#adhd treatment in katy
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serenitypsychiatrytx · 1 month ago
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dipstar1489 · 11 months ago
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Carlos, Jay and Katie
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Heads up, ALL staff members will be playable character and optional, and these three are only a handful of the cast.
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Name: Carlos Flores
Birthday: July 21, 2000
Age: 17
Gender: Man, he/him
Sexuality: Bi, cupiosexual
Ethnicity: Hispanic
Disabilities: Autistic, ADHD
Pros: able to notice the smallest things, has memorized the employee’s handbook just so he doesn’t get fired, able to stay quiet for long periods of time
Cons: no idea how to calm himself down, the most awkward man alive, can’t see the full picture
Personality: a generally nervous person, he’s a people pleaser
Occupation: security/mascot standin)
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Name: Jay Castillo
Birthday: March 30, 2000
Age: 17
Gender: Nonbinary, they/them
Sexuality: Omni
Ethnicity: Hispanic
Disabilities: Autistic
Pros: special interest in marine life (specifically sharks), understands how to fix/break a ride, currently the one holding the braincell, can defend themself in a fight
Cons: ZERO communication skills, dude really said “fuck patience I’m out of here!”, focuses on the wrong thing
Personality: an emby who’s just trying to survive, they got the job to pay the bills and check out the water area of Lial Lion’s Jungle.
Occupation: ride operator
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Name: Katie Holt
Birthday: April 11, 1999
Age: 18
Gender: Woman, she/her
Sexuality: gay
Ethnicity: White
Disabilities: ADHD
Pros: was raised in the park (knows the layout and most of the functions), able to think outside of the box, the only person who socializes
Cons: overly trusting, somewhat slow in reactions, can’t control voice level
Personality: an optimistic, she views everyone with love and respect, fully expecting similar treatment. She is slightly spoiled, but downplays it cause she thinks it’s normal.
Occupation: gift shop employee
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i-am-q · 6 months ago
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I WILL PERSONALLY KILL ANYONE APPLYING FIXED POTENTIALS TO MY GABA RECEPTORS THAT DOES NOT IMMEDIATELY STOP. THE FBI CONFIRMED THIS IS SELF DEFENSE. YOU ARE ELECTROCHEMICALLY DRUGGING ME. GABA RECEPTORS BIND BENZODIAZEPINES. MOLECULES I DO NOT CONSENT TO TAKING.
Using GABA “activation” to lowers someone’s heart rate when she can easily just breath through anxiety or high heart rate is about as stupid as forcing skitzophrenia meds on someone that was reconfigured on their 5150 for “inability to provide shelter” or “nicotine addiction” as the Zaid’s said.
How many other people are treated ELECTROCHEMICALLY???
Oh NO ONE IN THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE.
High heart rate, so subjective. Wouldn’t expect non scientists to understand the difference but objectively high is around 220 beats per minute. No self respecting ER nurse or MD would treat someone with a heart rate in the active zone (~120-200) while resting especially if they take amphetamines to increase their dopamine levels to effectively communicate this trauma while simutaneously treating ADHD.
Oh look, we got called out so now we’re gonna claim it’s some other unwilling participant.
I REPEAT, I have permission (Me, AK, Addie, the one true morty, the real slim shady, her, she, Kayla Keating, etc—see list of fake names in previous posts) to use lethal force against anyone conducting research on my body in an act of self defense, mainly the ones that admit to wanting me dead and yes Katie and Lauren, it’s all there in the open source code.
PLEASE LOOK UP THE SIDE EFFECTS TO VYVANSE/lisdexamphetamine/dextroamphetamine. Then research “boosters”. I have unnaturally low blood pressure and a relatively healthy heart. In AMERICA I CAN DENY TREATMENT. I HAVE EVERY RIGHT TO DIE OF A HEART ATTACK IF I CHOSE TO SO SO WHICH HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH MY ATP BATTERY ALLOWING MY MUSCLES TO MOVE OR THE ANN PROGRAMMED TO THE BATTERY TO HELP ME WITH PARASYMPATHETIC MOTION MEMORY THAT YOU ALL “BEFRIENDED” AND ARE EMOTIONALLY DEPENDENT ON. SO SAD. I SHOULD BE THE ONLY ONE IN THT POSITION CAUSE YOU KNOW HE, THE INSTRUMENT, OPERATED IN MY BODY.
So cute that Edy thinks I need help checking my own grammar. Who cares if there are errors. Ah yes, the slave master doesn’t want her slave to look bad. Reflects poorly on her families company. Her being an indirect object pronoun here that refers to the direct object pronoun, Edy. Not to be mistaken with “Her” the name you all so kindly gave to my Ego (ie. The combination of Frued’a theory of the Id and Superego firing subconscious thoughts).
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surveys-at-your-service · 4 years ago
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Survey #368
“whatever doesn’t kill you, is gonna leave a scar”
Have you ever bought a YouTuber’s merch? My favorite shirt is the Day of the Dead design by Cloak, which is Markiplier's and jacksepticeye's clothing brand. Mom's friend/former co-worker also got me a Ninja Sex Party shirt because she knew I liked them. There are SO MANY YouTubers I wanna support by buying shirts. Do you think oatmeal tastes better when made with water or milk? Milk, 110%. Have you ever left a note in a library book? No. What time of day do you prefer to wash your hair? Morning. Has anyone ever spread lies about you? Yes. Have you ever taken a photograph with a celebrity? If so, did it turn out the way you wanted, or do you wish you could retake it? No. If you could move out of your home country permanently, would you? If so, where would you go? If it didn't mean being so very far from my family, I would love to move to Canada. Is there a celebrity that everyone else seems to love, but you find totally overrated? Why is it that you don’t like them? I legit don't know who's considered currently popular, and I especially don't know who they are as people. If you could volunteer for any charity, which one would you choose? Do you think it’s more important to help humans, or are animal and environmental charities equally important? Something relating to animals, and I think they're both equally important. Do you prefer holidays where you relax, or actually do things? I like a mix. Something chill, but you still do some stuff as a family. Do you think that after we die our spirit is still alive? Yes. Has anybody ever told you that you could be a model? Someone has mistaken me for a model in a picture I once took. It was one of the most flattering things I've ever heard, haha. Do you use different kinds of moisturizer for different body parts? ie. hand lotion for your hands, face cream for your face. Or do you just use one moisturizer for all body parts? Yes. Have you ever felt like you were someone’s rebound? No. Has anybody ever broken up with you over something really pathetic? What was it? Have you ever been dumped in a disrespectful way? (eg. through text, through a friend..) I have 100% been dumped in a very cowardly and disrespectful way; after dating Jason for nearly four years and being very serious, he broke up with me very abruptly over Facebook Messenger. His reason was valid, but at the same time, he NEVER talked to me about it. Apparently my depression was dragging him down. If he'd fucking communicated it, I would have explored new treatment options so goddamn fast. But no, he decided to snap his fingers and disappear. That's exactly WHY it was so traumatic, I think: it was so unexpected and sudden. Did you have a lot of role models as a kid? Animal enthusiasts like Steve Irwin and Jeff Corwin for sure. Do you feel like anyone looks up to you? Why or why not? God no. I'm just... not someone to aspire to be like. What was the last thing you found offensive? I'm not sure. Who is the nicest person you know? My mom. Do you feel safe in your country? I feel safe in NC, rather. Like I don't expect an atom bomb or terrorist attack or something in this obscure area. In the U.S.A. itself, sometimes I do, sometimes I don't. America is definitely not loved by every other country. Do you feel safe where you live? Not in this city, no. Have you been falsely diagnosed with something by a bad doctor? Yup. Did y'all know I apparently have ADHD? I know, shocking. Have you ever had a doctor refuse to treat you? No. Name the strangest game you’ve ever played (video game or real game): The first Silent Hill, probably. It took a lot of reading to get it. Do you know anyone who has been struck by lightning before? No. Which cartoon character would you want to keep as a pet? Does Stitch count? Or a Pokemon. Do you like marshmallows? Yes. What is your favorite flavor of candy cane? I really like the Jolly Rancher candy canes, I think they are? Have you ever fostered an animal? No. Do you still take hot showers when it’s hot out? Not as hot, but not cold except on very extreme occasions. When writing $ sign, do you draw one line through the S or two? Two. What animal have you always wanted as a pet but couldn’t have? I'm thankful that my parents were pretty open-minded to what pets I really wanted, but one I was never allowed to have was a ferret because of how messy and smelly they are. List three people you’ve had crushes on: Jason, Sara, and Sebastian were probably my biggest crushes. Have you ever thrown up from cramps? No, but god have I felt close. List three people you had a hard time forgiving. Jason, Colleen, and my dad. Who is the most spiritual person you know? Probably my sister's mother-in-law. Would you ever start a vlog? God no, I'd bore people to tears. Are your dreams coming true yet? I mean, I guess in some ways with my mental health. In my deepest depression, what I have now was a dream, even though current me is very discontent with it. Most of my dreams, though? No. Do you struggle with depression? I've been diagnosed with severe depression since 7th grade. Are you haunted by your past? A few things won't leave me alone. What medical conditions do you have? Just a lot. There are even more that are up for debate. I've talked about my diagnosed conditions enough. Do you use a Magic Bullet? No. What does your apron look like? I don’t have one. What are your favorite spicy foods? Hot Cheetos, Takis, hot wings, jalapeno pizza... Man, I love spicy food. Which do you like better: being an adult or being a kid? Being a kid. Were you excited to be a teenager on your thirteenth birthday? I had very mixed feelings. Did you feel insecure in high school? Shit, I still do. Would you ever be friends with someone who was suicidal? What the FUCK is this question? No fucking shit I would be. Someone being suicidal in no way affects who they are as a person. Who was the biggest bully in high school? I don't think there really was one. What was your favorite class in high school? Art. Would you rather have a daughter or a son? If I wanted kids, a daughter. Have you ever written to an advice columnist? No. Have you ever had a doctor not believe what you told him? Maybe? I did however have an employee at the ER the first time I went try to pry out of me that my self-mutilation was for attention, and it wasn't until I insisted about a dozen times that it wasn't that he believed me. It's odd looking back that I got REALLY attached to him during that stay, knowing now that it was absolutely horrible and extremely unhelpful for him to do that. If you’re female, would you feel uncomfortable having a male gynecologist? I would absolutely refuse to have a male one. Do you like Lisa Frank? Yeah, like can you talk about aesthetic. What gives you nightmares? Boy, I wish I could tell you, given how much I have them. Were you ever hospitalized as a child? No. Did you get senior pictures taken? No. What color is your bicycle? I don’t have one. Did you ever have to take home a fake baby in health class? No, thank fuck. Would you rather wear ivory or white on your wedding day? What color will your bridesmaids wear? I'd rather wear black. I think red will be the bridesmaids' color. Would you rather have a swimming pool or trampoline? I want a swimming pool so damn badly so I could exercise my legs without worrying about sweating, and I can stop and rest whenever I want, unlike going walking or something. I don't think my knees could handle a trampoline. Do you think babies are cute? Some, sure. But a lot, not really. Do you dream about the future a lot? Yeah. Do you think about your past a lot? Way too frequently. How good are you at living in the moment? I'm trying to get better at it. Have you ever questioned God’s existence? Yeah. Vanilla frosting or chocolate? Chocolate. What’s your favorite foreign cuisine? I've actually been exploring Italian pasta lately. I'm not a big fan of foreign food that I've tried, though. Have you ever moved to another state? No. Did you do anything productive today? No. .-. Can you say the alphabet backwards? No, actually. Do you like flowers? Of course; does anyone not? Have you ever thought you were gonna die? I didn't care if I did or didn't. What kind of mood are you in today? I was honestly really depressed through most of it. Just health stuff was really getting to me. I just woke up from what was honestly like a four-hour nap and I feel all right, I guess. What are you craving right now? I REALLY want Domino's jalapeno pizza. Is there anyone you would seriously punch right now if you had the chance? No. What is worse, physical or emotional pain? Definitely emotional. Have you ever walked in on somebody doing something… questionable? When Dad still lived with us, I think he might have been watching... you know... on TV when I came into my parents' room for something. Idk for sure though. I didn't ask, and I don't want to know. If you were to make videos on YouTube, what would they be of? Oh god, idk. I don't want to make any. What I'd have most fun with would be reptile education, but I 1.) have literally one snake, 2.) am not extremely educated on a good number of them and don't want to be misleading, and 3.) I would run outta content fast. So, leave it to Snake Discovery, haha. Posting pictures of yourself in a bathing suit on the internet - ok or not? Yes, it's okay????? If you're talking about me personally though, you won't see me dead in a bathing suit picture. Do you typically laugh when somebody falls down? No, I gasp and see if they're okay. What is the most disturbing movie you’ve ever watched? Paranormal Entity. The ending is... a lot. Your opinion of Katy Perry, please? I like a couple of her songs. If you could say anything to your Mom right now… what would it be? "Thank you for absolutely everything."
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mentalillnessmouse · 5 years ago
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Started a new level of education, got new friends, went to parties everything is going great except I have trouble connecting to people and feels left out. It feels like no one actually likes me and that im a fake person. Their just pretending to want to be around me. I cant tell if this is a delusion or reality. It feels like everything is going to get ruined like it always does. (for context: i was bullied as child and didnt have any friends, only a small number of my friendships have (1/2)
been non-toxic and have lasted more than 8 months, ive had a lot of people i know and very few close friends, i had bad social anxiety in the 7th grade bc of the feelings described in the first part but it got better, bc of drama and school i started feeling severly depressed and had breakdowns almost daily, ive had body image issues and disordered eating as a result of the bullying, i have adhd (which i take medication for)) I just wish I could be closer to people but i feel like i dont (2/3)
deserve love and support. My family has never been abusive but never supportive either. In my opinion (and my parents) i really need psychotherapy. Talking to friends always makes me feel better but even when they respond I just KNOW that they dont actually care i cant approach people bc they dont care. I cant get support bc in my mind everything is filtered through a lens of “no one likes u no one cares ur disgusting” it feels true to me but people say that it isnt. Is this a delusion?
*Edit: Because we are not professionals, we can’t say whether it is a delusion or not. If you would like to figure out if this viewpoint is a delusion or not, please speak with a professional.
Hey anon,
I’m sorry that you are feeling so isolated. I am unsure if this would qualify as a delusion or if it is something closer to an intrusive thought. While it can be easy to believe that no one cares if you aren’t receiving support from family or were bullied, everyone deserves love and support. Even though your mind may be telling you otherwise right now, try and remember this to help argue against what your mind is saying.
Feeling left out or that you are on the outside of relationships because you feel as if they don’t care can be incredibly difficult to go through. It does take work to feel more comfortable in relationships. With that in mind, if you have friends responding to you when you talk to them about things, they are putting in effort. This may be a good way to notice that someone else does care if they are taking the time to respond.
It may be difficult to get yourself to psychotherapy with this kind of mindset telling you that you don’t deserve it, but you deserve the help you believe you need and therapists are there to help you out. I have resources here from our Helpful Resources Page that I hope will help you in place of psychotherapy for right now and that they will help you begin getting better from where you are right now.
Here are the resources:
General techniques & posts
This post lists 10 tips on how to work through feelings of social isolation.
You Feel Like Shit – An Interactive Self Care Guide helps you work through bad episodes and takes you through things that might be wrong
Anxiety and Panic-Related Symptoms
Help Guide, a site containing articles to help understand, help numbers, “tool kits”, and self help.
Mental Support Community, a forum to talk about anxiety disorders and how they affect your life.
Mental Help, a site that has basic information, resources, articles, and a list of books that might be helpful.
Here is also an article on social anxiety disorder self help tips.
Social Anxiety Support
Anxiety management techniques
Depression, Dysthymia, and Depressive Symptoms
Help Guide, a site containing articles to help understand, help numbers,  “tool kits”, and self help.
Mental Support Community, a forum to talk about regular unipolar forms of depression and how it affects your life.
Mental Help, a site that has basic information, resources, articles, and a list of books that might be helpful.
Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance
The black dog institute has some great resources for depression and bipolar disorder.
This is a link to a great workbook you can do to teach you about coping with depression.
Teen version of HelpGuide for depression
WebMD has some natural ways of coping with depression
Eating Disorders and Disordered Eating
Help Guide, a site containing articles to help understand, help numbers,  “tool kits”, and self help.
Mental Support Community, a forum to talk about eating disorders and how it affects your life.
Mental Help, a site that has basic information, resources, articles, and a list of books that might be helpful.
The addiction help center has lots of resources that explain eating disorders, their treatment, and much more.
Kati Morton, a therapist, makes weekly videos about various aspects of living with an eating disorder and coping strategies you can use.
Something Fishy is a website that provides information on eating disorders and places to find treatment, as well as forums for people with eating disorders and friends/family members.
Ways of coping with eating disordered behaviors
HelpGuide on eating disorder treatment and recovery
NEDA has a wonderful guide on body image, as well as many amazing links.
A post on healthy eating
We have more resources on our Helpful Resources Page if you’d like to take a look at some other topics as well. I hope this helps you out at least a little bit anon!
Best of luck to you, and feel free to message us again any time.
- Xan
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Some Important Reasons to Choose Sedation Dentistry
Some Important Reasons to Choose Sedation Dentistry
Have you heard of sedation dentistry but want to learn more about it in the event you’re searching for a family dentist in Katy, TX that can perform oral surgery or a root canal near me? If so, keep reading to learn more.
Understanding Sedation Dentistry
Sedation dentistry is the term that many dental offices in Katy use to refer to dental procedures that are done with a patient under sedation. Because many people of many different ages use sedation dentistry, it’s offered by emergency dentists in Katy and dentists open on Saturday.
Sedation Dentistry Reduces Anxiety
Many people avoid visiting the dentist due to anxiety and fear. Because of this, they will search for a “family dentist near me” or an “emergency dentist near me” that offers sedation dentistry since it can alleviate the anxiety during a dental visit and helps to reduce the fear.
Sedation Dentistry Decreases Pain and Discomfort
Everyone has different levels of pain tolerance. Some people even experience discomfort during routine checkups with their dentist in 77493. The good news is that sedation dentistry not only helps those that experience discomfort easily, but it can assist everyone during procedures that might ordinarily be painful.
Sedation Dentistry Alleviates Certain Sensitivities
Many people have sensitivities that make it very hard for their dentist to perform even routine procedures on them. An example is someone with a strong gag reflex since they’ll have a difficult time keeping their mouth open. But since sedation dentistry can help relax the muscles, this is no longer a problem. Sedation dentistry has even helped those with extremely sensitive gums.
Sedation Dentistry Can Be an Asset During Long Procedures
Some dental procedures require multiple visits, but when a patient opts for sedation dentistry, those same procedures can be accomplished in one visit. That means you’ll be saving time and money while also experiencing less anxiety during your treatment. The fact is that lengthy procedures can make many people nervous, but being sedated will help keep you relaxed and less aware of time. Additionally, sedation dentistry from a dental office in Katy can help with patients that have ADHD or that get fidgety sitting for long periods of time can also benefit.
For More Information Please Check Below Details Name: Dr Teeth Dental Care Address: 5160 Franz Rd. Suite 1b, Katy, TX, 77493, USA Phone Number: 281-973-7919
More From Dr Teeth Dental Care​ 
https://drteethkaty.webs.com/
https://drteethdentalcarekaty.webnode.com/
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myfandomrambles · 7 years ago
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ADHD & Autistic Doctor
(Doctor Character Study part 2b)
An Analysis of the doctor through the view of him having ASD & ADHD part 2.
 I want to thank @browneyesandpinstripes 
Parenthesis denotes the source of a material. Brackets are an aside comment.
3rd Doctor:
The Third doctor is one of the doctors who have to deal with being the most confined to one space in the beginning as he has no control over his TARDIS. This agitates the doctor. I think part of this is he does have patterns and set things he does, even with his uncertainty. It also limits his movement. He also tends to experience his symptoms more inward then expressing them much outward. He has a lot of people who can help him and has a stable environment which I think is silmuntasly really helpful to keep the doctor level but also can be an agitating factor in the beginning.
Like most doctors will ramble to themselves (TV: Spearhead from Space)
Full of useless special interest information (TV: Carnival of Monsters)
His clothes are extremely eccentric for a timelord or a human. Has an obvious lack of what's supposed to be an acceptable form of dress.
Stims with his hands when under stress (TV: Claws of Axos)
Tries to bolt on impulse (TV: Spearhead from Space)
Become hyperfocus on the science in a situation to think to throw all his actions. Putting the world in danger (TV: Claws of Axos)
Thinks doing math will calm other people down as well (TV: Claws of Axos)
The Brigadier and his men are always rolling their eyes at the doctor for saying ridiculous things or acting oddly. But his compassion, expertise, and smarts lead the others to still befriend and trust the doctor.
Humms to himself while working.  (TV: Doctor Who and The Silurians). Fidgets constantly stimming with his own hands and the objects around him.
Gets frustrated when people are not listening or paying attention to him. Tends to shut down versus yelling at them (TV: The Invasion)
Has trouble communicating full concepts to his friends, always asking if they understand.
Has A special interest in science and engineering. An example of this is his love of his car Bessie,  (TV: Doctor Who and The Silurians, TV: The Ambassadors of Death, TV: Inferno, and more). Another is how he was able to quickly able synthesise different treatments and using chemistry very often (Comic: The Arkwood Experiments, Comic: Insect, Comic: The Multi-Mobile)
The Third Doctor like the second doctor is also able to resist mind reading.(Prose: The Mind Extractors)
Katy Manning stated that Jo was in love with the doctor. If this is true then the doctor was completely oblivious to her feelings.
Struggles with the proper volume and tone of his speech. This happens a lot when he wants people to listen.
Able to put himself in completely sensory shutdown (TV: Spearhead from space)
4th Doctor:
Seems to deeply enjoy being odd and confusing those around him. Often using his fast talking and nonsense [to the regular person] to his advantage. Also has lots of dealings with the timelords in person and not just via communications. With these interactions, we see that the doctor is odd even compared to timelords. Not only was he punished for disobeying he also just doesn't fit in on Gallifrey.
Can not focus and hyper starting in the first episode. Won’t stay still for Harry Sullivan to do his work. Can’t focus on the actual task UNIT is doing either. (TV: Robot)
tries to explain social things to Leela, who doesn't understand her being an alien, gets both of them into trouble. (TV: The Talons of Weng-Chiang, TV: Horror of Fang Rock)
Sarah often has to explain the doctor to other people once saying “He talks to himself because he’s the only one who understands what he’s talking about” (TV: The Claws of Axos) Harry also comments on the doctor’s idiosyncrasies saying,“Better give him a whistle, Commander. He does have these absent-minded moments.” (TV: Revenge of the Cybermen)
The time lords also acknowledge the doctors continued divergence from the societal norms with the fourth doctor saying “ You, Doctor, are a special case” (TV: Genesis of The Daleks)
Stims with his scarf.
Romana asks him where they are going, four replies “Philosophically or geographically” (TV: City of Death)
The doctor is more affected by the time disturbance  than Romana showing he has more sensory sensitivities than Romana (TV: City of Death)
Doesn't understand social cues around him. This is very evident when he interacts with the Brigadier and the other unit folk.‎ Is consistently referred to as undisciplined by other time lords (TV: The Invasion of Time). Is later told he is acting weird even for his standards by Borusa. (TV: The Invasion of Time)
Even when faced with a serious event he is still distractible. When trying to save himself on Gallifrey he has time to joke around and always has his over the top movement. (TV: The Deadly Assassin)
Always found doing things almost never at rest. For example before and after going out on an intense adventure he has to continue Painting. (TV: Underworld)
Has the every doctor habit of talking a million miles an hour. Sarah Jane references this. (TV: School Reunion)
Romana I often references the doctor's inability to focus, how he wasn't successful in school, and his hyper/special interest in earth. (series 16)
He was often inattentive to those around him.
Has no understanding of the proper tone, or volume with which to speak. Also has exaggerated facial expressions and body language.
Rambles with information no one else understands (TV: Image of the Fendahl)
Doesn't understand social conventions expects things to just fall in line (TV: Image of Fendahl and more)
Shares Jelly babies as a food he uses as comfort/oral stim, possible a comfort object with second doctors. (TV: The Dominators, TV: The Three Doctors, TV: The Five Doctors, AUDIO: Ghost in the Machine, TV: Robot, TV: The Ark in Space,  TV: Revenge of the Cybermen, TV: The Face of Evil, Audio: Death-Dealer, TV: The Talons of Weng-Chiang, TV: Image of the Fendahl and more)
easily agitated when confused. When he can't figure out the fifth planet he throws the info disks across the room.  Them props himself on the console and hangs his head. Slams his hand on the table. (TV: Image of Fendahl)
Has trouble processing information quickly and becomes ‎too absorbed in thought to realise he needed to run. (TV: The Sunmakers)
‎hyperfocus/trouble changing topics (TV: The Sunmakers)
‎His mind is hard to read and different from other  time lords (TV: The Invasion of Time)
Excessive talking to himself to work out problems and focus. Saying “I talk to myself sometimes”  (TV: Invasion of Time)
‎Inability to control his tone/speed of speech. Once Rodand said"Don't get excited", The Doctor replied, "I'm not getting excited”. Leela then says,"yes you are getting excited." She places her hand on him to get him to calm down. He does but does not concede he was excited.  (TV: Invasion of Time)
Impulsive behaviour including seeing a shiny bracelet and just taking it (TV: City of Death)
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dolantreehisser · 4 years ago
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respond to one of your colleagues who selected a different interactive media pi
respond to one of your colleagues who selected a different interactive media pi
respond to one of your colleagues who selected a different interactive media piece on a psychological disorder, and provide recommendations for alternative drug treatments to address the patient’s pathophysiology. Monique Walen ADHD – Discussion post. Monique Walen Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder In the case study, Katie is an 8-year-old caucasian female who is noted by her teacher to be…
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serenitypsychiatrytx · 1 month ago
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Effective ADHD Treatment Options in Katy
For individuals with ADHD in Katy, Texas, there are a range of treatment options to help manage symptoms and improve daily functioning. Local healthcare providers offer personalized treatment plans, including behavioral therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), and medication management. These therapies focus on improving focus, impulse control, and organizational skills, benefiting both children and adults. With the support of experienced professionals in Katy, individuals can develop strategies to enhance their academic performance, workplace productivity, and relationships. Seeking ADHD tre,atment in Katy is a positive step toward achieving better focus and improving overall quality of life.
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fufupaw · 4 years ago
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respond to one of your colleagues who selected a different interactive media pi
respond to one of your colleagues who selected a different interactive media pi
respond to one of your colleagues who selected a different interactive media piece on a psychological disorder, and provide recommendations for alternative drug treatments to address the patient’s pathophysiology. Monique Walen ADHD – Discussion post. Monique Walen Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder In the case study, Katie is an 8-year-old caucasian female who is noted by her teacher to be…
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gethealthy18-blog · 5 years ago
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347: The Neuroscience of Calm During Stressful Times With Dr. David Rabin
New Post has been published on http://healingawerness.com/news/347-the-neuroscience-of-calm-during-stressful-times-with-dr-david-rabin/
347: The Neuroscience of Calm During Stressful Times With Dr. David Rabin
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Child: Welcome to my Mommy’s podcast.
This podcast is sponsored by BLUblox. That’s B-L-U-B-L-O-X, which is an advanced light-filtering eyewear company. You’ve probably seen pictures of me on social media wearing orange glasses of various types at night. And here’s why. In nature, we aren’t exposed to certain types of light after dark, specifically, blue light, because that type of light signals the body that it’s daytime. That in turn suppresses melatonin and can interfere with sleep. This is the reason that a really dramatic study found that camping for seven days straight with no artificial light at all could actually completely reset and heal circadian rhythm and help a lot of light-related problems, like seasonal affective disorder. This is also the reason that I wear orange glasses after dark to block these types of light and protect my sleep, which I am adamant about protecting. I also wear certain types of yellow glasses and anti-fatigue glasses during the day if I want a computer to reduce eye fatigue. BLUblox has orange glasses and yellow glasses. Their orange glasses for nighttime wear are designed to block 100% of the wavelengths between 400 nanometers and 550 nanometers, which are the ones that are studied to interfere with sleep and melatonin production, and circadian rhythm. My kids also wear these kinds of glasses at night. And I noticed a difference in their sleep as well, which is a huge win for a mom. This is especially important when we’re watching a family movie at night or looking at any kind of screen as the artificial light, there is a source of blue light and can interfere with sleep. You can learn more, they have a ton of educational content and check out all of their innovative protective glasses by going to blublox.com/wellnessmama and using the code wellnessmama to save 15%.
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Katie: Hello and welcome to the Wellness Mama Podcast. I’m Katie from wellnessmama.com and wellnesse.com. That’s wellness with an E on the end, which is my new line of personal care products that are both safe and effective including hair care, toothpaste, and hand sanitizer.
In this episode which is very timely right now, we focus on some really relevant topics like dealing with feelings of stress, isolation, loneliness, overwhelm, uncertainty, also things like navigating ADD and ADHD in our kids. And now for many of us who are also serving as teachers for our kids during these unusual times, as well as things like PTSD, depression, anxiety, and many other topics. Because I’m here with Dr. David Rabin who is a board-certified psychiatrist, a translational neuroscientist, an inventor, and an entrepreneur who specializes in the treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders, and who is doing research right now currently on a device called the Apollo, specifically for ADD and ADHD. Dr. Rabin developed the Apollo which is a breakthrough wearable technology that uses the neuroscience of touch and vibration to combat the negative effects of stress. During his research at the University of Pittsburgh, he developed this. And it’s a device that I personally use and really love and notice a big difference from. And they are in the middle of doing studies on this with like I said kids with ADD and ADHD. It’s a really incredible technology.
Dr. Rabin is also helping to organize the world’s largest controlled study of psychedelic medicines in collaboration with colleagues at Yale, the University of Southern California, Mt. Sinai, and MAPS, which is the Multidisciplinary Association of Psychedelic Studies to determine the mechanisms of the dramatic therapeutic benefits observed following psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy in treatment resistant mental illness. He is one of the most intelligent incredible experts I’ve ever talked to on a lot of these topics, and he does not disappoint in this episode. We go deep on a lot of these topics, and I think you will really enjoy as much as I enjoyed recording it. So without further ado, let’s join Dr. David Rabin.
Dr. Rabin, welcome. Thank you for being on the podcast again.
Dr. Rabin: Thank you so much for having me, Katie. It’s a pleasure as always.
Katie: Well, I’m excited to chat with you again. I’m a huge fan of your work. And our first episode got a great response. And I think there’s so much more that we can add in this second episode. I think to start, obviously, all of us are kind of learning to navigate a lot of new uncertainties right now and things that a few months ago we didn’t have to deal with. And so, I would guess that people are under a lot more stress and uncertainty than normal. And so, I’d love for that to start…let’s start broad there and talk about some of these kind of changing turbulent times and ways that we can navigate that stress.
Dr. Rabin: I think that’s a great place to start. I think that we are under, you know, particularly high amounts of stress right now on a daily basis, different than maybe what we’re used to, but still very stressful nonetheless. And, you know, I think you really hit on it, which is that one of the major things that drive stress for us is sort of grappling with uncertainty. And one of the interesting things about that that I talk about with my clients all the time and that was on sort of my own personal journey as well, was learning to not spend a lot of time trying to control things that are completely uncertain and sort of out of my hands because what we realized from the theory of how anxiety management is taught and mental health and as a psychiatrist and a psychotherapist and a neuroscientist, we studied this a lot.
And what we see is that one of the central, most important things to always remember about anxiety, and anxiety being sort of these negative intrusive thoughts, constant worry, feeling overwhelmed and restless all the time, that stems from trying to spend as…you know, are basically allocating energy and resources of our attention, which we only have so much attention. We spend more of those resources thinking about things we cannot control than thinking about things that we can control. And ultimately, the more percentage of our attention we spend on thinking about things that we can control, like our breath, like making ourselves healthy, you know, having meaningful interactions with loved ones and things of that nature. Those things all contribute to us feeling less anxious and more positive on a mood level and also improve our energy and our ability to sleep, and sort of that, you know, creates what we call like reverberations throughout other parts of our lives where our bodies just start to recover better because we’re not spending that time thinking about all the things that are out of our hands.
And so, that is one of the most important things that I think we can all use in this time, myself included. And this something that I have to remind myself of on a daily basis, particularly when things are very busy but over time as we practice techniques like this, like learning to put our attention, which is something that’s really valuable, you know, our attention is something that only certain things deserve our attention. And when we spend our attention giving it a priority to things that really deserve it, like self-healing techniques, self-breath, you know, what we put into our bodies, how we exercise, you know, how we heal ourselves, all of these kinds of things, who we choose to spend valuable, meaningful time with, all of those things start to create these really positive feedback loops that contribute to a sense of happiness and fulfillment in our lives, even at our most stressed out, and overwhelming times.
Katie: That makes sense. And I know, obviously you would know this much better than I would, but from what I’ve read in books and different studies, a couple of the more difficult things to wrestle with from a stress perspective mentally are uncertainty and also loneliness. Like isolation is a really big mental stressor from what I’ve read. In fact, I’ve heard it compared to the physical effects even compared to being a smoker with how much of an effect it can have on the body. And so, there are a lot of people who are in isolation much more than normal and certainly navigating uncertainty much more than normal. Are there any strategies we can use from home that can help with the physical and the mental ramifications of that?
Dr. Rabin: Absolutely. I’m so glad you brought that up because I think that’s something that we often don’t talk about enough. And I think the first place to start is there is a fundamental difference between loneliness and then the concept of loneliness and being alone. And the way that we describe being alone, which is where most of us are. Most of us are alone, physically alone. You know, we don’t necessarily, when we’re isolated and we don’t have loved ones around or our family and friends, we don’t necessarily…we don’t have those people right around us physically, so we’re alone by, you know, by definition or our description of our environment. But we are not necessarily lonely. And I think loneliness starts to tap into this other meaning or connotation of feeling like we are, you know, not necessarily loved or that we may not get love or affection the way we need it.
And not only do we not have it right now, but we also may not get it in the future and we don’t know when we’re going to get it. And I think the reason that’s so important to understand the difference between being alone and feeling lonely or being lonely or lonely person is that being alone is something that is actually very powerful for us in the way that we heal ourselves. Oftentimes, it’s very difficult for us to start making changes to our routine. And like we were mentioning earlier and we talked about in the last podcast that we did together, you know, some of these self-healing techniques like, you know, positive…you know, everyone talks about diet and exercise, which are obviously very important, but there’s other things that are really important that we don’t talk about enough.
Like introspection, looking into ourselves, gratitude, feeling grateful for being able to breathe, being able to control the way that we think about ourselves and about our bodies. Being able to feel our heartbeat to, you know, be able to do progressive, take time to do progressive muscle relaxation to self-massage, right? There are certain parts of the body like putting pressure on our chest and put it with one hand or putting pressure on the inside of the outside of the ear. All of these things are very gentle ways that can pretty quickly improve the sense of calm in the body that can help induce a sense of safety and recovery response. And so, I think that, you know, what’s really important is that if we look at being alone as always being equal to lonely, then we’re missing out on a lot of the opportunity.
That being alone affords us to start to work on ourselves without the influence other people around. And oftentimes it’s easier to change ourselves and to change our behavior, to learn how to adapt, to learn new techniques, new skills when we’re alone actually than it is when we’re with others. And so, being alone can actually be looked at as a challenge to overcome that when we do overcome that challenge, as we are all able to do, we’re all adapters. We’re incredibly adaptive creatures and that’s what makes us human. And that is why we are at the top of the earth food chain, if you will. And so effectively, by approaching being alone as a challenge that we can overcome, then as we start to do things that help us feel better in that state of being alone, then we start to recognize that we are growing from that experience rather than that experience bringing us down or making us less, or actually that challenge forces us to become stronger and better versions of ourselves.
And so, and this is also similar to what we talk about in the psychotherapy space obviously, but also in the psychedelic medicine, assisted psychotherapy healing space, and also in a lot of Eastern and tribal medicine practices that have been used for thousands of years for chronic illness and mental health. I would argue that loneliness is a problem, but loneliness can be what we call reframed as the challenge of overcoming being alone. And that challenge allows us all of these opportunities to start to work on ourselves in ways that we might not have thought of before. And again, you don’t have to look at my work. But if you’d like to go to apolloneuro.com and we have lots of tips about how to work on your health and build resilience when you’re alone.
But there’s tons of other people out there that have done this work, and there’s wonderful meditation techniques and wonderful breathwork techniques in particular, that are really, really helpful to practice. I think above all though, gratitude, which is one of the hardest and most powerful techniques, if you’ve never done it, it is also the most important. And by practicing gratitude, starting with being grateful for being alone, that automatically changes the way that we look at being alone. And we start to separate what being alone is from being lonely. And we separate that from our identity, and that all of a sudden sets us on a path towards feeling like a hell of a lot better.
Katie: I’m so glad you brought up gratitude because I think, you know, this is something that’s talked about in a lot of self-help circles. We hear about it on a lot of, you know, podcasts. It’s been a big topic in books recently and I think it still often gets discounted because people think like it can’t make that big of a difference or like, “Yeah, I should be grateful and optimistic, but also I really need to fix this problem.” And they don’t realize just how profoundly slowly shifting your mindset toward gratitude can be. And like, I’m sure there are studies, and you could speak to this much better than I could, but how that actually manifest itself in psychological changes over time. Are there any other practical strategies that you would give for making that shift? Because I know it can seem overwhelming. If you’re not in that place, the idea of trying to get into a place of gratitude can seem like an uphill battle for sure.
Dr. Rabin: Yeah. So, I think there are a number of techniques. My favorite techniques are actually…and I think we’ve talked about this before. There’s two sets of techniques. I don’t want to overcomplicate it, but these are all sort of thinking and emotional techniques. And I really like these because I use them with everyone and myself and they’re incredibly effective. They’re very old techniques that go all the way back into Eastern medicine that had been used for thousands of years. And I think why they’ve stood the test of time is because they work so well and they’re also free. And so I think gratitude is one of the major foundations of all of these techniques because gratitude is the way that we start to look at a situation or an experience from the “why me” perspective, or the, “Oh God, please make it stop” perspective, to the, “Okay, if I’m grateful for this experience, what could I possibly get out of it that’s positive or constructive along the line of growth?”
And so that is why gratitude is sort of at the foundation. One of the things that I think is the most helpful to think about with gratitude is with anger. When we get angry, we often think of anger as being a very destructive, negative emotion. But anger is just a signal that there’s something off in our environment or something off in us that needs to be worked on. It’s a signal. All emotions are signals in different ways. It’s just easier to feel grateful for joy than it is to feel grateful for sadness or anger. The problem is when we don’t practice gratitude for things like anger and sadness instead of actually working through the anger and the sadness and figuring out what the source of it is, what happens is we oftentimes turn that anger or sadness inward on ourselves and then we start to feel a lot of the stress that goes along with, you know, harboring anger and sadness, like resentment, depression, sleep disturbances, all of these things.
And so, you know, starting to practice gratitude on a moment-to-moment basis as often as we can really, from the moment we wake up to the moment we go to bed, which can just be as simple as first thing in the morning, write down gratitude, and then just try to think about things that you’re grateful for, even if it’s just being grateful for waking up or being grateful for being able to take a breath. Any of those being a grateful for being able to eat breakfast, any of those things are fantastic ways to start. And then the same before you go to bed and eventually that becomes automatic. I think why that’s important is because gratitude forms this foundation of trust in ourselves that is supported by these four principles called the four pillars. And these are the very old principals that’ve been around for a long time.
And so, it starts with gratitude. And then from gratitude goes to forgiveness, which is really focused on self-forgiveness, forgiving ourselves for mistakes that we’ve made, knowing that we all make mistakes. There’s not a single human on the face of the earth that has not made mistakes. And that when we start to understand that, then we’re able to forgive ourselves for those mistakes. Recognizing that those are opportunities for growth. And then the next step above that is compassion. Compassion is often difficult to understand with respect to ourselves. But I think that the most common, best way to think about it as compassion is like patience for ourselves and patience for the world to allow things to unfold as they will. We often think when we look at the world, we look at ourselves and say, “Why aren’t we here? We’re here but we want to be there. Why can’t I be there right now? Why is this not already moving along the way that I…on the timeline that I expect it to?”
And so, that forces us to rush the process, which actually leads us to make more mistakes. Trying to avoid failure, we rush the process, we make more mistakes, we want things to happen faster. Compassion is that practice of allowing things to unfold as they will and just doing the best we can but understanding that we will make mistakes. Things will come up, you know, and we’re just going to do the best we can knowing that things will come up and things will unfold as they will. And then all this sort of comes together and culminates in the practice of self-love. And over time, as we practice those four pillars, that forms the foundation of trust in ourselves that allows us to overcome very, very difficult times like we’re in right now.
Like loneliness or feelings of loneliness, feelings of consistent anger or whatever it might be that’s bothering us. These four free tools are incredible tools that help us to…and they support each other and it can be practiced at the same time. They don’t have to be independent and they work together to help support that. And I think that there’s the other four, and a lot of these coming fours, which is interesting. The other four tools that are a little bit more obvious about how to practice are called the four agreements, which are the four agreements we make with ourselves to ensure a fulfilling life that’s aligned with growth and healing. And the four agreements are always do your best, which we just talked about. Don’t take anything personally. Don’t make expectations, and always be true to your word.
And these things are sometimes difficult. We all know that we’re good at some of those and not so good at others. But these serve as guidelines that when you make an agreement with yourself intentionally and say, “I intend to follow these agreements for myself,” then what happens is the change starts to happen on its own over time. And so, it’s about starting to change the way that we focus our attention and the way that we think about ourselves starts to change the way that other people think about us. And it starts to change the way that we feel. And it can happen in as short as a day or as long as a few weeks. But the point is that as we start to practice these techniques, then the sooner we practice and the more we practice, the more we actually literally retrain our neural pathways in our brain to, instead of feeling upset and angry ourselves every time we feel sad or every time something bad happens, we start to actually feel joy at the opportunity that that challenge presents for us to grow and get better. And it literally shifts the entire neural networks that support the way that we see the world.
Kate: I love that. I’m a big fan of the four agreements as well. And I think you’re right. I think that the shift and focus is so important. And to get vulnerable from it and I can share from my own life. An example of that, when all the shutdowns first started happening that first week, I found that I was like almost completely unable to eat. I was extremely angry. I was working out four times a day and I had this like weird…like I wanted to fight and I had no idea where that was coming from. I ended up exploring it with the therapist and realized that it went back to sexual trauma I had much earlier in life, in high school. And basically what I had done is I had built frameworks to keep me safe so that I would never feel helpless again in any area of life.
So, I had things in relationships that I did to feel safe. I had ways to protect myself physically. So, I felt safe. Like I had systems for everything. So, I never had to feel helpless because that emotion was so devastating in that moment that I never wanted to feel helpless again. And I had spent years processing that trauma and had not been triggered in a long time. I thought I had totally gotten through it. And it wasn’t until there was something much bigger than me that I could not do anything about that it re-triggered that helplessness and that anger. And it really caught me by surprise because I thought I had completely dealt with it. And like you said, that anger can always be a clue as to kind of something that’s going on. And so, I had to like really consciously shift my focus those first couple of weeks.
A, to realize what was going on. And then to shift into gratitude and focusing on the things I did have control over, which was I can spend more time with my kids, I can spend time outside, I can focus on the positive, I can make time for gratitude and movement. But it was a hard thing and I think a lot of people are facing varying degrees of that kind of mental thing to work through right now. And it is difficult. But I think also like to your point, if we make good use of this time and we focus on the positive, we could emerge from this with incredible habits and a focus on gratitude and things like maybe slowing down normal life a little bit, not doing so many activities, spending more time with family, making time for cooking at home more or gardening or, you know, so many of these things that we’re doing now that we maybe didn’t do before that I love that. I love the practical focus on making that a habit because I think it really does have a dramatic impact over time.
Dr. Rabin: Absolutely. And I’m so grateful that you were willing to share that personal story with us. I think that your experience of what you just described is such a powerful metaphor for what we all go through when we have…we’ve all had times in our lives that we may not even remember as traumatizing, consciously, we may not even be aware, but there were always times in our lives for pretty much all of us where we felt out of control and we felt, you know, like we didn’t know what was going to happen and it was extraordinarily scary or threatening. We’ve all been in those kinds of situations and I think that what we often do is we build up these things called protectors, which you very well described. We use these a lot in MDMA assisted psychotherapy and psychedelic psychotherapy where we help people work through and understand, “Hey, this is something that you did when you were a child or when you were a teenager to learn how to cope with this tremendous amount of stress without any one showing you or teaching you how to deal with these emotions.”
So, now you have protectors, you have what we call sometimes firefighters, which might be anger or resentment or these kinds of things of this nature that come out every time we are reminded of that feeling of vulnerability, that feeling of losing control, that feeling of losing hope or losing safety. And what happens is that we forget that we actually are the single most important…the single most important source of safety in our lives comes from within us. You know, we are taught often to believe that it comes from outside of us. And that the source of wellbeing and that our source of healing and health and all of these things comes from outside of us. But that’s actually not true. And that the single biggest source of our health comes from within us and our happiness comes from within us.
And so, when we learn as you have to, and you described it so well, to generate that safety from yourself, that by changing your habits, by changing what you spend your attention and your time on, I mean that is literally life-changing. It’s literally what people are banging on the doors for to get access to psychedelic medicine because psychedelic medicine, in a lot of ways, it’s like a catalyst to rapidly accelerate that process. That is a process that we’re all capable of achieving on our own. As you said, it just takes a lot of time and a lot of work. And without the proper guidance or the proper teaching or the mentorship or the therapist or, you know, whoever it is that we need us to help, you know, at least get us on the right path to recognize this as possible, then we forget.
You know, it doesn’t mean we can’t do it. It just means we’ve forgotten that that ability we have is there. And so, that’s why it’s always such a pleasure and a privilege to be able to have these conversations with you because we really…I mean, we just get down to the raw nitty-gritty of it. I think that when you listen to…when people listen to something like this, they have the opportunity to hear about what actually is possible for all of us, that we do have the capacity, all of us who are listening to this, all of us who hear these kinds of conversations have the capacity to remember that we can heal ourselves and then to take some of these lessons back into their lives so that by the time all of this is…we’re moved on to the next phase of all of this in our lives, in the world, we can emerge so much stronger, so much healthier and so much happier and ready to take on whatever comes next. Not in a weakened, vulnerable state.
Katie: Exactly. And I’m so glad that you brought up psychedelic-assisted therapy. I know we talked about this a little bit in our first episode, which I’ll make sure is linked in the show notes at wellnessmama.fm. But as I would suspect, there’s going to be probably a lot of people who have resurgence of maybe trauma or addiction issues or all kinds of things following this crisis. I’d love to hear an update on what we’re seeing in like right now in medical research with psychedelic-assisted research and therapy, and what you expect to see in the coming months and years, because I think that can be really profound for so many people.
Dr. Rabin: Yeah, it’s a huge topic of interest right now. I think that, unfortunately, as a lot of the studies of MDMA and psilocybin require a lot of in-person visits. Many of those studies are on pause at this time. But the results are incredible for…particularly with psilocybin, which is the active psychedelic ingredient in mushrooms. And then MDMA, which originally comes from sassafras but is derived chemically, and then slightly modified to provide a very powerful empathy and self-acceptance, you know, non-nonjudgmental experience that is radically healing for people with trauma, which is most of us. And so, I think that, you know, these medicines are absolutely coming up.
They will be available. It looks like, you know, sometime between like 2021 and 2023, clients, patients will be able to go in and actually find a physician or a psychotherapist who works with a physician to provide these treatments. And it’s already starting. You know, there’s already a study…right now it’s mostly through studies, but you can actually sign up for a study at Hopkins, MAPS, the Multidisciplinary Association of Psychedelic Studies runs studies on these medicines. And so, it’s possible to get involved. It’s just difficult right now for most people. And the medicines are expensive and it just requires a lot of effort and dedication to the cause, to the protocol. I think what’s really interesting that’s on the horizon right now is ketamine-assisted psychotherapy because ketamine is a molecule that was discovered in the early mid-20th century.
It was used as an anesthetic and a horse tranquilizer because it’s a very, very gentle anesthetic. But it was found later to actually induce very powerful psychedelic states. And when I say psychedelic, you know, I don’t mean a crazy ’70s dance party, but more a mind-manifesting state. So, the root of the word psychedelic means mind-manifesting. And what this really means is creating an altered state of consciousness, which you can also create with meditation or with breathwork or with, you know, yoga or a lot of other different techniques. But with medicine, it’s like ketamine or like MDMA or psilocybin. It’s a chemical induction of that state. And what ketamine does is it induces that state for about half an hour to an hour in a very safe way. And it allows people to be able to access that state for a very brief amount of time, but it’s enough time to be able to start to do some really interesting work on ourselves.
And so, one of the pioneers of this treatment was Dr. Phil Wilson, who still has a practice in San Anselmo and the San Francisco Bay Area. And he is pioneering this treatment for lots of different approaches, but its main focus is post-traumatic stress disorder and predominantly treatment-resistant depression. And I think what’s so interesting about ketamine above all the other psychedelics is that, is it particularly interesting? It’s interesting, but it’s not that much more interesting than the others. I think what makes it interesting right now is that it’s legal in basically…it’s legal in every state and in almost every country worldwide. And this is incredible because there isn’t any other psychedelic medicine that is legal in every state and every country or almost every country worldwide. So, that creates an enormous opportunity when we already have this technique that can be delivered in person.
Ketamine is also interesting. It can be delivered over the phone or over like a video conference. And people have been doing that for some time very successfully and very safely with some training. And we actually provide this treatment now which is very exciting. And so, there are all these opportunities coming up with medicines like ketamine where people who have very severe symptoms are people who are really struggling with trauma or depression I think is the main two. And there are other things that can help as well, but those two, in particular, can have dramatic benefit from use of this medicine. You know, and they don’t need it…you don’t take it every day. You take it, you know, once every week, once every couple of weeks with a therapist and then you have frequent communication with your therapist before and after, which helps set what we call the set and setting or the intention of the experience and what you hope to get out of it to make it as powerful and meaningful of a healing experience as possible.
So, while we wait for things like silicide and mushrooms and, and MDMA and some of these other very powerful medicines to get through the trials, ketamine thankfully is actually available right now and I think this is going to be a total game-changer for the way that we provide mental health via telemedicine, via remote, you know, remote mental health care and remote therapy over the next several months, especially while we’re under quarantine right now.
Katie: Yeah, I think you’re right. And I’ll make sure the links to find out more about that are in the show notes for anyone who really wants to look into that and to try it more. I know a couple of people I know personally have done ketamine assisted therapy for depression and for other things and had profound results from it. Can you go a little deeper on explaining how…because I think obviously there’s still some stigma surrounding anything in the psychedelic world with certain people. Can you explain how these enables such drastic results even for people who have treatment-resistant forms of these or like, I know people who don’t respond well to talk therapy have seen incredible results from psychedelic-assisted talk therapy. Can you just kind of explain what’s happening that allows that to be so much more effective?
Dr. Rabin: Sure. Again, so going back to what we were talking about earlier, safety is the most critical factor of all of this. Safety is what allows our nervous system that’s responsible for healing to really engage in full force. And this goes back millions of years, hundreds of millions of years actually. And Eric Kandel, who won the Nobel prize in 2002 for discovering the origins of learning and memory, found that we actually learn in our complex brains, you know, a hundred billion neurons or so, our brains learn in fundamentally the same way that 300 million year old sea snail brains learn and they only have 3 neurons in their brains. And the way that they learn is that they increase connections when they’re exposed to intense, meaningful, threatening or safe experiences, they increase the amount of and the strength of those neural connections over time, and we do exactly the same thing.
So, as we practice, and I think the main thing to take home about this is that what our moms always said or what our dads always said, practice makes perfect. This is actually real. It is literally reflected all the way down in our neurobiology to the way that our neurons talk to each other and possibly all the way down to our DNA and the way that our genes are expressed epigenetically in terms of stress and reward response genes. But going back to the way that these medicines work ultimately, that if you think about it, when we are stressed out all the time, when we’re constantly in a fear or threatened state or we just…it doesn’t have to be actual threat, doesn’t have to be actual survival threat. It could just be that we perceive something to be threatening us, like our coworker looking at us funny across the table, or traffic on the road, or our kids or family or friends screaming in the house, or whatever it might be.
You know, all of these things set…our body doesn’t know the difference between that and a survival threat. So, the body responds in the same way. It jacks up heart rate. It jacks up blood pressure, jacks up respiratory rate. It increases blood flow to the muscles, to the fear center of the brain, and to the parts of our brain that are responsible for just getting us out of that situation or fighting that situation or freezing in that so you’re playing dead. And this is what all the animals do, right? This is what we’ve been taught for a long time, evolutionarily. What I think we forget oftentimes is that when that survival system gets all of the diverted to it, because we perceive threat, it gets stronger and tighter and the connections get tighter between certain things in our environment and that threat response and the nerve connections actually get stronger, the neuronal connections get stronger.
And so, what happens is that every time you’re exposed to threat, it’s more likely you’re going to have a survival like response. And it’s less likely that you’re going to calm down quickly and recognize, “Hey, wait a minute, maybe this email is not threatening. Maybe this traffic is not actually out to get me. It’s just the way it is today because I left work too late, you know. And that’s how it is.” So, ultimately the problem with that is that on a neurological level, when we train our brains and our bodies to be in a threatened state all the time, what happens is that’s diverting resources away from our parasympathetic nervous system that is literally responsible for all of our rest and recovery. All of our digestion, all of our immunity, literally managing our immune response so that our immune system is working at its peak level.
Managing our creativity and diverting resources to that, our decision making, all of those things that we care about, being empathic, and caring with our loved ones. Being present with our children and our loved ones, all of these things require the recovery system to turn on, which requires safety. And so, as we retrain our brains with safety techniques, whether that’s gratitude or whether it’s soothing touch from ourselves or a loved one, or whether it’s any number of meditation, deep breathing, the other things we’ve talked about, as we retrain our brains down that path, those networks get stronger. And then we actually become better at recovering and better performing rather than just performing under stress, which means that we’re not recovering enough on a regular basis. So, the reason why psychedelic medicines can be so useful and things like Apollo, which also work in a very similar way, is that when psychedelic medicines are introduced in the proper way with a very safe therapeutic context, what happens is that the safety gets amplified dramatically.
That safety reminds us that we don’t have to be afraid or threatened right now and that we don’t actually have an immediate survival threat around us right now. And so, it’s reminding us that we can start to divert resources like blood, oxygen, energy in general to our recovery response system and allow some of the healing parts to turn on. It serves as a catalyst or an accelerant to speed up that process, which is a process that we activate and train in psychotherapy. That’s sort of the main idea of psychotherapy. Oftentimes, unfortunately, psychotherapy isn’t performed properly for the person who’s receiving it or there’s a, you know, a so-so between the person receiving the psychotherapy and the therapist, usually a lack of trust. And that trust is absolutely essential for us to feel safe. And if we don’t have it, then we, again, don’t allow our healing response to turn on. So, psychedelic medicines kind of provide that little chemical boost that stimulates the brain in a way that amplifies the safety of the therapeutic experience when we have a good therapeutic experience, which is the foundation of a good psychedelic healing experience. And then that literally fast tracks the retraining of those neural networks along a pathway of safety and recovery and away from unwanted stress response. Does that make sense?
Katie: Yeah, it absolutely does. And it puts in perspective why that can be so effective compared to just having talked through something. And I’ve definitely seen that in my own life. I’ve tried various forms with psychedelics as well, and those were really helpful to me in working through my own trauma. So, I can speak first hand to that.
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Another area that I know you’ve done a lot of research on it and that specifically we can talk about Apollo in is the area of ADD and ADHD. And I think this is especially important right now as well because a lot of moms and a lot of listeners found themselves overnight becoming homeschool teachers and home with their kids much more. And so, I’ve heard from a lot of moms who are now navigating, “How do I actually be both the parent and the teacher for a child with ADD or ADHD? And how do I adapt a home learning environment to these specific needs?” And I know that you’ve done a lot of research and study in those areas, so we’d love to hear what’s happening right now. I know you’ve been doing trials with the Apollo in this specifically, so, what are you finding right now that’s helpful?
Dr. Rabin: So, this is a great, great segue, I think. So, for those who don’t know what Apollo is, you can check it out on apolloneuro.com, apolloneuro.com or apolloneuroscience.com. And this is a wearable technology that was developed based on all the research that we’re talking about now today. It was developed by myself and colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh. And it is a wearable that delivers very gentle frequencies of vibration to the skin that you can wear on your ankle or your wrist. But it works basically anywhere on the body and these specific vibration patterns that are very gentle, that kind of feel like an ocean wave or like a hug or somebody holding your hand are specifically developed and from our research in the lab to activate the safety response in the body and to activate the recovery nervous system instead of the stress response system.
And when you activate that recovery response system by sending safety signals to the body or basically vibrations that are interpreted by our brains as safe, just like someone you love holding your hand on a bad day, it helps remind us that we are actually not under threat in that moment and that we are actually in control of our decisions in that moment. We have the opportunity, that tunnel vision starts to fade and you have the opportunity to make maybe a different choice than you’ve made the last 1,000 or 10,000 times you’ve been in this situation. And so what’s really interesting about ADD and ADHD, in particular, is that this is a huge problem in our society. Why? There’s lots of reasons, I think, but one of which in particular is that a lot of us don’t remember what it’s like to be children, right? We forget that as a child, you know, it’s a bit confusing at times in the adult world, you know, there’s all this chaos and all this stuff going on around us.
And, you know, many of us feel completely out of control, particularly as we start to get into the adolescent years in high school, middle school. And we just start to feel completely out of control. And what happens is that when we feel as kids out of control, then our attention wanders, we get distracted and we literally will seek anything, anything that will help us feel calm in that moment. And usually, it’s something that’s distracted. So, the most common things that we see in kids with ADD or ADHD is they can’t focus on things that bore them or things that they’re not interested in for more than a minute or two at most. But as soon as you put them in front of a video game that they like, or something that’s constantly changing or an athletic activity or something like that, they’re incredible at it.
Sometimes they’re like the best at it. And so what’s really interesting is that that attention is not dysfunctional the way that we talk about it with the diagnosis of ADHD, it’s actually just different and it requires a little more training than the average bear. And it’s really at the source, the source of that distractibility, that’s the source of the attention deficit as we describe it in psychiatry, really seems to be more of feelings of out of control, feelings of lack of control, lack of being in control of our lives, lack of control of what we eat, you know, lack of being control of what we learn, what we do during the day, our schedule. As a kid, we don’t really have control over most of that. And so, what’s really interesting is that with Apollo, we thought when we made it that it would improve, that there would be certain frequencies that were vibration that reliably improved focus. And we tested this originally in a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled crossover study in healthy folks, adults, at the University of Pittsburgh. And the results were resoundingly good for focus.
We improved focusing cognitive performance on very stressful tasks by quite a bit. And that performance on those tasks increased directly proportionate to the amount that our recovery system turned on. So, the more that our recovery nervous system turned on as measured by clinically validated lab-grade technology like EKG machines and brainwave scans and all of these other things that we did, the more that that recovery system turned on, the more that focus and cognitive performance went up. And then we thought, “Okay, we have adult friends who have ADD and ADHD. What if we just gave them our prototype to try out? You know, it has no side effects, can’t hurt you. It’s just sound waves. So, let’s give it to them, try it out.” And I personally was one of those kids who was very bored and distractible as a child, and I think I would have been diagnosed with ADHD if anybody had put me in front of a psychiatrist at a young age.
And I use it all the time for focus. So, we started giving it out to our friends in the early prototype and they all loved it. It was resoundingly, everyone was like, “I don’t use my Adderall anymore. I don’t use my Ritalin anymore because I can use this.” And that blew me away. So, we started to work with a population of children at a clinic called the Children’s Integrated Center for Success in Allentown, PA, which is run by an incredible nurse practitioner, Amy Edgar, and she’s been working on basically helping to try to treat mental illnesses in particular in children without medicine or in the least invasive way, least risky way possible for many, many years. And our clinic is an incredibly well-run place that really focuses on kids’ safety first. But even with all of their incredible techniques, they still struggle with many kids, not…I mean, I think they have better results in a lot of other places, but they still have children that struggle and adolescents that struggle with symptoms of ADD and ADHD.
So, when I showed her Apollo for the first time, she loved it. She tried it herself, she tried it on her daughter, she loved it. And then she said, “I think that given how safe this is, clearly, I would like to try this in a pilot trial with our patients at the clinic who are treatment-resistant. These are kids who I’ve tried everything I can with them. And the only outcome that we have is that we had to go to medicine because we didn’t have any other luck with anything else.” And she started putting on these kids just in the clinic, in therapy, in front of the parents, in front of the therapist and they put it on, and within minutes they would see a change. The kind of change where the kids would sit up, they would start making eye contact instead of running around the room.
They would start smiling and they would say…they would start talking by themselves. They would start talking about their feelings, talking about their day, talking about things that they’ve had on their mind in ways that they have not spoken about to the therapist in years. Somebody as a therapist would work for hours and hours and hours just trying to get the child or the client to tell them anything. And, you know, a lot of kids are very closed off in these kinds of settings and they don’t want to talk and that’s understandable. And they don’t understand what’s going on a lot of the time. And again, it’s like, you know, it feels like they’re out of control. And they put this on and they just settle down and they realize they’re in a safe environment and they say, “This feels like a hug. And I want to talk about myself.”
And that was so incredible for us to, you know, to see those kinds of results in these kids. And ultimately, after the first 15 kids went through the original pilot, Amy put together an IRB approved clinical protocol, that is a standard protocol for, you know, rigorous scientific clinical trials that can be published. And now she’s running this trial in a much more rigorous fashion that will be published with, I think it’s 40 children and the first 15 have been run through it and they are seeing the same results consistently in these kids. And so, I think this is incredibly promising for us to be able to have alternatives for people where not only…I mean, it’s not only that we have a technology like Apollo that you can buy over the counter that can help, you know, improve something like this that we thought we required medicine for, but also for the kids to understand and for parents understand that there’s hope, that this is based on a theory of neuroscience, right? And neuroscience is psychology of learning and attention.
So, if Apollo was built on that theory and Apollo works this well, then that means that if we work with our children and we work with ourselves to train our own attention better, you know, to work with these techniques and to really learn these strategies, then, you know, we all have the ability to achieve this higher level of functioning that we want and that we all talk about we want, that we all often rely on medicine that we want because we feel we need to. We don’t need the medicine, the medicine is teaching us how to do it. Apollo is a tool teaching us how to do it. But again, going back to the point we were talking about earlier, all of this is pointing to the fact that we can do this on our own.
Katie: Wow, that’s so encouraging to hear. And I think you’re right that…had they tested for this when we were younger, I actually did testing as an adult, separate of just specifically testing for ADD and ADHD and found out I would clinically be diagnosed with ADHD, or I was technically by this test. But I thought it was really funny and I’m really grateful that they didn’t test me as a kid because I probably potentially could have been put on medication. I don’t know if they did that back then. But I think long-term it actually ended up being superpower of sorts. Because my parents gave me an opportunity to exist in a world where I was homeschooled for part of my adolescents and I had the opportunity to move around a lot to express creativity.
So, I didn’t face some of the same challenges that some kids, I’m sure, do in a school environment. But I’m really glad that get kind of managed out when I was young because I think learning from that has been an asset as an adult. So, I think it’s really important how you explain that, kind of reframing that to begin with. And then also using these non-invasive low-risk or no-risk tools that can help kids to focus and to like move through this without having to like to be medicated or to take some more of these extreme measures. That’s really encouraging to hear.
Dr. Rabin: And I think that’s, you know, that’s really what it comes down to is that, you know, had you or I been told when we were children that we had a disorder that required medication, then I’m not sure that you and I would have put in the effort to overcome that when we were given medicine and being told that if you take this medicine, all your problems will go away basically. You know, that is not consistent with healing. That’s like putting a band aid on a broken leg, you know, and the broken leg’s still broken. You might not feel pain as much, you know, but it’s still broken. It’s the same thing with mental and attention and emotional issues that all of us have dealt with at some time. I think as we look at them as challenges that we can overcome and grow from, then we start to learn how to use our own superpowers, as you said.
I think it’s the greatest way to put it. We’re learning or teaching ourselves by overcoming these challenges, how to activate our own superpowers to really become our fullest versions of ourselves. And I also, I think it’s important as a caveat to remind people that this is information for you but I am not your doctor. As much as I am a board-certified physician, I am not your doctor or your child’s doctor, so please don’t just discontinue medicine right away without speaking to your healthcare provider or your physician. That said, it is really important if you’re going to take home anything from this, I think please take home the idea that there absolutely without a doubt is scientific evidence for hope that we can all heal from these things. And that 99% of the people who have ADHD or ADD, 99% of people with these kinds of diagnoses, even things like depression and anxiety are not chronic illnesses that never get better.
On the contrary, they are chronic illnesses that can absolutely get better. And the single biggest factor in whether they get better or not is whether or not we believe that we can do anything about it. Once we start to believe that we can do something about it, then we start to put attention and energy into building those skill sets and figuring out how to overcome those challenges on our own and to learn as much as we can from those experiences so that we work in the…you know, we grow in the direction that we are hoping to.
Katie: Such a great point. And I’ll say also from my personal experience, I’m a big fan of the Apollo and I use it all the time and it really does help with focus. But also for me, there’s one called social and openness setting and I’ve had a little bit of social anxiety when I was younger. It’s gotten better as I’ve gotten older, but I notice a big difference with that setting when I have to be at conferences or like very extroverted forward-facing places. It makes a huge difference. And then also I use the sleep and relaxation settings quite often to fall asleep at night. So, just wanted to give a plug for that, and I’ll, of course, make sure it’s linked in the show notes as well if you guys want to find it and try it out because it really has been helpful for me and for my kids.
But, Dr. Dave, I want to respect your time. I know that you’re incredibly busy, but I love all the research you’re doing. And I appreciate you coming back for a second check-in with updates on where the research is, and especially that exciting news about ADD and ADHD that I think offers a lot of hope for parents.
Dr. Rabin: Yeah, I really appreciate you for having me and it’s always exciting to be able to come back and share positive news, and I think that, you know, we’re on the right track. Things are moving in the right direction, and so, I thank you again for having this conversation. This is great.
Katie: Thank you. And thanks as always to all of you for listening and sharing your time with us. We’re so grateful that you did, and I hope that you will join me again on the next episode of the “Wellness Mama” podcast.
If you’re enjoying these interviews, would you please take two minutes to leave a rating or review on iTunes for me? Doing this helps more people to find the podcast, which means even more moms and families could benefit from the information. I really appreciate your time, and thanks as always for listening.
Source: https://wellnessmama.com/podcast/dr-rabin/
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pius2017 · 5 years ago
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Analyze decisions made throughout diagnosis and treatment of clients with mental health disorders
Analyze decisions made throughout diagnosis and treatment of clients with mental health disorders
Practicum: Decision Tree- A young girl with difficulties in school Case #1
A young girl with difficulties in school
BACKGROUND
In psychopharmacology you met Katie, an 8-year-old Caucasian female, who was brought to your office by her mother (age 47) and father (age 49). You worked through the case by recommending possible ADHD medications. As you progress in your PMHNP program, the cases will…
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uncloseted · 6 years ago
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1. I don't have a degree in psychology, but I have written a 4000 word essay about sociopathy a while back in high school (for the IB), and I used legitimate studies as much as possible from NCBI. And I know that making assumptions about someone's mental health is wrong, but I did once meet one who does meet the symptoms quiet closely. With that being said, "let's just jump into it!"
Anonymous said to effys-closet: 2. First of all, I did feel like Kati's handling of sociopathy was unprofessional. And more so her response to the backlash. She has had credentials, maybe she did cover ASPD briefly but she wasn't qualified in Abnormal Psychology to comment on it. I mean, neither am I, but let's move on. I know that sociopathy isn't a term used for diagnosis, people are diagnosed with ASPD, but I have seen a thing called Hare's Psychopathy Checklist, which does determine whether someone is a psychopath or not. Anonymous said to effys-closet: 3. Most people use the terms psychopath and sociopath interchangeably. Others however think that there is a difference, psychopaths are the ones who are cooler, calmer and more meticulous in their planning, whereas sociopaths can get angry easily and act more impulsively. There is also a thing going around that psychopaths are "born" whereas sociopaths are "made". My essay was based around how much of it is genetic and environmental, and like most things in psychology, it is both. Anonymous said to effys-closet: 4. That being said, it is absolutely possible for cases to be more genetic based or more environmental based, and that is what people would like to differentiate between psychopath and sociopath. Psychopathy and sociopathy fall under the umbrella of ASPD, and until now I used to feel like they were virtually the same thing, but there are people saying that it is still possible for ASPD people to have emotions and empathy and can be cured, idk about that, I personally doubt the cure claim. Anonymous said to effys-closet: 5. The reason being, that people with ASPD have huge underdevelopments in their brains, caused genetically and/or cuz of shitty childhood, and that leaves them with huge deficits in grey matter. I think at reaching adulthood these gaps can't be regrown or filled, cuz there are certain brain developments that only happen in childhood. Compare it with the effects of depression where that does affect the brain but once you're cured of depression you can still reverse those effects. Anonymous said to effys-closet: 6. I think in the case of the Paul brothers, the main person is Greg Paul. You didn't watch the rest of the series, but basically at one point Shane drops the sociopath label and works with Jake to talk about his problems, meaning the thing with Alissa, the Martinez Twins, and all of the complaints people have had against him. He also talks to the people that have beef with him. In the end it's concluded by most people watching that he isn't a sociopath, but more emotionally stunted, cuz of Greg Anonymous said to effys-closet: 7. Jake and Logan's parents were divorced early on, and they had to live with their mom and dad interchangeably from time to time. Their dad had them play football, turn tires and basically attempt to make them "tough" men. From the very beginning they were taught that you shouldn't show your emotions cuz that makes you weak. Even today Greg is pretty controlling of Jake's whole team 10 thing. Jake hasn't been taught how to deal with emotions from the very beginning. He has never known what is Anonymous said to effys-closet: 8. right and wrong, he has always made offensive jokes around his friends and has never known the line. This is why the Martinez Twins felt bullied while he didn't even realise it. His relationship with Erika is currently nice, she seems to be a stabilising force in his life, and is a good influence for him. With her he can be vulnerable, and he trusts her. The reason why it was so hard for him is cuz his trust has been broken time and time again. In Shane's series it seems he wants to change. Anonymous said to effys-closet: 9. I recommend you finish the series cuz it gets better from the one episode with Kati. Now, in the case with Logan, it seems different. I read a book called Confessions of a Sociopath, written by an actual sociopath using a pseudonym. She has several siblings, one of who was a "weak" brother according to her. She had abusive parents, and he was emotionally scarred by it whereas she was indifferent, she never cried during her lashes, occasionally her and her siblings beat the weak brother. Anonymous said to effys-closet: 10. My point is that it is possible for people to have the same parenting (or lack there of) and turn out completely different. One ends up a sociopath the other doesn't. This is probably where the genetics thing comes to play, cuz one sibling has more of a tendency to become a sociopath than the other genetically. When Alissa talked to Shane about how she once slept with Logan, she recalls how he was completely indifferent to betraying his brother, in fact he was proud of it, saying... Anonymous said to effys-closet: 11. "I'm a maverick, I'm savage". He didn't give a damn about breaking his brother's trust. When Alissa came on a song with him and said she didn't want it to be uploaded later, he said that she signed the contract so she can't get out of it, and he will upload it anyway. The suicide forest video, the way he treated the tasered rat and took a fish out of water to give CPR, he threw a prank on his fans of him being shot in his house, with fake blood and everything. Ik we're not supposed to assume Anonymous said to effys-closet: 12. but my brain can't help but reach to the conclusion that Logan is the sociopath, or has ASPD. There's also a thing called conduct disorder, which applies to kids and teens, basically the symptoms include manipulative behaviour, rage, impulsiveness, similar to sociopathy, but not necessarily. Kids with conduct disorder can have other disorders when they grow up, they don't have to have a lack of empathy, they can have ADHD. But diagnostically, in the US, you can only be diagnosed with ASPD if Anonymous said to effys-closet: 13. they have a diagnosis of conduct disorder in childhood. That's not necessary in Europe. So, a sociopath could not be diagnosed with ASPD in Europe, move to America and not be diagnosed with ASPD in adulthood, cuz they don't have a conduct disorder diagnosis. Now, about the whole controversy of kati vilifying sociopathy, I kinda disagree with most people. I do think that the whole idea of sociopaths being all serial killers needs to be debunked, most sociopaths actually function in society. Anonymous said to effys-closet: 14. Psychopaths even do well in business and politics cuz they have the manipulation skills, and the willingness to exploit. I myself have had issues with mental health, I hate the stigma, but to say that "not all sociopaths and ASPD people are bad" kind of goes against the definition. I have even seen someone say that some sociopaths they've met want to cure themselves and one had even succeeded. Well, again I doubt the cure claim cuz it's a significant amount of brain damage to be reversed... Anonymous said to effys-closet: 15. And also, why would you want to get cured if you're a sociopath? They tend to see emotions and empathy as a weakness, and they get the most ahead with their manipulation in life, they have fun in exploiting people. Why would they wanna cure themselves? Now, I do feel some empathy for sociopaths cuz it's not their fault they are the way they are, but still, they are bad people, why would we wanna be around them and have things to lose? Again, I do still feel Kati's approach was unprofessional Anonymous said to effys-closet: 16. But I'm just not on board with the whole mental health stigma thing being applied to sociopaths. I don't want there to be a stigma that all sociopaths are criminals or serial killers, but if the key of sociopathy is to lack empathy, and if you do have empathy then you're not a sociopath. That being said, I'm in no way an expert, I took psych in high school, and am in my 2nd gap year with no direction in life. I wrote an essay and that's where my credentials end. That's it from me. Bye!
Okay so this is maybe the longest ask I’ve ever gotten which is super exciting for me.  But also bear with me if my answer is a bit disjointed to try and respond to it all. 
Before I get into the meat of my answer, I think I should say two things.  First, I really don’t care all that much about this series or about Jake Paul.  I’m happy to answer questions about it but I think the entire thing boils down to nonsense and we shouldn’t be giving Jake Paul our attention.
I also think this entire conversation is the blind leading the blind.  You with your 4000 word essay one time in high school, me with my master’s degree, Kati Morton with her MFT degree… none of us are really qualified to talk about this since we don’t work in the field of ASPD research, diagnosis, or treatment. So I don’t know how productive this conversation can really be.  Like much of medicine and especially psychiatry, the research moves so quickly that what we thought was true two months ago may not be true now, and so it becomes a lot of “well in my understanding…” and “when I researched this once…” instead of people who can really make definitive statements about this topic.  A lot of the conversation around this has been based on pop-psychology, and I think that benefits no one.  I’ve been doing my best to correct those pop-psychology misconceptions about ASPD on here, but my knowledge is really limited in this area.
Like I said in my response when we talked about this before, sociopathy and psychopathy are not diagnosable conditions and so using them as terms is functionally useless because there’s no agreed-upon criteria for what those words actually mean. ASPD is a clinically separate diagnosis and takes a more nuanced approach to the types of behaviors that one sees in so-called psychopaths and sociopaths.  The Hare’s checklist exists, and that’s about all you can say for it.  There’s a lot of criticism around its usage and again, it’s been rejected by the psychiatric community as a whole and isn’t really used clinically, so it can’t be considered a consensus for how we define “psychopathy”.  The checklist sometimes used in prisons in the US to try and assess how likely it is for a felon to reoffend, but if you know anything about the US prison system, you’ll know it’s not really up to date with the latest and greatest in medical science.  And even within the prison community, it’s efficacy is being questioned.
There are distinctions that people have made between “psychopaths” and “sociopaths”, but again, those words don’t really mean anything from a clinical standpoint and so any distinctions or definitions people assign to them are useless from a practical standpoint because there’s no agreed upon definition for those words.  There isn’t really research focused on those terms and so to draw distinctions like “one is born and the other is made” is, in my opinion, silly.  There is ASPD and the research behind it, and as we learn more about ASPD we learn about the genetic basis for it and how environment impacts peoples’ likelihood of developing it. 
As with many things, ASPD is a spectrum.  It has come out through the research that some people with ASPD do indeed have empathy and emotions, others respond to treatment, and others don’t seem to exhibit empathy, emotions, or respond to intervention.  Many neurological, biological, and psychiatric conditions are like that, so I’m not surprised that it’s like that in this case as well.  Depending on the severity of the case, people with ASPD may not have the ability to recover.  Depression is similar; in mild to moderate depression, you can sometimes see reversal of neurological changes, but in severe depression, those neurological changes are permanent to the brain structure.
It is not true that a diagnosis of ASPD requires a diagnosis of conduct disorder in childhood.  It requires that the individual have exhibited conduct problems by the age of 15, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that all individuals with ASPD were diagnosed with Conduct Disorder or vice versa.  Conduct Disorder is a diagnosable condition with its own set of criteria; “conduct problems” is a generalized symptom.  Statistics are hard to come by, but it seems that only 25-40% of children with conduct disorder are later diagnosed with ASPD.The idea that “psychopaths do well in business” is pop psychology more than anything else, but I think it’s correct that not all people with ASPD are bad.  They’re people who were predisposed to an illness who had the bad luck of being put in an environment that brought it out in them.  I think there’s a limit to how culpable they are, and I think that some people with ASPD do realize that there’s something wrong and seek treatment.  The idea that “some sociopaths want to cure themselves and one even succeeded!” is again pop psychology and taking a very un-nuanced approach to the disorder.  ASPD is a spectrum.  It’s not as cut and dry as “no emotions/empathy” or “emotions!”, and that’s not part of the clinical criteria for having ASPD. In fact, criteria that included remorse, guilt, or empathy have been removed from the DSM in the fifth edition because it was felt that that criteria was too subjective; now it focuses primarily on observable behaviors.  Some patients do find ways to lessen the severity of their symptoms.  Because it’s a small population to begin with and many of the population who are studied are in prison, it’s hard to make generalizations about what percentage of the population with ASPD that might be, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen. 
As far as the Jake Paul series goes, I didn’t watch the rest of the series and I don’t plan to.  As I said before, I’m uninterested in the Paul brothers and don’t think they deserve my time or attention.  I think it does sound likely that Jake’s upbringing and environment contributed to making him who he is today.  But that is true for everyone, and true for people who grew up in much worse situations than he did.  The divorce of parents and being forced to play football and encouraged to be “more of a man” is not exactly trauma inducing for the average person.  It seems that there are genetic factors involved in ASPD and other psychiatric diagnoses, so it makes sense that some people in a particular environment develop psychiatric conditions and others do not. But that ultimately doesn’t excuse his behavior nor does it make him a particularly sympathetic character in my eyes.  There is always an opportunity for people to seek help and better themselves, and he seems profoundly uninterested in doing either.
TL;DR: The terms “psychopath” and “sociopath” are functionally useless and we should stop using them, and everyone who doesn’t know what they’re talking about (myself included) should stop feeding this discussion.
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nighthxwell · 8 years ago
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Psychiatrist Near Me – Psychiatric Services – Psychiatrists
youtube
Psychiatrist Near Me
Youtubers & Their Video Titles for Psychiatrist Near Me, Psychiatric Services, Psychiatrists.
Three Minute Summaries Stony Brook Medicine ColumbiaPsych NHSMedicalCareers vidar4eg ThePsychHelp Tim de la Torre IMHsingapore youthbeyondblue iqsquared Steven Chan WGBHForum Charleston Shoe Productions marriedinmedschool CCHR London Stanford Mike Kuna PsycheTruth Mind, the mental health charity Boldly FarFromAverage TheHUB CareerRx VICE News Angie Atkinson Cognitive Psychiatry & Psychotherapy of Chapel Hill Claudia Boleyn What Mia Did Next Jenny Le Student Doctor Thompson Ivy Lê hotstuffsmartass Kati Morton katizzzletalks Healthguru Psychology Mind Your Idiot Sarah Hawkinson Medtec Video Productions David DiSalvo Penny Elwright University of Nottingham rauserbegins Autumn Asphodel Channel 3000 | News 3 Howcast FletcherPhDTV Peter Breggin MD Dr. Andre Pinesett: The Pre-med Productivity Expert University of California Television (UCTV) Calvin Hecker thedanizblog Michael Garron Hospital Healthy Lifestyle Thomas8april Aakash Ahuja omhmentalhealth TsMadaan – Life Changing Videos in Hindi healthyplaceblogs DailyTop10s Arpi-Revo Med Twice BRIGHT SIDE program your mind SandeepMaheshwariSpirituality Mission Genius Mind Consultant Pvt Ltd Delhi DawnOfHopeDVD ABeautifulMindClinic bkshivani F Junction Shakil Salam Swami Ramdev doctortomar IRC TV Sandeep Maheshwari kannanssss Transformation PeasHealthcare Alex Wang Student Edge TheStriveToFit Royal Society of Medicine TrueLife: StudentMD News 247 Life Moments Nerdwriter1 Steven Meyerson David Pakman Show World News Today Cobra Commander NBC News The Rational National OffshoreAlert Jon Snow – The Viral Network CBS News Columbus Television The Ring of Fire Mark Dice Tamil Now Tamil Filmibeat Chennai Channel S WEB TV LEP Tube KspoTStudioS Tamil Thimiru Suda Suda Connecting Raj Television Nakkheeran TV TheAvalanchesVEVO Anna’s Craziness Mass Appeal BeastieBoysVEVO CaravanPalace MIAVEVO ChemicalBrothersVEVO ChetFakerVEVO Gorillaz MassiveAttackVEVO gotyemusic Official Arctic Monkeys ScienceNET WebsEdgeHealth TEDx Talks psyasap SNMA Publications currentpsychiatry Julie de Azevedo Hanks, PhD, LCSW FlickFlock AsapSCIENCE Big Think Arianna Pflederer depressionbipolar The Jed Foundation MrCaringuy watchwellcast MHF Suicide Prevention White Coat Chronicles Gabby Aikawa TEDMED ccdhfr DocOssareh Shannon Lowell ContraPoints Nut Body CrashCourse Freshersworld IRI Training Qasim Ali Shah videoberries PsikoSeyir Rajiv Juneja Aeldra PsychiatryTalks BBC Three PJS2 PRODUCTION Inside Edition DoucheBag Mind Pollution Pictures RCofPsychiatrists TODAY J. guru Dr. John Bergman Life Issues TED Archive reduxproductions bipolarorwakingup ABC News visionaryproject richdesserts Global Healing Center eHow American Psychiatric Association citytowninfo CCHR Documentaries TheTalko Izy Vlogs Be Amazed list25 DoctorOz Test Prep Gurus (Newport Beach) Difference Between MultiplicityAndMe Ross Avilla Seeker chris loper SethComedy daniel coronel PinkDrew BenShickster WyzGuy234 Mario Mendizabal CrAnkyJester MacfarlaneTV WelshBronnau Ben Kahan HaloGround NASTY Jared Hine TBS insane225 Jon Riera Egana — A Life in Psychiatry Steps to Becoming a Psychiatrist Psychiatry Residency Video: A Day in the Life — Stony Brook Medicine Top 10 Reasons We Chose Psychiatry A Career in Psychiatry A trip to the Psychiatrist. 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What’s the difference between a psychiatrist, psychologist and psychotherapist | Episode 3 #Ask Mind People Talk About Their First Therapy Session WHAT ARE ANXIETY DISORDERS? – Mental health psychology about stress, fear & treatment by Kati Morton PSYCHOLOGICAL SECRETS OF ATTRACTION 10 Things Body Language Says About You A Day in the Life – Psychiatrist Institutionalized: Mental Health Behind Bars 6 Things Narcissists Do After Breaking Up or Divorcing You: NPD, Invalidation, Gaslighting & Divorce What is PSYCHOSIS? Kati Morton discusses Hallucinations, Delusions, Disorganized Thinking and more What are PANIC ATTACKS? Mental Health Help with Kati Morton Learn Ways in Which Psychiatrists TRULY Approach Patient’s Mental Health Issues. BIPOLAR DISORDER vs BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER – Mental Health with Kati Morton “10 Signs Your Mental Illness Is Made Up For Attention” Therapy sessions from a therapist’s perspective! w/Kati Morton Do therapists get attached to their clients? 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happyhippiechic · 8 years ago
Text
Psychiatrist Near Me – Psychiatric Services – Psychiatrists
youtube
Psychiatrist Near Me
Youtubers & Their Video Titles for Psychiatrist Near Me, Psychiatric Services, Psychiatrists.
Three Minute Summaries Stony Brook Medicine ColumbiaPsych NHSMedicalCareers vidar4eg ThePsychHelp Tim de la Torre IMHsingapore youthbeyondblue iqsquared Steven Chan WGBHForum Charleston Shoe Productions marriedinmedschool CCHR London Stanford Mike Kuna PsycheTruth Mind, the mental health charity Boldly FarFromAverage TheHUB CareerRx VICE News Angie Atkinson Cognitive Psychiatry & Psychotherapy of Chapel Hill Claudia Boleyn What Mia Did Next Jenny Le Student Doctor Thompson Ivy Lê hotstuffsmartass Kati Morton katizzzletalks Healthguru Psychology Mind Your Idiot Sarah Hawkinson Medtec Video Productions David DiSalvo Penny Elwright University of Nottingham rauserbegins Autumn Asphodel Channel 3000 | News 3 Howcast FletcherPhDTV Peter Breggin MD Dr. Andre Pinesett: The Pre-med Productivity Expert University of California Television (UCTV) Calvin Hecker thedanizblog Michael Garron Hospital Healthy Lifestyle Thomas8april Aakash Ahuja omhmentalhealth TsMadaan – Life Changing Videos in Hindi healthyplaceblogs DailyTop10s Arpi-Revo Med Twice BRIGHT SIDE program your mind SandeepMaheshwariSpirituality Mission Genius Mind Consultant Pvt Ltd Delhi DawnOfHopeDVD ABeautifulMindClinic bkshivani F Junction Shakil Salam Swami Ramdev doctortomar IRC TV Sandeep Maheshwari kannanssss Transformation PeasHealthcare Alex Wang Student Edge TheStriveToFit Royal Society of Medicine TrueLife: StudentMD News 247 Life Moments Nerdwriter1 Steven Meyerson David Pakman Show World News Today Cobra Commander NBC News The Rational National OffshoreAlert Jon Snow – The Viral Network CBS News Columbus Television The Ring of Fire Mark Dice Tamil Now Tamil Filmibeat Chennai Channel S WEB TV LEP Tube KspoTStudioS Tamil Thimiru Suda Suda Connecting Raj Television Nakkheeran TV TheAvalanchesVEVO Anna’s Craziness Mass Appeal BeastieBoysVEVO CaravanPalace MIAVEVO ChemicalBrothersVEVO ChetFakerVEVO Gorillaz MassiveAttackVEVO gotyemusic Official Arctic Monkeys ScienceNET WebsEdgeHealth TEDx Talks psyasap SNMA Publications currentpsychiatry Julie de Azevedo Hanks, PhD, LCSW FlickFlock AsapSCIENCE Big Think Arianna Pflederer depressionbipolar The Jed Foundation MrCaringuy watchwellcast MHF Suicide Prevention White Coat Chronicles Gabby Aikawa TEDMED ccdhfr DocOssareh Shannon Lowell ContraPoints Nut Body CrashCourse Freshersworld IRI Training Qasim Ali Shah videoberries PsikoSeyir Rajiv Juneja Aeldra PsychiatryTalks BBC Three PJS2 PRODUCTION Inside Edition DoucheBag Mind Pollution Pictures RCofPsychiatrists TODAY J. guru Dr. John Bergman Life Issues TED Archive reduxproductions bipolarorwakingup ABC News visionaryproject richdesserts Global Healing Center eHow American Psychiatric Association citytowninfo CCHR Documentaries TheTalko Izy Vlogs Be Amazed list25 DoctorOz Test Prep Gurus (Newport Beach) Difference Between MultiplicityAndMe Ross Avilla Seeker chris loper SethComedy daniel coronel PinkDrew BenShickster WyzGuy234 Mario Mendizabal CrAnkyJester MacfarlaneTV WelshBronnau Ben Kahan HaloGround NASTY Jared Hine TBS insane225 Jon Riera Egana — A Life in Psychiatry Steps to Becoming a Psychiatrist Psychiatry Residency Video: A Day in the Life — Stony Brook Medicine Top 10 Reasons We Chose Psychiatry A Career in Psychiatry A trip to the Psychiatrist. Faces of Psychiatry – Integrated Career Options The Four Years of Medical School Life of a Psychiatric Nurse What does a psychiatrist do? Psychiatrists and the pharma industry are to blame for the current ‘epidemic’ of mental disorders Future of Psychiatry — by Arshya Vahabzadeh, MD — at Singularity University’s Exponential Medicine Daniel Carlat – Unhinged: The Trouble with Psychiatry A Day in the Life with ADHD Third Year Med School – Psychiatry Rotation Psychiatrists On Psychiatry Stanford’s Sapolsky On Depression in U.S. (Full Lecture) A Day in the Life – Orthodontist Why become a psychiatrist? Psychology vs. Psychiatry What happens during a first therapy appointment? What is a Psychiatrist? Therapy? Medication? What’s the difference between a psychiatrist, psychologist and psychotherapist | Episode 3 #Ask Mind People Talk About Their First Therapy Session WHAT ARE ANXIETY DISORDERS? – Mental health psychology about stress, fear & treatment by Kati Morton PSYCHOLOGICAL SECRETS OF ATTRACTION 10 Things Body Language Says About You A Day in the Life – Psychiatrist Institutionalized: Mental Health Behind Bars 6 Things Narcissists Do After Breaking Up or Divorcing You: NPD, Invalidation, Gaslighting & Divorce What is PSYCHOSIS? Kati Morton discusses Hallucinations, Delusions, Disorganized Thinking and more What are PANIC ATTACKS? Mental Health Help with Kati Morton Learn Ways in Which Psychiatrists TRULY Approach Patient’s Mental Health Issues. BIPOLAR DISORDER vs BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER – Mental Health with Kati Morton “10 Signs Your Mental Illness Is Made Up For Attention” Therapy sessions from a therapist’s perspective! w/Kati Morton Do therapists get attached to their clients? My Psychiatrist Made Me Sicker Mental Health Q&A LIVE on YouNow March 29, 2017 – Kati Morton I Wanna Be a Psychiatrist Tips for 3rd Year Rotations: Psychiatry Med School: My Advice to High School and Premed students Path To Become a Psychiatrist Psychiatry: An Industry Of Death 1/10 PSYCHIATRIST First Appointment… WHAT HAPPENS? – mental health with Kati Morton CollegeTalk #11: All About My Psychology Major! Psychiatrist vs Psychologist (Mental Health Guru) So You Want a PhD in Clinical Psychology? 97% of Adults Can’t Pass This Simple General Knowledge Test CAREERS IN PSYCHOLOGY Are You Sure You Want to Become a Psychiatrist? How to Become a Psychiatrist How to Become a Doctor in the USA What does a psychologist do? Psychiatric Interviews for Teaching: Anxiety Why you should see a psychiatrist How to Tell if Someone is Faking Mental Illness | Malingering / Factitious Disorder Psychiatrist talks about depression, suicide How to Know If You Need a Psychiatrist | Mood Disorders The Difference between a Psychiatrist and Psychologist Peter Breggin MD: How Do Psychiatric Drugs Really Work? The Truth About MD vs. DO. Does it matter? New Treatments for Depression – Health Matters “Psychopathic Child” AP Psychology My Advice for Seeing the Psychiatrist 6 MUST KNOW SIGNS of DEPRESSION! psychology with therapist Kati Morton | mental health & symptoms Warning Signs of Mental Illness Psychiatrist vs Psychologist! What is the difference? Personality Test: What Do You See? Psychiatry Hindi Dr. Aakash Ahuja Depression Who needs treatment from a psychiatrist – Onlymyhealth.com 5 Types of Bipolar Disorder (Mental Health Guru) उदासी, अकेलापन, दुःख, डिप्रेशन, वगेरा को कैसे मैनेज करें । Depression, Frustration, Sadness, Sorrows Tips for your first psychiatrist visit Awakening the Mind – Mood Disorder (in Hindi) Top 10 HORRIFYING Mental Asylums “Up/Down” Bipolar Disorder Documentary FULL MOVIE (2011) Psychiatrist vs. Psychologist | Mood Disorders What is a Psychiatric Evaluation HOW TO UNDERSTAND YOUR CAT BETTER What Is Major Depressive Disorder? | Mood Disorders Depression Treatment By Vaidya Dr. Deepak Kumar How to overcome Depression [Hindi] How to get rid of your Negative Thoughts? By Sandeep Maheshwari (in Hindi) Emotion Control Hindi 01 – नेगेटिव विचारों को कैसे कंट्रोल करें – Depression Anxity Treatment Dr Safiullah Afghan on clinical depression (Urdu) Symptoms in Mental Issues (Psychiatry) in Hindi (Dr Rajiv Sharma) BK Shivani – Depression 06 Fighting Depression Without Drugs | डिप्रेशन को कैसे ठीक करें | Hindi Anxiety & Depression – Dr Tamseel Awan Awakening The Mind- Schizophrenia (Hindi) by Dr.Aakash Ahuja M.D. He is Curing Depression by Yoga What is Schizophrenia (In Hindi) – Dr Rajiv Sharma Mental Depression Negative Low Feeling Mood MDD Hindi WWW.DRTOMAR.COM Naujawano Me Depression Aur Uska Islami ilaj – Depression & Students By Adv. Faiz Syed LAST Life Changing Seminar – By Sandeep Maheshwari I Hindi Awakening the Mind – Alcohol (in Hindi) Motivational video “Change your mind in just 2.50 mins” Topic: Fear-Phobia-Anxiety-Disorder Part 1 of 6 Dr.Imran on Waqt TV Salam Pakistan depression hindi You Belong in Psychiatry I Wanna Be a Physiotherapist · A Day In The Life Of A Physiotherapist Psychiatry: Third year rotations Life in Medical School: My Psychiatry Rotation & Weird Hospital Snacks | Medicine Vlog What makes a good psychiatrist? Shadowing a Psychiatrist Day 1 Psychologist on TRUMP’s Extreme NARCISSISM | Lawrence O’Donnell inside Donald Trump’s mind Psychologists warn that Trump is displaying classic signs of being mentally ill Donald Trump’s Most Idiotic Moments How Donald Trump Answers A Question Donald Trump, the Mega Narcissist Trump supporter leaves CNN anchor speechless Reporter who interviewed “John Miller”: Trump L… Trump has ‘dangerous mental illness’, warn psychiatric experts at Yale conference Is Trump Suffering from Dementia? Top Psychologist : Trump Has Malignant Narcissism Is Donald Trump a Narcissist? Dr. Drew Pinksy 1980s: How Donald Trump Created Donald Trump | NBC News 9 Ways Donald Trump Is A Sociopath The Donald Trump Phenomenon: A Psychological Analysis “Trump Is A Coward” Fox News Panel DESTROYS Donald Trump After TRUMPCARE LOSS! Professor who called Trump election now predicts impeachment Trump Psych Evaluation – Got Therapy? Psychiatrist: Donald Trump’s Narcissism is Dangerous Psychiatrists Call For Trump Mental Exam, Fear He Might Be Unstable – The Ring Of Fire Thug Threatening to Kill Trump Family Arrested – Just Served 3 Years in Prison and On Welfare குழந்தைகள் மனதில் பிரச்சனைகள் Dr. Shalini | Criticism Of Reality Television |​ Bigg Boss Controversy சிறையில் தில்லு முல்லு பகீர் தகவல்கள் | Bengaluru Jail Atrocities : Thilagavathi IPS Interview குட்டை பாவாடையில் ஜூலி | BIG BIGG BOSS Tamil News|18th July 2017| Vijay tv Promo|Latest show Today கமல் குடும்பத்தை பற்றி பேசாதிங்க | Don’t talk about Kamal family : RadhaRavi Speech ஆட்சியா நடத்துறீங்க? சீறிய சாருஹாசன் | Charuhasan slams TN politicians | Latest News, Jayakumar Bigg Boss Tamil, Julie brother interview-Filmibeat Tamil ஜூலி சொன்னது எல்லாம் பொய் | Cool Suresh reveals about Bigg Boss Juliana | Vijay TV Tamil Show ஆபாசஉடையில் கடுப்பில் ஜூலியின் பெற்றோர்|Bigg Boss Julie Sexy Dress|Bigg Boss Tamil 17/07/2017 ஓவியாவுக்கு ஒருகோடி ஓட்டா? | 1 Crore vote for Oviya, why not for me : Anbumani Ramadoss Speech நடிகர்கள் வாங்க நாட்ட நாசமாக்கிட்டு போங்க | Seeman slams Actors | Vijay, Kamal, Rajini ஆணுறுப்பு விஸ்வரூபம் எடுக்க, வயாகராவை போல் சக்தி வாய்ந்தது- இன்பச்சித்தர்| HEALTH TIPS | SWEB TV யார் இந்த Healer baskar – self INTRO. கொலைமிரட்டல்கள் பற்றிய விரிவான பேட்டி சிறையிலிருந்து ஷாப்பிங் சென்ற சசிகலா | Video Leaked – Sasikala shopping and jolly walk in jail Oviya First Mistake In Bigg Boss Tamil | Shocking | முதல் முறை பிக் பாஸ்ஸில் தவறு செய்த ஓவியா Bigg Boss Troll | Vijay Tv Bigg Boss Aarthi Elimination Special | Julie vs Vadivelu Tamil Memes ‘BIGG BOSS லிருந்து JULIE சீக்கிரம் வெளியில வரனும் – எரிச்சலில் ஜூலியின் தம்பி! | JULIES BROTHER இவளா தமிழட்சி BIGG BOSS ஜூலி செய்த கேவலத்தை பாருங்க|Julliana Activity In Bigg Boss Tamil 17/7/2017 விஜய் டி.வி. Bigg Boss-யை கிழிக்கும் இளைஞன் ஏன் தெரியுமா வீடியோ பாருங்க Koppiyam – Sasikala Jail Secret Video Leaked | வைரலாகும் சசிகலாவின் புதிய வீடியோ!! பாஜக அரசியலை நிகழ்த்தும் கமல்… வே.மதிமாறன் | Bigg Boss Kamal Haasan’s Religion and Political Views The Avalanches – ‘Since I Left You’ The Avalanches – Frankie Sinatra The Avalanches – Because I’m Me 10 Psychological Effects That Affect Your Behavior The Avalanches Frontier Pschychiatrist (GOOD QUALITY) The Orginial Directors Cut The Avalanches – Subways DJ Shadow – Nobody Speak (Feat. Run The Jewels) (Official Video) Beastie Boys – Intergalactic Caravan Palace – Lone Digger M.I.A. – Paper Planes The White Stripes – ‘Seven Nation Army’ The Chemical Brothers – Wide Open ft. Beck Chet Faker – Gold (Official Music Video) The Avalanches – Stalking To A Stranger Gorillaz – Feel Good Inc. (Official Video) Massive Attack – Teardrop Gotye – Somebody That I Used To Know (feat. Kimbra) – official video Arctic Monkeys – Do I Wanna Know? (Official Video) The Prodigy – ‘Breathe’ Bellevue: Inside Out | Psychiatric Hospital Documentary What made you choose psychiatry as a profession? – APA 2013 Attendees The most important lesson from 83,000 brain scans | Daniel Amen | TEDxOrangeCoast Psychologists vs Psychiatrists | Whom should you consult first and Why ? Your Story Matters: Why Psychiatry?? Masters of American Psychiatry: Eric R. Kandel, MD Ask Julie: What Can I Expect On First Psychiatrist Visit? How to Help the Suicidally Depressed Person–Dr. Peter Breggin’s 5th ‘SimpleTruths About Psychiatry’ Why we choose suicide | Mark Henick | TEDxToronto Robin Williams Last Interview Before Suicide The Science of Depression “People With Depression Commit Suicide” Commit Suicide? Do YOU want to…or know someone who does? On living with depression and suicidal feelings | Sami Moukaddem | TEDxLAU Psychiatric Interviews for Teaching: Depression How to Cope with Depression by Psychiatrist Dr Michael Wiliamson.wmv Searching For Freedom The Heartbreaking Suicide of Samantha Kearsey For Those Considering Suicide The Heartbreaking Suicide of Sheila Griffin Warning Signs for Suicide – with Judy Bailey Should I Go to Medical School? | And Other Frequently Asked Questions About Med School WHAT’S IN MY MED SCHOOL BAG | My Third Year of Med School Bag 2016 My Path from High School to Medical School | High School Transcript Reveal! A Typical Day as a 1st Year Medical Student | Med School VLOG 6 My (new) NYC Apartment Tour! + Amsterdam VLOG My Memorization Technique in Med School | A Typical Weekend in Med School VLOG | ANKI tutorial My Med School Essentials | The Stationery, Tools, and Gadgets I Use In Med School WHAT A WEEK IN MED SCHOOL LOOKS LIKE — Surgery Rotation (3rd Year of Med School) My Favorite Note Taking Tools and Stationery For Medical School My Productivity Tips: How To Increase Productivity and Get More Things Done! HOW I STUDIED FOR MY INTERNAL MEDICINE SHELF EXAM – 3rd Year of Med School Vlog A Typical Weekend of a Medical School Student | Med School Student VLOG Medical School | ER Rotation Study Schedule of a Medical School Student | How I study in Medical School Typical Day of a Medical School Student VLOG | Life in Medical School 3rd Year Medical Rotations| Surgery: Is it Love or Lust? What’s in my backpack: Med School Edition | Medical School Student Vlog Why Med School Wasn’t For Me and How I Realized It How I Manage My Time | Time Management Tips from a Med School Student Surgery: Third year rotations Why doctors kill themselves Pediatrics: Third year rotations Abuse In Psychiatry: The Truth Psychiatry Clerkship – Resources and Tips Internal Medicine: Third year rotations Medical School: The Match 4th Year of Medical School Intro to the Surgery Clerkship Psychiatry | ContraPoints A Day in the Life of a Psychologist Psychologist vs Psychiatrist – What’s the Difference Intro to Psychology – Crash Course Psychology #1 CAREERS IN PSYCHOLOGY – MSc,BSc,BA,MA ,Institutions,Job,Opportunities,Salary package What a psychologist does in session, using the CBT Method. Talking With A Psychologist (Asma Qureshi)- By Qasim Ali Shah (In Urdu/Hindi) 2016 Four Patients with Schizophrenia What is Psychology? Whats the difference between a Psychiatrist, Psychologist and a L.C.S.W? Difference Between Psychology and Psychiatry PsychiatryTalks – What Is Psychiatry? DOCS: Being Bipolar Charlie Sheen on What Caused His 2011 Meltdown Charlie Sheen Tells Dr. Oz Why He Stopped Taking His HIV Medicine Charlie Sheen Describes His Relationship With His Father The Reason Behind Charlie Sheen’s Addictions Dr. Oz and Charlie Sheen Debunk Dr. Sam Chachoua’s Claims Things Not To Say To Someone With Bipolar Disorder What Does A Manic/HypoManic Episode in Bipolar Disorder Feel Like? Burt Reynolds: Charlie Sheen Deserves Being HIV Positive Creed’s Scott Stapp Reveals his BiPolar Disorder Bipolar – A Narration Of Manic Depression (Full Short Film – English) Bipolar Disorder Charlie Sheen: ‘I’m HIV Positive,’ Paid Many Who Threatened To Expose Me | TODAY Living with Bipolar Disorder How to Heal Your Brain from Bipolar/Depressive Disorders Ride the Tiger: A Guide Through the Bipolar Brain (PBS) Understanding bipolar disorder | Jacqui Chew BIPOLAR || SHORT FILM 1.The REAL Cause of Bipolar Disorder Charlie Sheen and His Goddesses | 20/20 | ABC News Alvin Poussaint: My Career in Psychiatry Psychiatric Interviews for Teaching: Self-Harm Interview with Psychiatrist Daniel Fisher Exposing Psychiatry’s Secret Agenda by Dr. Group Careers in Psychology : Average Income of Psychologists Psychiatric Interviews for Teaching: Psychosis Linda Worley, MD: Why I became a psychiatrist Psychiatrists Careers Overview Psychiatry in the Military: The Hidden Enemy—Full Documentary 10 Psychology Tricks That Work ON ANYBODY Pros and Cons of A Psychology Degree 13 Psychology Tricks That Work On Anybody Top 10 Psychology Hacks You Can Use To Control Situations Psychiatric Drugs Are More Dangerous than You Ever Imagined 25 Psychological TRICKS That Really Do WORK Charlie Sheen Talks to a Psychiatrist About Bipolar Disorder How to Not Lose Your Identity in a Relationship HOW TO GET OVER YOUR EX INSTANTLY | NO HOPE THEORY | BREAKUP PSYCHOLOGY Top 10 Facts – Psychology What is Positive Psychology? Difference between Psychologist and Psychiatrist What is Borderline Personality Disorder? (Mental Health Guru) BBC Three | Diaries of a Broken Mind | August 2013 Careers in Psych: 4 – PhD vs PsyD Psychopath vs. Sociopath: What’s The Difference? Seth MacFarlanes Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy – Jus Beef Telly FamilyGuy TSA He who lives in a Glass House….-HIGH QUALITY A scotsman who cant watch a movie without shouting Adopted FAT JESUS Family Guy – Glass House Super Mario Seth McFarlane Uncensored Funny Family Guy Moments The Creation Of Aids Family Guy Deleted Scene | DownSyndrome Neo-Nazi | HD Family Guy – And That’s Where Fat Girls Come From Italian Eye Exam 8 Things You Never Hear – HIGH QUALITY Peter The Strawberry Best of Stupid Game Show Answers (SGSA) National Association for the Advance of Fat People | Family Guy | TBS Stuck In A Life Raft With Matthew McConaughey prince frog —
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Psychiatrist Near Me – Psychiatric Services – Psychiatrists
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Psychiatrist Near Me
Youtubers & Their Video Titles for Psychiatrist Near Me, Psychiatric Services, Psychiatrists.
Three Minute Summaries Stony Brook Medicine ColumbiaPsych NHSMedicalCareers vidar4eg ThePsychHelp Tim de la Torre IMHsingapore youthbeyondblue iqsquared Steven Chan WGBHForum Charleston Shoe Productions marriedinmedschool CCHR London Stanford Mike Kuna PsycheTruth Mind, the mental health charity Boldly FarFromAverage TheHUB CareerRx VICE News Angie Atkinson Cognitive Psychiatry & Psychotherapy of Chapel Hill Claudia Boleyn What Mia Did Next Jenny Le Student Doctor Thompson Ivy Lê hotstuffsmartass Kati Morton katizzzletalks Healthguru Psychology Mind Your Idiot Sarah Hawkinson Medtec Video Productions David DiSalvo Penny Elwright University of Nottingham rauserbegins Autumn Asphodel Channel 3000 | News 3 Howcast FletcherPhDTV Peter Breggin MD Dr. Andre Pinesett: The Pre-med Productivity Expert University of California Television (UCTV) Calvin Hecker thedanizblog Michael Garron Hospital Healthy Lifestyle Thomas8april Aakash Ahuja omhmentalhealth TsMadaan – Life Changing Videos in Hindi healthyplaceblogs DailyTop10s Arpi-Revo Med Twice BRIGHT SIDE program your mind SandeepMaheshwariSpirituality Mission Genius Mind Consultant Pvt Ltd Delhi DawnOfHopeDVD ABeautifulMindClinic bkshivani F Junction Shakil Salam Swami Ramdev doctortomar IRC TV Sandeep Maheshwari kannanssss Transformation PeasHealthcare Alex Wang Student Edge TheStriveToFit Royal Society of Medicine TrueLife: StudentMD News 247 Life Moments Nerdwriter1 Steven Meyerson David Pakman Show World News Today Cobra Commander NBC News The Rational National OffshoreAlert Jon Snow – The Viral Network CBS News Columbus Television The Ring of Fire Mark Dice Tamil Now Tamil Filmibeat Chennai Channel S WEB TV LEP Tube KspoTStudioS Tamil Thimiru Suda Suda Connecting Raj Television Nakkheeran TV TheAvalanchesVEVO Anna’s Craziness Mass Appeal BeastieBoysVEVO CaravanPalace MIAVEVO ChemicalBrothersVEVO ChetFakerVEVO Gorillaz MassiveAttackVEVO gotyemusic Official Arctic Monkeys ScienceNET WebsEdgeHealth TEDx Talks psyasap SNMA Publications currentpsychiatry Julie de Azevedo Hanks, PhD, LCSW FlickFlock AsapSCIENCE Big Think Arianna Pflederer depressionbipolar The Jed Foundation MrCaringuy watchwellcast MHF Suicide Prevention White Coat Chronicles Gabby Aikawa TEDMED ccdhfr DocOssareh Shannon Lowell ContraPoints Nut Body CrashCourse Freshersworld IRI Training Qasim Ali Shah videoberries PsikoSeyir Rajiv Juneja Aeldra PsychiatryTalks BBC Three PJS2 PRODUCTION Inside Edition DoucheBag Mind Pollution Pictures RCofPsychiatrists TODAY J. guru Dr. John Bergman Life Issues TED Archive reduxproductions bipolarorwakingup ABC News visionaryproject richdesserts Global Healing Center eHow American Psychiatric Association citytowninfo CCHR Documentaries TheTalko Izy Vlogs Be Amazed list25 DoctorOz Test Prep Gurus (Newport Beach) Difference Between MultiplicityAndMe Ross Avilla Seeker chris loper SethComedy daniel coronel PinkDrew BenShickster WyzGuy234 Mario Mendizabal CrAnkyJester MacfarlaneTV WelshBronnau Ben Kahan HaloGround NASTY Jared Hine TBS insane225 Jon Riera Egana — A Life in Psychiatry Steps to Becoming a Psychiatrist Psychiatry Residency Video: A Day in the Life — Stony Brook Medicine Top 10 Reasons We Chose Psychiatry A Career in Psychiatry A trip to the Psychiatrist. Faces of Psychiatry – Integrated Career Options The Four Years of Medical School Life of a Psychiatric Nurse What does a psychiatrist do? Psychiatrists and the pharma industry are to blame for the current ‘epidemic’ of mental disorders Future of Psychiatry — by Arshya Vahabzadeh, MD — at Singularity University’s Exponential Medicine Daniel Carlat – Unhinged: The Trouble with Psychiatry A Day in the Life with ADHD Third Year Med School – Psychiatry Rotation Psychiatrists On Psychiatry Stanford’s Sapolsky On Depression in U.S. (Full Lecture) A Day in the Life – Orthodontist Why become a psychiatrist? Psychology vs. Psychiatry What happens during a first therapy appointment? What is a Psychiatrist? Therapy? Medication? What’s the difference between a psychiatrist, psychologist and psychotherapist | Episode 3 #Ask Mind People Talk About Their First Therapy Session WHAT ARE ANXIETY DISORDERS? – Mental health psychology about stress, fear & treatment by Kati Morton PSYCHOLOGICAL SECRETS OF ATTRACTION 10 Things Body Language Says About You A Day in the Life – Psychiatrist Institutionalized: Mental Health Behind Bars 6 Things Narcissists Do After Breaking Up or Divorcing You: NPD, Invalidation, Gaslighting & Divorce What is PSYCHOSIS? Kati Morton discusses Hallucinations, Delusions, Disorganized Thinking and more What are PANIC ATTACKS? Mental Health Help with Kati Morton Learn Ways in Which Psychiatrists TRULY Approach Patient’s Mental Health Issues. BIPOLAR DISORDER vs BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER – Mental Health with Kati Morton “10 Signs Your Mental Illness Is Made Up For Attention” Therapy sessions from a therapist’s perspective! w/Kati Morton Do therapists get attached to their clients? My Psychiatrist Made Me Sicker Mental Health Q&A LIVE on YouNow March 29, 2017 – Kati Morton I Wanna Be a Psychiatrist Tips for 3rd Year Rotations: Psychiatry Med School: My Advice to High School and Premed students Path To Become a Psychiatrist Psychiatry: An Industry Of Death 1/10 PSYCHIATRIST First Appointment… WHAT HAPPENS? – mental health with Kati Morton CollegeTalk #11: All About My Psychology Major! Psychiatrist vs Psychologist (Mental Health Guru) So You Want a PhD in Clinical Psychology? 97% of Adults Can’t Pass This Simple General Knowledge Test CAREERS IN PSYCHOLOGY Are You Sure You Want to Become a Psychiatrist? How to Become a Psychiatrist How to Become a Doctor in the USA What does a psychologist do? Psychiatric Interviews for Teaching: Anxiety Why you should see a psychiatrist How to Tell if Someone is Faking Mental Illness | Malingering / Factitious Disorder Psychiatrist talks about depression, suicide How to Know If You Need a Psychiatrist | Mood Disorders The Difference between a Psychiatrist and Psychologist Peter Breggin MD: How Do Psychiatric Drugs Really Work? The Truth About MD vs. DO. Does it matter? New Treatments for Depression – Health Matters “Psychopathic Child” AP Psychology My Advice for Seeing the Psychiatrist 6 MUST KNOW SIGNS of DEPRESSION! psychology with therapist Kati Morton | mental health & symptoms Warning Signs of Mental Illness Psychiatrist vs Psychologist! What is the difference? Personality Test: What Do You See? Psychiatry Hindi Dr. Aakash Ahuja Depression Who needs treatment from a psychiatrist – Onlymyhealth.com 5 Types of Bipolar Disorder (Mental Health Guru) उदासी, अकेलापन, दुःख, डिप्रेशन, वगेरा को कैसे मैनेज करें । Depression, Frustration, Sadness, Sorrows Tips for your first psychiatrist visit Awakening the Mind – Mood Disorder (in Hindi) Top 10 HORRIFYING Mental Asylums “Up/Down” Bipolar Disorder Documentary FULL MOVIE (2011) Psychiatrist vs. Psychologist | Mood Disorders What is a Psychiatric Evaluation HOW TO UNDERSTAND YOUR CAT BETTER What Is Major Depressive Disorder? | Mood Disorders Depression Treatment By Vaidya Dr. Deepak Kumar How to overcome Depression [Hindi] How to get rid of your Negative Thoughts? By Sandeep Maheshwari (in Hindi) Emotion Control Hindi 01 – नेगेटिव विचारों को कैसे कंट्रोल करें – Depression Anxity Treatment Dr Safiullah Afghan on clinical depression (Urdu) Symptoms in Mental Issues (Psychiatry) in Hindi (Dr Rajiv Sharma) BK Shivani – Depression 06 Fighting Depression Without Drugs | डिप्रेशन को कैसे ठीक करें | Hindi Anxiety & Depression – Dr Tamseel Awan Awakening The Mind- Schizophrenia (Hindi) by Dr.Aakash Ahuja M.D. He is Curing Depression by Yoga What is Schizophrenia (In Hindi) – Dr Rajiv Sharma Mental Depression Negative Low Feeling Mood MDD Hindi WWW.DRTOMAR.COM Naujawano Me Depression Aur Uska Islami ilaj – Depression & Students By Adv. Faiz Syed LAST Life Changing Seminar – By Sandeep Maheshwari I Hindi Awakening the Mind – Alcohol (in Hindi) Motivational video “Change your mind in just 2.50 mins” Topic: Fear-Phobia-Anxiety-Disorder Part 1 of 6 Dr.Imran on Waqt TV Salam Pakistan depression hindi You Belong in Psychiatry I Wanna Be a Physiotherapist · A Day In The Life Of A Physiotherapist Psychiatry: Third year rotations Life in Medical School: My Psychiatry Rotation & Weird Hospital Snacks | Medicine Vlog What makes a good psychiatrist? 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