy8245 3 года назад +3

    Really interesting video please react more of these videos we learn from you a lot thanks for doing this keep it up

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад

      Thanks so much! I made one other one about Mania. I’ll try do more :D

  • @tuffitout2568
    @tuffitout2568 Год назад

    Dr. Syl is a "Junior Medical Doctor?" A full explanation of that title and related practice experience would have been very useful. However, thank you for this quite brief commentary. I will view Dr. Elliot Carthy's review of this interview as well.

  • @RP4886
    @RP4886 2 года назад +2

    Good videos. I suggest checking audio levels on this and the other one with the piano guy. You are a little quiet and the video is loud. Thanks again

  • @roxanncorston9403
    @roxanncorston9403 2 года назад

    God bless all. Grateful to understand as I'm 1/2 française. My heart sinks with respect to the horror and stigma etc. So many have endured.

  • @adybarker4733
    @adybarker4733 3 года назад +4

    Hi, I wouldn't have noticed the thought blocks without you bringing them to my attention.
    What would you say is her prognosis considering the drugs avaialble at the time and the fact she has only been presenting for 3 weeks.
    Great channel btw, I've subscribed. 👍🏻

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад +1

      So it takes a lot more info and time to get a good assessment of all the prognostic factors. And it’s a hard thing to predict but based on her baseline level of functioning, short prodromes phase (I’m assuming) and the fact that she probably hasn’t trialled any antipsychotics I’d be cautiously optimistic. And thanks so much for the sub please feel free to request any vids

  • @dellahjs6504
    @dellahjs6504 2 года назад

    i like this. thankyou for the explanation.

  • @romarina2687
    @romarina2687 3 года назад

    Please, do more reactions to this old videos! Regards from Colombia, South America

  • @annab6726
    @annab6726 3 года назад +3

    If you watch the actual video of the young woman, you can turn on the CC closed captions to see the English translation.

  • @Dexy83
    @Dexy83 11 месяцев назад +2

    I like when you translate, so interrupt to your hearts content! 😂

  • @angelusavila3832
    @angelusavila3832 3 года назад +1

    Please continue the videos

  • @nikkashaila3675
    @nikkashaila3675 3 года назад

    I'm currently reviewing for boards for Psychometrician, this is very helpful 🙏

  • @chasenewberry6866
    @chasenewberry6866 3 года назад +2

    Please do more of these reactions. Preferably the Bipolar ones. It allows us a view into the struggle these people deal with.

  • @BVenge-pe4wi
    @BVenge-pe4wi 2 месяца назад +2

    If you ever find an example of autistic catatonia, Id love to see a video on it. I have it, and haven't ever met anyone else like that in real life.

  • @bkinouye
    @bkinouye 3 года назад +89

    I wonder what eventually happened to her and whether she was able to live a somewhat normal life.

    • @jgtemperton
      @jgtemperton 3 года назад +14

      Read somewhere, she later jump of a bridge after her mother stopped the car they were driving. Can't find the link. Maybe someone has it?

    • @bvdatech1
      @bvdatech1 3 года назад +4

      @@jgtemperton damn

    • @rachelb8698
      @rachelb8698 3 года назад +12

      @@jgtemperton how would you know this? Do you even know her name so someone COULD try to find out?

    • @krishn881
      @krishn881 3 года назад +1

      @@jgtemperton that is so sad

    • @adrianalanbennett
      @adrianalanbennett Год назад +1

      @@jgtemperton Some people just revel in misery and causing misery. I don't believe you for a moment.

  • @markrigg6623
    @markrigg6623 3 года назад

    Enjoyed your evaluation and personally I don't think there's an issue with the morality of it considering the age of the video. That was more for the uploader to make sure about. Good luck with the channel.

  • @Juli-ge4yp
    @Juli-ge4yp 3 года назад +20

    Doctor, have you ever read the book The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat? It is a 1985 book by neurologist Oliver Sacks describing the case histories of some of his patients. I read the small getting my master's degree in school psychology. I think you would find it interesting.

    • @patriciaroysdon9540
      @patriciaroysdon9540 10 месяцев назад

      I read it years ago. It was absolutely fascinating. The brain and the mind are such fascinating areas to study.

  • @DoctorElliottCarthy
    @DoctorElliottCarthy 2 года назад +1

    Omg thanks for the shout out :)

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  2 года назад

      With pleasure! Thanks for your outstanding channel!

  • @francismorganstern6455
    @francismorganstern6455 3 года назад +4

    Been diagnosed with schizophrenia since 88 it stinks just stay on my meds was hard in the past now get montly injection been arrested numerous times because of my illnesses it seems the older I get I'm learning to deal with what,I have better control over my thoughts

  • @thomniced
    @thomniced 2 года назад

    Excellent. Let's blow up Dr. Syl!

  • @kushagragupta8068
    @kushagragupta8068 3 года назад +6

    Sir, also please tell us, how to differentiate between the scripted videos(where they are acting), and where they are treating real patients.
    Although, I am interested to see the both of the types, but still I'll know then.

  • @-m7k0z7-9
    @-m7k0z7-9 3 года назад +6

    I remember when I was taking an intro to psychology course my sister told me that a picture she took with her phone was moving + she heard a whispering sound next to her as the image was kind of moving. So that made me focus, and I gave her an example of the whispering, and she said "yes, yup, that's how it sounded like".
    It made me scared because when I was 16-17 I did have the same thing once, scary as hell (imagine you being alone in the hosue and suddenly you get scared then a sound next to your ear is like "Booo :)", like it knows that you're scared and it decides to freak you out for fun). But that was it. And I did become very very bad/ill after taking antidepressants. I'm 22 and in medical school and when I heard my sister saying what she said (she's 12 , so most likely it's the hormones kicking into high gear skewing things up a bit), I told her a one time thing is not a problem. But inside I was like "Oh no, I hope this thing is not running in the family; because it sucks".
    I did seek help (talking with a psychologist) because I was in a rut, and I was like "bluh" towards my academics, and careless towards things, not seeing the point of life (At one point I was like writing "Ok, I'm 22, give or take, I got about 50 years to live; that's too much" I was kind of feeling that since I'm suffering day by day, 50 years is like "hahahahaha; yeah right, it's just too much to handle". And I did hurt myself one night, I guess because I was focused on the anhedonia, I was trying to try and feel like I used to before. It felt for so long that I can't feel things fully, like I will not have a state of mind/mood through out the day; it was mostly flat and squeezed.
    Then was where I decided to talk to a psychologist. It did feel like antidepressants did scew me up a bit. But I'm starting to get out of the whole I was in, I'm kind of doing things more and such; talk therapy works...

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад

      Great to hear that the talking therapies are having a positive impact , I know they are a lot of hard work but definitely worth it. Good on you! I would only add that there are many antidepressants to choose from so if you had a bad experience with one, that doesn't necessarily mean the rest would have the same side effects. Thank you so much for sharing and commenting and wishing you a wonderful week.

  • @BergenholtzChannel
    @BergenholtzChannel 3 года назад +1

    This is invaluable to me as I am writing a book about my schizophrenic grandmother who was hospitalized in 1930's to 1970's.

    • @rggtrsdgtw
      @rggtrsdgtw Год назад +1

      Id love read it when its finished

  • @rachelgregory672
    @rachelgregory672 2 года назад +1

    From a psych nurse you did an excellent job - very knowledgeable! Are you thinking of going into psychiatry?

  • @GardenHomie
    @GardenHomie 2 года назад +6

    God bless her , hope she is well now, in heaven or wherever she is. 🙏 I saw a homeless girl today that I believe had schizophrenia. She wouldn't respond to me. She was in the hot sun and wore winter clothes. It's summertime. I put some Gatorade and an umbrella for her to be protected from the sun by her feet. I hope she will be ok.

  • @deefitzgerald2906
    @deefitzgerald2906 Год назад +1

    I have seen this…..This Young Lady was very much able to say what she has been feeling she is almost like a Robot….
    Someone in the Comments said she died 3 yrs after this…..So SAD…..

    • @adrianalanbennett
      @adrianalanbennett Год назад +1

      I think the comments saying she met a bad end are just people wanting to make others feel bad. I have read several such comments and they are all inconsistent. It's nonsense.

  • @oliviernury3480
    @oliviernury3480 3 года назад

    Very good translation in french dude !!! I'm !!! When she takes about moving her arms in the street, she thinks everybody stares at her.

  • @user-ox7xr8nu4t
    @user-ox7xr8nu4t Месяц назад

    I'm not an expert at all and have no experience or knowledge on the matter. I found it amazing that a person can sit and talk for a long time period without even once blinking their eyes.

  • @-m7k0z7-9
    @-m7k0z7-9 3 года назад +3

    Psychiatry question: I read a cataonia case report; they gave her courses of treatments (antidepressants and all). She had deteroration in self care and she started to become catatonic. The thing that seems to work for her was lorazepam; how does it help in catatonia?

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад +3

      Yea Benzos are the mainstay treatment of catatonia and a positive response to them actually supports the diagnosis. Not sure of why GABAergic meds help catatonia though - I'll ask my reg next week! Great question and thanks so much for the comment!

  • @ministerofjoy
    @ministerofjoy 2 года назад

    Thank you Dr.

  • @bellatrixmoon1836
    @bellatrixmoon1836 2 года назад

    She’s so lovely ❤️

  • @Magdalene777
    @Magdalene777 3 года назад +31

    I noticed how well groomed and attractive she looks and wondered in her state if she had help, like a caring friend or family member. Also this seems like the 1960s and I'm from Canada, but my aunt worked in an office during that time and she told me about a coworker who wore go-go boots and dresses that short to work, so I think that was just the style at that time. I remember my aunt said the woman's underwear matched the fabric of her dress, because whenever she bent over to get files from the filing cabinet her underwear would show.

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад +2

      A very pretty young French girl. I wish that I could have gotten to know her. Maybe go out for tea. Definitely, a sweet, little gal😊

    • @hindenburg1596
      @hindenburg1596 Год назад +2

      @@barneyronnie Why are you commenting on every post?

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад +1

      @@hindenburg1596 Why do you exist?

    • @barneyronnie
      @barneyronnie Год назад +1

      @@hindenburg1596 I'd like to get to know you, sir. Especially after noting your interest and knowledge of baroque music. We share this interest and love for great music, as well as a commitment to the sublime. Neither of us would relegate our interests for the sake of pop culture. You're one in a million my dear sir, and as I have previously asserted herein, I'd like to get to know you. If you share my enthusiasm to become acquainted, then simply express your interest by responding, thus, to this post. I'm convinced that this could be the first step towards wonderful revelations regarding your ultimate purpose in life. Until then, I'll be thinking of you and what a remarkable team we would make.
      Yours In Reality,
      Reinhold Von Treffencaunbowz, MBBS

    • @AbstractAngelArtist
      @AbstractAngelArtist Год назад

      Hey... I'm interested in studying reality, life, death, philosophy...
      Visit my channel for some videos on a wide variety of fascinating topics.
      Cheers. :))

  • @jollygrim07
    @jollygrim07 8 месяцев назад

    Love the videos

  • @wattshappeninghere
    @wattshappeninghere 3 года назад +5

    This was super fascinating to watch. Perhaps most fascinating is the fact you've actually purchased RUclips Premium 👀😲 lmao, great video tho

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад +1

      had the free trial then i forgot to cancel 😩 hehe

  • @drawstringz
    @drawstringz 3 года назад +7

    Can you do a review of the other catatonic schizo video with the pianist? I really enjoyed this!

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  3 года назад +4

      Thanks jasmine!!! Can you send me the link?

    • @rayrayrox012
      @rayrayrox012 3 года назад +4

      ruclips.net/video/IehtMYlOuIk/видео.html

    • @markrigg6623
      @markrigg6623 3 года назад +3

      @@DrSyl Yes I'd be very keen on seeing your view on that one. It was the first one on the channel I watched and its quite impactful.

    • @drawstringz
      @drawstringz 3 года назад +1

      @@DrSyl yes! here it is! ruclips.net/video/IehtMYlOuIk/видео.html

  • @kathybramley5609
    @kathybramley5609 3 года назад

    Ah watching a video like this is always as bit disconcerting. Processing the patient experience and the reactions and frameworks applied. And comparing my own experience to them.
    My autism assessment that led to diagnosis, recently in my early forties, picked up on my report the times that I had wondered if I had schizophrenia having read a bit about it, and how I became a bit obsessed with it. And the reactiveness of my face was also mentioned.
    This I guess ties in with the history of the diagnosis that used to be more closely tied to schizophrenia than it is today, originally considered a kind of schizophrenia.
    I have also read via twitter blogs on a specific autistic kind of catatonia.
    My head is all too full with a lifetime of experiences that might fit in different diagnostic boxes! As well as the relevant information absorbed and remembered and secondary thoughts! All that investigation, passive sponging-up and thinking had in trying to remember and work out those boxes. That done so as to navigate through without being a passive victim sucked up into a system that did more harm than good against my will nor left drifting without help. Unfortunately this does seem to be necessary but it's a complex balancing act for both sides. The best intentions can turn and have turned into ethically questionable misdiagnosis or removal of agency, misjudged capacity, misapplied treatments. And we're all human with a variety of motivations. Power dynamics can be abused, people even doctors make mistakes or have their own delusions or socially un-earnt authority. These are some of the really painful questions at the heart of patient collaboration/user-led services, survivor movements and indeed anti-psychiatry.
    Having had two psychiatrists dismiss the possibility of autism before a later crisis brought the referral that led to diagnosis. And the involvement of maybe more anxious paranoid thought as part of postnatal depression and some voice hearing a bit like intrusive thoughts and indeed self aware but insistent paranoia that spikes at times of stress but not quite attracting treatment or a personality disorder diagnosis either, despite disclosure all feels a bit complicated. I have also been interested in the area for a long time. And then again I'm aware of iatrogenic conditions and also of a range of different non-service-user, non-clinical perspectives. So I'm very aware of a lot of connections and possibilities. My life feels like Sliding Doors mental health edition!
    It looks like I may have ADHD & dyspraxia too. On this current pathway.
    I was always different, I was called many different kinds of names. When I thought about having schizophrenia most, at university, it was especially the negative symptoms and my religious experience I was thinking about.
    But I have possibly always had a self aware tendency to more paranoid or weirdly expensive quixotic grand narrative thinking, a coping mechanism partly, and somewhat dissociated: I was always seeing everything ranged against me but able to challenge it and I had been subjected to quite deliberately harsh bullying to meltdown as a kid as well as struggling academically to write things down despite good IQ. A very spiky profile. Always developmental concerns.
    I wonder how like this woman I am. But her condition seems more pronounced and more actute.

  • @rkatewinslet6657
    @rkatewinslet6657 3 года назад +1

    Thank u fr ur effrt

  • @_APV_
    @_APV_ 4 месяца назад

    I know it must be hard (in relation to ethics and laws) to discuss treatments, but I feel it would make video much more valuable if you could also talk about how such conditions would be treated in 70s and how much (or little) it changed due to modern science and research.
    I found a comment of someone mentioning that they know the person and they are still alive and living full life having worked as an school teacher, so allegedly they had a full recovery, so it made me wonder what kind of treatment that could've been, because I've heard of very ineffective ways people treated mental illness back in the day (like that psychiatrist who pulled out teeth in 20s)

  • @debishaw9355
    @debishaw9355 3 года назад +1

    I worked with someone long ago. She walked like that, she had hair just like that. It all seemed robotic. And she was one of three in a group that was incredibly mean spirited. They were caregivers in a hospital. I don’t think any of them wanted to be there..

  • @momkatmax
    @momkatmax Год назад +2

    On her outfit, I remember that time well, and this was considered a nice, daily wear dress.