Every Major Psychological Disorder Explained in 13 Minutes

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Published 2024-02-22

All Comments (21)
  • @Jepppover
    Imagine how excited people with munchausen syndrome would be when they find out they have munchausen syndrome.
  • @marycumming8461
    What's hard with identifying someone as a hypochondriac is all the medical gaslighting today. You can be a "hypochondriac" until you get the right doctor. I wonder how rare it is to truly be one.
  • @KMocha_
    Derealization sucks. It wasn't chronic, but there a few months where nothing felt real. It's especially weird looking at a parent or a good friend and feeling disconnected, simply watching. So hard to explain
  • To people in the comments: This video is NOT for self-diagnosis! Stop self-diagnosing yourself in the comments; this video is for educational purposes only and is NOT a substitute for a real diagnosis. All this video does is briefly describe some common psychological disorders; while I applaud the creator for making a video on this topic, the people watching it should NOT form an opinion nor assume they have a disorder listed solely based on this video and other surface-level media. For people who think "i do this all the time, I'm going to guess I have this disorder": seek a professional diagnosis if you are genuinely concerned!
  • I have trich. I haven’t had eyebrows since I was 14. I just turned 30 in December. BUT FOR THE FIRST TIME IN OVER HALF MY LIFE, I HAVE EYEBROWS AGAIN!!!! It’s so weird but I’m happy! My technique is using fidgets and a PAINT BRUSH! I can play with it the way I’d play with my hair. When things are extremely stressful tho, I’ll lose some of my eyebrows. Legitimately, it was easy for me to quit vaping and smoking! Cold turkey for them! Pulling my hair is my smoking. I also have a vast medical knowledge, and my anxiety now manifests in extreme panic attacks where I think I can’t breathe, or having a heart attack or stroke etc. It’s miserable. My mental health issues stole from me and warped my love and knowledge of medicine. It turned it against me…
  • @jimcobbler3954
    I have pretty extreme Misophonia, and it’s destroyed much of my life. It started with just lip-smacking. It has since expanded to a massive range of noises. At first, noises become just a little tiny annoyance. It’s just enough to be disruptive, but not really bad. This causes frustration because I can’t focus on what I’m actually doing, and little by little the frustration gets worse and worse the more I hear the noise. Eventually it gets to the point where everyday noises are like a sledgehammer for my thoughts, and I can’t focus on anything else.
  • @almond-ul8ce
    As someone with professionally diagnosed DID, I have to say, you explained it pretty well! Other YouTubers explain it soooo wrong but yours is good!
  • @TheOneWayDown
    It's bizarrely comforting to know that despite my depression stemming from my anxiety and ADHD, there's actually quite a lot that isn't wrong with me. I struggle a lot with being grateful for what I have when I doubt the worth of everything, but at least I can be grateful that there are symptoms and disorders I'm not suffering from
  • @7-o1_
    PLEASE GUYS, this video is not for self-diagnosis, this video is solely for educational purposes and for people to learn, not an evaluation for a diagnosis. if you do suspect that you have one or two of these, just go get diagnosed by a professional and don't automatically assume that you have it.
  • @misskitty8282
    I used to suffer from hypochondria. Ironically, I ended up literally worrying myself sick. Frequent chest pains, nausea, vomiting, and strange sensations by my liver. I was dead set on the idea of having diabetes and liver disease, specifically. After being given reassurance from doctors and seeking help, these weird symptoms I experienced started to gradually go away. I also started trying to fix up my diet and increase my sleep and exercise to reduce my risk in the future. I still wouldn't wish that disorder on my worst enemy. It is the worst type of anxiety you can have, especially as an American who cannot afford health insurance. 😣
  • @PaintGuy-ed1dg
    Reading through these psychological disorders is like peeling back the layers of reality and diving headfirst into a carnival of the extraordinary. From thinking you're already dead to believing the world is a stage and everyone's an actor, these disorders showcase the incredible diversity of human perception.
  • @eepysleepy_
    I'm genuinely convinced I have dermatillomania. I CONSTANTLY pick at my skin, and I get excited whenever there's something new to pick at. I even literally seek out new things to pick at, and feel anxious when there's nothing. I sometimes will even sort of pull my shirt down over my shoulder to pick in public (since my shoulders get acne a lot). I know that it causes scarring and infections, but I literally cannot stop. Sometimes I can pull myself out of it but most of the time I can't. I do have anxiety and ADHD, so those probably contribute as well lol
  • @user-je1tp6vf8x
    As someone with trichotillomania i love the way you explained the disorder and another thing about is having hair pulled doesn't hurt idk if thats the disorder or something else though
  • @wubbzyofthewild
    I love how the Oppositional Defiant Disorder kid looks like DW from Arthur.
  • @TheVeriiFactor
    There are some gems in here! I myself was diagnosed with Borderline PD. I hate that all everyone seems to know about it is, that its the self harm disorder. Quick question, I do speeches about mental health and mental neurotic illnesses. There are some illnesses in here, that I talk regularly about, would it be cool if parts of the Video would be used in one of those speeches? (With proper Citation and attribution + link to the full video of course!)
  • @memez_r_life6692
    Munchausen by Proxie: Usually this is characterized in parents. This is where a parent lies about an illness their child doesn't have/exaggerates the extent OR flat out makes their child actively sick on purpose so the parent can gain sympathy.
  • So far we have diseaseballs, lawballs, disorderballs, mathballs, empireballs, mythology balls and scienceballs all from this channel. What’s next? Cheeseballs?
  • @Flyingsearat
    8:26 The not remembering bit isn’t always true , it’s not always blackout amnesia and sometimes it’s just partial amnesia described as grey outs or white outs
  • @fizzl8z
    As someone with dermotillomania and trichotillomania, it is a living hell. The amount of times I’ve had to shave my hair off so I don’t pull it out is insane. The scars across my arms, legs, and fingers from picking at my skin too is crazy.