24. Schizophrenia

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  • čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
  • (May 26, 2010) Professor Robert Sapolsky finishes his lecture on language and then dives into his discussion about schizophrenia. He discusses environmental factors as well as genetic characteristics that could apply to people who are affected. He describes schizophrenia as a disease of thought disorder and inappropriate emotional attributes.
    Stanford University:
    www.stanford.edu/
    Stanford Department of Biology:
    biology.stanford.edu/
    Stanford University Channel on CZcams:
    / stanford

Komentáře • 8K

  • @ramireza6026
    @ramireza6026 Před 3 lety +5798

    We are amazingly lucky to have hour long videos of ACTUAL university lectures. We are learning for free. We should take advantage of this and be very grateful 🙌🏻

    • @isahneto5548
      @isahneto5548 Před 3 lety +31

      true

    • @engrenage
      @engrenage Před 3 lety +166

      you can simply walk into a university and listen to the lectures. not sure how it's done where you live, but around here no-one checks you have a student card. it's still nice to be able to watch this at home years after it happened and at 4 in the morning

    • @engrenage
      @engrenage Před 3 lety +9

      @@mariecmcleodsterk3402 please explain. I don't follow you.

    • @engrenage
      @engrenage Před 3 lety +16

      @@mariecmcleodsterk3402 what's wrong? I would say not much if nothing. what's "wrong" about it is people who consider you like a criminal because you don't think the way they do.

    • @engrenage
      @engrenage Před 3 lety +15

      @@mariecmcleodsterk3402 Don't be angry (I try not to, although I am not as successful as I would like to). In some cultures, "schyzophrenes" (whatever that may be..) are considered as "shamans" ; they are not expected to do the usual/normal work others do : instead they are used as "counselors" and people go to them when there is something they can not understand.
      Nikola Tesla supposedly said sth like "my brain is an antenna, picking up signals from the universe surrounding me ; this is where I get my knowledge from". AFAIK those labeled as "schizophrenic" are sensitive to things most people are not. What you may perceive is _not_ a hallucination, it may be scary as death but you _must_ deal with it. At all costs. Life, the Universe and Everything depends on it.

  • @msbae
    @msbae Před 2 lety +4106

    23:40 is where the lecture on Schizophrenia actually starts. Everything before that is a continuation on the previous lecture concerning languages. The language discussion was interesting, though.

  • @kenkenobi9448
    @kenkenobi9448 Před rokem +74

    my girlfriend has Schizophrenia. she is the kindest most caring loving person I've ever met and I feel blessed everyday that she is in my life. I wouldn't change her for anything.

    • @ronnie1394
      @ronnie1394 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Good luck!

    • @imwhoamike
      @imwhoamike Před 3 měsíci +2

      My girlfriend too, we’re going to start making blogs

  • @noneya1987
    @noneya1987 Před 3 lety +2726

    This is one of those rare teachers that get in the zone and just spits their knowledge in a very digestible fashion.

    • @bobwoww8384
      @bobwoww8384 Před 3 lety +73

      @None Ya Some humans seem to be born with a high quality gift to educate. Distinctive benefit of CZcams we can all be grateful for.

    • @susanmann5286
      @susanmann5286 Před 3 lety +19

      Have you read, "A Primate's Memoir?' That was my introduction!

    • @williamgenis9596
      @williamgenis9596 Před 3 lety +12

      Teaching easy like a Sunday morning in a complex and schizoid world

    • @davidgregory5371
      @davidgregory5371 Před 3 lety +2

      Lljl

    • @williamgenis9596
      @williamgenis9596 Před 3 lety +1

      yep...heheh

  • @dank3251
    @dank3251 Před 3 lety +6570

    Mom, I made it into Stanford!!!!

    • @Android80631
      @Android80631 Před 3 lety +64

      Woot

    • @Joy-zz8wz
      @Joy-zz8wz Před 3 lety +40

      good job :)

    • @itsjeninMass
      @itsjeninMass Před 3 lety +34

      🤣🤣 Yay!

    • @sibelsavas6741
      @sibelsavas6741 Před 3 lety +28

      🤣

    • @brian8507
      @brian8507 Před 3 lety +194

      This is funny.... I tell people I take math classes from world renowned fields medalists.... when really I just watch lectures on youtube.
      I hope humans figure out that universities are just expensive babysitters for children.
      I stopped paying for college when my professors started wearing name tags with their pronouns on them. Like give me a break!

  • @MichaelSS
    @MichaelSS Před rokem +563

    0:00 Announcements
    1:35 Language Lecture wrap-up
    23:38 Schizophrenia Introduction
    25:38 Sub-types
    26:26 Symptoms
    42:35 Facts and Misconceptions
    50:24 Maasai Lady
    59:08 Neurochemistry
    1:11:09 Brain structure
    1:17:08 Genetics
    1:24:36 Early Experience
    1:37:03 Conclusion

  • @fernandoblancodiaz394
    @fernandoblancodiaz394 Před rokem +394

    "Schizophrenics are far less dangerous than are normal individuals in society. The rates of violence are extremely low." This specific feature should be learned by everyone to end one of the most common and unfair stigmas schizophrenics have to deal with on top of their own chaos.
    By the way, one of the most enjoyable and educational explanations of this terrible desease I have ever heard. Kudos to this professor.

    • @MalachiWhite-tw7hl
      @MalachiWhite-tw7hl Před 11 měsíci +14

      The rates of violence may be extremely low, but I don't believe you can claim that they are "FAR less dangerous than are normal individuals in society." Perhaps it was just a figure of speech.

    • @sammoreton333
      @sammoreton333 Před 6 měsíci +11

      @@MalachiWhite-tw7hl Yeah I think this is potentially one of the few things Sapolsky gets wrong...Schizophrenics aren't as dangerous as the general public thinks they are, but they are more dangerous than the average person in specific ways.

    • @MalachiWhite-tw7hl
      @MalachiWhite-tw7hl Před 6 měsíci

      @@sammoreton333 Exactly.

    • @josephbelisle5792
      @josephbelisle5792 Před 6 měsíci

      As with most people with mental illness. We are much more likely to hurt ourselves than others.

    • @unhurter
      @unhurter Před 6 měsíci +7

      @@sammoreton333 why are you so determined to demonize schizophrenics?

  • @whereisCarmenSandiego
    @whereisCarmenSandiego Před rokem +1001

    My mother is schizophrenic. You wouldn’t believe how many times my mother has been ostracized from family gatherings because someone in our extended family watched a movie that portrayed a schizophrenic individual as a demon possessed monster who would kill at any given time. Which is just so incredibly frustrating. They see a movie or show that portrays the schizophrenic as a loose cannon that could fly into a homicidal rage, and they suddenly remember “omg my aunt is schizophrenic, that’s what she’s going to do one day!”. It’s just wrong. My mother is very lucky because she has been on her medication for years without any episodes of chaos or mental trauma that were considered “bad”. She sometimes has trouble with listening to the radio or watching certain shows or movies, so she lives with me and we do a lot of gardening together and things that keep her busy and bring her happiness. My mother is a physically gorgeous woman with a beautiful heart, and she is my best friend. I try everyday to make sure she feels loved and happy, because she deserves it. Sadly, there are many people with schizophrenia who don’t have friends or family and that is heartbreaking.

    • @toofypeg7931
      @toofypeg7931 Před rokem +10

      AMEN 🙏🏻

    • @frozenbanana4842
      @frozenbanana4842 Před rokem +29

      They can be dangerous if they don't take thier meds

    • @yeayea9493
      @yeayea9493 Před rokem +2

      Magic mushrooms

    • @yeayea9493
      @yeayea9493 Před rokem +6

      By the way u are great person one day I know I will marry a person of ur value

    • @77777sadie
      @77777sadie Před rokem +1

      Everyone with an mental illness should have someone in their lives like you.

  • @alexhatz3389
    @alexhatz3389 Před 10 lety +3825

    A big THANK YOU to the professor for allowing his lectures to be uploaded.

    • @Aritul
      @Aritul Před 5 lety +50

      Yes! I have learnt so much from them.

    • @followingtheredbrickroad7508
      @followingtheredbrickroad7508 Před 4 lety +58

      I just love listening to him while learning. I was one that loved listening to what my teachers said. If i could have a profession of just attending school, id be so happy.

    • @jennyedwards4873
      @jennyedwards4873 Před 4 lety +1

      Yes, you are very brave....

    • @artandculture5262
      @artandculture5262 Před 4 lety +9

      Alex Hatz Also thank you to Stanford!

    • @MikeTheCriticalGamer
      @MikeTheCriticalGamer Před 4 lety +10

      Thanks Robert Sapolsky.

  • @mikeknowles8017
    @mikeknowles8017 Před 2 lety +754

    My little brother killed himself 40 years ago after suffering from and being diagnosed with schizophrenia. After 40 years of reading everything I could get my hands on to try and understand it and get past the misconceptions, this is the most coherent explanation I've ever heard and is spot on in my experience.

    • @deborahbarry8458
      @deborahbarry8458 Před 2 lety +59

      I’m sorry for your loss

    • @seven7upndown241
      @seven7upndown241 Před 2 lety +4

      The toughts and the shadows scitzophrenians see are demons. Its sound crasy but i experienced and seen these things in real life also in dreams coz i have them many. I had severe depression and paralasys also sleep paralasys that got of me in seconds by listening reading gospel scripture. I guarantee you that Jesus Christ can fix ur problem with prayer, fasting and devotion. It is written how Jesus casted out demons i tried it and it works coz i had ADHD too and i dont have it anymore. It is also incurable like scitz it works by spirits of fear and lies you cast them out in the name of Jesus Christ and you free of stupid and uncontrolable toughts. There is nothing that is beyond Christ and he is who he says he is. The Messiah.

    • @tasoskarasaxinidis5059
      @tasoskarasaxinidis5059 Před 2 lety +7

      @@seven7upndown241 if ,by any means, ADHD comes back and you have to be productive, you should know that ridalin helps. just in case...

    • @seven7upndown241
      @seven7upndown241 Před 2 lety +14

      @@tasoskarasaxinidis5059 if it comes back I'll chase the demon out again in the name of Jesus Christ.

    • @tekajohnson3514
      @tekajohnson3514 Před 2 lety +9

      @@seven7upndown241 amen. This is so true I'm a witness. Who the Lord sets free is free indeed

  • @TemjaSverd
    @TemjaSverd Před 6 měsíci +82

    I had a family friend with schizophrenia take his life a while ago. He was one of the most soft spoken intelligent person I’ve ever met and he changed my entire perspective on people with this condition. It makes me upset when people make fun of people who go through this. Rest in peace Kyle.

    • @billysunday7507
      @billysunday7507 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Any photos of his body?

    • @matth227
      @matth227 Před 6 měsíci +11

      @@billysunday7507bro wtf

    • @pewdiepeietank8908
      @pewdiepeietank8908 Před 5 měsíci +5

      i was not expecting that comment opening the replies

    • @PedroPinto-nj6vi
      @PedroPinto-nj6vi Před 5 měsíci

      @@billysunday7507delete this

    • @jacksonfev
      @jacksonfev Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@billysunday7507 WIll be sure to take pictures of yours.

  • @lounaticlouie
    @lounaticlouie Před rokem +104

    I'm an electrician and I love watching this man's lectures.

  • @fredmercury1314
    @fredmercury1314 Před 3 lety +1485

    "Language is how we outsmart plants."
    Ouch. I felt that right in my tomatoes.

    • @blahboidblah
      @blahboidblah Před 3 lety +50

      Ha! We’re on the brink of extinction. Plants will be here long after we’re gone. Who’s the smart one?

    • @misscindy58
      @misscindy58 Před 3 lety +5

      Lololol😄😂🤣😅

    • @misscindy58
      @misscindy58 Před 3 lety +8

      😄😂🤣😅 about the tomatoes comment.

    • @fredmercury1314
      @fredmercury1314 Před 3 lety +4

      @@blahboidblah Me.

    • @richidpraah
      @richidpraah Před 2 lety +4

      I read this comment at the exact time Sapolsky said it :D

  • @lisa.66
    @lisa.66 Před 3 lety +912

    Nobody ever tells you how much better your teachers will be if you can get into a prestigious school. I feel like it would have motivated me to get better grades in high school.

    • @engrenage
      @engrenage Před 3 lety +81

      There are some good ones out there. I found excellent teachers in random places and at random places in my life. Random (or entropy) IS life.

    • @perfectperson214
      @perfectperson214 Před 3 lety +17

      @@engrenage it really is, all of biology pretty much boils down to thermodynamics.

    • @lisa.66
      @lisa.66 Před 3 lety +97

      @@engrenage I know what you're saying; there are occasionally good teachers in unusual places. But what I'm talking about is how all teachers and parents talk about is how good of a job you'll get with a prestigious degree, but what they don't understand is how teenagers (at least myself and the ones I was around) don't think that far ahead. What they don't tell you is what a gorgeous campus you'll get to live on, how you won't have to be around annoying immature 17 year olds that only care about getting drunk and partying, how the proffesors actually care about what they're teaching; just generally how you'll be in an environment that is passionate about learning and growth and your future. It makes me a feel a little bitter that I never learned about what could be if I just suffered a little bit in high school by studying hard and doing extra curriculars.

    • @user-lk1qx7gb5o
      @user-lk1qx7gb5o Před 2 lety +56

      This guy is the exception to the rule. Don't generalize, money doesn't necessarily buy you a better education.

    • @rns2850
      @rns2850 Před 2 lety +31

      @@user-lk1qx7gb5o agreed. For every one of these guys, there are 10 professors who can't teach

  • @SilverFlame819
    @SilverFlame819 Před 2 lety +31

    "A disease of no hidden blessings whatsoever." As someone who has a schizoaffective person who is dear to me, that line hurt. :`(

    • @tucuteISU
      @tucuteISU Před 2 lety +7

      I’m with you on that. A nail in the proverbial coffin for those of us living day to day with the disease. I HAVE schizophrenia and am NOT schizophrenic. It doesn’t define me even though it has been, unfortunately, part of me for twenty years….I have my Masters but still struggle with relationships. This professor is precise in most of his lecture. 🙌

    • @louisehogg8472
      @louisehogg8472 Před rokem +1

      I've only known one person with schizoaffective so far and several with schizophrenia.
      In my subjective observations, schizoaffective presents more like bipolar, with the pros and cons of that. The trick with schizoaffective seems to be in balancing the necessary meds. Mood stabilizer, antipsychotic, and ideally antidepressant. Sometimes an anticonvulsant needed to treat side effects too.
      Those I know with schizophrenia however, I see no up side to their illness. But, due to modern meds with less poisoning or zombifying effect, they have a reasonable quality of life.

  • @taylormade3746
    @taylormade3746 Před rokem +123

    I woke up to this lecture beginning to play on my phone. I made a tea and listened to the whole thing. I was mesmerized. I was taught so much in such a short time. Excellent teaching.

  • @user-gf9zx4sl6d
    @user-gf9zx4sl6d Před 4 lety +1864

    The professor just has that voice. That voice that actually makes you listen.

    • @Medietos
      @Medietos Před 4 lety +8

      Emperor: To me, it takes true, good useful content to keep me listening fully. He thinks we are animals, and he gives no explanation and treatment and cure of Schz. Dr Lawrence Wilson is better. He has solution! And can explain more.
      Nutritional Balancing Science.

    • @emmettochrach-konradi2785
      @emmettochrach-konradi2785 Před 4 lety +37

      Claudia Bothner
      1. We are animals, just advanced ones
      2. He talks about various techniques used to treat it

    • @katherinebriceno6192
      @katherinebriceno6192 Před 4 lety +4

      Still this guy is amazing. So full of curiosity as the biology itself.

    • @vinayseth1114
      @vinayseth1114 Před 3 lety +7

      @Deb Mercer It's only in the Abrahamic faiths that humans are viewed as non-animals. All other worldviews are more advanced than that.

    • @vinayseth1114
      @vinayseth1114 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Medietos He provides a very good overview on his subjects. And that understanding is necessary to get to good, holistic solutions. Only in heavily action-oriented societies like the US is a quick solution given more importance than first trying to understand the issue at hand. Also, the Nazis had a 'solution' too by the way-look where it got them.

  • @thenit3vision
    @thenit3vision Před 2 lety +964

    You can tell this professor not only love the subject he teaches, he does researches and actively go out of his way to learn more. They say in order to have a very clear understanding of what you are talking about, you gotta read 10 times amount of related information. I can’t imagine the shear amount of hours he devoted into reading. I feel like he is one of very rare individuals who loves studying but also gifted at teaching.

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Před 2 lety +3

      Lies again? Samsung Ericsson

    • @yankee2yankee216
      @yankee2yankee216 Před 2 lety +24

      Sapolsky is a very smart guy, an academic and an intellectual. What he does does, in all likelihood, come naturally to him. Yes, he works hard, and yes, he is very good at what he does. We are lucky to have him, and a few thousands similar to him, in the world to show us the way...

    • @danielking7151
      @danielking7151 Před 2 lety +1

      @@yankee2yankee216 yes

    • @hthumbs4072
      @hthumbs4072 Před rokem +20

      Sapolsky is amazing! Also though all professors, at least at R1 and almost all R2 Universities, are researchers. Most people that go on to be profs do so specifically because they want to perform research and never stop studying in their fields. Then they also teach! That's why sometimes you dont always get great profs in college-- some are only there to really do research and begrudgingly teach courses because they have to. That said, when you find a prof like Sapolsky, who clearly is a great teacher AND an incredible researcher, you know you've hit the jackpot! Lol

    • @mikerohde7959
      @mikerohde7959 Před rokem +7

      Well, u kinda have to do research and read a lit of book to become a professor. This is not done overnight.

  • @dr_rein
    @dr_rein Před 7 měsíci +20

    I wish this man was my teacher for everything - I’m a sound engineering major and I just watched the whole thing bc of how interesting and good this man lectures.

  • @josephcochran5865
    @josephcochran5865 Před 2 lety +87

    I work for a homeless shelter that deals with mental illness, alcoholics & addictions. I needed to hear this lecture & I think everyone who is employed in this field should hear this also! Thank you for showing all your hard work Doc!

    • @ann-reneeleblanc6654
      @ann-reneeleblanc6654 Před rokem +5

      I work for a homeless shelter as well. I completely agree

    • @josephbelisle5792
      @josephbelisle5792 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Understand addictions stem from mental illness. Not the other way around. They are adaptations. Unhealthy ones, but adaptations created for survival.

    • @leannabedore
      @leannabedore Před 6 měsíci

      Thank you for everything you do! My aunt has schizophrenia and she is very stubborn. Not saying this is because of the disease, it could be her characteristic but by being this way she is argumentive (not in a mean way) she refuses she has the disease and is not willing to take medication. My grandma put meds in her drinks 25yrs ago and she got better for a while until she found out. It was the ultimate betrayal to her. Since then she has been homeless, by choice, a nomad kind of, all over the US. She came back home and has lived at a shelter for 7 years. They love her there, I love my aunt she is so fun to be around, but man this doctor is so accurate it makes it so much more concrete. 😢

  • @kaminarikatuhstrofik9534
    @kaminarikatuhstrofik9534 Před 3 lety +2016

    I suffer from schizophrenia. Thanks for educating others and providing the information publicly. By definition I suppose we are "crazy", but a lot of us function and cope in daily lives and make it work without being a danger to ourselves or others around us, which isn't something you commonly hear when it comes to the discussion of something like schizophrenia. Seeing this lecture was quite nice. Thanks!

    • @pn2543
      @pn2543 Před 3 lety +35

      yes, it is not all negative, there are some adaptive aspects, there is a book 'Madness and Modernism' about this

    • @bbyponk
      @bbyponk Před 3 lety +5

      your brain doesnt fucking work

    • @NicholasWiewiora
      @NicholasWiewiora Před 3 lety +131

      @@bbyponk Ooh, edgy.

    • @carminefan110
      @carminefan110 Před 2 lety +54

      @@bbyponk LOL you play dark souls 2, get fucked

    • @Fefe559
      @Fefe559 Před 2 lety +29

      Thats wonderful u r doing good :)) how are managing? Do u have a support system? Medical help? I am happy to hear you are ok

  • @GeahkBurchill
    @GeahkBurchill Před 8 lety +3303

    This is so great! This is literally the best thing about CZcams. I could never afford to be a student at Stanford but some of the lectures of one of Stanfords brightest and most interesting thinkers is right here for anyone to come across.

    • @zes3813
      @zes3813 Před 8 lety +10

      wrr

    • @yessy804
      @yessy804 Před 7 lety +21

      Geahk Burchill totally agree there.

    • @dimitrasantetsidou4037
      @dimitrasantetsidou4037 Před 6 lety +9

      Geahk Burchill θοοπ´´´πποιυττρρρρενβωψψζχχχχχχζζζζζζ
      ζΖζζζζζζζζζζζζζζζχζδδηπλξξγδσερξλκζφκληλλωφλκγδηξκγλ´´´´´´´´´´´´´´

    • @dimitrasantetsidou4037
      @dimitrasantetsidou4037 Před 6 lety +3

      ´λ´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´´λλλ´´´´´´´´´´´´´´

    • @LetMeDieLord
      @LetMeDieLord Před 5 lety +22

      That is the EXACT comment i was just going to make, after watching the video!! Absolutely priceless!!

  • @gastonvarela7425
    @gastonvarela7425 Před rokem +69

    not even studying psychiatry but I just ate the whole 1.5 hours video because this prof is amazing

  • @mikkisinstv7257
    @mikkisinstv7257 Před 2 lety +21

    i have schizophrenia and this was an incredible video to watch, ty for all the knowlege. So much from experience is true, but some things with medication is variented. I knew alot of the information like the Psychotic Vs Parkinsons stuff but theres so much information in here i really recommend anyone with Schiz to pay close attention. For training psychologists please watch the full video as the stigma with mental health has been growing over the past decade and many in the US, EU and especially the UK have been neglecting patients, even while i have been in the ER, listening to staff laughing at patients for their behaviour (when they are crying, having panick attacks, including my own during a suicidal state), take mental health seriously, vulnerable people deserve to be cared for, we do all the work ourselves but when things get bad we turn to doctors for help and support so we dont hurt others or ourselves, when you neglect/ignore/dismiss someones mental health from a medical position, the blood is on your hands.
    I say that because i want to be a psychologist, to help people, and not see patients be treated and diagnosed so wrecklessly then ignored for years, decades and no one take responsibility when something horrible happens.
    *Making a mistake is part of experience, but just ignoring a situation because you dont really care or can't be bothered, or have a huge ego, or no real intuition for the field, has serious conciquences, treat these people as you would a friend or family member, because generally we are alone facing these issues.
    Also there are blessings to schizophrenia(despite what he said), but the downsides far outway them because the suffering involved is beyond what most people can comprihend.

    • @ryanrandolph7734
      @ryanrandolph7734 Před 6 měsíci

      I see no blessings to schizophrenia. I guess it humbles you if you see that as a blessing. I also don't think the suffering involved is beyond what most can comprehend. It does suck, however.

  • @blackphoenix8932
    @blackphoenix8932 Před 3 lety +532

    This chap is one of the most charismatic & engaging speakers I've ever heard.

  • @jeanhartely
    @jeanhartely Před 2 lety +192

    My husband was a diagnosed schizophrenic. He had no problem with metaphor at all. Or, I should say, he did not take metaphors like "A rolling stone gathers no moss" literally. What he would do was take a literal comment, like "I had to shovel the snow off my car" and turn it into a critique on modern culture. We all do that to a certain extent, but he was a master of making a mountain out of a molehill. I said once, "Teddy, you make mountains out of molehills," and he gave me a critique about that! He was a brilliant, kind, handsome man. He died in 2003, and I think of him every day. At no time did he do any of the violent things being discussed here. He was a wonderful, humorous man.

    • @elmonstro7852
      @elmonstro7852 Před 7 měsíci +18

      I am sorry for your loss and I respect that you still talk about him and love him, 20 years later. Shows how much you really cared about him. You are a good woman!! Rest in peace to your wonderful husband.

    • @jeanhartely
      @jeanhartely Před 7 měsíci +23

      @@elmonstro7852 Thank you so much. It's not that I am so good, but I do recognize how good Teddy was and what a mountain of obstacles he had to overcome, just to do something like go to the store and buy groceries. It's not that he wasn't able, it's that he was so unsure of himself that he didn't know if he would do the right thing. He was a lovely man. If I didn't remember him, I would be doing myself a disservice. He was something wonderful to remember.

    • @limitisillusion7
      @limitisillusion7 Před 5 měsíci +7

      I had an episode of psychosis, and it was very similar to the ways that people describe schizophrenia. I used to use marijuana for depression, but now if I use it, those thought patterns come back stronger. Luckily i don't feel the need to use it anymore. When I hear people describe schizophrenia, I understand exactly where they're coming from. A metaphor will fly through your head in a split second and you'll be 100% convinced the world is about to end, and then nothing happens. It's a scary place for sure, and I'm pretty sure I'll never use drugs again. But oddly enough, it was mushrooms that led me out of the depression.
      They say "The psychotic drowns in the same waters in which the mystic swims with delight." I feel like I'm the mystic, but to stay there, I have to eat healthy, exercise, and do my best to create unity among the humans. I want to believe that there's a path out of schizophrenia to the mystic. I have to. Curious, what's your husband's diet and exercise regimen like?

    • @AngelinaLopez-cx5fw
      @AngelinaLopez-cx5fw Před 4 měsíci +2

      Wow I was born in 2003..he's watching over you every day

    • @jeanhartely
      @jeanhartely Před 4 měsíci

      @@AngelinaLopez-cx5fw Thank you.

  • @ohheydarciemae1121
    @ohheydarciemae1121 Před 2 lety +21

    "If you make it to age 30 without Schizophrenia, you have virtually no chance of ever having it..."
    I just turned 29 and never realized how important this year would be.

    • @durpledorekapre3991
      @durpledorekapre3991 Před rokem +6

      Im 30 now ive had schizoaffective disorder since age 19. Im doing much better now

    • @talloncusack
      @talloncusack Před 16 dny +1

      Actually the first psychotic episode is on average in ones early thirties. It’s not at all uncommon- Hate to break it to you! Although you technically “have” schizophrenia far far before you’re diagnosed, or even aware of any symptoms (on average). So maybe that’s what they’re saying.

  • @SJ-007
    @SJ-007 Před 2 lety +29

    I would've loved the opportunity to have attended his classes. This is the next best thing. We are so blessed to have these available for free 🖤

  • @LijuJohn
    @LijuJohn Před 2 lety +906

    He speaks confidently without taking a breath, stammering, making grammatical errors or referring notes ...meaning he's a proper authority & hands-on expert in his field. You falter only when the homework is pending.

    • @IIAOPSW
      @IIAOPSW Před 2 lety +10

      That's a terrible heuristic and you're setting yourself up to be conned. A "con" is literally short for "confidence trick", as in someone who says bullshit confidently because they know people mistake confidence for being an authority. The whole point of science is to look at the substance, and take no one as an authority. You're right Spoolansky is an expert, but you're right for all the wrong reasons.

    • @LijuJohn
      @LijuJohn Před 2 lety +10

      @@IIAOPSW I didn't know that in science, there is no authority a month ago. I discovered it in later days after posting this comment. My bad.

    • @IIAOPSW
      @IIAOPSW Před 2 lety +7

      @@LijuJohn let no one say I don't give credit where it's due. Good on you for having already learned.

    • @LijuJohn
      @LijuJohn Před 2 lety +4

      @@IIAOPSW lol so poetic

    • @SCAScienceLab
      @SCAScienceLab Před 2 lety +5

      What an amazing professor! I’m in awe of his flawless lectures.

  • @richardcrighton8079
    @richardcrighton8079 Před 3 lety +460

    i was so depressed to sit there for 23 minutes to listen about the death of ancient languages. the whole schizophrenia bit really cheered me up.

    • @GG-bw3uz
      @GG-bw3uz Před 3 lety +10

      made me chuckle

    • @AltumNovo
      @AltumNovo Před 3 lety +9

      I don't know why people being able to understand each other is depressing

    • @AltumNovo
      @AltumNovo Před 3 lety

      @LiL Speng If you think for yourself you might understand. Use your brain buddy

    • @martmarriner6793
      @martmarriner6793 Před 3 lety +7

      thank god we have the wayback machine.

    • @AltumNovo
      @AltumNovo Před 3 lety

      @LiL Speng nah you're an ignorant little weasel. Watching a video and absorbing the opinions of a psychology lecturer is not using your brain. Nether is telling someone to watch a video instead of addressing their point. You've got a lot to learn it seems.

  • @hannahsnyder8206
    @hannahsnyder8206 Před 4 měsíci +13

    this man’s lectures are my adult version of bedtime stories

  • @pleuriglosse8198
    @pleuriglosse8198 Před 2 lety +16

    such a blessing that this professor lets his lectures be uploaded. really helps me understand my schizophrenic grandmother.

  • @IraWade
    @IraWade Před 2 lety +828

    As the parent of a diagnosed schizophrenic son, with an affection for amphetamines, this is the most insightful video I have ever seen. You just explained to me what my adult son's doctors couldn't.
    Thank you.

    • @Fefe559
      @Fefe559 Před 2 lety +14

      I hope he is doing ok. And u too mom!

    • @IraWade
      @IraWade Před 2 lety +74

      @@Fefe559 thanks. I'm his dad.

    • @IraWade
      @IraWade Před 2 lety +73

      @@entertainmentgaming8738 nothing you said even makes sense. Ira is and always has been a masculine name.

    • @Fefe559
      @Fefe559 Před 2 lety +38

      @@IraWade sorry! Hope u r ok dad

    • @jeewillikers
      @jeewillikers Před 2 lety +56

      @@entertainmentgaming8738 The science might provide you some deeper insight into this, Sapolsky has talked about it before.
      "Remarkably, studies have examined brains of transgender individuals, concentrating on brain regions that, on the average, differ in size between men and women. And consistently, regardless of the desired direction of the sex change and, in fact, regardless of whether the person had undergone a sex change yet, the dimorphic brain regions in transgender individuals resembled the sex of the person they had always felt themselves to be, not their “actual” sex. In other words, it’s not the case that transgender individuals think they’re a different gender than they actually are. It’s more like they got stuck with the bodies of a different sex from who they actually are."

  • @loftyjones675
    @loftyjones675 Před 3 lety +901

    you know it slaps when you come here to take a deep dive into schizophrenia, but twelve minutes in and you're begging him to tell you about the intersection of all global Creole languages

    • @WungoBungo
      @WungoBungo Před 3 lety +17

      !!!! Love this. This is what office hours are for

    • @pooddescrewch8718
      @pooddescrewch8718 Před 3 lety +5

      I live in Louisiana where dialects abound . Franglais being hugely common .

    • @jco2303
      @jco2303 Před 3 lety +2

      lolol same

    • @paulal5353
      @paulal5353 Před 3 lety +2

      ME!! lol

    • @alexh6767
      @alexh6767 Před 3 lety +4

      I'm doing language studies degree and learning about creole languages and linguistics. This is fascinating

  • @mominsetu
    @mominsetu Před 2 lety +102

    I'm totally obsessed with Sir Sapolsky's lectures. Living in this technological era & watching these life-changing lectures in a small country like Bangladesh is amazing!

    • @thcdanes
      @thcdanes Před rokem +5

      Good luck to you my bro. We are all humans connected together now x

    • @thcdanes
      @thcdanes Před rokem +4

      (From Switzerland, but I grew up in the UK)

    • @mominsetu
      @mominsetu Před rokem +3

      Thanks brother for your comment.. we're all connected now!

    • @o0o-jd-o0o95
      @o0o-jd-o0o95 Před rokem +2

      i too like them... i am just a layman but i have watched this video several times and now i understand much more about where they are at with this disease (at least at the time they made this video)

    • @PortraitoftheArtistasanOldDog8
      @PortraitoftheArtistasanOldDog8 Před 7 měsíci +1

      G'day from Australia ☮️😁
      You might also like a dude I'm binging Prof Sam Vaknin....
      "Toxic families"" a good ep
      All the best❤

  • @Kparso01
    @Kparso01 Před 5 měsíci +6

    I have schizoaffective bipolar and honestly I cannot believe anyone would say there were "hidden blessings" about schizophrenia. I agree with most of this.

    • @bearclaus2676
      @bearclaus2676 Před 5 měsíci

      Not when there is so much stigma and fear mongering from the media and the consequences are also from society.
      The meds are terrible as well. The cure can certainly be called the disease.

    • @bearclaus2676
      @bearclaus2676 Před 5 měsíci

      Mine is the same diagnosis. But i also have stress conditions added.
      I have worked most my life. Breaks were necessary inbetween. One job was for 10 years, 4 days a week, 16 hour days.
      Do and Hope 😊

  • @Arthonizer101
    @Arthonizer101 Před 3 lety +537

    I fell asleep and autoplay took me here. I always was fascinated by psychiatry and this is a very good lecture. Really makes me feel like i missed out by going for an art degree instead

    • @maximschnerr9761
      @maximschnerr9761 Před 3 lety +4

      same with science degree uff

    • @seanjames6000
      @seanjames6000 Před 3 lety +48

      you can always go back to uni, my mum is doing psychology degree after teaching her whole life she is 67!

    • @sandraprakash8428
      @sandraprakash8428 Před 3 lety +8

      It's never too late!

    • @frankgrimes6771
      @frankgrimes6771 Před 3 lety +11

      Obviously an art degree is a huge waste of money regardless

    • @sandraprakash8428
      @sandraprakash8428 Před 3 lety +23

      @@frankgrimes6771 there's beauty in art which can't be found anywhere else. If the person is good in their field, they can do wonders with an arts degree.

  • @Huzefakhozemasaifee
    @Huzefakhozemasaifee Před 2 lety +91

    How does this guy talk so smoothly and coherently for this long.

  • @Daniel-zm6nh
    @Daniel-zm6nh Před 11 měsíci +14

    I was schizophrenia for 50 years, healed thank God , May 10, 2017. Confused, that's schizophrenia, I was never sure what was going on around me. I couldn't always think the words I wanted to think. If I did have the words I wanted, I couldn't always say those words. I couldn't be social. I wanted to avoid everyone. People could use me ,control me, and often, they did. Good people avoided me , bad people used or hurt me on purpose.

  • @maryamkhan9387
    @maryamkhan9387 Před 8 měsíci +4

    It’s twelve years since this enlightening lecture what about updates in 2023?

  • @JoseMonteverde
    @JoseMonteverde Před 9 lety +3190

    23:14 is when Schizophrenia lecture starts

    • @budrobinson7261
      @budrobinson7261 Před 9 lety +21

      Jose Monteverde thanks

    • @electricsoul8370
      @electricsoul8370 Před 8 lety +18

      Jose Monteverde RESPECT!

    • @boksaboki
      @boksaboki Před 8 lety +12

      Jose Monteverde Thank You

    • @GyroCoder
      @GyroCoder Před 8 lety +121

      Jose Monteverde Don't skip the language stuff, though, it's intriguing.

    • @sirmista
      @sirmista Před 8 lety +12

      +Jose Monteverde you the real MVP

  • @LarsTheHonest
    @LarsTheHonest Před 7 lety +668

    I love the 21st century, when seemingly limitless amounts of information have been made available online.

    • @camerontaylor7471
      @camerontaylor7471 Před 4 lety +1

      SS yes “the occults” who socially engineer civilization generation to generation(in the shadows) love to implement duality in its structure... “the good with the bad” ... so yes they went ahead and released the occult science from the ancient mystery schools(think ancient Egypt, Greece, India etc) to the masses of people, which is “good” in theory, but the “bad” is the intention to continue to deceive, and control the population... which is where you get the GMOs, poising/controlling water, taxes on land,etc...

    • @jennyedwards4873
      @jennyedwards4873 Před 4 lety +2

      About time it got boiled down to the truth...

    • @Medietos
      @Medietos Před 4 lety +1

      @@ThePravaya : Wise words, you!Also, they should not throw out good knowledge that is crucial for healing Schz. Like metabolic issues, diet needs, biochemical imbalance, nutrient deficiencies.
      A specialist once said to me, many ppl have just a little medical knowledge, which is dangerous in that they think they know more than they do and make all sorts of claims. Often patients, probably wanting to feel less powerless and lost, talking away about what their illness is and how they function... totally up the wall.

    • @mathiash.1379
      @mathiash.1379 Před 4 lety +13

      I posess a device that enables me to acess all informations known to mankind. I use it to watch videos of cats, and get into arguments with people i dont know

    • @theboss4359
      @theboss4359 Před 4 lety

      SS yeah I remember those times good times

  • @dochudson7284
    @dochudson7284 Před rokem +43

    A few years ago I got really into working out and eventually ended up taking pre workout somewhat regularly. Little did my 16 year old self realize was that the pre-workouts I was taking were filled with many different types of amphetamines (legal but not fda approved obviously). After a year or so of taking straight pre workout I started to experience feelings of paranoia, anxiety, disassociation, and in the worst moments auditory hallucinations. I didn’t bring myself around others anymore and cut off most social contact because I was so lost in confusion. I felt like everyone could see what I was thinking like I was on the Truman show. Even after I stopped taking it and pouring dopamine into my brain I still experienced these symptoms for months. It seemed like I had changed my brain’s chemistry or really messed something up. To this day the anxiety and paranoia linger but are much more controllable. I am just grateful to not be in that space anymore. I feel like I got to experience a piece of what some people experience their entire lives. I empathize with anyone who has to live with such a hellish condition.

    • @davidd854
      @davidd854 Před rokem +2

      Alright hope you get better all the way mate.

  • @eileenhetherington3704
    @eileenhetherington3704 Před 11 měsíci +13

    Our family was part of a genetic study financed by Johns Hopkins, and published in the Journal of Orthomolecular Psychiatry in 1995. We have the Disc 1 gene. I have 7 siblings, 3 of whom are schizophrenic. My great uncle and an aunt are also schizophrenic, and there are family stories of great grandmothers who lived out their lives in asylum. We have Finnish and Scottish bloodlines, both of which are linked to the Disc 1 gene. It was a nightmare for my parents to have 3 mentally ill children.
    Additionally, my mother had severe hyperemesis, (extreme vomiting, starvation), all of her pregnancies. My Dad was extremely physically and emotionally abusive to all of us. My mother and all of us children loved cats and we had several throughout our childhood, as did she. It was a perfect storm of genetic and environmental stew to create schizophrenic children.

  • @void6714
    @void6714 Před 5 lety +372

    This has been on CZcams for 8 years and I'm seeing it now? Oh well, better late than never. Thanks Mr. Professor.

    • @noonereallymattersbutcats9674
      @noonereallymattersbutcats9674 Před 5 lety +9

      Exactly what I was thinking! The entire list of his classes have beeb so interesting. I've literally been binge watching!

    • @user-mv5hl2hb5e
      @user-mv5hl2hb5e Před 4 lety +2

      Haha it took me 10 months longer than that. Worth the wait. :)

    • @ashbrady588
      @ashbrady588 Před 4 lety +1

      ** But just think of all the millions of people you’re ahead of :)

    • @kroneexe
      @kroneexe Před 3 lety +1

      Saying "Mr. Professor" isn't correct. You would just say Professor Sapolsky, not Mr. Professor Sapolsky.

    • @merlin4real
      @merlin4real Před 3 lety +1

      That's Professor Professor to you, sir.

  • @RobertAfoa
    @RobertAfoa Před 7 lety +849

    I've recovered from schizophrenia. As an engineering student, I never believed in anything spiritual, but being personally afflicted with the disease - I have yet to find a word more accurate to describe the experience than "demonic."

    • @Woman_in_the_Wilderness
      @Woman_in_the_Wilderness Před 3 lety +22

      Did you see/hear demons?

    • @63rambler66
      @63rambler66 Před 3 lety +138

      Congratulations on your recovery, I hope you are still well!

    • @spiritwarrior2942
      @spiritwarrior2942 Před 3 lety +81

      That's because it is demonic

    • @buzzl1ghtyear400
      @buzzl1ghtyear400 Před 3 lety +150

      Yea it is. What I don’t get is when I was prescribed adderall in high school after a week I couldn’t sleep so a friend who was bipolar gave me a 25mg Seroquel which they use for schizophrenia and oddly enough it made me hear someone whispering my name behind me audibly. It was really scary and than I literally saw a hole in the wall. I fell asleep because I had no tolerance but once I fell asleep I got sleep paralysis and saw that same hole in the wall along with a shadow being crawling through it. I know for a fact I was awake when I heard those voices and first hallucinated that hole in the wall but but this sleep paralysis eventually lead to this shadow dude coming up to me and trying to get inside of my body. I somehow was able to manifest a glock in that half awake half dream state and it leaped across the room to take cover behind a recliner. I guess I than fell farther back to sleep because I couldn’t move completely just enough to slide off the couch like melting rubber or slime. It was hard to move but I could just very slowly...than I realized my physical body was still on the couch. I was than able to fully move freely once I saw that my paralyzed body wasn’t holding me back and shot at the being until I finally hit him in the head. I laid back in my body and woke up. Idk how a dream bullet could kill a demon that wasn’t even in the 3D plane of existence so maybe I just scared it away but yea antipsychotics are supposed to do the opposite of make you hear voices. People who stay up too long on meth start seeing those shadow beings while they are awake. I was only taking adderall and I slept one hour a night that week so I wasn’t 100% sleep deprived I didn’t even have anxiety or psychosis I just desperately wanted sleep.

    • @cslantz4020
      @cslantz4020 Před 3 lety +59

      @@buzzl1ghtyear400 Jesus.

  • @polarberri
    @polarberri Před rokem +2

    Listening to Dr. Sapolsky is mesmerizing; it brings me back to being read amazing stories in elementary school, hanging on to every word and anticipating the next installment. I feel as though a world of knowledge has opened up. I am so thankful for this amazing content!

  • @user-oy4vu3ck3u
    @user-oy4vu3ck3u Před 2 lety +10

    I find it hard to understand non violent schizophrenia, because my father was a violent schizophrenic who physically abused me as a child. I'm pretty worried about my risk of passing it on to my own children :/ I wish we had a better comprehension of what we can do to stop schizophrenic people suffering

  • @KB4QAA
    @KB4QAA Před 3 lety +199

    One of those professors whose every word is like a pearl and every lecture an enlightenment.

  • @gryphon8483
    @gryphon8483 Před 5 lety +190

    Stanford lectures for free - Amazing!

  • @isa_well...
    @isa_well... Před rokem +2

    Please stop bashing R.D. Laing. He was a genius and a true hero who did not 'romanticise' or 'idealise' schizophrenia, but who really listened to people with psychosis. Everyone deserves to be listened to, no matter how seemingly strange their worldview might be. "The Divided Self" by R.D. Laing is an incredible book, by the way.

  • @jameshansen8684
    @jameshansen8684 Před 2 lety +23

    I've had three major psychotic breakdowns leading to hospitalization and characterized by periods (though brief) of serious schizo-affective symptoms. This all has happened within the last 5 years of my life. I currently live day-to-day with absolutely no psychotic symptoms. I do have some mood issues and swings typical of PTSD, but otherwise I'm not only functional, but quite averse to irrational thinking. I feel incredibly lucky for this. I'm astonished that my brain still works... not only that, but that I'm getting good grades in university (doing a STEM degree). This isn't a boast, it's just to say that psychopathology is SO unpredictable. A few years ago almost all of the psychs I saw were confident that I would suffer chronic symptoms.

    • @jameshansen8684
      @jameshansen8684 Před 2 lety +4

      So that was kind of a ramble but maybe some people here would find it interesting.
      They might also find it interesting that the subtype of psychotic symptoms I was experiencing was... I wouldn't say atyptical, but perhaps insufficiently recognized as distinct. It had the character of paranoid schizophrenia, but without as much of the antagonism. My brain was constantly making meaning connections out of whatever I experienced, and my mind jumped to conclusions about agency and conspiratorial plots therein, but this narrative did not center around me being chased by an antagonist - instead I experienced it as manically positive.
      It was so exciting that I finally 'realized' that I was some kind of special person involved in some massive conspiracy for heroic purposes.

    • @s.s5933
      @s.s5933 Před rokem +2

      @@jameshansen8684 I started going through depersonalization after a bad weed trip and I thought I was going crazy. Turned out it was just anxiety, but I did get scared I was developing schizophrenia because I had anxiety, but I realized anxiety doesn’t turn into schizophrenia. I get scared easily at times and I look at this incident as a lesson to my self journey. I want to understand more of my anxiety, cause it’s not benefiting me anymore.

    • @louisehogg8472
      @louisehogg8472 Před rokem

      I think there is more awareness now that a lot of psychotic breaks are stress and exhaustion induced and don't necessarily recur. Effective antipsychotics promptly can then be reduced and stopped after six months of no symptoms. This prevents the unpleasant side effects of those from being an enduring illness in themselves.

    • @adaptercrash
      @adaptercrash Před 9 měsíci

      ​​​​@@louisehogg8472l more than that we clock them in at 700 days and a hard release, why are they talking to me on this? Gotta be tough.

  • @user-mv1hv5ce3b
    @user-mv1hv5ce3b Před 2 lety +360

    I absolutely love these lectures. I learn so much every time, I hadn’t really though about how schizophrenia is a collection of symptoms instead of one condition. I wanna smooch this man for letting his lectures be recorded

    • @dullknife0490
      @dullknife0490 Před 2 lety +6

      @ODD EDDIES ODDIEDDIES OF APPENDICHTOMY what the fuck did i just read.

    • @coryjohnson2486
      @coryjohnson2486 Před 2 lety

      Calm down…

    • @astrammd
      @astrammd Před 2 lety +5

      @@dullknife0490 well now I'm disappointed that they deleted it.

    • @seven7upndown241
      @seven7upndown241 Před 2 lety +2

      The toughts and the shadows scitzophrenians see are demons. Its sound crasy but i experienced and seen these things in real life also in dreams coz i have them many. I had severe depression and paralasys also sleep paralasys that got of me in seconds by listening reading gospel scripture. I guarantee you that Jesus Christ can fix ur problem with prayer, fasting and devotion. It is written how Jesus casted out demons i tried it and it works coz i had ADHD too and i dont have it anymore. It is also incurable like scitz it works by spirits of fear and lies you cast them out in the name of Jesus Christ and you free of stupid and uncontrolable toughts. There is nothing that is beyond Christ and he is who he says he is. The Messiah.

    • @camogrrl
      @camogrrl Před rokem

      An earlier poster wanted to tear him down for being arrogant ffs people are attributional and create their own biases butthey just can’t see it

  • @jon-michaelbaribault767
    @jon-michaelbaribault767 Před 3 lety +1225

    He never says “um”

  • @liisabjork76
    @liisabjork76 Před rokem +9

    My father was a paranoid schizophrenic.
    When my twin sister and I were just babies my father put us out in our twin stroller into the winter cold because we wouldn't stop crying . We were found outside by friends
    Imagine children having no understanding that the father is sick and has unnatural thoughts.
    When all we need is love and attention.
    But my mother always told us he was an alcoholic.
    Imagine my confusion to this day. I'm 46

  • @renataklomer5591
    @renataklomer5591 Před rokem +4

    Proffessor giving this lecture should be admired for he is person who can see sad truth about certain groups of people BUT HE DOESNT SCORN THEM NOR HAS BAD FEELINGS. THIS IS PROOF OF GREAT PERSON

  • @josephlaubach6600
    @josephlaubach6600 Před 5 lety +216

    He speaks with great clarity. I wish I could have taken his courses.

    • @whalen84
      @whalen84 Před 4 lety +14

      You are

    • @Tunoi_Veil
      @Tunoi_Veil Před 3 lety +5

      you literally can....here...

    • @alonzomartii
      @alonzomartii Před 3 lety +7

      What do you think youre doing here? Online courses,

    • @anh7807
      @anh7807 Před 3 lety +8

      You are doing it, just without the live discussion, grades and assignments. This is much of what college is currently with the pandemic. We are all online.

    • @Leftyotism
      @Leftyotism Před 3 lety +2

      U kinda do now, sort of. ^.^

  • @alexsandralake6678
    @alexsandralake6678 Před 3 lety +1067

    Felt good pretending like I went to Stanford for an hour 😅

    • @heaven7360
      @heaven7360 Před 2 lety +61

      with no student loan to pay off until you''re dead

    • @julielevinge266
      @julielevinge266 Před 2 lety +3

      Me too👍😂😂

    • @davidpinontoan3429
      @davidpinontoan3429 Před 2 lety +6

      Who needs paper

    • @BeckBeckGo
      @BeckBeckGo Před 2 lety +5

      Well… you kind of did… right?

    • @Alphacentauri819
      @Alphacentauri819 Před 2 lety +27

      @@heaven7360 exactly.
      I got my nursing degree through a community college, and some of my coworkers had $60,000 up in debt. Both RN’s, and I paid off my loans in a couple years. I was making as much as they were too... actually a bit more, as I had started before some of them.
      If people can get away from the social conditioning of a certain prestige university connection...and do it smart...much can be achieved for less.

  • @rosekeyes3189
    @rosekeyes3189 Před 2 lety +6

    My aunt, 67, has been an unmedicated paranoid schizophrenic most of her life. She had an incident around the age of 50 where she was involuntarily committed and one in her 20s. She's only 80 pounds because of years of malnutrition, but she walks 20 miles a day.

  • @silentbullet2023
    @silentbullet2023 Před 2 lety +4

    Mr. Sapolsky's courses are so mind-blowing that I watch them at 15-minute intervals.

  • @homiebash2532
    @homiebash2532 Před 3 lety +64

    As someone who has been through multiple psychotic breaks, this guy explains and understands this stuff far better than the doctors who were in charge of my care

    • @JustBioBaB
      @JustBioBaB Před 3 lety

      Do you think people should listen and get to know more about these topics?

    • @homiebash2532
      @homiebash2532 Před 3 lety +4

      @@JustBioBaB Yes I think it is a stigmatized subject, I hope to live to see the day where mentally ill people can be given the care they need world wide. America is in a stage where we just put them in chemical straight jackets for profit instead of allowing them the time and effort necessary for emotional and psychological healing. There is too much that is not understood

    • @seven7upndown241
      @seven7upndown241 Před 2 lety

      The toughts and the shadows scitzophrenians see are demons. It is not desease it is curse. Its sound crasy but i experienced and seen these things in real life also in dreams coz i have them many. I had severe depression and paralasys also sleep paralasys that got of me in seconds by listening reading gospel scripture. I guarantee you that Jesus Christ can fix ur problem with prayer, fasting and devotion. Also Jesus can break the curse coz he is the one who was pinned on tree with which he made himself a curse for us. It is written how Jesus casted out demons i tried it and it works coz i had ADHD too and i dont have it anymore. It is also incurable like scitz it works by spirits of fear and lies you cast them out in the name of Jesus Christ and you free of stupid and uncontrolable toughts. There is nothing that is beyond Christ and he is who he says he is. The Messiah.
      If anyone interested i can tell you how to cast out demons and freeurself.

    • @eldflaug
      @eldflaug Před 2 lety +3

      Im really sad that your doctors do not understand. I just started working with people that have had psychotic breaks and have schizophrenia and this lecture helps me a lot to understand. I hope eweryone working with people that have had this experience or deal with it ewery day listens to this lecture and learn as much as they can to be able to help better and understand.

    • @sarahsahai5864
      @sarahsahai5864 Před rokem

      I am a mental health specialist. I am working for a docudrama on mental health. Would you be up for a chat?

  • @sunhead2573
    @sunhead2573 Před 3 lety +2400

    Plot twist: There are no people in the audience.

  • @AquariumWizard
    @AquariumWizard Před 5 měsíci +1

    My grandmother was diagnosed as schizophrenic and heavily medicated. I learned last year that I was autistic and it's very clear (now that my eyes are open to what autism means) that my father is also. I think that my poor grandmother was just autistic and they just put her in that box because they just saw she thought abnormally. I am really glad you are spreading better information. We have come such a long way woth all of this. I am so grateful

  • @darrianlof
    @darrianlof Před rokem +11

    Man I'm in my first year studying criminology and I wish we had this course at my university. Genuinely interesting concepts, great oration, and solid contextual knowledge provided!

    • @PortraitoftheArtistasanOldDog8
      @PortraitoftheArtistasanOldDog8 Před 7 měsíci +1

      G'day
      I recommend also an amazing guy re personality disorders
      Prof Sam Vaknin
      Esp virtue signalling NPD explains why social workers cops Medicis etc ineffectual want kudos with no commensurate effort....

    • @Totallyfine29_
      @Totallyfine29_ Před 5 měsíci

      @@PortraitoftheArtistasanOldDog8cool man

  • @sandbrm7786
    @sandbrm7786 Před 4 lety +56

    I was diagnosed back in 2019 and it got me kicked outta the air force. Its insane how he is teaching me things that I have where as I feel misunderstood.

    • @inamqazi1921
      @inamqazi1921 Před 4 lety +12

      Sorry to hear that.
      How are you doing now?

    • @johnharvey4448
      @johnharvey4448 Před 3 lety

      kicked ?

    • @sandbrm7786
      @sandbrm7786 Před 3 lety +9

      @@johnharvey4448 to be more formal I was medically retired. Didnt want to be but I worked with high voltage and heavy machinery, I get vivid hallucinations, and at the time I was first being treated so I was always switching meds, which caused akastegia or however its spelt and drowsiness where id fall asleep standing up. That didn't play nice with my job so I was retired.

    • @winsomecohall2250
      @winsomecohall2250 Před 3 lety

      Jaden Clark check out dr Peterson on Mikayla podcast talking about meds that causes that condition... SSR meds ...

    • @DavidVonR
      @DavidVonR Před 3 lety

      @@sandbrm7786 Hope you're doing well. Stay safe.

  • @balbinagamble8166
    @balbinagamble8166 Před 2 lety +78

    Always thought I wasn’t intelligent enough to understand the complexities of schizophrenia, after this lecture, I decided it wasn’t me, it was past lecturers. Enjoyed this immensely!

    • @jlouis4407
      @jlouis4407 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Albert Einstein said something along the lines of: if someone can’t speak simply about a subject to someone who knows nothing about it, they don’t know the subject themselves well enough.

  • @wandalee5010
    @wandalee5010 Před rokem +7

    I deleted this from my suggested list 4 times, and it kept popping back up, so I thought I would watch it. I thank you for this message! I thought I wanted to open homeless shelters, and after listening to this message, I am definitely not equipped to handle any of this. Maybe I’ll start a nice boutique or gift store, and donate to important causes! I hope that a solution is found for this condition and Parkinson’s very soon. ❤️

    • @UnironicallyToast
      @UnironicallyToast Před rokem

      Nice virtue signaling wanda, now go LARP somewhere else

    • @louisehogg8472
      @louisehogg8472 Před rokem

      With homeless shelters I think teamwork with clear ground rules is the important thing. Many of the individuals with addictions can be manipulative and with mental illness can be high maintenance. A good team prevents any staff member being overloaded and ensures accountability. Saying that, I couldn't do front line work in that area for that reason. Supporting a few friends with these sort of conditions is the most I manage or volunteering in milder mental health settings.

  • @draakisback
    @draakisback Před rokem

    This guy is a hell of a lecturer. I could listen to him all day long. This lecture kind of reminded me of some of the quantum mechanics lectures that I took in grad school. Just so dense but also easy to follow.

  • @salvation7141
    @salvation7141 Před 10 lety +1409

    did i just watched a lecture on my spare time??

  • @esslar1
    @esslar1 Před 7 lety +41

    I had an aunt who was schizophrenic and Dr. Sapolsky describes her symptoms and the "break" in late adolescence perfectly. That's just what she went through. It is really good to hear this talk on all of this because it has been so mysterious for so long.

    • @seven7upndown241
      @seven7upndown241 Před 2 lety

      The toughts and the shadows scitzophrenians see are demons. It is not desease it is curse. Its sound crasy but i experienced and seen these things in real life also in dreams coz i have them many. I had severe depression and paralasys also sleep paralasys that got of me in seconds by listening reading gospel scripture. I guarantee you that Jesus Christ can fix ur problem with prayer, fasting and devotion. Also Jesus can break the curse coz he is the one who was pinned on tree with which he made himself a curse for us. It is written how Jesus casted out demons i tried it and it works coz i had ADHD too and i dont have it anymore. It is also incurable like scitz it works by spirits of fear and lies you cast them out in the name of Jesus Christ and you free of stupid and uncontrolable toughts. There is nothing that is beyond Christ and he is who he says he is. The Messiah.
      If anyone interested i can tell you how to cast out demons and freeurself.

  • @musamula3709
    @musamula3709 Před rokem +7

    Wow!.. this lecture has really opened my eyes. I thought I already knew what schizophrenia is. I was mistaken. Thank you so much for sharing. I'll even watch the other videos

  • @underratedunity1528
    @underratedunity1528 Před rokem

    I am completely floored that this is free to watch on the Internet. Not only is the subject matter completely fascinating but this professor is very engaging and mindblowingly intelligent

  • @h4ff3
    @h4ff3 Před 5 lety +202

    Hey it's been 8 years, we're waiting for the slides!

    • @dumalun8388
      @dumalun8388 Před 3 lety

      What slides

    • @maxsnel3432
      @maxsnel3432 Před 3 lety +4

      @@dumalun8388 slides of the tribes

    • @Rayetwist
      @Rayetwist Před 3 lety +4

      Hahahaha I read this comment and was like what? Then got to 50:20 and he said it lmao

    • @Rayetwist
      @Rayetwist Před 3 lety +3

      duma lun at 50:20 he says in 8 years he may get to scanning the slides lol

    • @marielaalmonte3836
      @marielaalmonte3836 Před 3 lety +2

      HAHAHAHAHAHAH! This comment made my day!

  • @jackjackson7537
    @jackjackson7537 Před 3 lety +462

    Is this going viral or something? I don't know why it was recommended but this is dope

  • @kiannazemzadeh3289
    @kiannazemzadeh3289 Před rokem +1

    His English is so smooth that and the amount of information is just insane , this man is an encyclopedia with this video i finally realized after 25 years that why my thoughts are like this now it all make sense , thanks man

  • @preciousejikeme2964
    @preciousejikeme2964 Před 2 lety +3

    Why did I understand and enjoy every minute of this lecture. Wow.... This man is a true teacher 👏👏👏👏

  • @AlinaGorbatch
    @AlinaGorbatch Před 4 lety +62

    So I realize it's been 9 years since this was posted, but if anyone's wondering this is the next lecture: czcams.com/video/4WwAQqWUkpI/video.html It's on religion, not on individual differences, and I'll never understand why it was excluded from the playlist.

    • @carrielundell4224
      @carrielundell4224 Před 4 lety +7

      Thank you! In case it's helpful, the ending train of thought of this lecture basically continues at minute 3:00 of the religion lecture.

    • @persephone2706
      @persephone2706 Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you!

    • @leetcodeJS
      @leetcodeJS Před 2 lety

      Thank you!!

    • @Annkelia
      @Annkelia Před 2 lety

      It's too divisive so it was Sapolsky's wish not to even record it. :) I am glad it's there for the enlightenment of those who won't be offended.

  • @jimgilmour349
    @jimgilmour349 Před 2 lety +254

    I wish I had this much knowledge. It’s so inspirational and enlightening.
    People like this are gems, crucial for humanity.
    Thank you Robert.

  • @mariahbyrd3832
    @mariahbyrd3832 Před rokem +13

    My grandma had schizophrenia and was homeless.. treated different & treated like she was crazy! & my mother has it. Praying for the families who have someone you love & was raised by someone with this disease 💗💗. She has paranoia schizophrenia but if you look at her and talk to her she hides it well until she has a episode! She just is very scared to stay home by herself. She’s very antisocial & now I think about it we never went anywhere we stayed in the house. I use to be so scared of my mama when I was little

  • @Kid_Kootenay
    @Kid_Kootenay Před 2 lety +5

    I love this series Im so far from a college student but he makes it so interesting and easy to grasp awesome

  • @authenticufo4822
    @authenticufo4822 Před 2 lety +1396

    Something tells me this man has ingested mushrooms at least once

  • @ProbablyCathy
    @ProbablyCathy Před 4 lety +24

    "We are more vulnerable to sounds not making sense." (rather than sights...) This single statement shifted my paradigm and will help me help others with so much more efficacy.

  • @marralizakrs2247
    @marralizakrs2247 Před rokem +2

    i am so grateful to live in the age where information like this is accessable for all.

  • @PZBrooklyn
    @PZBrooklyn Před 7 měsíci +3

    Some of the linguistic symptoms of schizophrenia described here are similar to autism--difficulty with abstract understanding, confusion coming from words with multiple meanings.

  • @korwl540
    @korwl540 Před 2 lety +16

    "animals that start acting schizophrenic get eaten that evening."
    what a quote.

  • @ashvienis
    @ashvienis Před 5 lety +292

    I would like to speak like him - short sentences having all the information, smooth transitions. Meanwhile I speak like my FOXP2 replaced by mouse one.

    • @nobaso620
      @nobaso620 Před 4 lety +1

      Lol

    • @fredericmoresmau4303
      @fredericmoresmau4303 Před 4 lety +2

      And they want to tell me that i was the asshole......... its 10500to 1 in their favor nr of unmoral actions

    • @flowerdoyle3749
      @flowerdoyle3749 Před 4 lety +8

      Me too....have always had a hard time speaking my thoughts. Seem to to better at writing.

    • @fumosneedlovetoo
      @fumosneedlovetoo Před 4 lety +5

      Just learn how to make good notes by explaining it in a manner that to a stranger could read and understand, keep at it and optimise to minimize word count, next step is get over your fear of public speaking if you have it, best way to do it is with friends and a topic that you know very deeply, then channel that in a more stressful situation once you've got the discipline. You can apply your understanding of notemaking down to your public speaking skills and, with practice, you can eventually do it with the confidence that you know what you're talking about and are ready to overexplain things to people who would not understand the context of the information.
      Then it's just practice, age and personal development left and that's up to you how far you wish to push yourself.
      This is coming from an introverted individual so there may be some bias in my approach but I hope you find this and it helps!

    • @pudgiesC8
      @pudgiesC8 Před 4 lety +3

      @@fumosneedlovetoo I appreciate your contribution and effort to help others who also admire Sapolsky's skills, talent and experience. Public speaking is a sport/art to me. I find your comment comforting. Idk tyvm.

  • @bunsenn5064
    @bunsenn5064 Před 2 lety +19

    As someone with schizoaffective disorder, it definitely is different for everyone. My view of the world shaped by the way my brain works is going to certainly be different from another person with the same illness. I find that it’s a depression to the point of normalcy. The thoughts and machinations that come with it no longer bother me. Yet I also feel a constant terror, like I’m being watched by something that wants to get me, but never will.

    • @hlulanizitha9920
      @hlulanizitha9920 Před 4 měsíci +2

      That's unique, I feel a sense of impending doom as if at any moment I could lose my mind. However, I've only had one serious psychotic break from reality and one or two minor ones which is was able to quickly recover from. The thing that gets me the most is just that feeling of never being truly present in the world around me. It's as if I'm an outsider looking in through a window.

  • @hollyhope7227
    @hollyhope7227 Před 2 lety +15

    This is brilliant! Every sentence filled with compressed knowledge. I could follow him from morning to night.

  • @stephenstout4273
    @stephenstout4273 Před 3 lety +296

    I've lived my entire 18 years of life with "schizo-affective disorder," in my eyes I've had depression, PTSD, anxiety, paranoia, among so many other things. I never viewed it as a disease, a curse, or anything bad, I worked off of it. And I didn't start building off it because I knew I was different, I was proud of it. Unfortunately, what drew out my problems and made them worse was the fact that everyone else didn't view it the same way. I genuinely felt ousted from existence because nobody could accept that this is my "normal."
    You might ask why I would want this over being "normal," why don't you ask an artist why they don't want to live the rest of their lives working 9-5. It's not that I'm better than you, no more than an artist is to a worker. I'm just different. Which apparently is intolerable in this world.

    • @markt43
      @markt43 Před 3 lety +49

      The issue is that you appear to have built your identity out of your disorders. This typically leads to people exacerbating the disorders since they would rather revel in them instead of seeking help.

    • @psychiatry-is-eugenics
      @psychiatry-is-eugenics Před 3 lety +1

      Twilight Zone , eye of the beholder

    • @slit4659
      @slit4659 Před 3 lety +3

      Azazel...Is Azazel your SPACE Name ????

    • @stephenstout4273
      @stephenstout4273 Před 3 lety +8

      @@slit4659 it's the name of a demon who became king and ran Hell in lieu of Satan's return

    • @chrisferi7478
      @chrisferi7478 Před 3 lety +15

      insight called a disorder by the "ordered" people

  • @tommykebschull9439
    @tommykebschull9439 Před 2 lety +18

    My cousin was just diagnosed as schizophrenic earlier this year at age 20. This video is heart braking to hear but extremely needed. Everything the professor says matches up with the symptoms.

    • @seven7upndown241
      @seven7upndown241 Před 2 lety

      The toughts and the shadows scitzophrenians see are demons. It is not desease it is curse. Its sound crasy but i experienced and seen these things in real life also in dreams coz i have them many. I had severe depression and paralasys also sleep paralasys that got of me in seconds by listening reading gospel scripture. I guarantee you that Jesus Christ can fix ur problem with prayer, fasting and devotion. Also Jesus can break the curse coz he is the one who was pinned on tree with which he made himself a curse for us. It is written how Jesus casted out demons i tried it and it works coz i had ADHD too and i dont have it anymore. It is also incurable like scitz it works by spirits of fear and lies you cast them out in the name of Jesus Christ and you free of stupid and uncontrolable toughts. There is nothing that is beyond Christ and he is who he says he is. The Messiah.
      If anyone interested i can tell you how to cast out demons and freeurself.

    • @SuperStudying
      @SuperStudying Před rokem

      Hope he's had improvement/has not been relapsing since you posted this comment. All the best to you!

  • @TajusYoungOfficial
    @TajusYoungOfficial Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much for the lecture. This explains so much especially with how my mind works. I find relief in knowing that this isn't a result of my choice or a conscious state of mind because I would never forgive myself.

  • @victoriaalgra3675
    @victoriaalgra3675 Před rokem +2

    Amazing information.No surprise that several young individuals have onset psychological symptoms of schizophrenia due to unfortunate drug use that is prolific in our society. And devastated parents are Heartbroken .

  • @tubeuser2222
    @tubeuser2222 Před 2 lety +25

    An incredible testament to the prof's knowledge that he can speak for over an hour and a half without interruption or reading from any source.

    • @MsObeyy
      @MsObeyy Před 2 lety

      almost all professors will show you something or ramble out of context in my experience. he’s very VERY focused he’s a great lecturer.

  • @paconbancakes4347
    @paconbancakes4347 Před 3 lety +66

    I’ve been binging this guy’s lectures and still haven’t caught up on my own 😬

  • @jenniferwong4530
    @jenniferwong4530 Před 2 lety

    Amazing Prof! Fascinating lecture. The internet holds the wealth of the world's knowledge. The societal intellectual growth from exposure to higher education through university lectures and the sharing of information will bear fruit over the next several decades. It reaches people who otherwise would not have access to this type of information and sparks the growth of new ideas. The world is going to need that as it faces huge problems like climate, over population, water and land shortage... now and worse in the future. I'm old and won't live to see it, but it gives me such hope for humanity.

  • @yuleduenas1629
    @yuleduenas1629 Před 26 dny

    My fiancé was diagnosed this week. He had an attempt and was taking to inpatient. I’m trying to learn everything I can to be able to support him better. Thank you for this ❤

  • @Dr_Mike2
    @Dr_Mike2 Před 3 lety +56

    I practice medicine now, but way back when, i was a double major; Microbiology and Psychology with a minor in Chemistry. I LOVE this professor and his lectures. He makes everything relevant and is so easy to follow.
    Kudos for publishing his lecture series!!

  • @vickywright8409
    @vickywright8409 Před 2 lety +88

    Thank you for saying the truth about this horrific disease, there are no blessings, my brother has it, its the worst of the worst, thankfully we still have my brother with us. but his life has been beyond difficult due to his multiple suicide attempts. he is a beautiful soul very wise, and kind, even though his suffering has been immeasurable

    • @fatimamohsen5248
      @fatimamohsen5248 Před 2 lety +1

      i feel u

    • @johnridgeway3060
      @johnridgeway3060 Před 2 lety +3

      God bless your brother,your family, and you 🙏🏼 I hope he finds his way

    • @chickedee1085
      @chickedee1085 Před 2 lety +2

      Keep an eye on him, my brother didn’t make it.

    • @Nancy-pc6sf
      @Nancy-pc6sf Před 2 lety +1

      Then why do innocent people like us suffer from this deadly disease

    • @chickedee1085
      @chickedee1085 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Nancy-pc6sf genes

  • @catdelnorris
    @catdelnorris Před 2 lety +5

    this video is great, I was afraid I was schizophrenic but I'm glad Robert was able to explain the disorder in great detail and give some very good examples of what the disorder is like

    • @s.s5933
      @s.s5933 Před rokem +2

      Me too. It’s just anxiety for me. I still should seek some help in therapy

    • @s.s5933
      @s.s5933 Před rokem

      I was having racing thoughts before sleeping and started getting scared I looked up disorganized thoughts and saw schizophrenia and started freaking out

  • @saltspringdesign
    @saltspringdesign Před 2 lety +2

    This series is one of the most important things on the internet. Sapolski is a brilliant teacher and lecturer. This is me finally getting through watching the whole series and it took months because some of them i rewatched a few times. So glad for it though and have shared it quite a bit with friends via social media. So good, so much to be gleaned and considered and absorbed in this lecture series. A lot of what Stanford puts out is greatly appreciated and this is some of the best of.