Dealing with Delusional People

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 27 เม.ย. 2021
  • In this video Darren Magee discusses ways to handle yourself when dealing with people who are delusional. Exploring different types of delusions such as eromatic, somatic, grandiose, persecutory to jealous delusions. Looking also at what may be lying behind the delusions such as schizoaffective disorder, psychosis, delusion disorder, substance misuse, narcissism and pathological jealousy.
    Some delusions may manifest as hallucinations, unshakeable fixed beliefs, constant accusations of infidelity, psychotic depression - some are pathological delusions, some may be subclinical.
    Discussing three different types of delusional people - the self righteous, the toxic and the distressed.
    This video is for information purposes only and is not a substitute for support from a mental health professional.
    Delusion Disorder • Delusion Disorder
    Pathological Jealousy • Pathological Jealousy
    Please consider supporting me on Patreon
    / dfmagee
    #delusionalpeople #howtohandledelusionalpeople #delusions

ความคิดเห็น • 102

  • @DarrenFMagee
    @DarrenFMagee  3 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    The videos I make are requested by you the viewers. If there are any topics you would like me to cover in future videos please comment and let me know.

    • @francesasha
      @francesasha 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Please do some videos on anxious and avoidant attachment in relationships. Am enjoying your vids! thanks.

    • @DarrenFMagee
      @DarrenFMagee  3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Thank you for your suggestion and kind feedback

    • @jmo4521
      @jmo4521 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Hi. Have you discussed how to thrive as a single person after divorcing a narcissist? What are the challenges and benefits of living life as a single survivor who does not want a new partner/spouse/love? Are there stages to healing and thriving into late adulthood as a person who escaped decades of abuse?

    • @DarrenFMagee
      @DarrenFMagee  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I have a playlist on recovery and one on trauma bonding I’d you find anything there helpful. I’ll be adding to it in the future

    • @H.Hardrada
      @H.Hardrada ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I have had trouble finding scientific literature on group-associate / collective narcissism. Most of what you get is a short work by Freud. It would be nice to find some more recent work on the subject (if you know of any, please let me know). It seems psychologists get really wrapped up with the way a narcissist associates with romantic partners on an individual level, but that is just a small sliver of their interactions in the world, though it is one that is easier to observe. A video on the subject of what types of groups narcissists tend to be apart of, how do they behave in these groups, what types of groups tend to take on a narcissistic character themselves, common behaviors of narcissistic groups etc. This would be immensely helpful. Not only as a video, but as a research topic.

  • @honoryourself2098
    @honoryourself2098 3 ปีที่แล้ว +66

    I have a loved one who suffers from delusions.
    The Dr told me I would be ‘wasting my breath’ to reason or try to talk sense into the loved one.
    Even on antipsychotic medication delusions are very much fixed.
    Very draining to constantly reassure a person with such embedded beliefs.

    • @denisemaguire5482
      @denisemaguire5482 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I have a loved one that is suffering terribly from a fixed delusion that a government faction is trying to kill him, he is convinced they have stations set up by his house and are also listening to everything and are waiting to make their move to kill him, he has been diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder and is taking antipsychotic medication but it is not working and he refuses for us to take him to hospital (mental health hospital) to at least talk to some doctors. It is extremely difficult to know how to deal with him because we impulsively tell him what he is experiencing isn't real. This is a nightmare for myself and our family.

    • @CylenX6
      @CylenX6 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@learningenglishthroughtran8540 Sorry to hear. You should seek help. Hope things work out!

    • @aperta7525
      @aperta7525 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@denisemaguire5482 Well... In his favor, the government isn't trustworthy. But believing he has been specially singled out must be really hard.

    • @aperta7525
      @aperta7525 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@learningenglishthroughtran8540 No one who thinks they are holy is holy. Sanctity is too intimately tied to humility. Every good thing is from God, whatever I do that is evil is from me. Purity of intention also factors into that. Feeling good about/when doing good works is one thing, but doing good works for self esteem or for human respect deprives the good works of real merit.
      Unfortunately, many New Age/pagan spiritual practices are done by professed Christians, and demons are the top masters of deception. We humans are blind even when we think we see, and even when we do see we are apt to inaccurately interpret communication and actions. Only God perceives everything.
      But if those gifts are put to the test with a false witness, the one who employs the false witness to test the misled believer is the one nonetheless doing the works of demons. If the "believer" is secretly in league with the demons, it is likely that the false witness will nonetheless be seen through, and then the demons can potentially use the "believer" to lure the witness further in, for the demons to have a greater access and do greater prolonged harm. It can go both ways. Unbelief is not a good guard against deception. Wisdom and caution are healthier than cynicism.

    • @mzliberty7647
      @mzliberty7647 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Targeted Individuals... [gov conspiracy mob]...
      very draining...

  • @sonyacaztillo7649
    @sonyacaztillo7649 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    My husband is delusional. I get accused of cheating daily now it’s gotten as bad as him sending pictures of women and saying it’s me with another family which doesn’t even resemble me. These women have tattoos I have none. That was my warning ⚠️ that something was wrong. He admittedly believes it’s me. It’s daring exhausting and frustrating.

    • @newssquabbler69
      @newssquabbler69 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      The most dangerous is when they know you are leaving but if you don't escape it will only get worse...

    • @judeflynn9223
      @judeflynn9223 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      run

    • @sharit7970
      @sharit7970 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I hope things are better now, but I suspect not...would he be willing to go to counseling with you, maybe you could get him to go with the idea that you want to your marriage to work, and that a counselor could help get to the bottom of his feelings of why he feels you're cheating.

    • @tori8380
      @tori8380 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That’s horrid. So sorry.

  • @johnrauner2515
    @johnrauner2515 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    I have a delusional lunatic neighbor who is convinced there is some kind of feud between us. Won't bother going into the details. But I learned a long time ago delusional people can't be helped. Just walk away and leave them to it. They are not listening anyway so the only time being wasted is your own if you stick around and try to help. They are beyond help. That is not a selfish attitude, it is a pragmatic and realistic one.

    • @johnrauner2515
      @johnrauner2515 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      I enjoy Darren's videos but his advice here is way off the mark. My experience of trying to placate and pacify delusional people is, it only encourages them. It's like pouring fuel on the flames. They see your attempts to explain as justification that they are right. That's how twisted their logic is.
      You are in effect colluding with them in trying to explain (yourself or their view of things). You are in effect engaging with their delusions by trying to explain them. And that engagement is what they see as proof they are correct. You only make the situation worse by doing this.
      There is only one realistic option with delusional people. Bin them and move on.

    • @taraarrington2285
      @taraarrington2285 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Agreed. You can't help them.

    • @Minisynapse
      @Minisynapse ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I know people who will walk away from reasonable people while pretending the other one is crazy like in your speech. Imagine if A is the crazy one but they speak of B publicly so that B appears deluded like A, while A is the narcissist.
      Edit: this kind of distrust is what happens after narc abuse. Can't trust even youtube strangers. Maybe you're the narcissist who paints a bad picture of this other person but in reality you are the abuser. We strangers cannot know, so anyone who speaks ill of others might actually be the narcissist lying to themselves and getting reinforcement from these self-help videos.

    • @tammyfitzgerald5336
      @tammyfitzgerald5336 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yes 🎉here tooo they nuts

    • @bethmahoney1142
      @bethmahoney1142 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      If someone you loved was delusional you may feel differently.

  • @blue_eyed_wonder
    @blue_eyed_wonder 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    "People that make arrows for other people to shoot at each other"... wow that hit hard.

  • @ellencarpenter3635
    @ellencarpenter3635 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Getting a loved one treatment that refuses treatment is extremely difficult. In most states, you will need to go to the courthouse and file for a petition of emergency wellness. The loved one will be removed in handcuffs so brace yourself. There is less than a 10% chance (in the US) that they will be held. At the most, you can get confirmation that it’s not a UTI, medication, or brain tumor/stroke induced. If the person isn’t going to harm themselves or others, they let them walk.

  • @Oliver_Lim
    @Oliver_Lim หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I always loved watching and listening to psychology-related videos, especially when dealing with a situation where people of 'certain brains' might be involved, either through intrusion, or sharing a space with someone who might've some forms of mental illness. I hate saying that I'm so right about it, but hearing this confirms further my own analysis that delusional people go by their instinct without the ability to understand the simplicity, or clarity of a statement, and instead, they base it on senseless, illogical conclusions, and execute, or act upon them, regardless of how the other person perceives them that for most part it's better to ignore, and avoid argument knowing that they would never understand. They see the world differently, and oftentimes could only grasp on trivial things to make sense of something instead of using real logic.

  • @TC-gx3qn
    @TC-gx3qn ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Thank you for reminding us to be kind- it is challenging when dealing with this. 😌

  • @drfoye219
    @drfoye219 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    That was very helpful thank you for uploading

  • @darrynreid4500
    @darrynreid4500 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    A good discussion. I like your channel because the topics appear to me to be very effective in bringing the underlying theory to bear in a manner to which it is easy to relate to practical experiences on the slippery fringes of normality.
    I think there are a whole class of delusional beliefs held by dysfunctional abusive people that are not normally described in these terms. What I have in mind here are beliefs about the rights and obligations of other people: I have experience with people who are so pathological that they openly deny that others, whom they apparently view as their personal property, have basic human rights like privacy, autonomy, self-determination, or any right to dignity and respect. Such people also believe they are entitled to a relationship as a binding right, and one whose terms suit them. I had a toxic relative in my home bellow at me that I don't have the right to have any kind of personal boundaries. This directly contradicts rights clearly provided to everyone under law, including the right to exclude anyone this malignant from one's home and life.
    I haven't seen such beliefs described as delusions but I think it would help people to do so, because it grounds them in the reality of who really has what lawfully enforceable rights, as opposed to being sucked into the twisted arbitrary alternative universe of the malignant abuser.

    • @mzliberty7647
      @mzliberty7647 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      ... narcissistic traits, 'outrageous sense of entitlement'
      toxic, fur sure..

  • @Mariaaaaaaaa213
    @Mariaaaaaaaa213 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    My friend in college said 6x a week/ 7 months that these guys we knew were obsessed with her. I would ask her questions about his actions that I knew that answer too and she also said 'no', the right answer - yet the big picture was always a yes. For example,
    HER: 'They're trying SO hard to have sex with me'
    ME: 'Has he ever said anything sexual to you, or tried to have sex with you at all so far?'
    HER: 'No'
    One day I asked her if she thought he WOULD try to have sex with her if he was given the opportunity? HER: 'No'. She would say 4 main statements and if you asked how is he doing #1?, HER: 2, how 2? 3, how 3?, 4, how 4?, 1. She'd go back through the 1-4. So for example, 'how are they trying so hard to get with you, they don't do much of anything?, HER: 'they want me'... I tried telling her no YOU WANT them to WANT YOU.. she wouldn't say anything about it to the guys tho and at the end of the year she finally did and the guy yelled at her to her face and she STILL said 'they're lying and playing hard to get'.. I tried telling her that didn't make sense as she's said all year they wanted her, how are they playing hard to get... playing hard to get you? Does anyone play hard to show they want you when they supposedly want you so badly.. She was also telling her bf 'your not mad at me, your mad at them for wanting me.' And then say ' my bf is so mad that guys want me'... the bf didn't think they wanted her either, we both were begging her. Gaslighting herself and others...

  • @wilmawanker367
    @wilmawanker367 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thank you! I always use sarcasm and make everything worse🥶

  • @suzannekanaly7217
    @suzannekanaly7217 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    My recent ex boyfriend is a marriage therapist with a youtube channel . He has a long trail of failed relationships and when I called him on it he said “ I don’t have a single failed relationship . All of those women went on to find a healthier partner.” He likens himself as some kind of messiah who abuses women to “ heal “ them and Expects a thank you for the abuse .

    • @taom9004
      @taom9004 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      wow

    • @jessp8238
      @jessp8238 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Report him! He should not practice medicine.

    • @litrugia
      @litrugia หลายเดือนก่อน

      Ummm…. Would you call that narcissistic personality disorder?

  • @fidelmashelton9491
    @fidelmashelton9491 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Thank you Darren, great advice given...

  • @Tammy-hm9zr
    @Tammy-hm9zr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    wow..spot on straight off 🙏 thankyou

  • @saracroft2589
    @saracroft2589 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thank you for your time and effort

    • @DarrenFMagee
      @DarrenFMagee  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You’re welcome glad you find the topics interesting

  • @optimumoptimum5091
    @optimumoptimum5091 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Answered my question from your previous video on dillusion disorder. Appreciate it.

  • @cherylbommarito5569
    @cherylbommarito5569 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Excellent Advice!

  • @ag2011_X
    @ag2011_X หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Loved the video

  • @taom9004
    @taom9004 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Mum [self righteous type] was convinced my dad was plotting to kill her and her husband. 'Well, he sure knows how to play the long game," I said. They haven't laid eyes on each other or exchanged a word for 45 years. She went nuts when my father thought about moving to her part of the country, and explaining he'd been there on holidays a dozen times and made no effort to go near her had no effect. None. She barely took a breath before she went on, and on, and on. She was having a fit and falling in it for a good year, at the possibility of my crippled up, geriatric of a dad living within a thousand miles of her, so I did a whack of research and wrote, [took me hours] an email following the suggestions on an online website and it worked! Poof! It went away, after years of hearing this broken record and I thought I had hacked it! I figured it out and I fixed it. And she went, "Hold my beer." She has shifted on to far more destructive hatreds/targets of people close to home. As a consequence, she has totally alienated a granddaughter and lost an employee. I have gone super grey rock. I have kicked myself and my Dunning-Kroeger arrogance many times. Dad was a safe, distant, [if exhausting grind for me], almost abstract object and any real harm done was harm done decades ago. Instead, I pushed her into opening new boxes of fresh hell.

    • @jrperreault7025
      @jrperreault7025 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks for sharing this, this is helpful

  • @KimDrewTheLine
    @KimDrewTheLine หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    3:16 persecutory delusions

  • @a.b.2850
    @a.b.2850 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I’m stuck with a delusional ex-husband and father to my children. He gets really angry over his delusion. I’m scared for my children but CPS won’t do anything.

  • @northsouthroad6760
    @northsouthroad6760 3 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I have PTSD and practice convincing myself that I am in the here and now, instead of in the past. Is a flashback a delusion?

    • @honoryourself2098
      @honoryourself2098 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @Vasili ZgR I agree with you.. I have PTSD too and certain things that trigger me, such as a particular ring tone, it does have a very visceral effect on me but triggered and delusional aren’t really the same thing. Delusions can be triggered in a person based on something that only happened in their mind and that haven’t been witnessed or reality checked with another person.

    • @nmHispana
      @nmHispana 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @Lucy 2021 That's the reason why they are called flashbacks and I strongly believe that delusions are also closely related to magical thinking. Convinced and wanting to convince others it's truth and reality, but in fact it's not.

    • @simev500
      @simev500 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      In my opinion, flashbacks are like residual memories or, a way for the mind to resolve a nagging conflict. Except for the 'triggering' event, they are like dreaming, the subconscious mind does its housekeeping by sorting through all daytime conscious experience to retain only important memories (filing to long term retention during sleep, learning?).
      The mind is a very good biological puzzle-solving computer, but the amount of information it handles can be a bit overwhelming at times.
      I, too, have had c-ptsd. Still recovering. I trained myself to interpret my dreams when they are very vivid and have familiar images going back childhood. And this has been a lifetime process that allowed for many a breakthrough allowing me coming to terms with myself.
      I believe what keeps from getting over the past trauma is the paralyzing fear and psychosomatic pain (physically disabling, even if not permanent) that manifests when the flashbacks happen. So mine has been a rough journey.
      A most satisfying revelation has been to discover it was nothing more than the vagaries of life when one is most vulnerable in childhood, that flawed parenting made it harder for me. And now I have more control of how my life can potentially be better.

    • @mzliberty7647
      @mzliberty7647 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@simev500 ... wow, quite a touching comment... sending all good vibes of Peace and the Strength to endure... i too have c-ptsd...
      my dreams are ... nightmares ... vivid nightmares.. i dread them .. x

    • @Portia620
      @Portia620 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@mzliberty7647 me too and my kids are traumized too from narc and one kid is scared of me and I make her anxious. I was the one being abused in the mess too but she lives with her father now so it is it is what it is. I have nightmares to stay and it gets worse when I’m under stress

  • @mariagriffin2221
    @mariagriffin2221 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Persecutory delusions actually can become quite dangerous. There are many videos on defining, describing and coping but the main issue is they will not go to treatment voluntarily. By the time it’s mandated people have been hurt.

  • @Poppy-yx8js
    @Poppy-yx8js หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    How about when you say to a friend that the person going around suggesting that I’m discriminating against people with her particular problem is “delusional” because my behavior would support the opposite of this and then they proceed to pull a bunch of “pranks” on you - like moving your stuff around or even taking it - makes you look delusional! And even hacks your computer etc! Talk about going to an extreme over a perceived slight!!

  • @loriebalmer8888
    @loriebalmer8888 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hi my son who is 34 is delusional this started about a year ago he has used drugs that's when we tried to get him help for addiction he been in and out of prison county jail we've done what we can for that stuff now with this mental it's really hard to get him help he doesn't think there is anything wrong idk what to do.

  • @quantumfineartsandfossils2152
    @quantumfineartsandfossils2152 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    5:00+ "watch you scuttle about" YES!! like I can die of cancer (provably!!??) & they are like fine die of cancer its insane just unhinged

  • @user-fk8rb8ue5h
    @user-fk8rb8ue5h 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a retired senior mental health care nurse I can assure you that you do not challenge their delusions. You just sit and wait/hope for the medication to work.

  • @user-ey4rc5tu4t
    @user-ey4rc5tu4t 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    How do you deal with someone who claims to know if someone else is delusional?

  • @derek5168
    @derek5168 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Delusional people are poison to put it simple put your hand in your pocket and help and live for someone else and stop being greedy and selfish

    • @brianjones2384
      @brianjones2384 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Delusional people are like the dead who only take but never give or they give to only take what doesn't belong to them. Some of them can change but only if you hold them accountable for their actions,and keep them at arms length at all times.

  • @isobelangeli2053
    @isobelangeli2053 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Is this like brief psychosis disorder?

  • @thewoundedhealer4950
    @thewoundedhealer4950 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    When they show you who they are, believe them. How many strikes before you disengage? There’s nobody out there that can answer that question for you.

  • @KimDrewTheLine
    @KimDrewTheLine หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    1:08 subclinical delusions

  • @user-qm8bc4bu1t
    @user-qm8bc4bu1t 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I attract this kind 😂 substance abuser disorders are comorbid the whole time even though it may persist after quitting. It's sad.

  • @dinahsoar6982
    @dinahsoar6982 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    How do you deal with someone who is delusional and wants parts of their body removed? Why do we see so many delusional people today?

    • @MariaSantana-ul5wd
      @MariaSantana-ul5wd ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Pray over them as it is demonic. Have them read the Word of God.

    • @judeflynn9223
      @judeflynn9223 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@MariaSantana-ul5wd thats so fecking hepful...eejit

  • @Minisynapse
    @Minisynapse ปีที่แล้ว

    Beliefs are so interesting. How can people become convinced without reasons to be convinced? Is a motive enough? Then why aren't we all deluded even though we want some things to be true? Can you protect yourself from delusions by practicing belief formation (epistemology mostly)? I sometimes wonder how you could ever read epistemology and stay psychotic/deluded.

  • @emilytaylor1001
    @emilytaylor1001 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    ♥️

  • @derek5168
    @derek5168 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Most people are decent if you have a negative experience with someone they are probably just having a bad day or it's just plain misunderstanding

  • @danieljohnson2349
    @danieljohnson2349 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    DFM 👍

  • @thankyoudearjesus1
    @thankyoudearjesus1 ปีที่แล้ว

    ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ A dear friend of mine is having marital problems.
    SHE said he's Delusional.
    HE said he's right and she's gaslighting.
    How can I get a sense of what's really going on please? They are headed for divorce!

  • @isobelle.London
    @isobelle.London ปีที่แล้ว

    My narcissistic ex is delusional

  • @GullahGeecheeFarmer
    @GullahGeecheeFarmer ปีที่แล้ว +2

    My Jehovah’s Witness mother