Delusional Jealousy | Dr Syl's Analysis

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 14 ส.ค. 2023
  • In this video Dr Syl analyses old school footage of a patient with Othello's Syndrome (delusional jealousy). Dr Syl describes autochthonous primary delusions, risk assessments in psychiatry, how to treat psychosis and the different signs and symptoms of depression.
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    ❤ I LOVE to hear from you guys, please reach out!
    ** The information in this video is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information, contained in this video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a consultation with your own doctor/health professional. If anything in this video was distressing please consider calling LifeLine 131114 **
    Timestamps
    00:00 - Introduction
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ความคิดเห็น • 92

  • @silviabouros-lopataru2564
    @silviabouros-lopataru2564 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    Hello Dr. Syl,
    This is Silvia from Romania writing to you. I am a trauma specialized psychotherapist and have been working in private practice for 4 years. I came across your TH-cam channel through Ren, the British artist, while watching your reaction to his "Hi Ren" video. I greatly enjoyed your reaction and I believe you did a wonderful job. Since that video, I have gone through many other original videos created by you. What caught my attention from the beginning is your gentle and warm voice with a soothing tone. Furthermore, the content you create is amazing for me, filled with useful and eloquent information that is easy to understand. I felt compelled to share these thoughts with you because I think it might be encouraging for you to realize that you can reach and help someone even from the other hemisphere of the Earth.
    I will continue to enjoy your content and let myself be educated by it. Thank you for your work!

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      That’s such a kind comment - thank you for sharing!

    • @ashleypearson7848
      @ashleypearson7848 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Agreed is a fantastic dr.

  • @Elizabeth-jm2pk
    @Elizabeth-jm2pk 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    You have such a calming voice. Thank you for your contributions in the medical field.

  • @sharonthompson672
    @sharonthompson672 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    This is brilliant! You've combined an empathetic heart with knowledge of psychiatry AND you have the gift of putting it in layman's terms. I think you've landed exactly where you're supposed to be, to the benefit of a world wide audience. 👍🌹

  • @lizfortes9056
    @lizfortes9056 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    I recently found your channel and you are amazing. You have such a genuine kindness seen in your eyes, and an authentic compassion that is wonderful to see. You are gifted in what you do and thank you for sharing your insight. Liz

  • @sollasemusic8322
    @sollasemusic8322 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    1:36 I once started going into metabolic acidosis because I got dehydrated from vomiting while sick which started a vicious cycle that made me go to the ER because I didn’t think I could stop vomiting long enough to breathe. I can confirm it’s very unpleasant. Annoying part was the ER treated me a bit dismissively at first because I have mental health in my chart which apparently means “panic attack until proven otherwise” but they took it more seriously once my blood tests came back with almost every value abnormal.

    • @septimaserpent
      @septimaserpent 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I Hate That. My Opinion Is Even If The Patient Has Gone Through Psychotic Episodes, Even If They're Schizophrenic; Believe Them Until You Can Run The Proper Diagnostics Necessary To Rule Out Whatever They Say/Believe To Be Happening-Then From There Determine If There Is Another Factor & When All Is Said & Done; If Mental Illness Does Seem To Be The Answer; The Doctors/Hospital Should Be Responsible For Calling In A Mobile Crisis Team To Better Assess The Patient Before Determining The Next Route To Take.
      So Sorry You Have To Go Through That.
      I've Also Had/Continually Have The Same Experience.
      Sept. 29th 2018 I Got Robbed At 3 In The Morning. Two Guys Came Up Behind Me Trying To Steal My "Friends" Phone I Had Been Using. After Blows To All Over My Body & A Long Struggle, I Still Wouldn't Let Go Of The Phone & One Of The Guys Headbutted Me In The Face, Twisted My Arm & Stole My Bag With $1,300 Worth Of My Most Valued/Sentimental/Personal Belongings. The Other Guy Had Already Ran To Their Car To Turn It On & The Dude With My Bag Ran To The Car & I Ran After Him. He Got Into The Car & I Had Caught Up Right Behind The Car Just As It Was About To Accelerate. Out Of Feeling Defeated, Crushed, Upset & Not Being Mindful Of The Outcomes; I Had In My One Hand A Lighter & I Had Swung At The Back Windshield Of The Car, Basically Utilizing The Lighter As A Fist Pack. The Glass Immediately Shattered Like A Spiderweb From Where I Had Hit It-Outwards; Then POP & It Imploded. I Was Literally Right In Front Of It. I Shouted An Explitive Before Quickly Turning Around....Long Story Long, I Then Began Rejecting Glass Out Of Every Single Place In My Body, Some Areas Taking Longer To Begin Rejecting Than Others. Around 10 Months In; I Began Rejecting It From My Gumline (Likely Due To Shouting Said Explitive) & Unintentionally Swallowing It, Resulting In 3 Major Infections In My Trachea, Larynx & Some Other Part Of My Esophagus, Multiple Pulmonary Embolisms & My Appendix Being Removed. I Have Severe Nerve Damage All Over My Body From The Glass Rejecting Out Of My Skin & Damaging The Nerves In My Body. After Going To 9 Different Doctors & Them Just Straight Up Dismissing Me Without Even Running Any Radiology Whatsoever, After Going To My Primary Doctor & Him Screaming At Me, Saying I Need To Change My Lifestyle (Insinuating I Was Experiencing Drug-Induced Psychosis) & 86ing Me, Telling Me He Would Blacklist Me From Any Adjacent Facilities Because Upon Him Saying I Needed To Change My Lifestyle; I Began Crying Hysterically Because I Feel Like It's So Hard For Me To Reach Out For Help & Prior To This Happening; I Was Finally At A Point In My Life Where I WANTED To Live, I Was Excited For Life...He Said I Was "Too Emotional"...I Can't Even Bring Myself To Keep Trying To Find Help.
      It All Felt Like I Wasn't Worthy Of Saving, Wasn't Worthy Of Validation, Wasn't Worthy Of Not Having Immensely Severe, Excruciating Pain To The Point Of Suicxdal Ideation; Wasn't Worthy Of Receiving Any Sort Of Treatment Or Any Remedy & Was Essentially Forced To Self-Medicate With Opium So I Can Actually Live A Productive Life Where I'm Not Constantly Bed-Ridden, Crying In Pain & Miserable, To The Point Where Offing Myself Would Be The ONLY Other Way Out. I Can't Even Work A Scheduled Job Because It's The Curse That Keeps Cursing In That I Constantly Have New Health Issues/Medical Emergencies Etc. That I Can't Navigate Accommodations For Or Exactly Plan Around When I'm Going To Be In A State Where I'm Unable To Properly Function/Work With The Utmost Efficiency. All Of It Is Honestly Heartbreaking. Bc I Can't Even Get On Disability Bc...Well...If A Doctor Doesn't Validate It, It Must Not Exist. I Still Constantly Have Glass Rejecting Out Of My Body. For About 5 Months I Kept Believing Everyone That It Would All Come Out Soon Until I Read A Blog Post _(Vera's Log Glass In Skin Warning Gross)_ & Seeing All Of The Other People Who Have Gone Through Similar Situations & How Long They Have Been Rejecting Glass From Their Bodies. I'd Suggest You Google That Cuz It Is Honestly Pretty Wild & Pretty Damn Sad How Many Who Have Had Nearly Identical Experiences When Trying To Find Any Solution/Remedy To A Problem Few Ever Have To Face, Rarely Anyone Can Ever Truly Fully Empathize With & Is Detrimental To Overall Quality Of Life & Emotional/Physical/Mental Well-Being. It Honestly Changed Me As A Person Entirely. I Don't Have The Same Sense Of Humor Anymore. I Can Hardly Do Things I Used To Be Passionate About Doing. I Can No Longer Have A Job In My Chosen Career Field & Can No Longer Decorate My Temple As I Once Did, Bc The Glass Will Come Out Of Any Already-Opened Wound Before It Creates A New Flesh Tunnel, Meaning It Comes Out Through Any Piercing Hole, Over Any Tattoos, Etc. It Is Depressing Beyond Belief.

  • @jordang7479
    @jordang7479 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    the guy's story of his wife cheating sounds convincing until I noticed he never gives a real remembered example of what his wife did that makes him sure she was cheating. He mentions her joking about him but what was the joke exactly? He says its little things that built up but he won't say what exactly those little things were. most people would say "oh my partner is cheating on me and I know because they smelled like someone's perfume/came home late a lot/ too flirty with so-and-so" things that are small but memorable.

    • @HigoIndico
      @HigoIndico 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Was he asked to give out examples? Not everyone feels like telling the details if you haven't asked about them specifically.

    • @jordang7479
      @jordang7479 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@@HigoIndico Maybe but it's still odd to me that he goes into the amount of detail he does but still doesn't say anything specific really. All the details he gives are poetic summations of the situation. It just strikes me as off that someone who wants custody of his kids and almost killed himself over this would play down what he thinks been done to him. Not that people are always logical.

    • @ericapierson-way213
      @ericapierson-way213 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yeah - that's exactly how it is. I'm a pathological liar and constant cheater now, even though I'm the only one in my relationship who hasn't cheated and always talked about how important honesty was. I've always told him when I did something he wouldn't care for. But nope, now I lie constantly. Just decided so one day, haha. It's really great. So cool.

    • @ericapierson-way213
      @ericapierson-way213 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@HigoIndicooh, that doesn't matter. From personal experience, the answer would be something completely mundane, even normal in their relationship, that he suddenly decided was a sign. If he told the person interviewing him what the signs were, they would be baffled by the response.
      One time I scratched my nose and my husband said I was hiding my mouth so I could secretly talk to someone. No phone in sight, mind you. I also had to stop singing to my infant because he said I was singing to hide the conversation I was having. So, fear ruined that once in my lifetime experience for me. Psychosis and Delusions have no real weight most times.

    • @HigoIndico
      @HigoIndico หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@ericapierson-way213 When deciding if someone's delusional or not, it does matter. If one person has decided that a person seems delusional, due to not questioning them deep enough, then the next one analysing the person has their bias set up and just assumes every word coming out of patients mouth is because they're delusional. That's how misdiagnosis happen and other problems that patient may have, aren't recognised.
      And there's nothing cool about lying.

  • @user-vl6dc9yg3v
    @user-vl6dc9yg3v 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I missed seeing these old psychiatric interviews. It’s really interesting to me

  • @zeitmeister
    @zeitmeister 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    This is the impression I get, and it's only an impression.
    He seems fixated on his own helplessness. He's slowed down. There's no space to breathe in his mind; it's like he's in a tiny room with no windows and stale air. He's trapped in a corner, staring at a disgusting, frightening object which contaminates his foot. Sometimes he tries to shake it off, but it clings and frightens him even more and so he mostly remains still. His wife stands by the door and continually renews the disgusting object through an invisible process of connection and eruption. The possibilities for escape are limited and unpleasant. He could destroy himself and thus remove the corruption. He could try to destroy his wife, but perhaps he fears she's all-powerful. He could walk past his wife and through the door but the object will still cling, exposing him as an object of horror, ridicule, and contempt. He's an immediate danger to himself and his family- kids included. Poor soul.

  • @JR-ld1et
    @JR-ld1et 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    One of my friend’s wife’s was given a couple of stuffed animals from a coworker for their two children. The wife told him did you check for cameras , you never know.there could be a camera in there and he’s just watching our daughter change or getting dressing after bath time … the guy told her , he stuck the two stuffed animals in the washer already to clean them and then in the dryer and she still kept saying it could be a waterproof camera to watch her when they don’t know

  • @zeitmeister
    @zeitmeister 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I always wish that we could see the patient walking around. There's a wealth of information in someone's gait.

  • @tomfoley1401
    @tomfoley1401 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Howdy im a peer worker with luved experience of voices. I have run many workshops that follow the Hearing Voices approach. If your ever interested in broadening your perspective on the diagnosis. I would really recommend the 'hearing voices' approach in your country. I honestly think all psychiatrist should do training in the field. You don't have to necessarily agree with it but it gives food for thought. And breaks down alot of stigma with the diagnosis, which at times has been really hard for me. Im a clozzy child so whilst physical side effects could be killing me, I am relatively stable over the past 10 years. I still found the training super useful.

  • @PirateWW
    @PirateWW 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Really interesting and I learned a lot. Thank you Dr Syl!!

  • @jennifernaylor7535
    @jennifernaylor7535 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This was the hardest for me to separate in school which came first depression or delusions. Collateral is helpful. Working out patient so enjoy the review of this topic.

  • @Darkenedsoul
    @Darkenedsoul 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I am going to be going to college for psychology. So i find your inteligence and factual documents most informative. Thank you, Sir.

  • @Jabafish
    @Jabafish 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I watch all your videos. Keep making them, you're doing very good!

  • @typedbyben
    @typedbyben 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Another great video Syl. One comment from the gallery: is there a way you can raise your voice level a bit in the audio mix? For your videos only I have to go almost to 100% volume to clearly hear what you are saying. Thanks for reading and looking forward to more reactions to real case studies!

  • @too_tired_for_this
    @too_tired_for_this 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    This is so interesting. If I didn’t know that he had attempted suicide, I would have thought that this was just a guy who was going through relationship problems and was pretty depressed. When I think about the suicide attempt, I wonder if he could have ultimately become a family annihilator. He seemed to think that there was no saving his children. I wonder, too, if Dr Syl would have come to the same diagnostic conclusions if we didn’t know about the recent attempt.

  • @physicianskitchen
    @physicianskitchen 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Oh wow I really appreciated this analysis. What actually made me a bit surprised is that in my culture among non-professionals I'm not sure someone like him would be taken as seriously as they should be- ie hospitalized and this recognized as psychosis. Again, I appreciate the information and your gentle and knowledgable approach very much!

    • @buhmand
      @buhmand 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You are lucky to live in a culture that does not over-diagnose mental illness. This interview did not give enough information about his 'delusion', Dr.Syl seemed more delusional and had a very biased interpretation of the interview.
      The patient's delusion' started when the wife and the kids left him alone and went on vacation, we do not know how often his wife goes on vacations without him, and we do not know the excuse. We also do not know the jokes that made him question the relations; the wife accidentally brings a male underwater from those vacations and when the husbands notice she brash it off with a joke. The husband might have reasonable concerns about the relationship and reasonably does not want to lose his kids.

  • @user-wb1kr9yh1g
    @user-wb1kr9yh1g 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My ex suffered from this and spent every minute of his days (and nights) ruminating over my imagined infidelity. However when he was later hospitalized for severe depression the staff believed him and I was portrayed as the bad guy. Staff did not believe me when I said I wasn’t cheating and never had. Therefore my ex’s depression was treated but he actually felt validated in his delusions because the hospital staff agreed with him about my infidelity and wasn’t smart enough to see through his delusional thinking.

  • @lydiahuffington3921
    @lydiahuffington3921 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I really like this style of videos

  • @mazer4112
    @mazer4112 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    First of all, I would like to thank the people who have been filmed here, sharing their experiences with all of us I think that being that courageous and sharing your limitations, and vulnerabilities can result in a positive change in the way that general public interacts with people with mental illnesses and emotional vulnerabilities.
    I have one question for every single patient out there who are to be asked this question and that is if you are out in the general public and you don’t have a support person with you what do you need from a kind, compassionate, caring, empathetic person who notices you’re struggling? I would love to hear from every single person. How can somebody help you when you’re out in public and you know you’re going down that dark hole.
    What should we do? What should we not do?

  • @snatcher81
    @snatcher81 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    From the start of the video i was focusing on the chord, and how freaking annoying it was, and had to concentrate to make sure i didn't miss what you were saying.. lol
    But fortunately the chord doesn't speak to me!!

  • @kimmccomas3
    @kimmccomas3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My husband is currently experiencing this exact delusion about me! He has drug induced psychosis. There’s nothing I can do about it here in the USA. 😢😢😢

  • @DrSyl
    @DrSyl  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Link: th-cam.com/video/yYTJXHuZQn4/w-d-xo.html
    What should I react to next?

  • @Coppertunes
    @Coppertunes 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I suffered at the hands of a girl with this disorder, it was horrific.

  • @ericapierson-way213
    @ericapierson-way213 หลายเดือนก่อน

    For people that dont quite understand the how a delusion works - They just decide something is true one day and then grasp at straws, sometimes even completely made up scenarios, and use them as "evidence" to support their new fixed belief. And there is no convincing them otherwise - not even with provable facts

  • @Bandlover2564
    @Bandlover2564 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My dad has very similar thinking but less extreme compared ti this gentleman. He also thinks people at times are out to get him or not truthful but again nothing super crazy like. He still thinks my mom is out to mess up his life after they divorced years ago. Then thinks due to seeing her more than him I was brainwashed by her to do her ideas. He was getting better and the he got covid bad but not in hospital. Then things went bad. I know he has to be a narcissist because he fit all boxes well. Then in 2023 he went to the most extreme and hurt me some and locked me in his truck on the way to my grandmothers. My car broke down and needed a ride. We where at a full stop for a few mins and he never let me out. I got lucky and he let out after a few mins at my grandmothers. I took him to court and lost only due to not enough proof. He not in my life anymore due to this. Yet, now I wonder if he would fit into to this or something similar. He would never go to therapy or talk to me about his medical issues. He said people could use it against him and they don't need to know. he also is always the victim. I really hope he gets help and never hurts anyone more than the bruises he gave me and my mom. That was also the first and last time he very did that to me and he rarely hit her. He also cheated on my mom but to this day says she did. my mom has proof he does not. Also, a video on delusional memory or types of delusions would be a cool idea to do. I would like to understand more about delusional memory due to dealing with them my whole life due to my father.

  • @tempkinvient
    @tempkinvient 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is super the see discussed by a psychiatry Reg!

  • @Imbapiranha
    @Imbapiranha 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    So since you're a doctor and therefor already cleared the most important precondition to become a marvel villain, have you already decided which superpower you wish to make your secret identity about?

  • @mp123ny
    @mp123ny 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    My aunt was schizophrenic and experienced delusional love/erotomania. Does this occur in a similar way to Delusional Jealousy?

  • @jowoods7015
    @jowoods7015 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I was with my ex DJ for 22 years. Out of the blue 2 yrs prior to me fleeing he started making lots of accusations I was cheating, I never had, D Violence as a result of accusations and I left, full blown delusional, audio and visual hallucinations also after I left, horrific. Included myself, our kids, family and friends. He discarded his child and started a new life with no connection with anyone from his family or friends, nobody. The trauma he inflicted to myself and child is something that will take a lifetime to recover. He also started taking ICe after I left, hence when the delusions became extreme. As well as jealousy and cheating, he accusations were him being followed by the Feds, phone hacked, he said he was magic, he said he was becoming a movie star, model, book writer, he said he grew his genitalia by magic, the abuse from him was horrendous

    • @misstekhead
      @misstekhead 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      If he was tweaked out then that sadly makes so much sense. It doesn’t make it right, but it explains a lot. I hope the best in your family’s recovery from something so traumatic. Please take care.

    • @jowoods7015
      @jowoods7015 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@misstekhead thank you

  • @nrivera4380
    @nrivera4380 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    After years of all sorts of abuse, my father murdered my mom. He was jealous of her relationship with their own kids (my 2 brothers and me) at the time. He always seemed to project his crap onto her and finally killed her. It was a very complicated life - there were times when he raged against her or my brothers, and also long periods of being "normal", the latter were much less frequent then non-existent the last 3 years before he killed her. Not sure if delusional jealousy was relevant for him, but his irrational behaviors draw me to some kind of psychosis.

  • @distelinchen816
    @distelinchen816 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was actually focused on the headphone cable a lot of the time 😆

  • @windowsxd215
    @windowsxd215 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Ik you already reacted to Ren twice but he has a music video that are three in one and that gives me chills every time I hear it it's name is the tale of jenny and screech I would like to see you're reaction and hear out what you have to say about it

  • @InvertedGoblin
    @InvertedGoblin 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Do all psychotic delusions start with a moment of realization out of the blue?

    • @HigoIndico
      @HigoIndico 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I like this question, so I'm only commenting to see if anyone has an answer to this.

    • @daisyasbury9593
      @daisyasbury9593 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Sometimes, Sometimes there can also be a series of events that a person without mental illness would think is normal but a person with abnormal behaviours or is psychotic may have aberrant salience which is where they may have a string of delusions with a pattern being recognised or an idea they truly believe from something that doesn't mean anything. Everyone is different so one person might just 'realise' something while someone else might closely follow events or things happening and see them as a pattern for something like being hunted down or followed etc

    • @HigoIndico
      @HigoIndico 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@daisyasbury9593 What do you mean with "abnormal behaviors" in this case? If the person is psychotic, then the delusion has already started and those patterns are there afterwards and it doesn't start the delusion. If someone is closely following events and seeing them as patterns for something like being followed, hasn't that delusion started already when they started to follow those events? Or do you just mean, that some people remember every aspect of the things that happened more carefully and have more analytical mind where they store information with more detail?

    • @daisyasbury9593
      @daisyasbury9593 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@HigoIndico So I say abnormal behaviours just as an umbrella term as some people can experience pyschotic symptoms or delusion without a diagnosis. I'm not sure I quite follow what you mean, so are you saying psychotic symptoms will come first, then a delusion? Many people are different. For different people what comes first will be different for each case. I don't know if you've ever experienced someone who's in psychosis but they can very quickly hold delusions. Like if you tell them to grab a red cup out of the cuboard and they're suspicious as to why and they can be quite reactive and may believe there is a reason for that, like I've poisoned the cup. Or some people may keep that in mind and almost keep a list of things I've done which will (in their mind) reinforce their ideas of what I'm doing (delusion)

  • @chriswayne166
    @chriswayne166 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This video hit my situation on the head 100% and I just don't know how to fix the situation she refuses to get help she won't understand anything and it's coming to a point where I don't know what to do so any message back to help me would be grateful thanks again for the video was so helpful and awesome

    • @mariyajan262
      @mariyajan262 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Hi this is happening to my husband right know.

  • @BasedGodEmperorTrump
    @BasedGodEmperorTrump 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I wonder if the patient depicted actually has PPD, hence delusional jealousy is basically one of the traits for a diagnosis. I don't know, though.

  • @user-pq4pi2ks9y
    @user-pq4pi2ks9y หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi, I have watched this video and the original several times, this also happened to my husband. I stayed for 2 years hoping things would get better but they only got worse. He would secretly record me, spy on me, go through my phone, send me messages pretending to be another man to get my reaction and he would contact people from my past pretending to be me to try and get incriminating evidence against me. I could go on about how strange his behaviour got. I had no idea what was happening or how to get help so I finally left. It feels like a death. I miss him. Oh and don’t ever take a lie detector test. Just saying.

    • @mariyajan262
      @mariyajan262 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Hi I’m sorry to hear that. This just happend to my dear husband of 13 years. It’s for 2 months right know. He left us just like that with the saying you cheated on me

  • @Felipedino321
    @Felipedino321 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi! thanks so much for yours videos, I learn a lot about myself and other who same strugles with mental illness. If you can, could you watch "How I Cured My Mental Illness" of jREG, its a rlly good and creative video about schyzoafective illness, specific the part of hypomanic/depressed state. I that video he use niacin to treat the hypomanic, can you give your opinion about that? I cant find anything trustworthy about niacin.

  • @shandizuribe
    @shandizuribe 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    With alcohol abuse being rampant in most societies we live in, this has become more common than not. I've had experience with someone who drank severely and in his 40's developed intense obsession and jealous behavior toward his best friend and also his wife. Not them being together but just inappropriate behavior and delusional memories about what happened and become obsess about it. Is this possible if the person has been an alcoholic since early 20's?

    • @misstekhead
      @misstekhead 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I wonder the same if alcoholism or substance abuse has deteriorated his thinking. I know someone developed weird obsessions and delusions due to his long-term alcohol and drug use.

  • @blondbum
    @blondbum 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    People who cheat and then ascribe the cheating to a spouse/partner and become jealous and hateful, like we see in narcissistic individuals, seems close to this. Even the attempt at suicide but in a mild manner, more of a show then actual attempt.
    I'd love to know how he acted towards the wife and kids in daily life.

  • @silverraindropper8713
    @silverraindropper8713 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Dr. Syl, how do I send you a video to react to?

  • @michaelsuder486
    @michaelsuder486 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Joke's on you. I was focused on the cord and not you 😂 kidding

    • @pardalote
      @pardalote 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nice. I was focused on the plant on the left-hand side of the screen. It has really nice leaves 🪴. I am Autistic though, so watching faces can feel intense.

  • @Mangoomads
    @Mangoomads 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    How long can a delusion or psychotic episode last?

  • @song5361
    @song5361 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I’m so sorry if I’m asking in the wrong way. I’m sorry if I missed a video.
    I wanted to ask about your education on PTSD and cases where trauma happens over and over. It’s debated a lot in the US amongst professionals and I just want to understand more. I’m sorry for asking a lot. I hope I’m not causing repeat videos for you.

  • @leama4597
    @leama4597 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    it said “father unknown”, does that mean he could’ve had an absent father, would that possibly be relevant in some way?

  • @sofie1065
    @sofie1065 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    My guess is that he is delusional. But no, I am not sure. But if I was involved in this situation, I would be quite concerned for the wifes safety, that I do know. Sad for everybody

  • @clonaztevedreamkiller5277
    @clonaztevedreamkiller5277 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It looks like he's the one with the "roving eye"

  • @NeonCicada
    @NeonCicada 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What about this interview made you suspect _autochthonous primary delusions_
    instead of something like _psychotic depression with maladaptive rumination_ ?🤔

  • @TheKrispyfort
    @TheKrispyfort 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Your thoughts on the research into links between cerebellum insult during early childhood and later onset of schizophrenia?
    Also, prevalence of FASD being misdiagnosed as ASD.
    Any idea as to the prevalence of FASD in children who also experience neglect?
    Your thoughts on Dr CA Childress, his parental alienation model under attachment injury, and parental alienation as a child safety issue more than a child safety issue?
    Parental alienation as a "ex-partner equals Ex-parent" mindset, consciously or otherwise.
    Could the combination of all these increase a child's likelihood of BPD and other personality disorders?
    How would you inform policy suggestions to minimise harm to children at the hands of their family animosities?

  • @teri2466
    @teri2466 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Very interesting, but I'm not convinced he's delusional. It's entirely possible that he's correct. 🤷‍♀️

    • @necrodefecator
      @necrodefecator 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Note the fact he is not bringing any concretes exemples to back up his thoughts about her wife being unfaithful. This is a very weird way in itself to describe the situation.

    • @teri2466
      @teri2466 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@necrodefecator He didn't bring up specifics but he did bring up types of cues he was getting from his wife, for example the fact that she didn't want to have sex because she was afraid to have more children. This wasn't so long ago that birth control didn't exist.

    • @tinypixiekitten7806
      @tinypixiekitten7806 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I agree. Also, he said she kept laughing at him - disrespecting him. That was not nothing. I have also realised sometime after the start of being with someone that he was abusive, but not for a year or more, because of cognitive dissonance. My mind convinced me it was normal. I remembered conversations and actions with hindsight and wrote them all down to help me not go back to him.

    • @necrodefecator
      @necrodefecator 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@tinypixiekitten7806 I'll be as nice as I could here, but that's why you're in the comment section of this TH-cam channel and not the shrink who is interpreting the footage here. You don't have the tools to interprete the situation beside your own bad experiences with abuse and gaslighting, which I 'm sorry for, but it is not a good starting point to evaluate somebody mentally, probably the worst starting point actually.
      This guy presents himself as the victim but you have no idea on what kind of situations he brought his wife and kids to begin with, we have his side of the story only.

    • @Rabaheo
      @Rabaheo 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And we have info that he sent letters to his wife anonymously. Can you imagine being the wife finding out your husband is trying to catch you cheating by sending you anonymous letters asking you to cheat? that is not how you find out if your wife is cheating on you with other people. She seemed alarmed to be getting anonymous letters asking her for an affair? yeah, that would freak a person who isn't having an affair out.
      Also, @Necrodefecator, you are also in the youtube comments section where nobody here has their college degrees and full life experience in every single comment that they make, but sure assume you're talking to an ignorant person and make sure they know it with your words that you are intellectually superior and have the right of the situation which neither of you have the full information on. You look real super like you like to be superior to others and you're doing a good job.
      Point, When does a person experiencing delusions USUALLY end up in front of a doctor? Not usually voluntarily. If his wife was just cheating on him and a hospital, the police and this psychiatrist were involved, do you think that they might have figured that out instead of labeling a man delusional?

  • @double-you5130
    @double-you5130 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    im so confused so he is making it all up? what did the wife do ?

  • @pardalote
    @pardalote 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wow, depressed person who is jealous and wants to hit someone but doesn’t and he's a high risk? I thought we all felt like hitting other people sometimes and were holding it in. Are you saying that’s not normal? Serious question here. 🤔

  • @infopubs
    @infopubs 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    Interesting video. I learned a lot from your explanations, but admit that the analyzed video itself wasn't all that convincing. On its own, it could have just been an interview with a man who was depressed because his wife was truly unfaithful and he felt trapped by his loyalty to the children. I have to assume the rest of the background info is strong evidence of the psychosis.

  • @jessicacabras5612
    @jessicacabras5612 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    not to complain but your video audio is really low, i have it like all the way up and its pretty low but then the video you are showing and ads are like 10x louder. is it just me?

  • @SomeoneBeginingWithI
    @SomeoneBeginingWithI 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I think it might be helpful/safer for your audience if you avoided commenting on the relative dangerousness of different methods people use to attempt suicide, particularly mentioning that something is especially dangerous or difficult to treat. That kind of information can stick in the minds of vulnerable people and might lead them to choose that more dangerous method if they feel very low and desparate in the future.

  • @nellytube4537
    @nellytube4537 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Why did he not go on holiday? Maybe the family didnt want his drunk ass there and that turned him nuts

  • @natalieburns
    @natalieburns 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I want to talk to you sooooo bad I think my boyfriend has this.

  • @paulk8072
    @paulk8072 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have been diagnosed schizophrenia theses when,