We Tried To Rewire Our Brains

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июн 2017
  • Once you change the direction, amount of effort, or the spacial orientation, the brain has to fire differently.
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    Caucasian baby rolling over
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    EXTERNAL CREDITS
    Beth Rubenstein
    movementmatters.us/
    +
    Richard Goldsand
    www.feldenkrais-goldsand.net

Комментарии • 913

  • @sophie228
    @sophie228 7 лет назад +2324

    Does anyone else think the Doctor gives out that loving Dad vibe?🤔😄

  • @matildab1693
    @matildab1693 7 лет назад +2124

    I need to rewire my brain to not stay up this late to watch videos on youtube

    • @cosmodewit
      @cosmodewit 7 лет назад +13

      I had the same problem XD, now I just kind of save the videos for when I wake up.

    • @JOJOSTAR69
      @JOJOSTAR69 7 лет назад +3

      Matilda B same

    • @monday4123
      @monday4123 7 лет назад

      same

    • @ConverseGirlxoxo
      @ConverseGirlxoxo 7 лет назад +1

      Matilda B honestly though lol

    • @ilovebandz_6252
      @ilovebandz_6252 7 лет назад

      Matilda B 200th like

  • @aztap130
    @aztap130 7 лет назад +462

    That's my professor from college! I loved taking his class. We were assigned different texts along with our daily lessons that support the philosophy behind it, and while I don't 100% believe in it, I did always come out of class relaxed and more in tune with my body.
    He's a great teacher.

  • @jesuseugene4612
    @jesuseugene4612 7 лет назад +134

    *snaps neck*
    "all done !"

  • @Peach-yu9ki
    @Peach-yu9ki 7 лет назад +286

    the amount of actual 9-year-olds making the exact same "no brain" joke in the comments section is astounding.

    • @Peach-yu9ki
      @Peach-yu9ki 7 лет назад +8

      Yuali .....lol. Who, in the history of the internet, has ever abided by age restrictions online? It was more a comment on the maturity levels of those making the same exact joke over and over again, not so much an assumption on their actual age anyway. :)

    • @Falixd
      @Falixd 7 лет назад +1

      Yuali Not true, they have tech classes in all schools now that make you more tech savvy. I created an account at 9, now I'm 17. Amazing how much people underestimate this generation.

  • @34Moonchild
    @34Moonchild 7 лет назад +1613

    Im an electrician do you need any help?

    • @34Moonchild
      @34Moonchild 7 лет назад +7

      abbi d everyone knows the reason

    • @greencyy
      @greencyy 7 лет назад +1

      same

    • @34Moonchild
      @34Moonchild 7 лет назад +1

      elleisrandom★ same what

    • @celaenas3016
      @celaenas3016 7 лет назад +1

      No thanks bye b

    • @marcom2092
      @marcom2092 7 лет назад +3

      Can you help me install this toaster in my bath tub without killing myself?

  • @praisesindick6245
    @praisesindick6245 7 лет назад +88

    I saw the title of the video and I was like "only buzzfeed"

  • @radishpie
    @radishpie 7 лет назад +48

    gonna use that as an excuse now. MUM: "get up" ME: "im standing, im just in a different configuration in gravity"

  • @julesk2629
    @julesk2629 7 лет назад +1080

    Can I rewire my brain to forget all the buzzfeed I've watched

    • @anidrawsd2416
      @anidrawsd2416 7 лет назад +10

      Julianna Kopa sorry, it is not that powerful XD

  • @eddypewdipie9011
    @eddypewdipie9011 7 лет назад +297

    Is it weird that when my turtle saw this at 3:15 he started doing that

    • @aBitSickYT
      @aBitSickYT 7 лет назад +20

      😂😂😂

    • @creeplant2973
      @creeplant2973 7 лет назад +17

      The king Easantedestroy oh my god I really thought about a turtle when I saw these movements😂

    • @wksrai
      @wksrai 6 лет назад

      The king Easantedestroy o

    • @ihavehairinmybuttcrack4349
      @ihavehairinmybuttcrack4349 6 лет назад +2

      The king Easantedestroy why you watch buzzfeed with a turtle fam

    • @lilyosh3107
      @lilyosh3107 6 лет назад +3

      You have a turtle 😍

  • @AJLowik
    @AJLowik 7 лет назад +107

    Neuroplasticity calls those moments after a treatment 'the residual effect.' That's your brain remembering the new neuro-pathway that the treatment laid down. The more you do whatever the treatment is, the longer than residual effect will be. Norman Doidge describes a woman with a malfunctioning vestibular apparatus (your balance system), whose tongue learns to do the work of her inner ear - she wears a device that sends tingles to her tongue when her head moves around in space. She takes the device off, and retains her balance for seconds, then minutes... then, years. Her tongue now completely does the work of her inner ear, and she no longer has a balance disorder. So, it's normal that the results 'wore off,' and indeed, consistent practice will strengthen those new neuro-pathways, consequently weakening the alternatives (or harmful) pathways. It's fascinating. People calling this pseudoscience or the placebo effect should read up on new advancements in neuroscience. Our brains are elastic.

    • @azigz
      @azigz 7 лет назад +1

      A.J. Lowik yes it is true that you can train the brain like in the example you used above but those new connections can't be made in only 3 or 4 sessions it can take months or even years to develop thats why this seems like the placebo effect because he is taking a legitment scientific phenomenon and using it as an excuse to sell the bs of reflexology under a different name.

    • @AJLowik
      @AJLowik 7 лет назад +3

      If someone could teach me how to start learning the rewiring process, so that I could try to overcome a difficulty I have, I think I would take that on. I learn mindfulness techniques in therapy - they follow the same science, and could similarly be seen as a 'fab' that is being commodified. Mindfulness techniques have also helped me in my recovery from mental illness, which is taking years, but every tool helps... so, if we can teach people the skills to start making new neuro-connections, why not? This doesn't look or sound like any reflexology I've ever had. Perhaps we need to think about ways that these techniques can be taught to you and I, in a few sessions, for problems no matter how severe, so that we can try them at home, rather than discounting the potential benefit someone might feel from learning these skills, or imagining that this science only works for profound difficulties, if the therapy last years... Even learning that you can control your brain can be incredibly powerful, and long-lasting, even if making those new connections takes practice and years. Anyway, those are just my two cents. :) Respectful dialogue always welcome. I'm always willing to listen and learn.

    • @azigz
      @azigz 7 лет назад

      A.J. Lowik wow to be honest I was not expecting such a civil responce. considering the usual RUclips responces I respect your willingness to converse :) I can agree to you have to start somewhere in the road to creating new neural pathways:) I compaired it to reflexology because it seems what he was describing was moving the body in a certain way to fix mental problems much like how in reflexology they claim pressing on the foot a certain way can fix your liver it's simply not true.Im not saying stretching and massages are necessarily a bad thing for mental or physical health but to claim that because you stretched in a slightly different way for an hour and now you are fixed doesn't prove any pathway was truly built it just proves that the power of suggestion is very strong.

    • @AJLowik
      @AJLowik 7 лет назад +6

      The comments are an incredibly scary place! I generally avoid it, because most folks seem unable and unwilling to actually engage with the content, and most spread vitriol here. I don't think the practitioner claimed to have 'fixed them,' rather, like a therapy, he is showing them a different want to thinking, moving, being. This doesn't remind me of reflexology at all. Rather, this is moreso a guided mindfulness technique where you link the physical sensations and postures of the body to a state of relaxation or stress. And I personally find the logic of mindfulness to be in keeping in the science of neuroplasticity. Whether anything can be gained from a few sessions seems to be the question, and I think you can gain important skills and ways of thinking about your brain from even a single sesson. Michelle says in the video - this will only work with consistent practice over time. And small micro adjustments to the body and way of thinking can have positive effects, so I don't see the harm. Also, there are studies that show the positive effects of reflexology including increasing blood flow to organs, decreasing blood pressure - it may not do what it claims, but it still has noteworthy and scientifically proven positive effects. Anyway, that's my engagement with this therapy. Thanks for chatting!

    • @XtinaLucia
      @XtinaLucia 7 лет назад +1

      This reminded me of classically taught pilates on the equipment. After doing certain things making small adjustments i saw it bleed over into my daily life in how sat in a chair or how my body reacted to the movement while riding inside a car. It fades with time away from practicing pilates but quickly comes back when i begin again. Also, pple left their session more aware of their bodies and also moved their bodies in new ways so often they were standing notably taller or beginning to correct the imbalances that they were newly aware of. Cheers guys!

  • @elfamanfreed8633
    @elfamanfreed8633 7 лет назад +929

    Who will be your buzzfeed best friend?!!!
    Match with the last digit of your like to find out who will be your buzzfeed best friend!
    0 - Keith
    1 - Steve (Worth it guy)
    2 - Ashley
    3 - Adam (worth it cameraman)
    4 - Eugene
    5 - Evan + Kelsey (hitting two birds with one stone!)
    6 - Andrew
    7 - Ned
    8 - Quinta
    9 - other Kelsey
    Show less

  • @Ceranne1010
    @Ceranne1010 7 лет назад +28

    I read the title as remove instead of rewire and I was mildly disturbed for a minute

  • @japowey8958
    @japowey8958 7 лет назад +1475

    This man makes a living off of the placebo effect

    • @madelinebartot8011
      @madelinebartot8011 7 лет назад +223

      JaPowey to be fair if it works, it works. He still had to do something in order to make these people feel better.

    • @noneya7910
      @noneya7910 7 лет назад +1

      JaPowey yup

    • @FromDkWithLove
      @FromDkWithLove 7 лет назад +86

      True, but so do most psychologists, psychiatrists and hypnotherapists. This really isn't any different.

    • @IschysSyrra
      @IschysSyrra 7 лет назад +52

      1. If you haven't tried it you can't say that for sure.
      2. It seems to help people, even if it's a placebo, that is still the main goal.

    • @DarthMadV
      @DarthMadV 7 лет назад +55

      .....Mental health professionals do NOT induce placebo, they strategically converse with a patient and analyse what a patient says to strategically ask questions that helps the client find and solve problems in their life through their own thinking in order to motivate and influence positive change. Its the same hypothesis for majority of Mental health jobs, i'm studying mental health so i know. You don't only go to these people for a prescription for drugs. Although a lot of Psychologists went to uni decades ago and think they know everything about people and the brain and have an ego.. a lot of psychologists have out of date data in their brains because discoveries and studies come out about the human body every week or month..

  • @creeplant2973
    @creeplant2973 7 лет назад +347

    Please make something with lucid dreaming! :)

    • @Luminousley
      @Luminousley 7 лет назад +25

      Creeplant 2 Oh, it would be super cool if people tried techniques to lucid dream for a month or something!!

    • @creeplant2973
      @creeplant2973 7 лет назад +6

      Jillian Weber yes that's exactly what I wanted :)👍🏼

    • @flare380
      @flare380 7 лет назад +2

      the main way to have lucid dreaming is to realize that you are dreaming, while your brain is unconscious.

    • @creeplant2973
      @creeplant2973 7 лет назад +7

      ShadowIceFire easy said but it's not that easy😂:/

    • @MMDRen
      @MMDRen 7 лет назад +2

      ShadowIceFire
      I don't think people can control their brain that easily....
      One time I did lucid dream, but I woke up rip

  • @keenanslittlesister4604
    @keenanslittlesister4604 7 лет назад +27

    From some angles he looked like an old Ned

  • @hanzturtogo7295
    @hanzturtogo7295 7 лет назад +48

    Is it just me or does the doctor look like an old Ned?

  • @DAChristopherGaw
    @DAChristopherGaw 7 лет назад +1164

    how do you rewire your brain if you don't have one?

  • @vogelnjreri8248
    @vogelnjreri8248 7 лет назад +225

    4:17 He's *so focused on her butt.. I mean his work*

  • @TheMovieMyLife
    @TheMovieMyLife 7 лет назад +199

    Very peculiar movement from 3:03 😀

    • @GeoMatRay
      @GeoMatRay 7 лет назад +11

      TheMovieMyLife It's like his head was floating!

    • @anhtu.nguyen
      @anhtu.nguyen 7 лет назад +6

      TheMovieMyLife You buzzfeed comments section again..

    • @ZoeAzodeh
      @ZoeAzodeh 7 лет назад +43

      WHY ARE YOU EVERYWHERE

    • @genevievee2801
      @genevievee2801 7 лет назад +1

      ZoeSmallworlds ikr why is she everywhere.?

    • @stickmationslol4026
      @stickmationslol4026 7 лет назад +13

      TheMovieMyLife ive seen you on every dang video i watch😂

  • @audreybushnell5027
    @audreybushnell5027 7 лет назад +4

    I love that buzzfeed while being interesting and involved with pop culture, can still teach me about tons of things I had no idea about and not only tell me but show me. I love this channel

    • @brentshaub
      @brentshaub 4 года назад

      Glad to hear the positive comment about BuzzFeed and the quality of this content. As a practitioner, I'm curious if this inspired you to seek out a practitioner, go to a class, get a one-on-one session, read any of the books written by Moshe Feldenkrais?

  • @raev7456
    @raev7456 7 лет назад +614

    I thought Michelle quit?

    • @lovelight6340
      @lovelight6340 7 лет назад +144

      Rachael Vallespir
      this video is probably hella old

    • @raev7456
      @raev7456 7 лет назад +8

      true, thank you!

    • @D.Ronoa69
      @D.Ronoa69 7 лет назад +5

      You're welcome.

    • @Ineeee
      @Ineeee 7 лет назад +19

      Also, she said she quit as an employee but could still collaborate I think

    • @liamaldous2624
      @liamaldous2624 7 лет назад +39

      Ine Danger no she probably filmed this before she left because it takes a few weeks to produce and edit the video

  • @evagolden8093
    @evagolden8093 6 лет назад +2

    This is strikingly similar to Alexander technique, used by musicians to avoid tension

    • @brentshaub
      @brentshaub 4 года назад +1

      Moshe Feldenkrais and Frederick Alexander shared notes. There are similarities and differences. David Hall has trained in both, and teaches the differences in detail in this hour RUclips video. ruclips.net/video/MSZ5VWA7I1c/видео.html

  • @ryangreen8067
    @ryangreen8067 7 лет назад +4

    Who else is watching without socks on?

  • @Lhere45
    @Lhere45 7 лет назад +21

    Will this work for buzzfeeds ideas?

  • @carsoncarcar5523
    @carsoncarcar5523 7 лет назад +4

    They should just make a buzzfeed rainbow with all the buzzfeed colors combined into one channel.

  • @tata132818
    @tata132818 6 лет назад +1

    "I have bad body posture" "I JUST FEEL LIKE IM NOT GOOD ENOUGH"

  • @lina.jacobsen98
    @lina.jacobsen98 6 лет назад +1

    He's so kind I love it

  • @_tdot_9463
    @_tdot_9463 7 лет назад +13

    This is some Get Out mess

  • @alli7578
    @alli7578 7 лет назад +6

    Can my brain be rewired to hate junk food?

    • @katiie7
      @katiie7 6 лет назад

      Alli take an anti parasite herb lol

  • @anikawhite6876
    @anikawhite6876 7 лет назад

    Loved this video! Super cool and really interesting. I loved how they all benefitted in different ways

  • @johnriley7794
    @johnriley7794 7 лет назад +2

    1.i woke up
    2.went to the park
    3.saw a hot girl
    4.kissed her
    Now read 2,3,4,1

  • @okashi10
    @okashi10 7 лет назад +4

    It's so interesting... It's kind of like he's teaching them how to move better.

    • @brentshaub
      @brentshaub 4 года назад

      That's exactly correct. Curious if this inspired you to find a practitioner, take an online class or pick up any of the many books the founder wrote, Moshe Feldenkrais.

  • @ioannisholden1108
    @ioannisholden1108 7 лет назад +47

    yeah i mean were do you get this
    brains i mean not the rewiring

    • @Falixd
      @Falixd 7 лет назад +5

      Ioannis Holden Ebay, maybe you should go check it out. :) Some organ doner on the black market aswell may be able to give you a brain transplant.

  • @easeintoawareness9051
    @easeintoawareness9051 7 лет назад +1

    Excellent video. Thank you!!

  • @MysticMyths
    @MysticMyths 7 лет назад +2

    With the right practicioners, this could be really helpful for people with ptsd and trauma, like Michelle said. Part of what we learn already is how to rewire our brains to take instincts that have become maladaptive and return them to a normal cycle, so they no longer interfere with life and they return to their natural survival modes.

    • @brentshaub
      @brentshaub 4 года назад +1

      Well said, Kai. Reminds me of Peter Levine's work.

  • @jasminehaule7294
    @jasminehaule7294 7 лет назад +10

    The girl that's crying is so cool she's one of my fav people on buzzfeed

  • @sanjanakumari5551
    @sanjanakumari5551 7 лет назад +7

    this sounds messes up but also cool

  • @pieterm7440
    @pieterm7440 7 лет назад

    That was actually great! Thanks!

  • @ItsAllGoodGames
    @ItsAllGoodGames 2 года назад

    This stuff is the real deal. It’s obvious but elusive simultaneously.

  • @TheStormArrow
    @TheStormArrow 7 лет назад +7

    ...placebo effect?

    • @brentshaub
      @brentshaub 4 года назад

      They are learning how to do habitual patterns of movement differently. In sessions, the practitioner is providing novel tactile sensations to their nervous systems which, if paid attention to and practiced, lead to making things easier on themselves through being better organized. The one woman mentioned how being slightly more rotated made a difference in how much she could move. That's an example of reorganizing. Placebos do not provide new information. They are faux drugs which those who take them believe something will happen. Feldenkrais is about making distinctions between moving different ways, bearing weight on different paths of your feet, changing the trajectory your arm normally takes, etc. Learning.

  • @pattem3787
    @pattem3787 7 лет назад +3

    Feldenkrais sessions with my mentor, Fariya Doc, have helped me move efficiently and without the pain that I had been experiencing prior to learning about this process of moving. I love how each person is asking why, how? I still ask those same things after our many sessions.. I realize that I sometimes revert back to old habits. What a fantastic video. Feldenkrais works and I am proof.

    • @brentshaub
      @brentshaub 4 года назад

      Bravo, Patte! I'm sold on the Method too. Helped me out of chronic pelvic pain from a car accident that made sitting tough. Sitting on a fractured pelvis made my job as software programmer far more difficult because of the steadily increasing pain. Thanks to Feldenkrais, I have several strategies to prevent the pain from becoming impeding, as well as reducing any flare-ups which are far fewer and longer between. I've been able to travel again, hike, resume bowling despite an injury... It does require a practice and the benefits get better the more I do!

  • @chikifree
    @chikifree 5 лет назад

    the power of suggestion.

  • @nataliecross9403
    @nataliecross9403 7 лет назад

    The power of suggestion.

  • @hugoman98
    @hugoman98 7 лет назад +373

    pseudo science and placebo effect

    • @Lilithly
      @Lilithly 7 лет назад +34

      Who cares as long as it works.

    • @BathSaltsMex
      @BathSaltsMex 7 лет назад +9

      It will only work for some time, so it's useless

    • @kisshorekumar4331
      @kisshorekumar4331 7 лет назад +7

      Bath Salts then what about these placebo surgeries and tablets? Those stuff can completely trick your brain that whatever in your body was wrong can get fixed.
      Right?

    • @doctorsoncars1393
      @doctorsoncars1393 7 лет назад +53

      its actually not. subconscious parts of your brain aid in spatial movements like the cerebellar nuclei in your hind brain as well your vestibular system. These systems are constantly receiving data from the periphery and are always sending corrective output signals. This is all legit neuro-physiology. Also Im in med school.

    • @katelynbrown98
      @katelynbrown98 7 лет назад +1

      Bath Salts How do you know this only works for a short period of time?

  • @meropianagnostou5344
    @meropianagnostou5344 7 лет назад +7

    Will this work for migraines ??

    • @davidtee372
      @davidtee372 7 лет назад +1

      Meropi Anagnostou go to chiropractic i think it's the best

    • @meropianagnostou5344
      @meropianagnostou5344 7 лет назад

      David Tee Ok thank you

    • @Hollyhock7
      @Hollyhock7 6 лет назад

      Meropi Anagnostou this method would work yes. By the way- Chiropractic was way too forceful for me and made my migraines worse...acupuncture thus far is my favorite . My migraines are gone, after 6 treatments. Look for something called "community acupuncture", in your area! My treatments in Illinois cost $15 :))
      Check out magnesium supplementation as well as getting toxic people out of your life, and dealing with the cause of your anxiety.. your heart needs to be set free, who is holding you back? Wha t do you need to say to them??! Set yourself free . Much love.

  • @asmahanmohamed4484
    @asmahanmohamed4484 7 лет назад

    I read rewire as "REMOVE' and started cackling hahaha

  • @juniperlee9668
    @juniperlee9668 7 лет назад

    I need this. I have an extreme anxiety disorder called OCD (Not the kind you are thinking of) but I do certain actions and I feel like this would help. Where could I get this?

  • @K9RA
    @K9RA 7 лет назад +3

    i feel like most of this is just placebo

    • @brentshaub
      @brentshaub 4 года назад

      They are learning how to do habitual patterns of movement differently. In sessions, the practitioner is providing novel tactile sensations to their nervous systems which, if paid attention to and practiced, lead to making things easier on themselves through being better organized. The one woman mentioned how being slightly more rotated made a difference in how much she could move. That's an example of reorganizing. Placebos do not provide new information. They are faux drugs which those who take them believe something will happen. Feldenkrais is about making distinctions between moving different ways, bearing weight on different paths of your feet, changing the trajectory your arm normally takes, etc. Learning.

  • @gracejoy407
    @gracejoy407 7 лет назад +56

    Why does she cry in every fucking video

    • @email1889
      @email1889 7 лет назад +3

      Grace Joy I was looking for this comment 😂

    • @Darkside77771
      @Darkside77771 7 лет назад +16

      Maybe it is because she has some serious emotional issues and she doesn't attend to psychotherapy

    • @HereIAm247
      @HereIAm247 6 лет назад

      I think she experienced a traumatising event not that long ago, perhaps it stirred up some emotions. She used to be different.

  • @AnnabelChick
    @AnnabelChick 6 лет назад

    I’m really relieved that it does not involve learning disabilities. Some people falsely believe you can “cure” learning learning differences by “rewiring” the brain.

  • @kevincanales1486
    @kevincanales1486 7 лет назад

    Me being a massage therapist and learning so much about the body it was easy for my to understand what he did and how it worked like the hamstring thing is cause that's one of the main movements that the hamstring does it movement towards our back so allowing it to move around can help against scar tissue that restricts the muscles and helps remove the pain in the area

  • @jaimenickson
    @jaimenickson 7 лет назад +20

    Michelle is always crying what is her zodiac sign

  • @yonokashi
    @yonokashi 7 лет назад +3

    Neuromods

    • @user-js8hf3zj9y
      @user-js8hf3zj9y 7 лет назад

      S P Y D Ξ R 《》 I almost threw my phone away when I saw your display

  • @bamir1
    @bamir1 Год назад

    When your health insurance has run out

  • @cat27evergreen
    @cat27evergreen 7 лет назад

    Where can I get this done

  • @bobjames9849
    @bobjames9849 7 лет назад +12

    Why does she cry in every shoot

  • @op4gothic
    @op4gothic 7 лет назад +3

    Can you help me i cant smell anything all my life :(

    • @calvinbrownie
      @calvinbrownie 7 лет назад

      there should be surgeries or doctors that could help you if they can make people see again they should be able to make you smell again but it will cost a lot of money

    • @Wonderingcrowbird
      @Wonderingcrowbird 7 лет назад

      Faris ali I'd try this, chiropractor, etc not surgery

  • @MisterTingles
    @MisterTingles 7 лет назад

    probably the most fascinating thing i've ever seen. not even exaggerating, this might end up being the video that changes my life.

  • @JonesBrothersProductionsiac
    @JonesBrothersProductionsiac 6 лет назад

    I need this for my anxiety and focusness.

  • @sjame1
    @sjame1 6 лет назад +3

    Michelle is literally so extra lmfao

  • @lolalane5257
    @lolalane5257 7 лет назад +27

    trust me i love michelle but is there a video where she doesn't cry omg

  • @Ecliptic47
    @Ecliptic47 6 лет назад +2

    Buzzfeed: let's rewire your brain for a video
    Person 1: is this safe
    Buzzfeed: yeah, you are in perfect hands
    Person 1: *gets ligma*

  • @cassiepiva6091
    @cassiepiva6091 7 лет назад

    im so glad that this is one of the only channels that doesnt clickbait

  • @Tony-sx1rh
    @Tony-sx1rh 7 лет назад +11

    Was anyone else like "omg if she force real crying??!!" Lol

  • @hyacinthoides
    @hyacinthoides 7 лет назад +6

    why can't jordan leave buzzfeed lol

  • @marmareido
    @marmareido 7 лет назад

    man how much will this cost? esp on several classes? no chances of me getting it though, i live a continent away, but im still interested

  • @christianbass10
    @christianbass10 3 года назад

    It gives a vibes that something is about to go down after the massage🤣🙏

  • @fujmish
    @fujmish 7 лет назад +77

    this guy seems lowkey creepy

  • @Ttiiaarraa
    @Ttiiaarraa 7 лет назад +55

    Michelle literally always cries

  • @ratkin9913
    @ratkin9913 6 лет назад +2

    *Zendaya comes in out of now where*
    "How can we rewire our brains"

  • @PriscillaOpokuYeboah
    @PriscillaOpokuYeboah 7 лет назад +2

    PLACEBO EFFECT

  • @mylifeisameme1534
    @mylifeisameme1534 7 лет назад +4

    Wait why is Michelle in this video?!???

    • @mooglare
      @mooglare 7 лет назад +1

      My life Is a meme this video is probably pretty old

  • @averageblackjoe
    @averageblackjoe 7 лет назад +18

    I just found this #notnotificationaquad

  • @NetiNeti-gm5bz
    @NetiNeti-gm5bz 6 лет назад +1

    I've had this done and my past trauma was healed in minutes after carrying it for over 2 decades. However, it does require practice so you don't fall back on the same thinking habits

  • @nicolebradford6284
    @nicolebradford6284 6 лет назад +1

    I love these kinds of videos there so relaxing 😌😌😌

  • @lyns9628
    @lyns9628 7 лет назад +3

    what was

  • @HrishiBaney
    @HrishiBaney 7 лет назад +23

    Michelle makes the video too deep even time.
    Sometimes leaving her out is a lot better.

  • @tiktokplus956
    @tiktokplus956 6 лет назад

    Lmao this reminds me of one of those documentaries about weird animals doing some sorta mating ritual

  • @coleriley775
    @coleriley775 6 лет назад

    Hey doc, wonder if this could help my myoclnonic spasms , if you are ever on TN I would love to try it. I am in desperate need of relief as they control my life.

  • @hud9041
    @hud9041 7 лет назад +6

    who is here before 50 views

  • @tristmarvel5335
    @tristmarvel5335 7 лет назад +43

    Shes always crying

  • @aliarusso4301
    @aliarusso4301 7 лет назад

    3:05 lol his head 😂

  • @DillanmrcMSP
    @DillanmrcMSP 7 лет назад

    The tendons on the back of my knee are so tight. I am able to do the splits, but those tendons top me from fully being able to. is there anyway to stretch that out?

  • @sean7332
    @sean7332 7 лет назад +20

    go to 4:18 😉

  • @CStPeter
    @CStPeter 7 лет назад +13

    😂😂😂😂😂😂 buzzfeed is a load of crap

  • @fatoomrachid6250
    @fatoomrachid6250 7 лет назад

    Does this help those with scoliosis?

  • @theclockworks2
    @theclockworks2 7 лет назад

    Do you think this could help muscular dystrophy? When i was about 15 my body decided that that the protein needed to make muscle is not needed, so my body stopped making muscle. I only loose muscle, i cant gain it. Ive been in a wheelchair for about 8 years now. I really need to find something that works.

  • @TheHaloop
    @TheHaloop 7 лет назад +12

    Why is this chick always crying?

  • @erinbrown8914
    @erinbrown8914 7 лет назад +27

    Why does that girl cry every episode she's in? The camera is not a therapist, get some help

  • @stylishgiraffe7334
    @stylishgiraffe7334 6 лет назад

    I think all buzzfeed employees should have those prosedure

  • @elizabethcoyotl1883
    @elizabethcoyotl1883 7 лет назад +1

    i mean, isnt he just teaching you how to properly do things? like if you learned to walk in a way that makes your feet drag, he teaches you what it feels like when your feet dont drag

  • @ellen3931
    @ellen3931 7 лет назад +129

    Does anyone else find Michelle to be a little melodramatic? I understand some of these issues are important, but she turns every video into some kind of sentimental crap and then stars to cry about it.

    • @janiya7335
      @janiya7335 7 лет назад +6

      엘렌 Honestly yes, but some people.."take things" differently​. I dunno how to explain it but maybe the experience she has makes her "sentimental"

    • @TheAlexandra211
      @TheAlexandra211 7 лет назад +5

      엘렌 I agree. Every video that she is in somehow or another she ends up crying.

    • @genahxoxo_
      @genahxoxo_ 7 лет назад +20

      She's just sensitive I guess

    • @IschysSyrra
      @IschysSyrra 7 лет назад +18

      You seem to have anger issues, going around on the internet giving diminishing comments, turning every comment field into some ignorant hateful crap-filled place, and you will probably cry about it if anyone says something to you about it.

    • @ellen3931
      @ellen3931 7 лет назад +9

      Lisa Persson Actually no. I've only ever been diagnosed with social anxiety.
      As a result, I can sympathise with the struggle of mental health and low confidence, but as someone who has a lot of difficulty with these things I find it irritating when someone makes a big deal out of issues that are so small.
      I understand that my personal issues are nothing compared to what others experience, so I try not to go on about them or burden others with them.
      I don't wish to spread negativity, and I don't dislike Michelle. But her attitude towards everything makes it such a sad thing when it really doesn't have to be.
      I apologise for triggering you, you're clearly a very sensitive individual.

  • @HunterCartan
    @HunterCartan 7 лет назад +14

    I'm pretty sure he's taking advantage of these girls

  • @mr.ninetails6447
    @mr.ninetails6447 6 лет назад

    Would this work with motor tick cause if so i NEED IT

  • @user-js8hf3zj9y
    @user-js8hf3zj9y 7 лет назад +1

    Next week on Buzzfeed Unsolved - The Bizarre Video Ideas of Buzzfeed
    There have been many theories, but it will still remained *UNSOLVED*

  • @gameplayswithcj3309
    @gameplayswithcj3309 7 лет назад +3

    My name is CJ whats yours?

  • @anidrawsd2416
    @anidrawsd2416 7 лет назад +8

    And how is this a good idea?

  • @we88881
    @we88881 6 лет назад

    this guy seems to really understand people like most of these people confused on him so easily

  • @henryd.3995
    @henryd.3995 7 лет назад

    This is the placebo effect