Australian Sociopath Interviewed by M.E. Thomas

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  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024
  • 📖 PICK UP MY BOOK: www.sociopathwo...
    💻 MY OFFICIAL WEBSITE: www.sociopathwo... M.E. Thomas, from sociopathworld.com, interviews a successful Australian sociopath about his diagnosis as ASPD by his therapist, his treatment, his relationships with his current life partner whom he loves, his professional life as an HR representative. We talk about channeling impulses, his childhood diagnosis of ADHD, what worked best for him to live a more normal and stable life. Zoom Sociopathworld 20 0422

Комментарии • 23

  • @angelcathairs
    @angelcathairs 2 месяца назад +2

    5:30 very true! that’s why being authentic is so important! that way we attract the right people because times are changing

  • @budawang77
    @budawang77 2 года назад +4

    As a neuro-typical person, I find it quite unnerving how normal these two psychopaths sound. It's unnerving because the ability to empathise seems to me to be such a fundamental human trait. Empathy is rooted in my concept of what it means to be conscious and I cannot imagine myself without it. On the other hand, it is reassuring that these two seem to have developed pro-social ways of dealing with their condition. A psychopath who believes himself or herself to be fundamentally "bad" and embraces their "badness" is a terrifying thing to contemplate.

  • @jennleiker1823
    @jennleiker1823 3 года назад +3

    Thank you SO much for doing this work. It helps to understand my loved one a lot better. Your book gave me hope, just in understanding what she might be. This IS her world. It helps just to know that, to shift my expectations (and communication) accordingly. Thank you... you make a difference in lives!

  • @isabellebrintnall8454
    @isabellebrintnall8454 3 года назад +9

    I'm fascinated by this condition because I want to empathize with those who have ASPD but struggle to do so. But I wonder if that fascination and almost frustration/confusion is sort of how people with this condition may experience others without it.

    • @thatstrangekid1226
      @thatstrangekid1226 3 года назад +1

      @@remley8877 I see your point but Its very hard to overlook the negative aspects of the disorder, but personally I find it very hard to empathize with people who would have no problem stepping over me or lying to my face. And if I'm completely honest I only have hate towards people who score very highly on the general ASPD/psychopath spectrum and barley even see them as humans as ironic that is.

    • @AliciaM5555
      @AliciaM5555 2 года назад

      @That strange kid that entirely understandable. I am bpd and was raised in a severe lack of control environment and I am hypersensitive to certain red flags I see in people and the main one are those that seek to manipulate and control in a malign way. Once I see those character red flags it triggers a kind of fury and predatory response in me that seeks to teach them a lesson.

  • @Eyelash85
    @Eyelash85 3 года назад +12

    I like Japan, where you have to prove you are a good person in order to be respected. In the West, psychopathic behaviour is considered almost a virtue to some.
    I am a law student and I know I will have the job with probably the highest number of psychopaths per capita. I am learning how to detect and dodge psychopathic behaviour.

  • @DjordjeDjuricSRB
    @DjordjeDjuricSRB Год назад +2

    5:37 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Nobody-Nowhere
    @Nobody-Nowhere 4 года назад +5

    24:55 This is kinda interesting, as i see this in a lot of borderlines also. They constantly seek reactions, affirmation of their own existence. Its a really childlike behavior. And usually manifest in the most ridiculous ways. Especially as i'm the type of person who does not react to people at all, so this evokes this insane fear in some people. And i have constantly females working as cashiers trying to get my attention and get reactions out of me. I seem to trigger their fear of abandonment.

    • @Nobody-Nowhere
      @Nobody-Nowhere 4 года назад +10

      The more you learn about personality disorders, the more you start just seeing children. They are fascinating windows into early formation of personality, almost like fossils. Personalities frozen in time.

    • @Nobody-Nowhere
      @Nobody-Nowhere 4 года назад +5

      If you think about, what you call "gamesmanship", its simply a child's way of seeking the connection, the reaction from the adult. The affirmation a child, or actually a baby needs. This is also in the end, why the behavior is abusive. As when we deal with children, we know they are children. They are self centered, and we find it endearing. But when a child lives inside an adults body, our expectations for their behavior are that of an adult. In the end, its like a big miscommunication. People talking in different languages. And that of different needs, one person having the needs of a child. While other has the needs of an adult.
      A child does not need or know how to offer the reciprocal emotional connection a healthy adult needs. A child only knows that it needs, it only has primal needs and they are one way. It does not give to receive, it expects to receive.

    • @Buttercup-vw2zo
      @Buttercup-vw2zo 3 года назад +5

      Lol. Responding to yourself?

  • @adriandalton08
    @adriandalton08 4 года назад

    Awesome interview :)

  • @angellee356
    @angellee356 2 года назад

    I got picked up thrown through the air by a female drug dealer, I was fine bi called off and bizzaly I enjoyed being grabbed and thrown through the air.

  • @katherinebruce500
    @katherinebruce500 3 года назад +4

    It's called evil no matter what diagnosis

    • @amiwhoiam278
      @amiwhoiam278 3 года назад

      What is called evil? Define evil?

    • @amiwhoiam278
      @amiwhoiam278 3 года назад +4

      @@katherinebruce500 "impulse" and "character" =only known when manifested through "conduct", there's no way to perceive what qualities are predominant in one's thoughts or personality, unless reflected in one's words or actions. So essentially "evil or not" is judged from one's behavior, right? So yes I agree with you, no matter what diagnosis, with or without diagnosis, anyone is capable of evil behavior. Is this what you're trying to say though? "It's called evil no matter what diagnosis" what is called evil? Action? Individual? Humanity?

    • @TheRedlegoguy
      @TheRedlegoguy 2 года назад +3

      So if I was diagnosed with Depression would I automatically be evil?

    • @katherinebruce500
      @katherinebruce500 2 года назад

      @@TheRedlegoguy Depression is not narcissism or psychopathy. So no depression in itself is not evil.

    • @thememaster7
      @thememaster7 2 года назад

      Evil is evasion of facts

  • @cinamingrl
    @cinamingrl Год назад

    This is useless to watch or even to try and listen. There are no people . Maybe try a podcast platform .