Dr Syl's Psychiatric Analysis: 'Anxiety & Depression - Giana' (Soft White Underbelly)

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ธ.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 409

  • @cathyjoy9214
    @cathyjoy9214 ปีที่แล้ว +117

    So very grateful that you are doing these videos. Distinguishing between the specific disorders - too many call everything 'anxiety & depression'. Also, loved that you specifically mentioned how 'being clean' should not be used to describe 'not taking your prescribed medication'.

  • @steveneardley7541
    @steveneardley7541 ปีที่แล้ว +313

    I was having severe panic attacks, and was prescribed a number of SSRIs (none of which helped, and had awful side effects). I finally ended up on Xanax. It had fewer side effects, but I was still having panic attacks. I went to a nutritionist, who did muscle testing on me and told me I was allergic to milk products. I went off milk products and have never had another panic attack, and that was 23 years ago. I am no longer on any psychiatric drugs.

    • @martinasikk6162
      @martinasikk6162 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Thank you for that information. I’m happy you are healthy now. 🌹

    • @thatdutchguy89
      @thatdutchguy89 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Weird

    • @ItzaMystri
      @ItzaMystri ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Fascinating, thanks for sharing

    • @Chels-fz5uq
      @Chels-fz5uq ปีที่แล้ว +44

      A milk allergy isn’t picked up on “muscle” testing. 😅

    • @hannahmitchell87
      @hannahmitchell87 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      were panic attacks your only symptom? and did they correlate with you consuming dairy?

  • @le_th_
    @le_th_ ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I appreciate your nuanced approach to dissecting this particular video of Soft White Underbelly. One of the biggest problems I have with this YT channel is that he chooses inaccurate titles (in order to get the most views) and it's quite misleading (at times).
    More importantly, I appreciate that you have the ability to diagnose these symptoms that so many psychologists can't (because they'd need post-doc education since it's not taught in most programs).
    As a layperson, when I hear childhood meltdowns, I immediately think of two possibilities: autism spectrum or bipolar disorder as the first consideration, although those aren't the only two.

    • @OurTube_TheOriginal
      @OurTube_TheOriginal ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Also SWU doesn’t seem to provide a therapist behind the scenes to be there after someone talks about really difficult things. The woman in this video had a caring family or at least mom and seemed OK but many of those who are interviewed seem to find themselves unexpectedly going into tough things which is great to get out into public for society’s benefit AND to just walk off into the mean streets alone or even to a hotel room if mark feels charitable in their case is not ideal at all and can be damaging for many who have suffered severe trauma. He ought to ask “What sorts of support do you have now and for after this interview?” But he is an excellent videographer/artists not an excellent interviewer though he has chosen a population ground breaking for such in depth interviews. Wish he’d be a tad more humble and work more empathetically and as a team.

    • @Roswell33
      @Roswell33 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I came here to mention Autism. I found out at 37 that I'm on the spectrum and it explains so much!

    • @le_th_
      @le_th_ หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@OurTube_TheOriginal Yes, he doesn't seem to care that talking about sometimes extreme trauma only reinforces the neural pathways of those painful memories. Very recently, I observed him showing zero empathy for a 20 year old female during her 2nd interview with him, shortly after she endured a violent SA while asleep on a couch at a friend's house. I had to turn it off because I was so disgusted with him.
      You're right, he is a "good interviewer" and photographer, but he's not really making sure these individuals, most of whom have severe personality disorders, are having an opportunity to speak with someone after recounting some of the most difficult experiences of their life. Most probaby want to go out and use drugs right away after these interviews, once those they are alone with those recently revived memories and feelings. I couldn't agree with you more, as I've observed almost exactly what you have.

    • @le_th_
      @le_th_ หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Roswell33 Thank you for sharing your late diagnosis. I wish you the best going forward now that you have some answers! : )

  • @sdc9368
    @sdc9368 ปีที่แล้ว +52

    I just now watched your evaluation of this anxiety depression video. And you certainly have the heart for helping people. I read somewhere that the vulnerability of mental health care workers requires that they themselves require a psychiatric evaluation every so often because of their exposure to so many ill patients. I wish you the greatest success in your endeavor.

  • @christinfierro8009
    @christinfierro8009 ปีที่แล้ว +61

    THANK YOU for differentiating depression from sadness!!!!! This is SO frustrating for me, as I experience severe depression. I HATE when people tell me to just think positive thoughts etc. Most often my symptoms are physiological at this point in my life. I've done a ton of work with my counselor, psych, and use my knowledge of ABA. Depression is not a choice and is not synonymous with being sad. Ugghh! This drives me bonkers when people dont get this and give advice from such an ignorant stand point.

    • @heatherrae901
      @heatherrae901 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I feel that way when people describe their nervousness as anxiety. Lots of situations would naturally make one nervous but to suffer from anxiety is debilitating and happens in situations where it's not even warranted, for me. It's frustrating.

    • @avril.227
      @avril.227 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yep. This is why I can’t stand the big pseudo science people all over social media.

    • @Thatshow8223
      @Thatshow8223 ปีที่แล้ว

      💯🎯

    • @Ciara-ASMR
      @Ciara-ASMR ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Absolutely! I have depression too and when I’m having a depressive episode, for some try to relate with their own episodic sadness and tips on how they just got over it used to make me feel like I was so broken for not being able to be happy, I would feel like it was my fault and that the world hated me for being sad. Now I am much stronger and I am very careful with who I talk to about it, and I always explain clearly that sadness when it continues and you can’t come to the root of it is exhausting and it’s the compounding of it that makes it hard. I don’t let them away with fobbing me off but I also don’t hold onto it if they don’t get it.

    • @dopex89
      @dopex89 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@heatherrae901everyone feels anxious at some point. Not everyone has an anxiety disorder. I wouldn't call myself an anxious person but I do feel anxious from time to time in specific situations. I don't think it's harmful to talk about it. Not trying to discredit your struggles, but I don't think people are being disrespectful if they share about their anxiety without being diagnosed with GAD or another mental illness.

  • @ritz6982
    @ritz6982 ปีที่แล้ว +89

    I was put on antipsychotics to deal with my mood swings. Problem was I was being abused by my partner - and when I left I just didn’t have mental illness at all. Sadly the antipsychotics probably made me stay longer because I wasn’t connected to my own intuition. When I got off them I also managed to realise I had to escape the relationship.

    • @ChristinaFromYoutube
      @ChristinaFromYoutube ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I went through a similar experience.
      Basically a target for people that want to call me crazy so they provoke me until i can't stand it anymore.
      Now that i isolate i have no anxiety.

    • @OurTube_TheOriginal
      @OurTube_TheOriginal ปีที่แล้ว +3

      So sorry you experienced that AND thank you so much for articulating a strange unpublicized aspect side effect of medications and how ENVIRONMENT is often what needs changed not always the person’s responsibility alone. I imagine you might have had some social supports in order to leave and see the meds effects?

    • @TashaRansomArt
      @TashaRansomArt ปีที่แล้ว +2

      This!!

    • @OM-or3im
      @OM-or3im ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I am a fairly new clinician and i am soooo reluctant to suggest medication to clients especially if i learn there is a possibly toxic or abusive partner. I know it’s because i didn’t grow up in this country and i dislike meds in general for many reasons. Thank you for sharing your experience and i hope you are doing well!

    • @Felice_Enellen
      @Felice_Enellen ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Misdiagnosis is definitely a major problem in any field of medicine.
      There's an old joke, it goes something like, "Q: What do you call a med student who graduates in the bottom 10% of their class? A: Doctor."
      You really have to learn to learn to recognize a doctor who barely scraped by, and fire them ASAP so you can find a better one. Never feel guilty about switching docs or shrinks.
      Personally I find it telling when a doctor is very authoritarian. Good doctors look me in the eye and ask probing questions, rather than looking at a checklist or only talking to you while they're preparing the next part of the exam and have attention to spare. Avoid any doc that feels like he's running his office like an assembly line.

  • @MegaWakingup
    @MegaWakingup ปีที่แล้ว +46

    This is hard for me to watch. At 26 I was put on Paxil for panic attacks. That started an ugly vortex of more diagnosis (including depression, hypomania, and rapid cycling bipolar) and more medications. Too many meds to list over the next 18 years. Weaning off them was one of the hardests things I have ever done. The last 12 years, off meds, have been the best years of my life.

    • @sharonthompson672
      @sharonthompson672 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      I've always wondered how many people who were diagnosed bipolar are actually on the autism spectrum. 🤔

    • @szuber72
      @szuber72 ปีที่แล้ว

      The statement he made that you can't get addicted to SSRIs is completely false. I was put on Paxil when I was 25 years old and have never been able to get off of it because of the severe withdrawal. They try tapering it and replacing it with something else but it don't work. I have tried so many times to get off this poison that they call medication to no avail. Been stuck on it for 25 years. It has ruined my life and made it a living hell.

    • @phendranaa
      @phendranaa ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Wow that must've been tough but worth it. Yeah I don't understand the casual way he promotes meds, especially since there's no proof that mental illness is a chemical imbalance and people get misdiagnosed all the time.

    • @merin5230
      @merin5230 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @offthecrook
      I'm interested in your opinion that there is no proof that mental illness is due to chemical imbalance, and therefore meds are unnecessary.
      I get the impression that you are one of the lucky people who have not experienced mental illness. I envy you.
      I would like to read the paper that disproves the chemical imbalance model. Of course, not ALL mental illness is due to chemical imbalance. And sometimes, naturally, chemical imbalance ,when it occurs, does not need meds to correct the balance.
      Our brain lies in a bath of chemicals. It's awash with them. So many that I'm sure we will be discovering hitherto unknown chemicals in our brain bath for many decades or centuries to come.
      Certainly, the chemicals in our brain do change many times each day, depending on the stimulation or lack thereof that our little lump of fatty tissue depends on to direct our thoughts and actions.
      If we are under a perceived threat, for example, our body manufactures stress hormones, like adrenalin and cortisol and ,ooh, many others, that will allow our muscles to perform above normal standard to get us out of the threatening situation.
      And at other times our brain may need to think very fast and hard to make decisions with little time for cognitive musing. In which case, our clever little brain demands and receives a larger than usual amount of Seratonin to help those synaptic transmitters to gear up a level or two. Of course, if the Seratonin produced remains after the stimulus ,necessity for the extra supply has passed, then the person in whom that brain resides may start to behave a little strangely as their brain is being overstimulated. But the brilliant design of the old grey matter has thought of that, if you'll excuse the pun! And has these little things that can be thought of as vacuums, which remove the excess Seratonin and recycle it so the brain, and therefore the mind, can safely cycle down to baseline levels.
      Anyone reading this, please understand I'm using layman's terms here to make life simple. Especially as I am a layman.
      Anyway, these little vacuums 'hoover' up the excess chemicals and get them cleared away to restore normal function. This is , as I understand it, referred to as 'reuptake'. Sometimes, though, the little vacuums get a bit enthusiastic, and keep on hoovering after optimum baseline has been achieved, and then the poor old brain is left struggling because the Seratonin level is now below optimum and synaptic signals are impeded by lack of Seratonin. This ,if it continues , is often referred to as 'depression'. Symptoms being, among other things, a flattening of mood. Perhaps a lack of affect, or possibly the opposite, accompanied by excessive lability. This causes the human hosting the mind to function erratically and experience distress and often loss of income. If the little reuptake mechanisms do not switch themselves off, and the brain is left choking for lack of Seratonin, then a Seratonin reuptake inhibitor may be prescribed, this allowing the Seratonin levels to gradually build up again to correct levels.
      While the brain and the mind remain largely a huge mystery, we do seem to have found some little things that can help rebalance things and so lift a depressive mood. By altering the chemical balance in the brain.
      What causes this to happen is not widely known, but the little bit we do know seems to work very well. As a lady who needed an ssri for quite some time, and felt very much better for it once levels had been restored, I am ,understandably, I think, very interested in the paper that has disproved the theory, ( fact), that depressive mood can result from an imbalance of Seratonin.
      I'd really appreciate the link, or the title and author of this very important body of work. Was the research done in the states? Harvard, maybe? Or was it Cambridge or Oxford in England? Edinburgh University has a very high standard, perhaps it originated there?
      It doesn't really matter , I suppose. Just that the knowledge is available to us all so we can avoid taking unnecessary medication.

    • @ThePathOfLeastResistanc
      @ThePathOfLeastResistanc ปีที่แล้ว

      @@sharonthompson672actually lots of females

  • @amberkluga8949
    @amberkluga8949 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    her comment, and your follow-up, to "clicking" with a therapist is something I discovered during my battles with anxiety, depression, and working through the abuse in my childhood. I went to several before finding one that had an approach that worked for me. It wasn't just about liking them, I liked a few of the ones I rejected because their their approach of affirmations or spiritual solutions just wasn't what I needed to figure myself out. Don't be afraid to end a therapeutic relationship that isn't working for you, and don't give up assuming all therapy/therapist will not work.

    • @GailMailable
      @GailMailable ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I could not agree more! I'll share my experience. I am a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, which I didn't remember, until I was an adult. Interestingly, while taking psychology courses in college, I realized all the warning signs were present, looking back, but the memory was blocked for years. So, I went to a therapist. After two visits, this counselor, he actually said that it wasn't actually memories, but simply a "suggestion" from the MeToo movement! I KID YOU NOT!!!! I promptly left and got a new therapist, who actually began the process of helping me process and start healing. If your gut is telling you that something is "not quite right" with your therapist, trust that instinct and keep looking for someone you connect with.

    • @safetyfirst3132
      @safetyfirst3132 ปีที่แล้ว

      The last time I tried therapy, (as a female, with a female therapist) she told me that there was no reason to masturbate once you’re married. Obviously she was a conservative woman with patriarchal ideals that was of the opinion that any sexual feeling I had should be shared with my husband. Meanwhile indicating that I was somehow responsible to resolve his every erection. She also insisted that I get on medication by my 3rd visit. After meeting with the psychiatrist and expressing an opinion against taking antidepressants, I was prescribed anti-seizure medication instead. I lied and said I was taking it. The only thing that changed was the way she behaved. “See how much calmer you are now?” After 2 weeks of visits post “meds kicking in” I disclosed that I never took the meds and canceled all future appointments. I haven’t returned to therapy since. I’m still holding a grudge against the money I spent. But at least I’m not leaving a comment about losing years of my life experimenting with a bunch of psych drugs.

    • @aggravatedHart
      @aggravatedHart ปีที่แล้ว

      @@safetyfirst3132I’ve found this trend of religious therapists very disturbing. It’s about all I can find in my area and I’m not religious at all. Every time I went to a therapist it was horrible. One treated me like I was her therapist and would tell me all her problems. Another kept trying to get me to be ok with what happened to me when it is not something that was ok. Another kept wanting to try things that stressed me out really bad to “help keep me calm.” I would tell her they stressed me out more and she would get mad at me and say they calm you down and is part of the standard care for my issue and I should just do them and they would calm me….when they were actively stressing me out. You can only go to so many therapists before you run out of money when you aren’t rich. I saw several therapists and all that ever happened was my problems got 10xs worse, I had insomnia, hallucinations and brain shocks while coming off their awful drugs(I was also not ever told about that possibility when put on it) and I ran out of money.

  • @HeyLetsTalkAboutIt
    @HeyLetsTalkAboutIt ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Finding the right therapist for me has made so much of a difference. Especially as a first responder.

  • @TashkaGrace
    @TashkaGrace ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Nice to hear you’re view that it’s not just about medication. Therapy is also needed.

  • @mandy3404
    @mandy3404 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    SSRIs may be 'not addictive' but you still get nasty withdrawals when you stop taking them. Even with 'tapering slowly' it can be debilitating for some people.

  • @HollyJordan15
    @HollyJordan15 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    A lot of women are diagnosed with bipolar when really it’s ADHD or autism or a combination of the two.

  • @missellehayes
    @missellehayes ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This was one of the best videos on basic mental health care that I've ever seen! Thank you for making it.

  • @ctidd
    @ctidd 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    This was great, thank you. Glad to hear that you want to become a psychiatrist. My grandfather was a psychiatrist. It’s so good to see the stigma start to be dismantled over mental health. Giana has a self awareness and understanding of her brain at 25 that I wish I had. I’m turning 50 this year and it’s only been within the past 6 months that I got my depression diagnosed and the right meds to help.

  • @M3ganss
    @M3ganss ปีที่แล้ว +36

    It’s crazy what the right medication can do. Went from the highest dose on one medication not seeing any benefit to my mental health to the absolute lowest dose on another and felt 110x better than I’d ever felt before

    • @MassaCreatures1031
      @MassaCreatures1031 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I’m so happy you’re feeling better. Recently my psychiatrist switched my antidepressant to night time because it was making me feel groggy, exhausted and worsened my dissociation. But now I feel a hundred times better. I’m not tired in the day, my depression is still there but it’s not getting in the way of too many things, I only wake up once in the night instead of four times etc. It’s not just the type of meds but how you take it can drastically affect you.

    • @OurTube_TheOriginal
      @OurTube_TheOriginal ปีที่แล้ว

      Specifics might help more people. Thank you.

  • @Who-en2vo
    @Who-en2vo ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Im glad i finally found an underlying reason for constant feelings of anxiety and depression. I have ehlers danlos and my spine is already degenerating in my 30's. It makes logical sense why I have a racing heart and can sleep a whole day when im dragging around a half paralyzed leg and process pain as anxiety and dont sleep eell because im exhausted. Anxiety and depression can vary so much from person to person and can be symptoms of other things, really appreciate your videos as im up during a pain flare and unable to find a comfortable way to lay down.

  • @marykaykovalkoski5762
    @marykaykovalkoski5762 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Great video, you brought up some points that hit close to home. I suffer from anxiety and went to therapy for years, the changing of medication can be very overwhelming. I believe the best thing that worked for me was cognitive reconstruction. Also, the going “clean” made me roll my eyes…if you are a diabetic should you stop taking your insulin so you could be “clean”…of course not! Metal illness still has a negative stigma, although I am relieved it is getting better. Personally I live a peaceful life and have a positive outlook on life, for that I have an enormous amount of gratitude. Thank you for sharing your videos, hopefully it will open peoples eyes.

  • @Sophiedorian0535
    @Sophiedorian0535 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    I distinguish between Sad, Blue, Down, Doomy, and Gloomy. I have experienced them as five very very different feelings, since I was about eight years old. I’m sixty-one, and a retired music teacher.

    • @dsoule4902
      @dsoule4902 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Music teachers ... thank you

  • @debbieporter6581
    @debbieporter6581 2 ปีที่แล้ว +87

    I've had mental health problems for over 25 yrs. Could you do a video on Borderline Personality disorder. I'm 67 now and it has completely ruined my life. I love your channel.Thank you so much for all your informative videos.

    • @PortraitoftheArtistasanOldDog8
      @PortraitoftheArtistasanOldDog8 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I have been watching a cluster b youtubr Prof Sam Vaknin he is phenomenal inc blew my mind with bpd knowledge....

    • @livinginparallel
      @livinginparallel ปีที่แล้ว +16

      If you do, Dr. Syl, can you please talk about how BPD is one of the most common misdiagnoses for Autism? In general, I would love to see you analyze all the many and complex comorbidities of Autism and AuDHD, and how hard it is to diagnose in high masking, especially AFAB high masking people??? We need the industry to start talking about this!

    • @CleoHarperReturns
      @CleoHarperReturns ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I'm so sorry you've gone through this. I'm sure because of the times you've had little to no emotional support system as the world just doesn't get it. Yet. It's coming around.
      Stay strong; your life isn't yet over. You've still got decades if you're careful and you can use them to become whoever you want -- not what someone else expects you to be. That's the shit you throw out the window.
      Just don't literally throw shit out the window. They arrest you for that nowadays.😉

    • @melissareece8656
      @melissareece8656 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      My mom was a Borderline. It wasnt fun. Shes dead now. My sister and I are still in therapy from all her chaos.

    • @asassynation9955
      @asassynation9955 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@melissareece8656I have it too, (diagnosed) and I can definitely understand that it must be difficult for others to deal with. I’m sorry for all of you that had to suffer because of this awful, awful sickness. ❤

  • @robynmills3934
    @robynmills3934 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Hi, I too have experienced years of depression and thought I was in a good place and decided to do my counselling degree. I’m in year 3 and the self reflection and treatment has been awesome because I am in the best mental health space I have ever been. I realise there is always more tidying to do. I love your video’s, subject matter and your style. You are introducing new ideas but also edifying my learning- thank you. From across the ditch in NZ!

  • @jbbeats7786
    @jbbeats7786 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    It's always cool to hear your perspective about mental health, therapy, and psychiatry. I've been in and out of counseling for almost 9 years, and also am working toward my bachelor's in psychology (eventually also a master's in counseling) to become a therapist. Love your channel, Dr. Syl!

  • @CleoHarperReturns
    @CleoHarperReturns ปีที่แล้ว +46

    I was misdiagnosed with bipolar and took Latuda for 3 years. Because I'm not bipolar, it was constant drool city for me and I barely remember those three years. I'm sure it would've been fine if I'd been properly diagnosed. Honestly I've had different diagnoses with each doctor so I take them all with a grain of salt. The effects of psych meds in general are as varied as fingerprints; I was told we still can't explain consciousness and psychology is still in its infancy. Be patient; once you find the right meds it makes all the difference (but so does therapy -- many people need both). For those of you nervous to take meds, they do NOT change who you essentially are -- what happens is that everything is brought into focus so that you have the clarity to get to work on the problem. With Latuda, I too temporarily had auditory hallucinations, though not voices...mechanical noises or music that wasn't playing. I never had a problem with rashes. Sorry this is scattered. Good luck!

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. ปีที่แล้ว +4

      100% agree about medication. My SSRI has helped me deal with anxiety and deal with anxiety causing situations. It does not make me a different person but it makes me a more complete person.

    • @Marlayyna
      @Marlayyna ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I was also misdiagnosed with bipolar and took Latuda too! It gave me terrible restless legs. I hardly remember the period of time when I was taking antipsychotics. This happened when I was young too and I really think that it messed with my developing brain because my short and long term memory is very poor now.

    • @CleoHarperReturns
      @CleoHarperReturns ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@Marlayyna It very well could be. When I stopped taking Latuda it took years but my memory did return. I think it was more about concentration than actual memory loss -- but I was in my 40s when I took it so my experiences will be different. The restless leg was a nightmare though! Worst side effect EVER. Seems that a bipolar diagnosis is the new catchall bandaid for things that can't be explained. Yet.

    • @Lovestoplaywithfire
      @Lovestoplaywithfire ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Last summer my psychiatrist prescribed me Latuda. She has in her records that I have Bipolar Disorder but I have never been diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder. Within 4 days of being on Latuda I started to experience auditory and terrifying visual hallucinations that ended me in a psychiatric hospital for 10 days. As soon as the Latuda was out of my system, I no longer had any hallucinations (by the way I’m 47 and had never once experienced hallucinations until Latuda). It made me so angry because she just threw this powerful drug to see if it would “help.” Instead it somewhat ruined my life. Many psychiatrists need to do their homework before just throwing medications at patients to see what “sticks.” I’m a person, not a lab rat. Just thought I would share my experience and see if anyone else has had similar experiences.

    • @CleoHarperReturns
      @CleoHarperReturns ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Lovestoplaywithfire Wow that's terrible! I'm so sorry you went through that. Were you going to a govt-funded facility? Because that sounds like what I went through until I got proper insurance (and even a couple doctors after). Either way yours seemed pretty irresponsible; no one jumps directly to Latuda before trying other things. Or at least they shouldn't *because* the side effects are so strong.
      Unfortunately psychology (esp psychiatry) is still such a new field compared to trad medicine that we are still in the "see what sticks" era. More unfortunately, some doctors take that literally. We are very much lab rats now except we have to pay for the privilege (depending where you live). Whether we want it or not.
      Some achieve greatness, and others have greatness thrust upon them.
      The key word there is "thrust." We're currently in the era of Bend Over.

  • @jgnz
    @jgnz 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Probably one of the most relatable videos ive come across. Awesome video

  • @TheJenlavoy
    @TheJenlavoy ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Omg thank you I have BP2 CPTSD ADHD and everything out of your mouth is so on point with everything to a T .. this gave me some peace today I feel herd

  • @kchardison9480
    @kchardison9480 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Great video, thanks for posting! I have schizoaffective and was on lurasidone for a time also. Yeah, didn't go well for me either, and went way worse when I came off it. But everyone reacts differently. I really like that she, and you, point out that there is no one size fits all when it comes to treatment of any mental health disorder. Looking forward to your next vid(s)!

  • @justinwebb3117
    @justinwebb3117 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I find these commentary videos absolutely absorbing, and your pauses and interjections and additions (even when you say sorry for interrupting, is so cute) are really helpful in my understanding of the terminology, thanks! ❤

  • @TonyaKay
    @TonyaKay ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Biopolar 1 here. Thank you for mentioning that people are very open to talk about neurosis these days but still hush hush on psychosis. I find that to be accurate.

  • @GoldenVulpes
    @GoldenVulpes ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank you for this video. It helps me understand what my brother who has bipolar is going through

  • @DenGirl12
    @DenGirl12 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I’m not kidding you when I say I had the EXACT same thing happen in my late teens/early twenties. Being treated for BP (was told it was because I had one S attempt) and was on seroquel and lamictal. I was going to raves every weekend and taking ecstasy and lsd or shrooms and coke. The combinations of my habits with my medications was BAD. I wasn’t taking my meds regularly, I had super erratic behavior. It was not fun. That was twenty years ago. I was dx with AUTISM in February this year. So, my current and, finally, accurate (imho) dx is ADHD, Autism, OCD (trichotillomania), and anxiety.

    • @OurTube_TheOriginal
      @OurTube_TheOriginal ปีที่แล้ว

      And do they consider hormones? Life stages before diagnosis with MH labels? Not often.

  • @tammyd.970
    @tammyd.970 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Sadness vs. depression, in case it helps anyone: in the example given of winning money, I'd say people depressed *know* they should feel happy, but because they don't, the winning may make them feel worse. Then they have to pretend, or deal with people windering what's wrong with them. It's not just a lack of feeling, it's the inability to change that, knowing the societal expectation. It is isolating and is parasitic in nature.

  • @frickfrack7075
    @frickfrack7075 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    My husband has bi polar depressive disorder. When he is manic, he's "enjoying" himself, but from the outside he's edgy and seems uncomfortable.
    He's been slowly increasing dosage of lamictal for about a year now. He's finally at a dosage that's considered therapeutic. It's definitely helped keep him more stable, but he's disappointed because he liked the mania. He said it helped him get things done. Now he feels like he's just depressed and doesn't get the week of mania to break it up.
    I can understand how that's frustrating for him, but for me seeing him from my POV it seems like the better option to be more stable.
    It's worth mentioning that he gets to points where he will stop medication for awhile and relapse. He's also been told he has had schizo affective disorder. So he doesn't want to add more medications on top of what he's already taking. His doctor wants to get to a certain dosage of lamictal to see how he feels at that point, before discussing other meds... To add, or to discontinue ECT.
    It's definitely a journey and it can take a really long time to find the right dosage/combo that works for you.

  • @raelewis9957
    @raelewis9957 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    This was so much like what I went thru. My journey took me thru many different drugs but we have finally settled on an anti depressant and a mood stabilizer. Mind you it took many years to get here.

  • @felixhenson9926
    @felixhenson9926 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    As someone with bipolar 1 when she said she felt wired and couldn't sleep i immediately thought the same thing. Also that she said it was anxiety not hypomania is weird since hypomania can present in feelings like anxiety, agitation, restlessness, racing thoughts etc so i dunno that it's so easy to disentangle the two.

    • @princessleia9735
      @princessleia9735 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I was diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder and major depressive disorder with different doctors from when I was a teenager. Didn’t get a bipolar 1 diagnosis (months long episodes) until my late 20s. It’s tough because anxiety and depression are part of my bipolar, but depending on what presented at the time that’s what I was treated for.

    • @sharonthompson672
      @sharonthompson672 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I was misdiagnosed With Bipolar II, when in reality it was cptsd and depression. The wrong medication and being spoken to like a child and not being HEARD is the WORST.
      My life is my own again. It went from gray to technicolor. 🥰
      For anyone going through this, give yourself time. Find the RIGHT doctor. Yes, talk to your primary care doctor first.
      There IS a way to manage your brain health. And it's a beautiful, one of a kind brain. 👍

    • @OurTube_TheOriginal
      @OurTube_TheOriginal ปีที่แล้ว

      @@sharonthompson672 so common and sorry you went through that. A therapist told me PTSD and cPTSD are the psyphilis of mental health conditions because it so often shares overlapping symptoms with other conditions and dr. Don’t take the time plus it is new that there is much understanding at all of PTSD…i is misdiagnosed all the time therefore. Sharing any details how you found a “Right” dr. Would be great for potentially helping others.

  • @eliseintheattic9697
    @eliseintheattic9697 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    I can't speak for other countries, but I can tell you that in the US, it's extremely difficult to find a good psychiatrist. Most are lazy, arrogant, judgemental and act like seeing patients is a bother.

    • @SavannahSedai
      @SavannahSedai ปีที่แล้ว

      I had a WONDERFUL psych but the restrictions on how they practice with insurance providers (USA here) made him go to a no insurance accepting practice.
      The ones who know what they're doing get punished. He doesn't push medication. He wants to look into every route that could be causing things (which is wonderful).

    • @ZeldasSword
      @ZeldasSword ปีที่แล้ว

      What’s really scary, is the US has the best psych care currently. It’s beyond terrifying

  • @ksenijavranjevac2572
    @ksenijavranjevac2572 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I love the understanding nods Dr Syl does even if it's not him that is talking with the interviewee, that's such a psych move 😂 you can see the doc does a bunch of understanding nodding in his day job 😊

  • @jetsandthebombers
    @jetsandthebombers ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Dr Syl these videos are excellent. You know how to communicate effectively. Glad i stumbled upon ur vids.

  • @laurelgillespie5612
    @laurelgillespie5612 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thanks!

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      No problem! Thank you for the support 🧡❤️♥️

  • @Saritabanana
    @Saritabanana ปีที่แล้ว

    EMDR is the jam, man. I love my therapist, Gail. She changed my life. Got so much worse before it got better. My mood can get down and my life can feel really heavy still at times, but at least now I'm aware of my triggers and have rewired my brain in a way to not react in such self harmful ways like isolating and ruminating and thinking everyone hates me. I see life and people differently like I don't need external approval to exist. I like it though! This therapy has helped more than the meds for sure but the combo is the key. Thanks!

  • @katm5903
    @katm5903 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I had the most success going to a psychiatrist vs pcp AND a good therapist. Therapy helped me identify triggers, how to cope with them, and then ultimately how to avoid triggering people or events. Having a psychiatrist really helped me get a more effective combination of medications. I feel "normal" now, not a zombie and such a better functioning human.

  • @eleanoredmunds7102
    @eleanoredmunds7102 ปีที่แล้ว

    This video came up randomly on my home feed and ive now currently decided to book an appointment with my Dr and see if i can get a referal. So thanks 😊

  • @deer105
    @deer105 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Paradoxical reactions to atypical antipsychotics aren't as rare as you might think. For some reason symptoms of the underlying illness may worsen in direct response to the medication, and a person who has Bipolar disorder without psychosis might develop transient psychosis. Sometimes anxiety in response to an antidepressant is a paradoxical response too, as opposed to a switch into dysphoric mania.

    • @OurTube_TheOriginal
      @OurTube_TheOriginal ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes and antidepressants can cause anxiety to increase for those with PTSD and cPTSD too.

  • @lizl2432
    @lizl2432 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I have GAD and my psych has put me on every SSRI under the sun but I always wonder why most psychiatrists are willing to put me on an everyday medication rather than a benzodiazepine for “as-needed use”. I was given clonazepam 15 pills each month to use as needed and it was perfect. I’ve been on benzodiazepines everyday before and have had no problem stopping so I know I don’t have a tendency for dependency so I just don’t understand why he’s willing to keep changing my anxiety meds when there is a good one that works, that I know I don’t become dependent on. Many psychiatrist’s are so hesitant to give benzo’s, but if a patient is telling you it works I think it should be fine.

    • @avril.227
      @avril.227 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You sound exactly like me. SSRIs can make some people more anxious or literally not help with GAD. Benzos worked but no Doctors in my area will prescribe them. 🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @tiffanylynn8376
    @tiffanylynn8376 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    “Chill Syl” 😂 this journey is gonna be fun!

  • @thelonemaiden
    @thelonemaiden ปีที่แล้ว

    Really appreciates the providing reactions, on multiple aspects! This is great just in that this would help the post's dimensionality and expand on the lens:)

  • @WendyVega-mi3fe
    @WendyVega-mi3fe ปีที่แล้ว

    I love watching Dr.Syl hes very educated in every aspect of mental health hes my favorite as u watched different Drs. And they just never make sense he is so young too wich is surprising love watching you Dr. Syl thank you for wonderful educating videos and awareness

  • @Atleastihavemydog
    @Atleastihavemydog ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The best part of being prescribed antidepressants for anxiety is the ringing in the ears they cause. It’s the icing on the cake.

  • @kitthekat1612
    @kitthekat1612 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I had SJS. Took 6 months of high dose steroids and silver packs to finally heal and not have it creep back. Was on my skin, eyes, nails, nose bleeds, sores all inside my mouth, even lower GI bleeding. Was from taking lamotrigine and fluoxetine at the same time. I still have the scars and watching your skin just sheer away and slough off and not hurt because it's dead is such a weird experience.
    Also had serotonin syndrome when they upped my fluoxetine, sumatriptan, sleeping pill, and pain pill for a migrain. Blown pupils, my jaw was gurning, arms like a Trex, spasms, nystagmus, fever, vomiting, etc. They tested my reflexes and had me inpatient. Felt awful.

  • @Enjoyinglifeonedayatatime
    @Enjoyinglifeonedayatatime ปีที่แล้ว

    I really enjoyed this, I am glad that she got the help that she needed and continues to work on it.

  • @aspidoscelis
    @aspidoscelis ปีที่แล้ว +7

    At 18:30 - Regarding being honest with your psychiatrist... it would be nice if someone would explain how to do that. For me, at least, the basic problem is that every interaction with the medical system puts me in a very stressful and unfamiliar social environment, and the way I've learned to deal with stressful, unfamiliar environments is "pretend everything is fine and hope they don't notice". That isn't a conscious choice, it's more like a fail-safe that just starts running of its own accord while my executive functions go hide in the corner for a while. Usually, a couple minutes after the interaction ends, I'm thinking to myself, "WTF? Why do I do that? It doesn't feel like that was even me in there!"
    Assuming this isn't unique to me, presumably there is some workaround or accommodation that could be put in place, but I don't know what it is or how to get there.

    • @MJJYANA
      @MJJYANA ปีที่แล้ว

      You probably went through a lot and deal with feelings of distrust and unsafety. I recognize what you are saying. Been send away a few times, because of my coping mechanisms. But since I try to be more open and more vulnerable about my issues, the more the help got into tune. It's very important to take the time to become comfortable and trust your psy or anyone you talk to, before opening up, because opening up makes you feel vulnerable and makes you feel unsafe.

    • @aspidoscelis
      @aspidoscelis ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Thanks. I just don’t really know how to do the “becoming comfortable and trusting” part. There ought to be a manual, or something…

    • @MJJYANA
      @MJJYANA ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@aspidoscelis there isn't a manual, because it's about feeling and everyone has their own tempo in that. It's normal behaviour when you went through a lot and it takes time to trust again. Don't rush, you probably had times where your trust had been broken, abused and situations weren't safe for you. Counselers and psych need to have patience. You may share that it's a big issue for you to create a connection. For me I also wasn't used to reach out for help anymore, because I had to deal with things on my own for a long time. Be kind to yourself 💓

    • @aspidoscelis
      @aspidoscelis ปีที่แล้ว

      Well, suppose you’ve never seen anyone play golf, don’t know any of the rules, how scoring works, or what any of the equipment is for. And someone just sends you out onto a golf course, alone, with the instruction to “play golf”. That’s what it feels like.

    • @aspidoscelis
      @aspidoscelis ปีที่แล้ว

      I think there are some social abilities everyone else takes for granted, and I just don’t have. I could learn, but it’s hard when people don’t realize that these are things you can simply… not know.

  • @oem8530
    @oem8530 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    She is so me, I can't even believe.
    At least she was diagnosed pretty early and not at 35 with your whole life down the drain.
    I also had a similar breakdown for a long long time with panic attacks and dissociation for weeks, I was terrified of leaving my room let alone go out the house, i physically couldnt move, but I never worked out what that was all about and what caused it because I wasn't on meds, and then I never had it again. Maybe it was just a breakdown which would be pretty justified by the whole situation. Anyway it's such a better time right now to be diagnosed quickly and correctly as opposed to 20 years ago when they didn't even quite know how to spot bipolar2 from depression and anyway I seriously doubt they would have diagnosed a teenager with it... but better late than never, some people are even more unlucky.
    I am so happy for people younger than me who are hopefully going to have a much easier and quicker time at least with acceptance and diagnosis, which is half the battle anyway.x

    • @fancydancer2016
      @fancydancer2016 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I feel you. I slept around, sold drugs, and spent money until I was 25 and was diagnosed. I had a depressive episode that caused a general practitioner to try Prozac which sent me into hide in my bedroom spirals from hell. I told my boss I was sad and wanted to jump off the 9 story building. Every antidepressant I was given sent me down a paranoid, terrified path. At one point I started telling a friend “hey, I’m about to start a new drug. Can I call you if needed?” Around that time I FINALLY found a doctor who would give me a mood stabilizer.

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Right now is a much better time to get diagnosed than 20 years ago but I still find things to be quite messy in terms of diagnosis, treatment and medications . It’s a crap shoot . I can’t imagine how things were for our ancestors - talk about in the dark and hopeless

  • @aleanbh3808
    @aleanbh3808 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Also, anxiety is a symptom of both depression and PTSD.
    This poor woman was absolutely overmedicated. Never mind she uses some incorrect terminology (but NB this is the most inexact science of the inexact sciences!), at least now she’s educated herself. Consumers who just demand a pill from a white coat have zero skin in the game for their recovery. Empowered and educated consumers have the best chance.
    Which is why we need peer workers who relate to adolescents (teen peer workers!). Teens whose first experience of the MH system is in hospital are scared, clueless, waiting in the PECC…

  • @user-kn4vi9mt7b
    @user-kn4vi9mt7b ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I would appreciate if you could do an episode about PTSD - this became so horrible for me I lost over 40lbs in a couple of months and then I stopped eating thank god I have my husband who was able to send me to FLORIDA a facility called TRANSFORMATIONS MENDING FENCES which is a PTSD FACILITY, where I had lots of group and differant types of therapy including EMDR . I had equine therapy which was amazing the. Came back to my life to find myself truly struggling . Any advise would be great . I appreciate you that you make these mental health videos. I kinda feel alone especially in my home - no one truly knows what I feel or think. I find myself less afraid and nervous when I listen to you . Thank you

  • @frazzledeos604
    @frazzledeos604 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    (PDD, GAD here) You would be surprised about the high dose thing--it depends on how bad your symptoms are. if I was ever in the hospital needing a meds switch, they'd start off very high, vs out patient they'd start low.

  • @hollehpazouki7623
    @hollehpazouki7623 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You have awesome videos. I am glad that I found you. Thank you:)

  • @ariasaber9737
    @ariasaber9737 ปีที่แล้ว

    I like this channel. It's comforting in a way.

  • @SonyaStarStudio
    @SonyaStarStudio ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’m from the US. And I can say therapy isn’t very great here. I had a therapist who she slowly switched me to a different SSRI . Couple weeks I had a problem renewing my prescription. I tried contacting her for 2 weeks and she never responded. I was completely out of my meds by then. I had to go to my primary doctor to get back on a anxiety medicine. By then I felt so bad by the side effects. I never used that therapist again. Kind of afraid to use another. I have severe anxiety and high functioning depression. These videos help me being aware of what others go through

  • @persona5305
    @persona5305 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I forgot the anti-depressant drug that a doctor prescribed to me back when I got diagnosed with depression because I didn't knew I had ADHD and the world was against me as a mother. anyway, after doing a lot of research online about why I feel this way and that way, I end up understanding what I truly had which is ADHD and then mentioned that to the doctor psychiatrist. then I just end up stoping my antidepressants because it did worked for a while, it numb the pain of my existence if you can understand what I mean but it also numb me from my other emotions. So then I end up replacing it with ADHD essential supplements like Fish oil and especially Magnesium and Vit.D and more like Iron since i'm also anemic. it solved it for me up until today, not to mention that I kinda end up adapting a stoic mindset. I don't feel sorry for myself anymore and I completely change. once a while I tend to recognize the symptoms of it si then I know I had been probably slacking off with following the right lifestyle so I end up getting back on track. eating my right, doing small workouts since I hate heavy workouts, be strict with my sleep etc. so I hope others will do the same, no one else can truly help you unless you take the first step.. good luck❤

    • @OurTube_TheOriginal
      @OurTube_TheOriginal ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes to those supplements. Also a good psychiatrist who has since left our rural area as is always the case….did a test of my genetics and although i had enough trauma (“torture” someone trained in such things explained my trauma actually was) to warrant depression etc. …i had a severe case of cPTSD that didn’t take me down till my late 50s. Anyway found out i have a gene that makes absorbing folate more difficult or some such thing. I started taking B vitamins and methyl folate (NOT FOLIC ACID) when i found the paperwork years later during my breakdown..i had been so busy etc. ignored it until then and taking methyl folate and b supplement (b vitamins work together) it added 5 hours to my day that after the breakdown i had lost due to not being able to get out of bed. Founder of AA believed in B vitamins too…

  • @Gchili
    @Gchili ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The feeling of waking up every single morning to instant DREAD and the feeling of having to do it all over again is one of the worst things imaginable. And not having the guts or motivation to end it all. Just stuck here. I haven't had this bad like that for a while but I remember like it was yesterday.

  • @octonautical1263
    @octonautical1263 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    My understanding is that depression along with many other mental illnesses are usually the result of trauma and Adverse Childhood Experiences. With this in mind, her description of hearing voices and blacking out run parallel with stories Ive heard from people with dissociative disorders, esp Dissociative Identity Disorder. Hope shes doing well and thanks for the great video!

    • @Alice-si8uz
      @Alice-si8uz ปีที่แล้ว +4

      She was on a lot of medications and taking drugs at the time, that is the more likely answer tbh...

  • @hannahlacy8538
    @hannahlacy8538 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    So my pharmacist screwed up my lamotrigine script one time and filled it for a significantly higher dose than what I was taking. I didn’t take them and brought them back to my psychiatrist and told her that I thought the pharmacy screwed up. My psychiatrist told me that if I had taken them I could have gotten “the life threatening rash.” She then proceeded to call the pharmacy and tell the pharmacist that he was a moron 😂😅

    • @princessleia9735
      @princessleia9735 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Damn that’s scary! Good thing you noticed the dosage was wrong and didn’t just take it

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. ปีที่แล้ว +1

      My husband takes that as well and that's why we always double check the prescription and what he gets at the pharmacy!

  • @madisonanderson1266
    @madisonanderson1266 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Instead of “antipsychotic” we use “neuroleptic” as the name for the class. I believe it is becoming more common in the psychiatric field to use neuroleptic as the name of the class.

  • @faithoverfear1722
    @faithoverfear1722 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I feel what she said about lack of awareness my mom went unmedicated for a lot of our childhood and it was not good. My dad worked alot so he wouldnt have to deal with her. And no one thought that she needed psychiatric help.

  • @albacan
    @albacan 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    If you are anxious you over breathe. Do everything you can to slow down and reduce your breathing

  • @empoweredlifeco
    @empoweredlifeco ปีที่แล้ว

    @14:00 made me so damn happy.
    The SJS countdown is just priceless.

  • @hetaes
    @hetaes ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Mania can last months. I work with a bipolar man. He did very well the first 2 years, but then he started acting out of character. He wasn't sleeping. He couldn't focus on anything. He had tons of projects going at once. It was very difficult. He then went into psychosis, which lasted a couple of months. He's better now, but it took nearly a year to get back in balance.

  • @livNSomehow
    @livNSomehow ปีที่แล้ว +2

    If she was over medicated according to some folk, I hate to think what I was. Currently 24 and been on at least 20-30 different psychoactive medications. Currently take around 4 different types a day.
    It breaks my heart that she is my age and finally getting somewhere with MH,
    I don’t feel anywhere close.
    Love your recreations Dr. Syl, you’ll be a great psychiatrist xxx

    • @livNSomehow
      @livNSomehow ปีที่แล้ว

      And please do some videos on BPD ❤

    • @rubytuesday7653
      @rubytuesday7653 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Hoping ,a big change in your life. 🦋

    • @avril.227
      @avril.227 ปีที่แล้ว

      Keep trying. 🙏🏻

  • @avarcine
    @avarcine ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm in the south and I was diagnosed with anxiety/depression for over a decade, got a new diagnosis of Bipolar 2 recently

  • @mandibailey9104
    @mandibailey9104 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I've never met a medical student or resident who didn't want to look for SJS. In 2021, we had 3 cases of possibe CJD (was properly diagnosed during autopsy) . CJD is not funny. It's terrifying. What was amusing is the residents all wanted to meet the patients. One was from the UK (yes, the patient's age aligned with the possibility of BSE & the pt was also from the UK)
    It wasn't BSE, but it was a form of CJD. This is my 23rd year in practice. Those cases of CJD are the only ones I've ever personally seen. What's even more interesting is that they all came in within 60 days of one another, weren't related, we couldn't find a link between the pts, and after autopsy each case was confirmed CJD yet the type was listed as CJD NOS. That was a terribly sad time but very interesting.

  • @daisybennett1600
    @daisybennett1600 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Dr Syl I had the exact same side effects (the hallucinations) with seroquel. They went away permanently after discontinuing the seroquel. Tbh it was full blown psychosis, and I think that my psychosis was not caused by dopamine because I now take vyvanse without any other medication and do not have any psychosis symptoms.

  • @mama_j1629
    @mama_j1629 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think that it’s really great that you are really diving into so many real world mental conditions that all these people have while going through school and studying to be a psychiatrist, the more you listen and study people and the problems they’re having I believe will make you much more empathetic and a much more knowledgeable doctor better equipped to interact with so many different personalities 🫶good luck to you

  • @BrianaCunningham
    @BrianaCunningham ปีที่แล้ว +1

    When i was trying to get a diagnosis for my panic disorder and cyclical vomitting syndrome - I had both gps and psychiatrists that shamed me for using weed, making me feel even worse about myself and finished their "assessment" of me within 30 min and gave me a very strong antipsychotic. Thankfully I understand this is mistreatment and changed both doctors for new ones. Dont let anyone make you feel shitty for telling the truth.
    Not all psychiatrists and GPs are good at their jobs. Theyre suppsed to have a least basic empathy to work in mental health.

    • @laanaalove
      @laanaalove 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Weed triggers cyclic vomiting syndrome

    • @BrianaCunningham
      @BrianaCunningham 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @laanaalove it can yes. But I have cyclical vomitting regardless. Even after I quit smoking. Mental health was the cause and it was ignored. Took four years to figure out it was my panic disorder. If I hadn't told anyone about my weed use, I wholeheartedly believe I would have been diagnosed sooner.
      4 years of vomiting caused me to have four teeth replaced with fake ones.
      More than on thing can cause the same symptoms. No one was willing to look past my weed admission. They stopped caring.

    • @laanaalove
      @laanaalove 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @BrianaCunningham my sister has CVS and also smokes weed, it's definitely a difficult diagnosis hey? They treat you like you're crazy :(

    • @BrianaCunningham
      @BrianaCunningham 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@laanaalove I'm sorry to hear that she has it too. It's the worst.

  • @LB-xe6rz
    @LB-xe6rz ปีที่แล้ว

    i was diagnosed with depression at 12 and put on prozac which lead to some bad side effects and i began to SH. they thought i might be bipolar but i refused to take another medication. years later around 19 i was diagnosed as ADHD and now take medicine for that and recently got on buspirone for anxiety and it’s going good so far!

  • @MissReneeMichelle
    @MissReneeMichelle 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I thought I was depressed for my entire life..... Come to discover in therapy work recently that it's not depression.... It's the long term effects of narcissistic abuse.
    From my narcissistic family member growing up and more recently with my narcissist ex partner.

  • @TashPointOh96
    @TashPointOh96 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wait wait wait, so 19:30, if a person is diagnosed with generalized anxiety and major depression but later diagnosed with bipolar like her- you no longer say that you have anxiety/depression?
    Also, about the experience of hearing voices on the dopamine antagonist, I was on an antipsychotic and also developed this phenomenon with the voices. No idea why, I've never had that! I told my dr and she operated on the "lets see where it goes" mentality. I stopped medication therapy shortly after without physician oversight (I know, reckless) and I felt MUCH better. Turns out after years of struggling I learned that I actually was just severely traumatized, have an autoimmune disease and in the resolution journey of the (C)PTSD with a couple years of therapy/physical symptom resolutions, many symptoms of my previously diagnosed mental illness have been mitigated and what wasn't led to the diagnosis of having ADHD. So just keep trying and STAY HONEST with your Dr's! I have been apprehensive about starting ADHD medication therapy but CBT has been a great value to my life.

  • @Felice_Enellen
    @Felice_Enellen ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I strongly disagree with saying it's never just medication. I grew up with pretty severe Generalized Anxiety Disorder until I started Prozac in my 20's and it was like a lightswitch was flipped and I suddenly felt the way everyone else seemed to be. It's remained that way, with family and friends confirming it. Sometimes it's _just_ brain chemistry.

    • @sarahoakley7212
      @sarahoakley7212 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I think what he means is the way psychiatry approaches treatment of mental illnesses like anxiety and depression is to use medications to get over the first little bump to reduce symptoms and help consumers get to a state where they can function again. From there, it’s intended that the consumer strengthens their coping skills and “rewire” their brain by using CBT or cognitive behavioural therapy. This in theory lessens the relapse probability as that person will now have more self awareness and they would have built more positive neural pathways. Thats fantastic that you were able to find solace with medications, however he’s just simply making the point that it’s evidence based to combine medication and therapy to achieve better and longer lasting outcomes in MOST patients. 😊

    • @avril.227
      @avril.227 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I agree. I have literally been anxious my whole life. It wasn’t trauma induced. Very few things help. Unfortunately they won’t prescribe Benzos for my GAD. I’m still anxious on SSRIs.

    • @Felice_Enellen
      @Felice_Enellen ปีที่แล้ว

      @@sarahoakley7212 That's sort of my point. You end by saying combined therapy is best "in MOST patients", and my point was that it's wrong to say "it's NEVER just medication." If it were never, then people like me wouldn't exist. It's not never. It's the way you say, just inverted, i.e. if the video had said, "almost never," I wouldn't have objected.
      TL;DR - I think we're on the same page

    • @Felice_Enellen
      @Felice_Enellen ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@avril.227OMG do NOT use benzos. They are extremely habit-forming. Your body gets used to them very quickly and then they stop working unless you take 2x as much, rinse and repeat until you're in rehab. Benzos are only good for occasional breakthrough symptoms (i.e. your boyfriend just cheated on you with your bff and you're freaking out). It's ok to have some on hand for that kind of situation but do not _ever_ take benzos on the regular.
      Is it safe to assume you tried increasing the SSRI dose? I started on 10 mg of Prozac and ended up upping it twice over a year or three to 30 and I've been stable on that ever since (10+ years).

    • @veronicalz2695
      @veronicalz2695 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I often tell myself that exact thing that I wish to be like everyone else seems to be… I always come to those type of videos just to read the comments and feel less alone

  • @schnupsyjen2552
    @schnupsyjen2552 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I wish it were easier to find a psych as clued in as Dr. Syl.

  • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
    @WouldntULikeToKnow. 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm just taking medication for my anxiety and it's made *such* a difference. I am not comfortable speaking to a therapist, probably due to my anxiety and bad experiences with past therapists. I don't think you need to see a therapist all the time.

  • @Ellerenh
    @Ellerenh ปีที่แล้ว

    I thought for 10 years a just suffered from anxiety and panic attacks turns out I have schizophrenia. I just thought paranoia was anxiety but apparently I’m on the spectrum of schizophrenia, and you don’t need to hear voices, I’ve been on antidepressants and just started a antipsychotic and I feel amazing!

  • @eXcludeyStarling
    @eXcludeyStarling ปีที่แล้ว +1

    She’s talking the same way I do. Why is that? I start a thought, add an “um”, rephrase and end up with two unfinished thoughts. I also have adhd. Why is that? It’s like it’s hard for me to find words to complete a full sentence.

  • @myshihtzudontstink
    @myshihtzudontstink ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My anxiety makes me want to go to sleep. I used to fall asleep at Christmas parties because I have bad anxiety in social situations. Now I’m anxious because I have zero control of anything in my life.

  • @tinajarvis6486
    @tinajarvis6486 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I've been on all of them in addition to ect, but I felt the need to comment on Latuda being you said you haven't heard of that side effect....the second day I was on it I had hallucinations. I thought I seen a rattlesnake in my hallway, I ran to get the only thing in my mind to kill it,which was a pen. By the time I got back to the hallway it was gone, but I could hear the rattling under my feet and underneath the carpet. Therefore, I pulled the entire carpet up in the hallway. After, when I looked up sitting there wondering if I should rip up the carpet in the whole house, something caught my attention. Millions of spiders coming down the walls, and hanging from the ceiling. For some reason I snapped because I tried to get away from them by running into my roommates room but the door was locked. I still don't know why, but it immediately made me think that he had my kids in there holding them hostage and I called the cops. Mind you, he was at work, my kids were at school. Needless to say I was admitted to the crisis center, soon to go through ect.

    • @tinajarvis6486
      @tinajarvis6486 ปีที่แล้ว

      Also, as the doctor said before he sent me to ect treatment. "You're on enough thorazine to put down a full grown cow, I just don't understand it". I felt like a test rat after that and especially after all the ect treatments. I quit everything, I don't leave home, I don't talk to no one. Don't know what's wrong with me, but I also just don't care anymore.

  • @catherinemarsh5453
    @catherinemarsh5453 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    When I decided to come off Luvox (ssri) I went cold turkey. I had night sweats, nightmares, cramps. I felt like I was a nutter by the 3rd day. I went to the chemist and a lady who was a naturopath told me to take Kava Calm 3 times a day. When I woke the next morning there was absolutely no sign of the withdrawal. I continued to take kava for two months and then decided to stop. There was still no sign of withdrawal. I would recommend kava to anyone coming off SSRIs. A miracle really. I have heard people actually suicide coming off SSRIs. If only they new about kava.

  • @shieh.4743
    @shieh.4743 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I was given an SSRI for my mental health breakdown and it made me super super super anxious and nearly psychotic. Full blown panic attacks. Unable to eat, sleep, think, etc. My cousin was on an SNRI, so I tried that and boom. Soooo much better! I've been on that for 12 years now and had a couple lapses , but am now on a low dose and have been for 7 years. So, not always is an SSRI reaction because of bipolar disorder.

  • @felixhenson9926
    @felixhenson9926 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I'm not a medical student but i knew the answer to the lamotrogine question! Mostly because i was on it. Tho i didn't know the details, just knew to look out for a rash and that it wasn't to be fucked around with and could be fatal.

  • @iRECKONER
    @iRECKONER 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is so insightful!

  • @leslietisdial5753
    @leslietisdial5753 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You are right that you should not ever stopped meds especially without the dr knowing. Trust me i stopped all mine a few months ago because of my thoughts about my meds. Things went bad real fast. I got pychosis back after yrs of no symptoms. Now im going back on my meds but they cant start them again at the doses they were at becausd they were high doses. Im still having symptoms but its not as bad now that im back on meds.

  • @hellaSwankkyToo
    @hellaSwankkyToo ปีที่แล้ว

    great reaction video! i love learning so thank you for this. 🖤✊🏾

  • @KraftyKc
    @KraftyKc ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I watch her episode and again with you on your channel. She actually reminds me of my daughter, and my daughter has BPD. Actually, i have 2 daughters, and they both have it. But my one daughter helps herself and sees a doctor, but my other self medicate, and honestly, i think that's what holds her back with having any kind of a relationship with people. And she won't hear anything from doctors, let alone family telling her anything she dont want to hear. God forbid the weed is helpful. I actually think thats whats holding her back from life. I've dealt with Bipolar in my young adult years. I was given Lamotrigine which to this day was my live saving medication along with citalopram. When she said 300, i nearly fell off my chair. I think she may be wrong with that. I think they only give that amount to people with epilepsy. Even then, they wouldn't start you there. It's weird that she would only be Lamotrigine. I agree with her when she said to be honest with your doctor, or you'll never get the correct help. 😊

  • @medicine2202
    @medicine2202 ปีที่แล้ว

    I think this quote sums up our struggles
    "Drugs and alcohol are not are problems, reality is our problem and drugs and alcohol are our solution to that problem"

  • @austinbunyard3284
    @austinbunyard3284 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I was put on a bipolar medicine when I was 17 I had horrible hallucinations

  • @adventuresofperseus945
    @adventuresofperseus945 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Do u have a video on intrusive thoughts? For most of my life I thought the thoughts I had were normal, found out recently that it's anxiety. The thoughts I have are like horror movies. When I asked people before I just got a weird look. I haven't told a Dr until recently because I was scared to be put in a psych ward plus because I didn't know what it was and assumed everyone had this.

    • @livinginparallel
      @livinginparallel ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Pretty common in all types of OCD, definitely doesn't make you crazy, or even too weird tbh lol. A Dr probably wouldn't even bat an eye, unless it is debilitating or concerning you. Some types of OCD definitely FEEL more concerning, with the topic of thoughts you have, but tbhbif you're recognizing them as intrusive thoughts that a sign of your good mental health. But intrusive thoughts aren't you and aren't bizarre, and your doctor will understand that🩷

    • @adventuresofperseus945
      @adventuresofperseus945 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@livinginparallel it is dibilitating, I have to stop what I'm doing, I drive for a living and it becomes a pain in the ass because I have to stop driving and it can take some time for them to pass

    • @livinginparallel
      @livinginparallel ปีที่แล้ว

      @@adventuresofperseus945 then probably worth bringing up. I would just do your research first. I personally didn't approach my doc about any of my issues until I had already diagnosed myself and was basically just asking for confirmation for treatment. Asking a Dr to tell me what I don't already know has NEVER resulted in correct diagnosis or treatment for me, unfortunately, but I have gotten lucky lately with supportive doctors who's egos aren't threatened by a patient that wants to participate in the intellectual part of their own healthcare. Younger docs seem so be the best👌

    • @joolslorien3936
      @joolslorien3936 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      There’s a book called Dare by Barry McDonagh that I think has a really effective approach for managing intrusive thoughts. There’s also an app now too.

  • @karmanozdin
    @karmanozdin ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi Dr Syl , watching this video immediately bought to mind my own experience with the Ssri citalopram , the first time I took it it took me about 10days to metabolise it and during that time sleep was very hard to come by and I needed a lot of support , the second time I took it during a very stressful time in my life coupled with the onset of the menopause it took easily a month to metabolise , sleeplessness, 1 hallucination akathisia, sensitivity to movement and noise , difficulty eating, once suicidal feelings , eventually I settle down , I was left with bruxism but it stabilised me well , but highlighted the potency of these meds and difficulties with decisions about persevering and about coming off them

  • @c.r.k.7162
    @c.r.k.7162 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm diagnosed with cyclothymia which does cause manic episodes that only last a few hours.

  • @zigzaglychee7324
    @zigzaglychee7324 ปีที่แล้ว

    I started taking sertraline a couple months ago, and ngl I do feel much better. I've had a horrible time trying to access therapy for years, and while I always try self soothing, it's just never enough once the anxiety really gets going and my thoughts spiral. After a couple weeks on sertraline, I was no longer waking up every morning with my heart immediately racing. It took longer for the depressive symptoms to go away, but I am now also back on the combined pill because my worst suicidal feelings are strongly correlated with my period. I've read that sertraline can also help with PMDD. I feel much calmer now, my negative feelings no longer feel as strong and hopefully this will make it easier for me to self soothe when things get difficult in future instead of having the very exaggerated reactions. I do kinda wish I'd agreed to try medication a couple years ago when my GP first suggested it, because I feel like it was a missing piece for me.

  • @travelpalz
    @travelpalz ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Very interesting perspective. I usually watch SWU, new angle here. Are you from Australia or New Zeeland? Cheers from Sweden

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  ปีที่แล้ว

      Aussie! Welcome :)

  • @kandymich4861
    @kandymich4861 ปีที่แล้ว

    My councillor passed away last year and I just found out. 😭 Councillor was moving and opening a practice where they moved to. They passed away before they could set it up. So no one told me I found out when looking up his new practice information. Going from sessions every few months to confusion why he didn’t respond to emails to maybe I wrote it down wrong. To finally, they were dead when I emailed so they could not respond. Had this person as my councillor for many years.

  • @OurTube_TheOriginal
    @OurTube_TheOriginal ปีที่แล้ว +2

    “SSRIs” are not addictive he says but he admits one has to be weaned off . (EDIT ok well there isn’t craving for more SSRIs but i feel research shows addiction is not inherently the drug nor the person but environment induced the majority of the time and therefore conditons need to be changed. Dr. Carl Hart and many others’ work in that area) . Also he mentions bi-polar as the only thing that could result in mania with SSRI’s which is so inaccurate ….(EDIT: also happens with cPTSD and PTSD then too likely to get diagnosed with bi-polar rather than the PTSD though maybe things improving with PTSD awareness but it was true just 5 years ago here in US, CA at County mental health and in private settings a decade or two ago). ANYONE NOT ACTUALLY low on Seratonin etc. can end up “Manic” it is called Seratonin Syndrome. Also they have recently finally shown that SSRI effect can kick in with day or days. I’m going to stop watching this (EDIT: i was reactive ..and am back after watching another of Dr Syl’s videos so full with great vital info and insights including Dr. Syl’s curiosity asking questions. Also so many of his interruptions, added info is too basic to warrant the interruption - (EDIT i dont’ feel he is interrupting too much nor the info too basic - my bad). Though his descriptions of depression are good, detailed and accurate.

  • @aright2lucidity
    @aright2lucidity ปีที่แล้ว

    Love your videos. Your insights, explanations and information on various mental health disorders and the complexities of them all is extremely helpful. I have subscribed as I have a 21 yr old son dealing with severe paranoid(?) schizophrenia. Looking back, mood disorders have been there for many years but the onset of SZ has been over the past 2-3 yrs roughly. Its taken a whole lot of chaos, destruction, upheaval and dysfunction to finally start seeing some real help for him.
    I wanted to comment on this video imparticular only to point out that this gal started having "auditory hallucinations" when she was 4 drugs in. (You seemed to find this odd, which its not) Luckily for her, she is self-aware enough to recognize that what was happening was "off" and not good for her. A person with full-on psychiatric disorder can not necessarily make that distinction.
    My point is this...part of staying humble as a doctor is to not be "triggered" by the use of a statement like 'clean off the meds'.
    Basically, as you allude to, psychiatrists are going into these situations blind and typically would have zero personal experience with the drugs they're playing around with. In an ideal world, yes, everyone would and could be "clean" off these meds.
    (I have personal experience with being erroneously prescribed a well known anti-convulsant, typical off label prescrip and it was a horrible experience)
    These drugs are SERIOUSLY POTENT pharmaceuticals for every aspect of the brain and should not be thrown at patients willy-nilly in different combinations as though humans are guinea pigs. (This happens often and especially when multiple different psychiatrists are in the mix) In my opinion, many drugs are easily making a situation worse, not better. Patients should WANT to be "clean" off of drugs...and for that reason I appreciate that you speak in other videos about the need for psycho-therapy(and no medication) being JUST as important as medicating to stabilize. Because it is.
    Stay humble. ;)

  • @lovingod4ever33
    @lovingod4ever33 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I just want to say, for the record,,,, THIS is not strange for her experience. It's almost identical to my story,,, Except I was living in a very abusive and toxic household. BUT I too was wrongly diagnosed at a young age (14) with Bipolar and cycled through SSRI's While taking illegal drugs, then was put on an anti-psychotic medication and then started hearing voices and experiencing moments of psychosis hospitalized a multitude of times, got a new diagnosis of schizo-affective disorder, until I was approximately 28 and decided to remove all medications from my system for 10 years. Rebuilt my life from the ground up Medication FREE and then at 38 my Anxiety got so bad that I literally felt like I was dying and went back to Therapy and was referred to a psychiatrist and FINALLY was diagnosed Correctly with ADHD!!! All of my original symptoms were already displayed as ADHD,,, But,,, at that time in history,,, Girls were not looked at for ADHD because it was a "boys" disorder,, Eventhough I displayed identical symptoms of my older brother!!!!

  • @clairek-s8918
    @clairek-s8918 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have been diagnosed with schizoaffective, bipolar type and Borderline Personality Disorder. For me, this kind of “ultra rapid cycling” is a function of the BPD, not the bipolar. Longer term, more severe mood states are the bipolar. I find the BPD responsive to DBT, EMDR etc, but not the bipolar. Bipolar depression, hypomania, mania, need medication, sometimes hospitalization.