We Ranked Every White Guy (w/ Ted Nivison) | Sad Boyz

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  • čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
  • The best way to learn a language is through immersion - living where the language is spoken natively and using it every day - but that's not possible for everyone. So what's the second best way to learn a language? Babbel. Beacause with Babbel you can start speaking a new language in just 3 weeks. Get 55% off your subscription at Babbel.com/SAD Rules and restrictions may apply.
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    🎶outro music🎶
    @prod.typhoon & @ysoblank
    00:00:00 Ted Nivison
    00:02:23 ADHD & Mozerella Sticks
    00:19:05 Getting into tech as a kid
    00:25:39 Our first gaming consoles
    00:43:16 How to watch TV in bed
    00:46:01 ADHD
    01:03:31 TwitchCon
    01:20:12 Being Impersonated By Fake Accounts
    01:25:37 White Guy Tier List
    02:05:51 Sad Boyz Nightz

Komentáře • 602

  • @martymcflown3707
    @martymcflown3707 Před 7 měsíci +1066

    The discussion of Ted's ADHD diagnosis leading to like a 20 minute segment discussing the minor detail of him having mozz sticks was the most ADHD thing I've ever seen. I related so hard.

    • @Lucifersfursona
      @Lucifersfursona Před 7 měsíci +71

      Unknown popularity adhd opinion; I like listening to other adhd people have conversations more than nt conversations

    • @friendlyneigborhoodbean
      @friendlyneigborhoodbean Před 7 měsíci +24

      @@Lucifersfursona fr because it goes along the same trajectory as my brain

    • @shlogo1119
      @shlogo1119 Před 6 měsíci +7

      ​@@LucifersfursonaNever agreed with something more

    • @zippityzoop1478
      @zippityzoop1478 Před 6 měsíci +3

      I want those fat mozzarella sticks from chilis now

    • @sidhackney8831
      @sidhackney8831 Před 6 měsíci +5

      ​@@Lucifersfursona Yes NTs would have moved on but *we need to hear more about the mozz sticks*

  • @saff4997
    @saff4997 Před 7 měsíci +202

    jarvis speaks so slowly sometimes that it leads to some funny sound bites.
    “i eat… people…”

  • @albent4604
    @albent4604 Před 7 měsíci +1133

    Hearing about the boys being taken under a teacher's wing literally made me cry because as a kid with ADHD I wanted to be the teachers pet so bad and I tried so hard to be their friend but literally every single one would try their hardest to pretend I didn't exist because they thought I needed to stop seeking attention

    • @albent4604
      @albent4604 Před 7 měsíci +125

      I remember thinking my friends were so stupid for having favourite teachers because "teachers don't wanna be FRIENDS with KIDS the only reason they're here is because they're getting paid" and being so confused and hurt when other kids would develop a relationship with the teachers

    • @genericname8727
      @genericname8727 Před 7 měsíci +66

      It’s also possible they worried if you seemed to eager to be their friend that it could be unprofessional. Like, idk if it applies to how you were, but some kids would struggle to understand the professional boundaries if the teacher let them develop a more personal connection. Even if that doesn’t apply to your situation I think if applies to others. Teachers need to be very careful in situations like that

    • @Gladiva19
      @Gladiva19 Před 7 měsíci +59

      ​@@genericname8727I definitely agree. Especially when dealing with minors, you have to be INCREDIBLY explicit about drawing boundaries. Especially about personal life matters.

    • @Teddie_Vision
      @Teddie_Vision Před 7 měsíci +12

      OMG I WANTED TO BE LIKED BY MY TEACHERS SO BAD 😭😭

    • @Aussie_Archmage
      @Aussie_Archmage Před 7 měsíci +29

      @@albent4604 Highly relatable, though I wasn't really trying to be a "teacher's pet". I'm sorry you had that experience, I can imagine that felt very isolating for you too.
      My favourite teachers were the ones that didn't publicly humiliate me by yelling at me and belittling/insulting me in front of the class whenever my (at the time undiagnosed) ADHD led me to forget homework or to be distracted in class. I think genuinely I can count maybe four teachers over my school career who treated me with any form of dignity, and of them only two who I would describe as any kind of supportive, neither of whom I had as a teacher for more than 12 months.
      While I agree that teachers do need to be careful in their relationships with students, it's one thing to be cautious and professional, quite another entirely to ignore a student entirely and provide no support or guidance. I imagine however your use of the word friends is more contextualising a positive non-familial relationship from your childhood self's perspective.

  • @pearachu5363
    @pearachu5363 Před 7 měsíci +102

    The whole "have you taken your medicine?" thing is a pretty close equivalent to "is it that time of the month?"

    • @joshuadarling7439
      @joshuadarling7439 Před měsícem +3

      It's so aggravating. My experience is not lesser than simply because I didn't take a pill.

  • @jordan9240
    @jordan9240 Před 7 měsíci +90

    the adhd meds to mozzarella sticks convo is so quintisentally a-conversation-with-adhders its truly beautiful

  • @AKA253
    @AKA253 Před 7 měsíci +336

    The medication stuff Ted was talking about hit SO hard for me, with his mom asking “did you take your medication” when there was a disagreement is something I faced with my family for FAR too long. It’s not usually meant to be hurtful or anything, but it feels incredibly dismissive when my parents responded to me having negative feelings and reaching out for help with “did you take your meds today”. It’s usually coming from a place of care, but at the end of it all, whether or not I’ve taken my meds isn’t the concern. My reactions are my reactions, I’m feeling bad and am looking for comfort in the moment. No amount of alarms that remind me to take my Zoloft each day is going to change that.

    • @Cheyscrochetshop
      @Cheyscrochetshop Před 6 měsíci +7

      Haha yeahhhh like I do need my meds but I’m telling you how I’m feeling because I wanted human comfort

    • @SheWhoWalksSilently
      @SheWhoWalksSilently Před 6 měsíci +26

      It’s the “are you on your period?” of the neurodivergent folk 😑

    • @victoriakerr5130
      @victoriakerr5130 Před 6 měsíci +5

      I didn't even realize this was an issue that I've encountered so much with my own family. But I'm recognizing how it hurt me to hear as a child and also how it hurts to hear as an adult now.

    • @salemcrow5078
      @salemcrow5078 Před 6 měsíci +6

      parents will be like "y'know medication won't solve all your problems :/ you need to be self responsible" and then when you start having any problems simultaneously they'll hit you with "did you take your meds :/"

    • @Eiffiel
      @Eiffiel Před 6 měsíci +2

      I also felt this so hard. My previous anxiety meds used to give me a headache if I missed a dose, and then I'd be irritable, because headache. But "did you forget your meds" became a shorthand with my parents for "you seem irrational and overly emotional" I was a teenager, of course I felt emotional sometimes! Just so dismissive and invalidating.

  • @FlyoverStatePark
    @FlyoverStatePark Před 7 měsíci +156

    Funny story about a generic brand. I take Sertraline (the generic brand for Zoloft) for anxiety and a few years ago it suddenly started having a sweet vanilla flavor to it. At first I thought I was imagining it, but after one anxious month, I started wondering if they had, for some strange reason, given me sugar pills as a placebo medicine for my anxiety. Finally I googled about it and found a reddit thread discussing what had happened. Apparently, they added a vanilla coating to the pill without saying anything. It was really gratifying reading all of the comments of the post because everyone was having the same anxiety trip over the last few months. I still can't believe they changed the flavor of an anxiety medication without saying a word. It feels like a prank.

    • @phobos_irl
      @phobos_irl Před 7 měsíci +11

      damn fingers crossed the vanilla flavor comes quickly to europe i want a taste asap (disclailer : sertraline is already in my prescription)

    • @JazzyFizzleDrummers
      @JazzyFizzleDrummers Před 6 měsíci +11

      When I was on it, it made my mouth taste metallic. I'm on buproprion now which occasionally smells/tastes like eggs. Fingers crossed for cheesy omlette flavor haha.

    • @mmtittle
      @mmtittle Před 6 měsíci +3

      i take sertaline and i guess i just never noticed the change lmao

    • @juicetuber
      @juicetuber Před 6 měsíci +2

      i'm on sertraline and i HATE the vanilla taste it's so off putting

    • @Trash.girl.chic.
      @Trash.girl.chic. Před 6 měsíci +2

      Omg the vanilla flavor was so horrible and I told my psychiatrist and she was like what

  • @saraisreading4231
    @saraisreading4231 Před 7 měsíci +451

    As a teacher, it’s really refreshing to hear people speak positively of teachers. We’ve been getting a lot of shit lately. Thanks boyz ❤️❤️

    • @K.C-2049
      @K.C-2049 Před 7 měsíci +55

      I have NO love for the education system as it stands, but you all are out here putting in the work. my mum was a teacher, the amount of labour she did well outside of work hours (including weekends and holidays) was staggering.

    • @ellieofficialvevo
      @ellieofficialvevo Před 7 měsíci +7

      teachers are heroes 🫡

    • @plankton2507
      @plankton2507 Před 7 měsíci +19

      I’ve had some shitty teachers but nothing sticks with you quite like the ones that truly care ❤ in the US, being a teacher is a risky job. getting sick all the time, violence very much on the rise, the iffy workload/ pay ratio, and seeing bright kids come from neglectful homes must be so draining. yet you show up with papers graded & a smile on your face. trust me, it’s not lost on the majority of us how hard you guys work!

    • @kb7633
      @kb7633 Před 7 měsíci +4

      You're a hero and an incredible person for dealing with the shit the education system puts you through and still having this level of positivity and love for your profession. keep going ❤❤

    • @hayleyquinnx94
      @hayleyquinnx94 Před 7 měsíci

      the 'have you taken your meds' thing is real but also both me and my partner have adhd and I ask that a lot bc we both sometimes skip doses (short release so 3x a day so we might skip afternoons for example) and his bad moods are a lot more obvious externally if he's missed a dose, he just tends to get more flustered and frustrated and apathetic when it comes to making decisions. So like if something bad happens at work and he's on meds he gets annoyed or upset but is able to articulate that and judge if it's worth saying anything or letting it go where as off meds he's more likely to speak first and find himself stuck going in circles with someone when he'd normally just leave it. I worry now that my asking if he's had meds when he's in a outwardly bad mood could come off like that, but also it helps to know where he's at meds wise because that might change how I then approach things... tbf it's also easy to tell with me too because my short term memory disappears and I never have a single idea what I'm doing or what's going on at any time off meds.

  • @squid7855
    @squid7855 Před 7 měsíci +410

    As a future pharmacist I love hearing people talk about their drugs because I can hear an actual patient’s unbiased experience. I’m grateful the boys are this comfortable with their audience❤️

    • @mmybickers
      @mmybickers Před 7 měsíci +5

      I think Vyvanse gang (I'm a member) don't feel anything on the other drugs because the mechanism of action is so different? Vyvanse is a pro-drug vs the salt from what I understand... like Jarvis, I also have fatigue issues. I'm really imaging we're going to finally get some research on all these after long COVID etc.

    • @Kingbimmy
      @Kingbimmy Před 7 měsíci +2

      ⁠@@mmybickersdo you have long Covid? I’ve had issues since I had Covid in January of this year, and medication has definitely helped out, but generally I’m not back to how I was before then. My fatigue is insanely bad, and I developed POTS and it’s been hell 😭

    • @lunaskisses
      @lunaskisses Před 6 měsíci

      ​​@@mmybickersVyvanse and Adderall work on CYP2D6 receptors, "Cytochrome P450 2D6 (CYP2D6) is expressed at high levels in the brain and plays a considerable role in the biotransformation and neurotransmission of dopamine", whereas methylphenidate is not metabolized through cyp2d6. this could potentially be a reason?

    • @lunaskisses
      @lunaskisses Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@mmybickersI have severe fatigue and ADHD and have taken Vyvanse, amphet salts, meth (illicit), Adderall, concertA, and Ritalin, and all have helped my fatigue BUT I think Vyvanse gave me the most 'calm' energy. I also have CYP2D6 poor metabolization, which is something to consider.
      also, woah! just read this: "Children and adults who are Poor or Ultrarapid metabolizers should avoid amphetamine. However, they can take lisdexamfetamine (Vyvanse), which is independent of CYP2D6 metabolism. Amphetamines carry a higher risk for agitation and psychotic or manic symptoms in teens."
      so apparently my information is wrong our outdated and Vyvanse is NOT metabolized through cyp2d6 (I believe I learned about Vyvanse being metabolized this way from my genetic testing done in 2018 so information may have changed since then or I'm misremembering)

    • @mmybickers
      @mmybickers Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@Kingbimmy I have a post-viral fatigue profile from waaaay before COVID, probably EBV. But most researchers are pointing out it's kind of... the exact same thing, like a fever can be caused from different things. My daughter has long COVID and we both have POTS, fatigue, worsened asthma, MCAS, etc. I'm kinda the canary down the coal mine with this stuff, so I'm glad the world is at least a LITTLE BIT paying attention now.

  • @mircat-dh3is
    @mircat-dh3is Před 6 měsíci +23

    Toby being short for Tobuscus literally made me tip over on my bed laughing so hard, oh my god

  • @oliviab26
    @oliviab26 Před 7 měsíci +177

    Hearing Ted talk about his elementary school, knowing I went to the same one is so interesting. I’m from the same town as Ted, and the academics are very intense there. But the elementary school we both went to was the reason I was able to diagnosed with ADHD SO young as a girl. I was diagnosed at age 7, and barely had any hyperactivity. A teacher at the elementary school caught it and got consent from my parents to record my behavior in order to get a diagnosis. She still asks about me when she sees my mom in the grocery store.The early intervention and inclusion of the special ed students within our classes is why I was able to succeed and accept that I am disabled. Being in occupational therapy with the kid who had cerebral palsy allowed me to understand others and myself from a young age, and i’m forever grateful for that experience. The school may have been rather crunchy, hippie and weird, but it quite obviously produces successful, creative people. Very curious if the teacher who had ted lead transitions is the same one who got me diagnosed. I wouldn’t be surprised.

    • @trustthesauce
      @trustthesauce Před 7 měsíci +4

      Sorry to ask but what does crunchy mean in this context?

    • @oliviab26
      @oliviab26 Před 7 měsíci +13

      @@trustthesauce i guess in this context i’m using it to mean like organic, natural, artistic and liberal. no need to be sorry

    • @trustthesauce
      @trustthesauce Před 7 měsíci +10

      @@oliviab26 I've never heard of crunchy being used this way (only to describe a texture) so thanks for teaching me something new!

    • @victai163
      @victai163 Před 6 měsíci +8

      ​@@trustthesauceit's from the phrase "crunchy granola" lol

    • @sidhackney8831
      @sidhackney8831 Před 6 měsíci +3

      ​@@victai163 Which now that I think about it must be from a time when granola was something only hippies ate? Granola feels pretty mainstream these days

  • @tovelandstrom2918
    @tovelandstrom2918 Před 7 měsíci +288

    I never considered that you guys don't do slöjd in school, it was the best! Slöjd is "handicraft" i guess, and everyone alternates between sewing class and woodworking class. / Swede

    • @EmTheBig
      @EmTheBig Před 7 měsíci +15

      My school in Canada had it but it was called practical and applied arts and we did half home economics and half industrial arts (woodworking)

    • @the_bearer_of_truth00
      @the_bearer_of_truth00 Před 7 měsíci +12

      US here and neither of those were ever required at any level, but there were options for it in high school (besides specifically sewing). Luckily my grandma was a home ec teacher so she taught me how to sew.

    • @peterevans6480
      @peterevans6480 Před 7 měsíci +1

      yoooo another swedeee

    • @helplessheroine2641
      @helplessheroine2641 Před 7 měsíci +7

      ​@@EmTheBighome economics in Sweden is learning to cook and bake simple things and how to make a budget, how loans work, etc

    • @hungover5300
      @hungover5300 Před 7 měsíci

      We also do it in Denmark! It’s so much fun!

  • @huntercadima
    @huntercadima Před 7 měsíci +217

    I literally gasp with joy every time Sad Boyz posts

    • @sunlitChaos
      @sunlitChaos Před 7 měsíci +8

      I gasp with fear

    • @catsarefancy9053
      @catsarefancy9053 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Same. They are my comfort podcast and I look forward to it every week.

  • @normalguy246
    @normalguy246 Před 7 měsíci +111

    as a burnt out former GT student (k-10th grade) who was only recently diagnosed w ADHD it hurts so bad that my parents refused to provide me any help throughout school bc i could've done so much better than i did and all they did was blame me :/ but hearing other ppl talk about their experiences is so comforting and you guys could never imagine how much ur openness and candor abt mental health means to me

    • @Kingbimmy
      @Kingbimmy Před 7 měsíci +5

      Same! I was diagnosed with autism and adhd much later, after finishing school, and if I had known sooner I could’ve had so much more help.
      My parents also didn’t understand and thought I was just lazy or something, and would push me way too hard. 😭

    • @spacejinkies
      @spacejinkies Před 2 měsíci

      @@Kingbimmysaaame but I was diagnosed and my mom at one point started telling me I outgrew it

  • @Dinomater_
    @Dinomater_ Před 7 měsíci +109

    It almost sounds like the school Ted went to when growing up, was based on Scandinavian elementary schools. Calling teachers by their first name and having "sloyd" (doing woodwork etc) as a subject is super common here (at least where I'm from)

    • @linn8370
      @linn8370 Před 7 měsíci +6

      Love slöjd!

    • @Lucifersfursona
      @Lucifersfursona Před 7 měsíci +3

      Damn it that word is fantastic
      Shlohjd
      Good shit

    • @jacqueline4689
      @jacqueline4689 Před 7 měsíci +4

      This would totally make sense! My high school was founded by a Spanish woman and there are some key differences between it and other area schools because of it

    • @lovisadouhan8261
      @lovisadouhan8261 Před 6 měsíci

      It's mandatory in the whole country

    • @kk-bz7pf
      @kk-bz7pf Před 6 měsíci +1

      lmao, that’s a lot of schools in boston area tho- that’s how it is here at my school

  • @salty4771
    @salty4771 Před 7 měsíci +41

    You guys healed a little bit of my inner child. I didn’t realize other people’s parents asked “did you take your medicine?”
    Bc I always felt so bad when I’d just be having a conversation and my parents would suggest I needed to chemically change what was going on inside me to interact with my family 😢

    • @MisterSludge
      @MisterSludge Před 6 měsíci

      This exact feeling is why I stopped taking my meds as a kid. My mom once stopped the morning bus because I forgot it. She did it very discreetly and didn't embarrass me but I couldn't stop thinking after that..."what is wrong with me that taking this is so important!?". Around the same time I asked my friend at school about his morning pill and he said he didn't have one and didn't know what I was talking about.....it made me feel so different and weird
      So I just stopped and Mom pushed a little but eventually just let me make the decision for myself....I may never know if this was the best decision but her giving me the ability to choose for myself has always made the difference in my life!

  • @welpppppppppppppp
    @welpppppppppppppp Před 7 měsíci +36

    the microwave talk was so real... i just learned when and why to use the different power levels and it changed the leftovers game

    • @plankton2507
      @plankton2507 Před 7 měsíci

      Please share your wisdom if you see this…. I just learned to make a baked (microwaved) potato in 5 minutes & it’s changed my entire life ngl

    • @plankton2507
      @plankton2507 Před 7 měsíci +6

      microwave potato tutorial:
      -fork stab potato all around (not explode)
      -butter on salt on
      -plate
      -microwave 6
      - :)
      edit:
      -more butter inside (NOT OPTIONAL ITS GOOD FOR U)
      use real butter and go ham !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! kerrygold if u can afford and/ or run fast from the police !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @artreleaf
    @artreleaf Před 7 měsíci +28

    This has grown to become one of my favorite podcasts because of all of these mental health conversations and so much candid honesty. Thank you for making these eps each week, despite all the ups and downs that come!

  • @ohtobethecream
    @ohtobethecream Před 7 měsíci +42

    omfg i relate so much to what ted said at 27:58 as a kid i would use games as just a way to make up stories in my head and roam around without any care for completing levels or missions

  • @lanceelliott2504
    @lanceelliott2504 Před 7 měsíci +75

    This podcast helps me understand myself and my newly discovered ADHD so much better

  • @Kingbimmy
    @Kingbimmy Před 7 měsíci +41

    I was diagnosed with autism at age 20, and adhd THIS year at age 27. And adderall had been so fucking life changing. I don’t feel at all different in creative terms or experience that “zombie” feeling that a lot of people describe having. It’s been incredible at helping quiet alllll the noises I can’t otherwise shut up or follow cohesively. I’m finally able to focus on a task and not be distressed about it.
    I also got prescribed it for my low blood pressure that was effecting me a lot, and it has helped enormously with that.
    I have the non hyperactive kind of adhd, so it doesn’t necessarily give me a crazy rush physically, it makes me kinda feel like that scene in the Hangover where Zach Galifianakis’s character is doing crazy math at the poker table and the numbers are going around his mind and he’s in some sort of savant mode 😂
    It obviously doesn’t make me smarter, but it helps me unlock the knowledge I already have and utilize it better. Love this shit.

    • @assas1nscreed
      @assas1nscreed Před 7 měsíci +5

      Aw good for you my guy

    • @pixel4o4
      @pixel4o4 Před 6 měsíci +5

      That's good to hear bro. The thing about the "zombie" feeling happens usually to people who are over medicated. I experienced it once, I was over medicated and felt like a shell of myself. Getting that right medicine though is definitely what helped me. Too many people use the "zombie" talking point to discourage giving ppl with adhd meds smh.

    • @alexakelley2353
      @alexakelley2353 Před 6 měsíci

      Totally feel you about the hangover scene!! To me it feels like all my thoughts are a tangled up string and meds feel like pulling the string tight from end to end. Still me but actually able to think clearly!

  • @pebbleslikesthings
    @pebbleslikesthings Před 7 měsíci +74

    idk if y’all have any plans to make a part 2 to this tier list but if yall did here are some suggestions: jim (nickname for james), matt, noah, ben/benjamin, don, john, scott, mark

    • @Lucifersfursona
      @Lucifersfursona Před 7 měsíci +2

      My brain, not the best:
      Don John Scott Mark
      Don John Scott Mark
      Don John Scott Mark

  • @crow1247
    @crow1247 Před 7 měsíci +68

    Yay! I've felt awful all day (COVID, sadly), so a new SB ep is great :) thanks guys!

    • @user-jd6rp8fw9b
      @user-jd6rp8fw9b Před 7 měsíci +11

      hope u have a speedy recovery ❤

    • @rein.cosplays
      @rein.cosplays Před 7 měsíci +7

      I have Covid, too 😭 This is my last sick day before I have to be functional again. Hope you feel better, soon!

    • @crow1247
      @crow1247 Před 7 měsíci +6

      @@rein.cosplays oh no 😭😭 mines Thursday so hopefully I feel better then. Thank you, you too!! 💚

    • @crow1247
      @crow1247 Před 7 měsíci

      @@user-jd6rp8fw9b thank you 💚

    • @shoechives1998
      @shoechives1998 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@crow1247omg same

  • @stephaniesapp
    @stephaniesapp Před 7 měsíci +30

    I was in the gifted and honors classes from the time I was 6 or 7 until I was 17 I think, and that was one of the main reasons why they didn’t pick up that I had ADHD until I was 14 and failing all of my classes freshman year of high school. Most of the adults I’d talk to would say that there was no possibility that I could have ADHD because 1) I was a girl and “girls don’t have ADHD, they’re just not lady like” and 2) I was a gifted kid so it was automatically impossible to be neurodivergent in their eyes. My parents just thought I was really creative, had extremely specific interests in media, music and production, and was just an extremely passionate and talkative little girl. When I finally got the diagnosis and began to learn techniques, get proper medication/treatment, and get set up for a plan through the school, I was such a different person in and out of school.
    Math has always been a rough subject for me, especially when it comes to tests, even though I enjoyed most classes I took on it. I had an advanced geometry/algebra 1 teacher my sophomore year and he spent the whole year working WITH me to figure out how I learned best as an individual student. The day he got our test scores back from our End Of Course exams he stood in front of the room and asked each of us if we felt comfortable with him telling the class our grade out loud. I was the last person and I looked terrified as my classmates waited to know my grade (gifted classes stay together all through school so we were all close and they knew how much I’d been struggling). When I told him he could say it out loud, he brought me a tissue from his little tissue box and said in the proudest voice I’ve ever heard from a teacher “73, I told you that you could do it!” And I just started sobbing as my friends all cheered and hugged me because I had worked my butt off to do better than the failed exams from the year before.
    His dedication to making my academic career catered more towards my individual needs and support is such a huge reason why I’m about to graduate with my Bachelor’s degree in May and start on my Masters program sometime in the fall. Teachers who support students who just need someone to be in their corner don’t realize how much of an impact they have on a student’s life, but they truly are so important.

    • @faye7441
      @faye7441 Před 4 měsíci

      you saying that they all knew you and were all close is so real, like these are the same 100 kids ive known since 4th grade. they know everryyything abt me whether i like it or not

  • @harrisonlaws4866
    @harrisonlaws4866 Před 7 měsíci +15

    Ted getting agency over his anxiety of change is everything. I would’ve loved it. Choosing my schedule in college gave me that agency.

  • @milesdavis3380
    @milesdavis3380 Před 7 měsíci +18

    Hearing Jordan say he doesn't get blood tests for Lamictal was insane to me. My Primary forces me to get blood panels done like every 3-4 months to ensure the Lamictal isn't building up too much and that my kidneys are fine.

    • @mikusheadphones
      @mikusheadphones Před 6 měsíci +2

      I have been on Lamictal for like 6 years and literally never been blood tested for anything with it

  • @welpppppppppppppp
    @welpppppppppppppp Před 7 měsíci +41

    also re: being gifted it's sort of weird cause i went to a school that sounded very much like ted's but we called anyone with any sort of neurodivergence or learning disability "gifted" in addition to kids who had a higher reading or math level or w/e. as a then undiagnosed kid w combined adhd they actually rejected me from joining that class 😅 but the whole school was super crunchy and made everyone take a weekly creative activity every year.

  • @FirstNameBunchANumbers
    @FirstNameBunchANumbers Před 7 měsíci +15

    I was a "gifted" kid in elementary school - My school system used the term AIG for "Academically Intellectually Gifted" 🤮 It was the same as Jarvis's experience where the AIG kids would leave our main classroom to go to a different class that was supposed to be more challenging for "the smart kids."
    Basically everyone went from AIG in elementary school, to honors classes in middle school, and to honors and/or AP classes in high school before (it was assumed) going to college. It definitely made my kid brain believe that I was smarter than my peers because I was praised more than others, but worse for my long term psyche - It made me believe being "gifted" and performing well in school was the most important thing about me. I wasn't just that I was smarter - I HAD to ALWAYS be smarter.
    It really instilled a mindset in me that if I ever started having trouble in class or god forbid if I got a B in a class, it was a personal failing. So much unnecessary pressure and mental anguish because of expectations school had made me set for myself. I am happy that I was able to do more challenging school work because the reality is that I was bored in my grade level all throughout elementary school, which is a great way to have a kid lose interest in learning. I am grateful that I was able to stay engaged with school and have a genuine want to learn because it did set me up well, but damn did being labeled as "gifted" instilled a lot of anxiety that still manifests in different ways today

  • @juniperusvloggus
    @juniperusvloggus Před 7 měsíci +28

    JARVIS I’M HAVING THE SAME EXPERIENCE WITH STOPPING MY ANTIDEPRESSANTS!! I had a serious suspicion for a long time that the worst symptoms of my depression were actually related to ADHD and after getting my Vyvanse adjusted to a good point I’ve stopped taking my antidepressants (I did tell my doctor about this and he’s helping me keep an eye on it). It’s been going pretty damn well!! It definitely feels like I need to cope less day-to-day but I am still a bit nervous about facing a harder time again (I.e. recovering from a surgery) but I don’t know it’s been an interesting experience. I wonder if there’s research on this pattern!

    • @juniperusvloggus
      @juniperusvloggus Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Yuki-di2rb yea that’s usually my sign that my dose was too high and tbh missing a dose would make me feel so sick that it just didn’t really feel like they were worth the side effects any more

    • @invaderliz
      @invaderliz Před 5 měsíci +2

      Before I got my ADHD diagnoses, I got Wellbutrin as I was pretty depressed. Wellbutrin happens to help with ADHD as well (at low levels apparently). As it took the edge off my ADHD symptoms my depression disappeared. Turns out my depression was situational and the situation was feeling like a lazy dumb-dumb who couldn’t keep my life together but actually had undiagnosed ADHD. People can definitely have both depression and ADHD, but feeling like you’re a failure because you can’t seem to do “normal” things because you don’t understand how your brain works can definitely confuse a diagnoses.

  • @spidermonkeybm
    @spidermonkeybm Před 7 měsíci +22

    the random uploads keeping us on our toes! excellent prank guys

  • @SleepyMedia
    @SleepyMedia Před 7 měsíci +14

    I have to say Lithium has changed my life. The imposter syndrome of being diagnosed with Bipolar young when it's mostly not diagnosed before a certain age really made me focus on everything but that.

  • @eringrupp3399
    @eringrupp3399 Před 7 měsíci +7

    Jordan sits like we're the last ones awake at the sleepover and we're sharing our deepest, darkest secrets

  • @kiwid3628
    @kiwid3628 Před 5 měsíci +4

    As a teenager with ADHD and dyscalculia who only got diagnosed a couple years ago, it's so nice hearing other people talking about their ADHD. I feel like most people with ADHD have so many shared experiences, it's crazy how similar we all are. Not to mention how neurodivergent people are almost like drawn to each other or something, most of my friends have been diagnosed with ADHD or autism.
    Also I just got to the part of you talking about "gifted" kids. I went to a gifted magnet from 4th grade up until my sophomore year of high school, I'm now in my junior year and I am out of the gifted system! I go to a regular high school with an art program. Switching schools was honestly the best decision I've ever made. I love my new school and I've been getting better at coping with my ADHD. Love the podcast, love listening to you guys talk. One of the only podcasts I can actually stand listening to ❤

  • @silasbenoit773
    @silasbenoit773 Před 7 měsíci +5

    Missed opportunity to put Ted in D teir for the thumbnail to spell sad 😭

  • @sunnytheo
    @sunnytheo Před 7 měsíci +11

    Perfect timing for this episode to drop! Love when y’all get to keep me company while I work obscene amounts of overtime

  • @townfool4682
    @townfool4682 Před 7 měsíci +12

    I really appreciate the ADHD talk in this one

  • @earthavi
    @earthavi Před 7 měsíci +6

    the wet paper towel over pizza while microwaving it is literally life changing i've never heard of that, thank you jarvis i am forever in your debt

  • @cam5017
    @cam5017 Před 7 měsíci +10

    i’ve been diagnosed with adhd since i was 11 but not having many friends who also have it i love hearing you guys talk about it, makes me feel like i’m not as alone. great ep as always 🫶🏻

  • @Katiekinney23
    @Katiekinney23 Před 7 měsíci +8

    It’s always so interesting hearing other people’s ADHD experiences and stories.
    I was actually diagnosed at SIX YEARS OLD and have been medicated basically every day of my life since. And this is even with girls being under diagnosed, my kindergarten teacher went to my parents like “you should get her tested”. I must’ve been the freaking poster child.
    I’m not me without my meds, if that makes sense. Being off my meds if there’s a problem getting ahold of it is an actual nightmare. I feel like jelly and I eat myself sick. So I’m always on them. I’m jealous of people that can pick and choose, cuz my life literally revolves around medication and phone calls, on a thirty day cycle.
    You’d think after over two decades I’d have some kind of universal notifier in my records saying “loosen the controlled substances rules, she’s good”.
    I was actually thriving all the way into college on the max vyvanse dose, but then the combination of a concussion and severe depression setting in made everything spiral. It basically increased my ADHD symptoms by like 200% and now every single day is a struggle despite being on max dose vyvanse PLUS low Wellbutrin (actually just dropped Wellbutrin cuz it gave me daily migraines).
    Even though vyvanse makes me feel the most like myself, I’ve accepted I’ll have to switch to adderall next visit, cuz vyvanse just isn’t cutting it whatsoever.
    Honestly I’ve considered volunteering for medical studies on adhd, the meds, etc, cuz I am basically the perfect test subject having mutant adhd and been on the meds nonstop since childhood.
    And yes, insurance companies are the fucking BANE of my existence

  • @iammyself7885
    @iammyself7885 Před 7 měsíci +18

    The "sloyd" is what we call slöjd in swedish, it's woodworking/ textile sewing etc. We could try out both but eventually chose to do one or the other

  • @iamalittler
    @iamalittler Před 7 měsíci +6

    Jarvis a cannibal CONFIRMED
    "I just to eat, I think, a lot of people."

  • @zadkielseraph7752
    @zadkielseraph7752 Před 7 měsíci +7

    DAMN Jarvis what relatable content! I feel for him fr though the anger and self-loathing that comes with not having the energy to see your friends or keep up appearances or 'be who you're supposed to be' or w/e is almost worse than the lack of energy to begin with. Feels like it starts a vicious cycle that's hard to get out of

  • @mapleisntsyrup
    @mapleisntsyrup Před 7 měsíci +9

    love hearing people talk about the confusing drug names, being epileptic means ive gone through the brand name -> generic several times and the names get confusing for a while

    • @mikusheadphones
      @mikusheadphones Před 6 měsíci +2

      The "generic" name is the actual name and I take multiple biologics for migraines and the names are INSANE

  • @starboardia
    @starboardia Před 7 měsíci +4

    as soon as you clicked on david I said “that man’s autistic”. and then y’all went that man likes trains and I knew we were on the same page.

  • @sarahwinters6052
    @sarahwinters6052 Před 7 měsíci +3

    this crossover!!!!!!! exactly what i needed today fr

  • @katebradley9306
    @katebradley9306 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Im very glad for this podcast! im currently switching around my adhd meds aswell; I was on concerta from age 8 and recently I've gone on my own journey to find what works best

  • @honey_tteok
    @honey_tteok Před 7 měsíci +1

    another 2 hour ep!! yes please 🙏

  • @aresxna
    @aresxna Před 7 měsíci +7

    16:07 this tip works wonders for my daughters class, they get to take turns and it’s so awesome for both having that agency as well as learning to work with peers

  • @jace6823
    @jace6823 Před 6 měsíci

    so glad these are hitting the 2 hour mark makes the work shift a little easier love you guys

  • @Djampuu
    @Djampuu Před 7 měsíci +8

    I abosolutely love David, he looks like a teacher who makes fun presentations because his class subject is kind of boring, a well intetioned guy who makes mistakes but tries his best

  • @asheronthehoise4813
    @asheronthehoise4813 Před 7 měsíci +10

    brand new sad boys with the post-pubescent danny gonzalez :)

  • @corduroy799
    @corduroy799 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Oh thank God,, I was waiting for another episode. I'm tired of living my life without Sad Boyz

  • @Isa.Imagination
    @Isa.Imagination Před 7 měsíci +1

    Wasn't expecting to be so early, but watching a Sad Boyz video posted an hour ago is an unexpected pleasure lmao

  • @jusi1993
    @jusi1993 Před 5 měsíci

    THANK YOU for talking about your adhd meds, it has been one of the things I have struggled THE MOST with over the past 8-10 years since I got diagnosed in my early 20s

  • @oriole3702
    @oriole3702 Před 7 měsíci +1

    yayyyyyy!!!!!!!!!!! Also these captions are really nice idk what it is but i love them!

  • @LePompiste
    @LePompiste Před 7 měsíci +4

    Ooh, this Sad Boyz resonated extra-zestily with me! From Sonic the Hedgehog 2 as a formative gaming experience-though, bizarrely, mine was on the Game Gear right after the system was discontinued-to a desperation to bond with teachers because I so very much wanted a mentor in an academic capacity, I felt this episode intensely. What really pushed it over, though, was Jordan's discussion of his experiences with lamotrigine; I took that for several years during a particularly tumultuous period of my mid-twenties (34 now) and, while the eventual physician-suggested taper off was discombobulating, I recall it providing an access to executive function and relative mental equilibrium that I miss today. Once I sort out my general whatnots (in an unemployment rut, so healthcare's a bit out of reach), I'm going to investigate it as an option again, for I know I deserve to operate as my best self; I just wanted to thank all of you for being ABSOLUTELY HECKIN' RAD HUMANS and vicariously reassuring me that I'm valid in pursuing this avenue!

  • @mayhemilyy
    @mayhemilyy Před 7 měsíci +1

    lets go jordan, lamictal ftw! love this episode, it's so warming to see my own experiences reflected in the creators i enjoy :]

  • @cerysxox
    @cerysxox Před 7 měsíci

    got diagnosed with adhd literally last week (as 19f, living in ireland) and will be getting meds asap - similar to if not the same as concerta - so it was really lovely to hear you guys talking about it, and it makes me feel less alone in this process ❤

  • @maylagesse
    @maylagesse Před 6 měsíci +1

    Lovee the discussion of trying to find mental health meds, because it was discouraging for a long time.
    Starting/tweaking my lamictal dose has been LIFECHANGING. I wish it was more normal to be so open about these experiences. ♥️

  • @starman12122
    @starman12122 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Hay Jordan glad to see your doing good

  • @evie1919
    @evie1919 Před 7 měsíci +6

    I have ADHD, and I was very recently diagnosed/medicated as an adult in college. I did shockingly well in school- on paper- to the point where I was put into honor roll every semester and scored like 92nd SAT percentile or something, but I never took a single AP class because even a singular freshman honors english class completely overwhelmed me (honors was slightly below AP in my school, for context). I was just bottling obscene amounts of constant terror, discomfort, mood swings, impulsive/obsessive shit, physical symptoms (like from digestive shit to migraines to a skin-picking disorder) and more. It just felt like being awake was rapidly draining me and sustaining a human body, alongside thinking or doing anything at all, was either so torturously unsatisfying and exhausting that it wasn't worth it, or, if it actually caught my interest, it turned into torture because I'd latch onto that thing so hard that I'd straight up not go to the bathroom or drink water for a day.
    Now that I know why I felt like that, though, I could sit down and consume hours of content from/about other people who have ADHD, especially when its more of a casual, individual-based conversation more than like impersonal documentary-style type stuff. I just want to talk on and on about having ADHD with everyone, but I feel like that bothers or bores people. Listening to other people who feel the EXACT SAME WAY about so much stuff I've barely had anyone relate to before, but also hearing their really interesting variances from my experience, is just so fulfilling and genuinely fills that weird ADHD brain-bucket of satisfaction that usually seems to have a massive leak in the bottom, if that makes sense. Also I never believed I could become a teacher until I met a teacher with ADHD who experienced a lot of similar stuff, and then I was like ohhh so normal human jobs and pursuits aren't just automatically out of the question for me? Sick!
    Basically, in short, this topic and this specific podcast was very yas and slay so thanks for that lmao

  • @prez6274
    @prez6274 Před 7 měsíci

    Many Kudos Goated, so is the podcast he's dose, its underrated af

  • @FirstNameBunchANumbers
    @FirstNameBunchANumbers Před 7 měsíci +4

    Jordan, 100% same on a high ish dose of lamotrigine and one other mental health med. I'm incapacitated a lot of the time if I miss just one or two days. I feel dizzy when I turn my head and get what people call "brain zaps" that feel like an uncomfortable dizzying jolt of electricity in my head. Not painful but distracting when I drive when I'm having withdrawal symptoms. Still absolutely changed my life significantly for the better ❤️

  • @danajoe3489
    @danajoe3489 Před 3 měsíci

    this is so wholesome - literally teared up 🥹 ❤

  • @Shrekslover777
    @Shrekslover777 Před 7 měsíci +6

    hearing ted talk about elementary school was so cool, bc it was exactly the way my elementary school worked here in Denmark. we also have sloyd, (spelled sløjt) and is just woodworking. so fun

    • @peterevans6480
      @peterevans6480 Před 7 měsíci +2

      in sweden slöjd is both woodworking and sewing, it used to be that boys went to woodworking and girls did sowing but now we all just do both and its really fun if not stressful sometimes 😅

    • @LFSDK
      @LFSDK Před 6 měsíci

      it's also sløjd in Danish. the word is loaned from Swedish even

  • @profileuser5845
    @profileuser5845 Před 6 měsíci +3

    always love it when jordan talks about bipolar experience it is nice to hear about in a casual but serious conversation that sad boyz fosters. lamotrigine ladies, lads, and lovelies unite :)

  • @Fannywikstrom95
    @Fannywikstrom95 Před 6 měsíci +3

    as a swede, everybody has slöjd (or sloyd) from when you’re about 9-15 years old in school. you can typically choose between woodworking or sowing, and you just get taught and try to make your own projects. we also call our teachers by their first name here! very interesting to hear ted talk about that.

  • @acey.mp3
    @acey.mp3 Před 3 měsíci +1

    as someone with bpd, my lamotrigine literally saved my life and it feels so nice hearing other people having the same experience

  • @guitarhero1346
    @guitarhero1346 Před 4 měsíci

    I really appreciate the talk about psychiatric medications and the difficulties therein. I've been on antidepressants for 9 years or so now and I love seeing it more normalized and talked about. Thank you boys

  • @emmistjernfelt
    @emmistjernfelt Před 7 měsíci +3

    I only see one comment about this so lemme leave one too; sloyd seems to be an anglicised version of the word "slöjd" (as someone else mentioned). In Sweden our kids have this as a compulsory subject in school until you start high school the year you turn 16. At what age you start depends on the school, some start at age seven, some not until age nine! There are two kinds of slöjd - syslöjd (sewing, yarn work like knitting, embroidery, etc.) and träslöjd (woodworking and metalwork). So every Swedish, Danish, Finnish, and Norwegian who's gone through the whole school system have a basic understanding of crafting with these materials. Some middle schools let the students choose which one they want to do for each school year, so per example I did three years of only sewing class. Sloyd as an English word also means a pedagogical theory though, but clearly based on the Nordic countries approach to the subjects and their involvement in growing a kids confidence. Slöjd means handiwork or crafts and there's skolslöjd (school sloyd) and hemslöjd (home sloyd) which is basically making stuff at home, but generally with a solid footing in traditional crafts from our area of the world!

  • @marissawilliams656
    @marissawilliams656 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Pharmacy technician and current med student here! Concerta is actually a really common medication (a least my area of the country), especially since the adderall storage. Drs really like this medication due to how much they can customize the dosage and it can be used in children all the way to elder!

  • @idk4129
    @idk4129 Před 6 měsíci

    very topical episode as i sit here waiting for my LA walgreens to get concerta back in stock (i always have to call around, the shortage is real for concerta too!)

  • @rio425ee
    @rio425ee Před 7 měsíci +8

    Hearing ADHD boys talk about the joys of ordering food is so funny bc none of them know it's a symptom.

    • @bitchfuel666
      @bitchfuel666 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ok im sorry but what do you mean ORDERING FOOD is a SYMPTOM OF ADHD??

    • @rio425ee
      @rio425ee Před 6 měsíci +1

      Not the action itself their relationship to it. It's the way it's done it's the way it makes you feel, it's a common shared experience for ADHD havers

    • @bitchfuel666
      @bitchfuel666 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@rio425ee sure but as someone who also has adhd i think it's really important to differentiate between "relatable experience" and "symptom of adhd" bc those are two very different things

    • @rio425ee
      @rio425ee Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@bitchfuel666 when it's rooted in the ADHD brains chemical dependency on easy to achieve dopamine rushes via food and online shopping that's what it is. It's literally an expression of an ADHD symptom. Not just a relatable experience, a relatable experience *caused* by a symptom.

  • @einfisch3891
    @einfisch3891 Před 7 měsíci +5

    Honestly when y'all were talking about gaming and working on the same PC, I totally felt that. To the point where when I was considering upgrading my PC, I budgeted money to also buy a new decent-ish laptop specifically to work on so I didn't cross contaminate my cool new computer with work shit.

  • @beefy74
    @beefy74 Před 7 měsíci +1

    there’s so many moments in my childhood that i forgot that really explain a lot. like i remember needing my teacher to give me an incentive to just do a single homework assignment (he would let me be student of the month). once i sat in one place and read an entire captain underpants book in one sitting. i used to go to a math help group bc i have always had trouble with math. after i hit middle school, i just didn’t get much support. i spent a lot of my school life moving to different places which definitely impacted my learning and my ability to make friends. i don’t even know if i was evaluated for anything, maybe i was i just forgot it happened.

  • @yeastnecklace
    @yeastnecklace Před 7 měsíci +1

    ANOTHER EPISODE OVER AN HOUR YOU GUYS ARE SPOILING US!!!

  • @AAA_NNN_DDD
    @AAA_NNN_DDD Před 7 měsíci +2

    the quiet "tread lightly" when talking about nick was deeply amusing

  • @bmatos5785
    @bmatos5785 Před 6 měsíci +2

    The discussion about adhd immediately turning into a discussion about mozzarella sticks is so real

  • @alisonjane7102
    @alisonjane7102 Před 6 měsíci +2

    As a future teacher, it was really nice to hear your positive experiences of teachers accommodating to your needs. I'm hoping that as someone who is also autistic and possibly has ADHD, I can make a similar difference in the lives of my students

  • @ToasterStronkle
    @ToasterStronkle Před 7 měsíci +1

    As a podcast enjoyer I really enjoyed this podcast.

  • @eistla
    @eistla Před 7 měsíci

    lamotrigine is my mood stabilizer and i take it at a high dosage like jordan too and i feel SO understood lmao. i'm very serious about taking all my medication regularly, but if i happen to miss one because of pharmacy issues with refills, that single missed dose can knock me into a depression where i can't do anything for days. other than that, like jordan said, it totally changed my life. i never hear ANYONE talk about taking mood stabilizers so it meant a lot especially since it's something i still feel ashamed of sometimes. thank you jordan!! 💜

  • @baileygoff1143
    @baileygoff1143 Před 6 měsíci

    Talking about Lamictal made me feel so seen! It’s the best for me and I agree with everything Jordan said.

  • @hannaraschiversen3102
    @hannaraschiversen3102 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Danish girl here :))) so crazy hearing an American person refer to sløjd, I had wiped that from my memory

  • @Drexcalibur
    @Drexcalibur Před 7 měsíci +4

    As someone who was diagnosed with ADHD at 10 years old, when Ted talked about his mom saying "did you take your meds" holy shit that hit home. It would always be right after she said something obviously wrong or is losing an argument to where i'm getting annoyed, she would hit me with that phrase.

  • @sarahwinters6052
    @sarahwinters6052 Před 7 měsíci +1

    it’s fun listening to y’all talk about video games bc you’re all a few years older than me but the same age as my siblings, so i still have memories of watching my siblings play games and get their gaming consoles

    • @sarahwinters6052
      @sarahwinters6052 Před 7 měsíci

      i also had a vendetta against minecraft bc that’s what all my guy friends would do when it came out and so hanging out with them just meant watching minecraft

  • @Dazelo_
    @Dazelo_ Před 7 měsíci +1

    I was in gifted in middle/high school and it was very helpful. I needed more challenge and that was the best way for me to get it

  • @user-qt5dl9ts4d
    @user-qt5dl9ts4d Před 7 měsíci

    Man idk whats up with the mic but its really picking up all of the CRUNCH in teds voice, its soothing

  • @alexbell3791
    @alexbell3791 Před měsícem

    Y’all are going through all these old games consoles and dragging me back through my nostalgia.
    Super Mario 3 was my first game, I loved those old N64 games and I just would not beat them but instead replay certain things (Majora’s Mask was soooo easy to do this in).

  • @CommonLoganist
    @CommonLoganist Před 7 měsíci +3

    Save-a-lot part hit way to close to home (still love a good banquet meal)

  • @littelcreatchure506
    @littelcreatchure506 Před 7 měsíci +3

    56:11 Once in middle school i drank a rockstar or something with my daily adderall and by lunch time i literally thought i was going to die

  • @Bulletproof-Rose
    @Bulletproof-Rose Před 7 měsíci +1

    I have a c-section scar too right above my eye! My mom called it a stork bite and I always thought it was super cool 😊

  • @Vernon_oddities
    @Vernon_oddities Před 9 dny

    As a person who takes Concerta, it’s incredibly refreshing to hear these three to talk about the struggles of getting medication, and the rocky road of just getting it refilled every month. I feel less alone lol. I remember one time I had ran out of my medication, and I called it in to get a refill through my psychiatrist. And my pharmacy would say they were on it, but never filled it. They never called me, never told me it was out of stock. I had to call 2 times and they’d get angry at me and say they were on it. But in reality they weren’t telling me it was out of stock. I was out of my medication for almost a month. ADHD medication is the worst trying to get refilled 🙄🙄
    I also hate the fact I can’t drink caffeinated drinks anymore, not because they give me energy but I liked the flavor of things like coffee or redbull. But I remember trying to drink redbull and it was the literal worst, it’s like my heart was beating 110mph while laying down. It’s awful I don’t recommend lol.

  • @ElinOskarsson
    @ElinOskarsson Před 7 měsíci +4

    the Swedish slöjd thing is interesting. In Sweden we also call our teachers by their first names. so i guess it was just a pretty Swedish school :P

  • @tree8210
    @tree8210 Před 2 měsíci

    it's nice to hear y'all talking about adhd, especially hearing jarvis talk about being diagnosed post-school age. i got my diagnosis around 17 (like 2 ish years ago), and one of the first things my psychiatrist said to me when i told him i was gonna go get evaluated by a psychologist was "but you did really well in school as a kid!" which is wild and insane considering the fact that (although i was considered a "gifted" child when i was in elementary school) my backpack was filled with crumpled up homework assignments / handouts that i never filled out or put in my notebook and i was doing so terribly in school that i basically stopped going in like 7th grade

  • @trashcanbanker
    @trashcanbanker Před 7 měsíci +3

    "Let there be light" will always be funny.

  • @megamuffin92
    @megamuffin92 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Those horizontal computers were normally used in offices. My mom always got old computers from work, and I remember running CS 1.6 at like 20 fps on one of those things!

  • @joshuwu8218
    @joshuwu8218 Před 6 měsíci +1

    the SLOYD part, in Denmark, its spelled "sløjd" (pronounced like sloyd basically) but yea, its a woodworking/hand on how to make stuff thing, kinda like art or when you have cooking classes in school

  • @corrosivesprings9526
    @corrosivesprings9526 Před 6 měsíci

    How did this come out 2 weeks ago without me seeing it

  • @mmilcz833
    @mmilcz833 Před 5 měsíci +1

    This episode made me go on a half-hour long deep dive into the Frutiger family of aesthetics and Microsoft design languages while in the bath. I’m not sure if I should be upset or thankful.

  • @deaconoliphant8096
    @deaconoliphant8096 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Jarvis’s outer-shirt is my favorite thing ever