The most important lesson from 83,000 brain scans | Daniel Amen | TEDxOrangeCoast

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  • 게시일 2024. 04. 23.

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  • @TheSupertecnology
    @TheSupertecnology 4 개월 전 +2920

    I can't believe this took place 10 years ago and in plain 2023 I've heard absolutely nothing about such methods for psychiatric treatment. This is extremely important and relevant, not to mention groundbreaking.

    • @pennyannvincent8831
      @pennyannvincent8831 4 개월 전 +23

      He didn't mention anything about 'treatment '...ie if one is bipolar you try this if they think its depression, you try this. A cyst is relatively easy to treat once diagnosed...the previous 2, not...

    • @blacdiamond2334
      @blacdiamond2334 4 개월 전 +20

      @@pennyannvincent8831 who said it would be easy? Its important that it works

    • @reitairue2073
      @reitairue2073 4 개월 전 +31

      ​@@blacdiamond2334What evidence did he give that it works again? His claim that "we made brains better"? 😂

    • @Brehvon
      @Brehvon 4 개월 전 +24

      I've never even heard of anything like this... I've been really interested in psychology and psychiatry the last few years and no one has ever mentioned spect or brain scans or anything! Kind of maddening...

    • @silverlight4977
      @silverlight4977 4 개월 전 +67

      Because he never put his work through review process, as it doesn't work as he claims. He only gave examples of the successful cases, not the failed ones which is a high number.
      As of now he is more of a businessman than a doctor, doesn't publish research results, so no other medical professional uses this

  • @ashtyn4856
    @ashtyn4856 년 전 +6201

    Having more doctors like him would diminish so much suffering in this world.

    • @c.golden8280
      @c.golden8280 년 전 +158

      And unfortunately they have put a warning on this video. It needs to be seen!

    • @alejandroag3674
      @alejandroag3674 년 전 +26

      @tech fx youtube is censoring it, I had to enter incognito to watch it

    • @user-pr4by4gi9y
      @user-pr4by4gi9y 년 전 +31

      Yeah, absolutely, if doctors were concerned about patient's health as this magnificent psychiatrist is, the world would be a better place!

    • @dlf1976
      @dlf1976 년 전 +10

      they would have to do it for something other than the money

    • @konstantindanielyan5985
      @konstantindanielyan5985 년 전

      Wow it’s amazing how this snake oil salesman has you all fooled. Ask any educated physician in the U.S about Dr. Amen and they’ll laugh. Firstly, there is no evidence showing that mental disorders can be solely diagnosed from a spect scan. Also, insurance doesn’t even cover this scan, because they have no proof it can be used for these types of diagnoses. Also, this scumbag will literally peddle a bunch of bs supplements that his wife sells on their website. No psychiatrist who genuinely cares about their patients would charge them 3500 out of pocket for unnecessary radiation and offer them their own supplement line

  • @Maex__
    @Maex__ 2 개월 전 +1184

    This outstanding presentation is over ten years old, has more than 20 million views but yet it feels like no change has happened whatsoever

    • @presto999
      @presto999 2 개월 전 +5

      exactly

    • @Fatima.ameen3
      @Fatima.ameen3 2 개월 전 +3

      In what way? In the mental health community? I’m sure their are doctors that do have brain scanners if you want

    • @mlsnr
      @mlsnr 2 개월 전 +5

      Maybe proof that it’s fake news?

    • @ItsZayV
      @ItsZayV 2 개월 전 +2

      Maybe you’re the person we need to get and see change😁

    • @andressretainss
      @andressretainss 2 개월 전

      Seems to just be getting worse!

  • @carmenmccauley585
    @carmenmccauley585 2 개월 전 +331

    This is so important. Why on earth was I subjected to a warning posted by you tube before I could watch it? Why? !?!??

    • @poojashekhar-ms4zw
      @poojashekhar-ms4zw 2 개월 전 +31

      because it spoke about suicide and self harm.

    • @ethimself5064
      @ethimself5064 개월 전 +3

      @@poojashekhar-ms4zw Yes he did

    • @PetiteJazz333
      @PetiteJazz333 개월 전

      Because the government doesn’t want us seeing the truth lol

    • @danibot3000
      @danibot3000 29 일 전 +7

      The answer was in the warning mesage...

    • @keeks8531
      @keeks8531 9 일 전

      Because the most valuable thing to any platform is in fact our minds …

  • @fishingtreatment7260
    @fishingtreatment7260 4 년 전 +10173

    "Behavior is the expression of the problem, not the problem". Daniel Amen.
    Amen to that.

    • @fetilu0975
      @fetilu0975 4 년 전 +84

      Behavior is part of the problem tho, if you want to be precise you must use every tools. That's why health and mental health professionals should know their limits and collaborate more !

    • @-HolySpiritDove-
      @-HolySpiritDove- 4 년 전 +35

      I hope & pray that people can get the help that they need
      for their social-behaviour difficulties
      while choosing to work on & improve on their
      self-control, peacefulness, patience,
      gentleness, kindness, goodness, lovingness & joyfulness
      Amen 🐹🌻🐥🌿😇💫

    • @mauromrmr3596
      @mauromrmr3596 4 년 전 +30

      But healthy people an choose to have bad behaviour also... It's not always a matter of life or healthy problems

    • @yourhuckleberry6757
      @yourhuckleberry6757 4 년 전 +8

      I too appreciate Egyptian gods.. The great Amen ra was pretty cool.

    • @taurasblazevicius2732
      @taurasblazevicius2732 4 년 전 +14

      @@fetilu0975 Yeah, I agree that behavior is the expression of the problem, but why he opposes Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy confuses me. Psychotherapy is pretty much always beneficial in treating or helping treat mental issues regardless of their cause. Meanwhile, he makes CBT sound like some scary Pavlonian mind-control program. "Isn't it cruel?" lol

  • @FloralHaze
    @FloralHaze 4 년 전 +4866

    “You are not stuck with the brain you have, you can make it better.” That hit me so hard

    • @opentrunk
      @opentrunk 4 년 전 +93

      Uh, yeah, but he's not saying exactly how he proposes to change your brain! He took a golfball tumor out of his nephew's brain but what about the old lady with Alzheimers, or the young girl with ADHD? Lobotomy or what? He doesn't say. My guess is he uses the standard drugs that everyone else uses. I call BS.

    • @coreybkguy1372
      @coreybkguy1372 4 년 전 +141

      @@opentrunk you can change your own brain through meditation. Accessing higher states of awareness. Think, feel and act in accordance with the way you want the new you to be . Easier said than done but that's the way

    • @opentrunk
      @opentrunk 4 년 전 +20

      @@coreybkguy1372 Maybe, but you know that's not his plan. And the old lady with Alzheimers can't do that anyway.

    • @coreybkguy1372
      @coreybkguy1372 4 년 전 +69

      @@opentrunkknowing the brain and cells could be changed is what's most important. what if someone could do it for her . Energy flows where attention goes . Remember that .

    • @coreybkguy1372
      @coreybkguy1372 4 년 전 +2

      @George xeno . Yes you can .

  • @manjeetjat6742
    @manjeetjat6742 16 일 전 +61

    "If you are feeling unintelligent, don't worry, you have the ability to become smart," because this study proves it.

  • @rainboww1515
    @rainboww1515 6 개월 전 +346

    I wish everyone had access to such medical facilities and doctors who'd genuinely help people improve

    • @videokitten
      @videokitten 5 개월 전 +9

      I wish insurance will cover one day

    • @Spook36
      @Spook36 2 개월 전 +3

      😢same..

    • @tannhauser5399
      @tannhauser5399 13 일 전

      True, and generally you should do a full body scan every 4-5 years, after the age of 40. I've done it a while back and in a way it was amazing, not only seeing inside of your body as such, but also the brain and whole scull, sliced and diced in every possible way.
      I think I'm going to repeat it soon, but it is definitely worth it and doesn't cost a lot at all (you can use public health service or go private if you want; I think around 2019-2020, it did cost me about 1700 British pounds, for a fully body MRI scan, CT scan, full top level boood test and so on.
      I had doctors talking to me 20 minutes after the scans, and decribing everything that was seen on the monitors, few hundred slides to go through (pure pros). I only did it because I wanted the results to be done on the same day, otherwide the public health service is good enough too (you just have to wait longer for the results and consultation).

  • @alienc
    @alienc 3 년 전 +14084

    Who else is now curious to have a brain scan to see how their brain health and activity holds up?

    • @monraybrand6726
      @monraybrand6726 3 년 전 +138

      Totally!

    • @kikima258
      @kikima258 3 년 전 +331

      Yep with my depression and anxiety and medication not doing much i'm very curious

    • @karlashoultz3157
      @karlashoultz3157 3 년 전 +217

      @Waterlec excellent point, it should be taken by school children, that are not performing at average level, and brain training provide at schools.

    • @rogerlagrange6082
      @rogerlagrange6082 3 년 전 +126

      I am interested in knowing more. I have been seen by many doctors at the VA and still haven't found what is wrong with my thoughts words and actions. How do we get more information on how to get a brain scan to see how things are going?

    • @stephpaoli7637
      @stephpaoli7637 3 년 전 +53

      ​@Waterlec I am assuming that you are an American? My MRI was free in Ontario. Not sure about SPECT but I'd assume it's also covered if you're referred by a neurologist.

  • @RealMikeClements
    @RealMikeClements 7 년 전 +9666

    Behaviour is not the problem, behaviour is an expression of the problem. Love this one

  • @julesnonconformist
    @julesnonconformist 개월 전 +58

    1. i’m in love with this man’s mind
    2. we absolutely NEED this approach in every country, for every case. i’m taking antidepressants, mood stabilizers, anti anxiety pills - so a handful of pills every day; and i also had a head trauma, and I WISH i could scan my brain activity like that and know for sure what the problem really is and what i really need to do

    • @santwaniiiii
      @santwaniiiii 23 일 전

      Are u okay ?? Be patience give sometime u have come a great way and I know you r more than all this.
      You will definitely conquer thiss😊😊😊lots of love from India

    • @MA-ip4gw
      @MA-ip4gw 13 일 전 +1

      See if you can get evaluated at one of Dan Amen’s clinics. There may be one within a reasonable distance. It is an extremely thorough process. With the complexity of your profile you may be able to get your health insurance to cover at least some of it. (Streamlining your meds regimen could be a cost savings for them, for example, while also being more effective for you :-). Hang in there, and good luck.

    • @julesnonconformist
      @julesnonconformist 12 일 전

      @@MA-ip4gw thanks for the reply, i’ll keep it in mind.

    • @nnouria-du6jq
      @nnouria-du6jq 3 일 전

      It is costy that is why the gov dont generalize it

  • @kidelliott7122
    @kidelliott7122 2 개월 전 +90

    I would have liked for him to cover his brain recovery program in more detail. How exactly is he using scans to inform treatment would be nice to see.

    • @stanzedicinema
      @stanzedicinema 2 개월 전

      I googled his research and I found out this: phisical activity first and then 5.6 grams of fish oil a day, containing 1720mg of EPA and 1160mg of DHA, high-potency multiple vitamin, ginkgo, vinpocetine, phosphatidylserine, acetyl-l-carnitine, huperzine A, alpha-lipoic acid, n-acetyl-cysteine. So buy fish oil, multivitaminic and Nature's Plus Brainceutix Boost 90

    • @exhibitdeveloper
      @exhibitdeveloper 일 전

      He doesn’t cover that because, while he may be mesmerizing to the TED audience, he hasn’t convinced the scientific community of the efficacy of his work. Do a search for his name + “quackwatch” for a second opinion.

    • @justryingmybest
      @justryingmybest 일 전

      True. I'm sure he still has an office email

  • @YuhYus_
    @YuhYus_ 4 년 전 +2846

    “Behavior is an expression of the problem, not the problem.” WOAH

    • @evapick1566
      @evapick1566 4 년 전 +50

      He sounds like many in the alternative health field, who say that stopping symptoms is like turning off the little light that starts blinking when your car is low on oil. And then think you have 'fixed it'.

    • @nicholascowan1731
      @nicholascowan1731 4 년 전 +8

      Duh

    • @AnujFalcon
      @AnujFalcon 4 년 전 +10

      I have a feeling that part is right. Consequences needn't have to be tightly linked to the cause. And what one thinks as cause could be just a consequence with even deeper cause.

    • @danaricci5044
      @danaricci5044 4 년 전 +15

      It's like with a heart disease..
      Cholesterol is not a problem but manifestation of the disease triggered by inflammation

    • @kirstybelle8392
      @kirstybelle8392 4 년 전 +5

      I know! That really hit me too. Such a realisation!

  • @dhardy6654
    @dhardy6654 3 년 전 +2510

    "Behavior is an expression of the problem, behavior isn't not the problem."
    Well said Dr Amen

    • @annisad.s.7351
      @annisad.s.7351 3 년 전 +6

      "Don't look the symptoms, but look the brain (scan)."

    • @sweetpeace5
      @sweetpeace5 3 년 전 +10

      Amen

    • @johnf367
      @johnf367 2 년 전 +18

      He only said this in the context of someone with a traumatic brain injury, though. That idea is not applicable to people with improper behavior without physiological problems.

    • @VidyaKamalesh
      @VidyaKamalesh 2 년 전 +1

      Absolutely 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

    • @Kal-EL_Volta
      @Kal-EL_Volta 2 년 전 +7

      Isint not? Im confused

  • @wudipest
    @wudipest 10 개월 전 +29

    It's 2023... This talk is 9 years old...
    Unfortunately what Dr Amen has taught us still hasn't materialised in real life medicine / psychiatry...

    • @Ivaninjo
      @Ivaninjo 6 일 전

      And it will sure take a while.. Medication is a billion $ biz - they will do everything possible to keep the sales stable. Just imagine we could "heal" people just by training their brain. Pfizer & others would be done in just a few years and I guess they know it.

    • @thisisme5487
      @thisisme5487 일 전

      Plenty of people in positions of power don't want a large-scale solution. A healthier society means less power.

  • @rebeccahuelskamp8928
    @rebeccahuelskamp8928 개월 전 +9

    I'm so glad to have come across this one. I lost my brother 6 months ago to suicide and I knew in my heart that something had to be different in his brain. A person with a healthy brain does not end their own life only someone with an unhealthy brain can do something like my brother did. I'm so disappointed and saddened with our mental health system. We need change and it needs to be this! Scan the brain of those who struggle with any type of mental illness.

  • @rolandgreystoke5601
    @rolandgreystoke5601 4 년 전 +3649

    You want to drop the crime rate drastically? Do everything possible to stop child abuse.

    • @chelseajoseph7417
      @chelseajoseph7417 4 년 전 +165

      This comment is so accurate

    • @jasont8022
      @jasont8022 4 년 전 +264

      Better yet, end poverty. Lack of money for basic needs puts people in situations where they have to make a difficult decisions such as: to work, or not to work; to rob or not to rob; to hoe, or not to hoe; to kill, or not to kill; Most of these situations contribute heavily to stress, and stress leads to... abuse.

    • @rolandgreystoke5601
      @rolandgreystoke5601 4 년 전 +159

      @@jasont8022 I ended my own poverty by staying sober and studying hard.

    • @pollyb.4648
      @pollyb.4648 4 년 전 +52

      @@b.b.4831 It's not just poverty but knowing that the system is rigged against anyone without wealth and
      systemic racism. Sure, some can pull themselves up but 40% live in poverty in this country and know their options are so limited as to cause understandable despair.

    • @doro8856
      @doro8856 4 년 전 +28

      @Ironcore You make your own opportunities, and determination will get you through the rest. What Ronald addressed has nothing to do with wealth, and getting things laid on for you. I know, I ended my poverty by the same hard route. Too many people want things laid on for them or else they claim they "can't" do it.

  • @anthropomorphizedrock
    @anthropomorphizedrock 4 년 전 +2025

    "treatment needs to be tailored to individual brains, not clusters of symptoms"

    • @WindwolfBlog
      @WindwolfBlog 4 년 전 +51

      I caught that sentence as well. Could an entire documentary series be created from that one sentence? I think so.

    • @davidbarnes1357
      @davidbarnes1357 4 년 전 +41

      @@RachelCrabtree The problem is that without the symptoms (and the symptom clusters as a way of explaining them) - we have no recognizable disorder. The scan by itself can't tell us anything about the patients symptoms or what disorder they have. His own examples show that patients with different disorders can show different levels of brain activity. The issue is that brain activity does not translate one to one with a particular disorder the way, for example, an ulcer that can be imaged in the stomach, does. It is not surprising that people with various disorders also show an anomaly in brain activity - I don't decry the work, but brain scans at best should be an additional tool to better specify treatment, but can in no way replace symptom based diagnosis and treatment.

    • @rahiljogani4825
      @rahiljogani4825 4 년 전 +4

      David Barnes i concur.

    • @agmechanix
      @agmechanix 4 년 전 +26

      @@rahiljogani4825 I believed that was the whole point of his talk. It should considered as another tool to better diagnose, not the only tool. Without the symptoms, you have no idea there is a problem. Using the symptoms and a scan together can discern the physical versus the mental.

    • @nityatabhattarai6141
      @nityatabhattarai6141 4 년 전 +1

      Rachel Crabtree nice 👍 video

  • @AliMohamed-sl1mf
    @AliMohamed-sl1mf 3 개월 전 +91

    when you have the privilege of changing someone's brain
    you are not only change their life, but you have the opportunity to change generations to come.
    Best quot ever ❤❤❤

    • @curtisaitken7027
      @curtisaitken7027 3 개월 전 +3

      I also love “expression of the problem NOT the problem”.

  • @HarpaAI
    @HarpaAI 9 개월 전 +481

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 🧠 Daniel Amen and his colleagues have analyzed 83,000 brain scans, leading to valuable insights into brain health and disorders.
    01:24 🧠 Psychiatry has the potential to change generations of people by improving mental health, happiness, and stability.
    05:11 🧠 Psychiatrists rarely use brain imaging, missing a valuable tool for diagnosis and personalized treatment.
    08:08 🧠 Undiagnosed brain injuries can lead to a range of psychiatric issues and contribute to homelessness, drug abuse, and suicide.
    09:08 🧠 Evaluating and treating troubled brains could be more effective and cost-saving than simply punishing criminals.
    11:14 🧠 Brain damage can be reversed and improved through brain-smart programs, offering hope for many neurological conditions.
    12:13 🧠 Brain rehabilitation can significantly improve academic performance, emotional stability, and memory in individuals with conditions like ADHD and dementia.
    13:14 🧠 Brain imaging can lead to better understanding and more effective treatment for individuals with behavioral issues caused by brain abnormalities.
    Made with HARPA AI 👍 Upvote to improve video surfing

  • @onlyheretowatchfailcompilation

    "behavior is an *expression of the problem* , not the *problem itself* "
    wow, that made me think

    • @360.Tapestry
      @360.Tapestry 5 년 전 +13

      @Charles Martel - GDL showing symptoms

    • @MsSilvain
      @MsSilvain 5 년 전 +4

      onlyheretowatch failcompilations
      That’s just a simple truth.

    • @corninyourpoop
      @corninyourpoop 5 년 전 +3

      Hey now, aren't you supposed to be watching fail compilations?

    • @vansserafim
      @vansserafim 4 년 전 +2

      onlyheretowatch failcompilations he is right lol

    • @vansserafim
      @vansserafim 4 년 전 +1

      That’s pretty obvious

  • @Fitterminal
    @Fitterminal 년 전 +2245

    “The following information may contain suicide or self harm topics” - KRplus
    Still puzzled for getting the warning, I truly believe this is a very outstanding and informative talk.

    • @dadephunt1717
      @dadephunt1717 년 전 +68

      Yea i got the warning too. But when did he do anything but mention suicide along with a bunch of other symptoms the warning focused on suicide more than he did.

    • @jessehardin8500
      @jessehardin8500 년 전 +14

      Yeah it through me for a loop also

    • @hiwayhighway9925
      @hiwayhighway9925 년 전 +107

      Because it involves truth and the machine hates when you get educated.

    • @cosumel
      @cosumel 년 전 +32

      Any mention of suicide is enough to trigger that warning. Just hearing about it could upset some people.

    • @jessehardin8500
      @jessehardin8500 년 전 +20

      @@cosumel them ppl are obviously to soft to live in this world

  • @tateandovida
    @tateandovida 2 일 전 +1

    We need to spread the good news! Why am I getting all this fantastic information just now?
    We need to support this work. Oh my gosh! How many lives can his findings help? 🙏🏼

  • @Thebipolarachiever
    @Thebipolarachiever 6 개월 전 +44

    For anyone wondering the cost is $5600 without insurance. Most insurances do not cover mental health. I just got my second scan this morning I’ll update in a few weeks. I’m bipolar, and I have had at least six traumatic brain injuries through my life. I really struggled to want to stay alive for my family. So here’s my last hope. Thank you Dr. Daniel Amen

    • @Anotherhumanexisting
      @Anotherhumanexisting 6 개월 전 +2

      Where did you go to get the scan??? I have no brain injuries I know of, but also bipolar and only keep myself alive for my parents sake.

    • @peniscanis8100
      @peniscanis8100 5 개월 전

      I hope it will help you!

    • @rugbyshorts
      @rugbyshorts 2 개월 전 +2

      Must be terrible trying to get medical treatment in the US

    • @lucasalviani3756
      @lucasalviani3756 2 개월 전 +1

      Any updates?

    • @pamelaia
      @pamelaia 2 개월 전 +2

      Any updates on your brain scans? Would love to hear how it went.

  • @Nellz1
    @Nellz1 년 전 +1524

    As a social worker, this video is pure facts. Treat the problem, not the behavior.

    • @thedivinefeminine1821
      @thedivinefeminine1821 6 개월 전 +44

      "The behavior is an EXPRESSION of the problem, NOT the problem"
      👍🏼Thank god someone is finally pioneering this.

    • @silviadoria7062
      @silviadoria7062 3 개월 전 +8

      You wouldn't believe me,but in Germany, psychiatrists and psychotherapists think the behaviour is the problem that has to be fixed,not the problem that caused it. I went to a psychotherapist in Germany and said I had to change my behaviour towards the problem if I wanted to be happy. Crazy,uh?,😅 she also said psychologists can't fix your life problems but only you. They want a world where everybody smiles at problems and feels good,instead of solving them. This "therapy" is used by all psychoanalysta in Germany and it's got a name but I don't remember

    • @yupyup7up
      @yupyup7up 2 개월 전 +6

      ​@@silviadoria7062 I thought it was generally accepted that it IS you who works on your problem and not the psychologist. They work with you, but although you cannot 'fix' yourself it is always you doing all the work internally

    • @dcamron46
      @dcamron46 2 개월 전

      No, it’s literally not facts, this guy isn’t a real scientist, snake oil salesman

    • @theprousteffect9717
      @theprousteffect9717 2 개월 전 +6

      And as a social worker, you're not exactly qualified to determine what's "pure facts." Lol. There are reasons why his method hasn't been adopted by the psychiatric community. He's not the pioneer you think he is.

  • @kerrynewsome8745
    @kerrynewsome8745 년 전 +2259

    He makes such a logical case for brain scans it’s hard to rationalise why this hasn’t been implemented as part of normal mental health treatment. As usual it will come down to cost. Money.
    The rich will insist on it and get it, the poor will go undiagnosed or worse untreated. Great talk.

  • @shubham8192
    @shubham8192 24 일 전 +3

    Literally, from past 2 year KRplus is continuously recommending me this video

  • @mariok123456789
    @mariok123456789 10 시간 전

    The world needs more people/drs like this.

  • @launiwalker3694
    @launiwalker3694 3 년 전 +1877

    This talk was given 8 years ago! Sadly we are still throwing darts.

    • @ayeshak6822
      @ayeshak6822 3 년 전 +53

      Societal rot in America really starts with its wars. Soldiers driven mad by war go home to their families as alcoholics and addicts and thus begins the cycle of dysfunction, traumatized kids, and intergenerational trauma. Stop being such a bully country and maybe your society would stop being the madhouse it is today.

    • @s.y.7866
      @s.y.7866 3 년 전 +24

      @@ayeshak6822 I understand what you mean but you can't just say to a person from a certain country to not do the wrong things their country does. She doesn't represent the u.s ofc and you don't even know if she's American

    • @jamesduff6937
      @jamesduff6937 3 년 전 +2

      @@ayeshak6822 Well said Aysha.

    • @ayeshak6822
      @ayeshak6822 3 년 전 +10

      Rajmund Csombordi Your country may have a lot of mentally ill people, but are they mentally ill to the point of shooting random strangers in shops and schools? Do you have a relatively large number of serial killers (compared to the rest of the world) with no motive aside from satisfaction in killing?

    • @humpydumpy8399
      @humpydumpy8399 3 년 전

      farts*

  • @raymondpeter4827
    @raymondpeter4827 3 년 전 +4110

    Every politicians should undergo regular scan before and after they elected.

    • @rohankapoor9845
      @rohankapoor9845 3 년 전 +29

      Very true !!

    • @SimonSverige
      @SimonSverige 3 년 전 +53

      So that a team of politically appointed doctors can decide who we are governed by? What a bizarre and flawed statement!

    • @raymondpeter4827
      @raymondpeter4827 3 년 전 +109

      @@SimonSverige dude you also need a brain scan and pls. find sarcasm in your brain.

    • @JohnnyNagaSins
      @JohnnyNagaSins 3 년 전 +9

      Brilliant 🤣🤣

    • @gavtipor7394
      @gavtipor7394 3 년 전 +3

      @Waterlec they wudn't hav to b,but they will b..n you'll never knw that's d prolm!

  • @TheWesternSharmas
    @TheWesternSharmas 2 개월 전 +64

    Literally going to share this with all the people I know! I’m a survivor of childhood abuse and at 33 still not feeling whole. My grandma has dementia and barely recognizes us most of the time. My grandpa committed suicide in adulthood as he was himself abused and molested as a child by catholic priests in Europe. If only these treatments would become mainstream! I pray it does one day! Thank you Daniel for sharing such important information about the brain and its effects on behaviours. The story about Andrew at the end also made me tear up! Please governments make these treatments accessible to all and society would thrive from it!! ❤

    • @nagodio
      @nagodio 2 개월 전 +1

      Emdr

    • @skatecrew090582
      @skatecrew090582 2 개월 전 +1

      Yes yes I think and hope it will one day

    • @Tenmack416
      @Tenmack416 2 개월 전

      Pls check the information first. It could be a complete manipulation or misconception. There is a reason probably why everyone in the psychiatry doesn’t do that

    • @elastostac
      @elastostac 2 개월 전

      Same im also 23 and a survivor of childhood abuse:( even with therapy I'm not managing to process it​@@nagodio

  • @lonewoodsman00
    @lonewoodsman00 6 개월 전 +32

    33 years ago at the age of 17, I was in a car accident, where I was ejected from the car... 13 broken ribs on right side, both lungs ruptured, jaw broken in 2 places and hit my head so hard that it left me blind in my right eye as well! 28 days in ICU and 21 of those on a respirator... ruined everything I had planned after high-school... couldn't do any career I had planned on! Been treated with every single drug from depression to bi-polar... nothing worked! 50 years old now and given Ritalin for ADHD... I hate it! I tried to raise money to go see Dr Amen after I 1st seen this around 7 years ago and was unsuccessful sadly! I would give anything to find out the answer to the problems I deal with and he seems to be the only way. However I csnt afford to get there, for several reasons. I'm surprised and kind of upset I've made it this long honestly. Happy to hear there is someone out there helping others in the right way though.

  • @SiCVoltage
    @SiCVoltage 4 년 전 +1988

    This is what happens when someone cares so much about people. The passion is real. His heart is genuine. This Doctor has a testimony. We need to listen.

    • @nicholasvanlierde2546
      @nicholasvanlierde2546 4 년 전 +33

      He's a fraud

    • @alexd42dani
      @alexd42dani 4 년 전 +2

      @@nicholasvanlierde2546 why?

    • @nicholasvanlierde2546
      @nicholasvanlierde2546 4 년 전 +24

      @@alexd42dani the scans he uses are 50 year old outdated technology. MRI scans are much more advanced. But you cannot actually see the things he says you can, and he definitely doesn't have the treatments he says he does. 95% treatment rates for alzheimer's? And brain trauma in NFL players? He does none of these things. See a real doctor and psychiatrist.

    • @Tarotiste
      @Tarotiste 4 년 전 +18

      @@nicholasvanlierde2546 There's a difference between "better" and "healed." It's likely that, like many doctors, he sees his specialty as the one that rules all... When coordinated care between multiple specialists usually results in more balanced care and care that looks at at the systems NM it just the one he's trained in. However, he does have a point about Psychiatrists being a specialty that doesn't look at the organ they treat. (Endocrinologists also don't, I guess, but that's kind of difficult?)
      He makes some interesting points that would be interesting to discuss with other health Care providers.

    • @SuperNewf1
      @SuperNewf1 4 년 전 +22

      40 years I have suffered from a brain injury. The brain does heal. I also suffer from Chronic Pain and PTSD. Each have some of the same symptoms. No treatments at all. Had to study to find out my condition.

  • @merryhunt9153
    @merryhunt9153 2 년 전 +2427

    This is the best TED talk I have ever heard. Every word is clear, no wasted time, no waffling - and so inspiring.

    • @shirleymason7697
      @shirleymason7697 2 년 전 +28

      He is a very good speaker.

    • @markidiotzuckerberg2975
      @markidiotzuckerberg2975 2 년 전 +24

      I agree... I haven't watched a lot of talks but among the ones I watched this one is the best.

    • @CM_CHESS
      @CM_CHESS 2 년 전 +14

      When the video ended I thought wow what a nice performance. I was so immersed and interested in the topic I realized he was just talking lol

    • @markdemell3717
      @markdemell3717 2 년 전 +4

      AMEIN.

    • @jacquelienjee9281
      @jacquelienjee9281 2 년 전 +6

      Maybe a good speaker but read all the comments and you will know more!

  • @tateandovida
    @tateandovida 2 일 전 +1

    So brilliant! "Behavior is an expression of the problem, not the problem". "Psychiatrists are the only professionals in the medical field that don't take a look at the source of their study (the brain)... Therefore they can only guess" This TedTalk was amazing.👏🏼

  • @BoggleMeBog
    @BoggleMeBog 7 개월 전 +38

    I can’t believe how before this research, treating was done without any basis. Diagnosis on the most complex organ, most complex thing in the world, was done by listening to what the patient TELLS you what they feel. Absolutely insane. Thank you for your work.

  • @ismayilarifoglu6226
    @ismayilarifoglu6226 2 년 전 +1250

    I like how he says "I and my colleagues" instead of "I", "me" , "only me" and so on. He has a team spirit attitude for sure.

    • @avtarsingh469
      @avtarsingh469 2 년 전 +17

      Scientist know I & me is not in the will of the creator. Science and spirituality are not opposite but complimentary!!!!

    • @jimscanoe
      @jimscanoe 2 년 전 +66

      Grammatically, it should be "... my colleagues and I ...."

    • @jjtucker
      @jjtucker 2 년 전 +5

      His military background probably had some part to play in that.

    • @westsi1
      @westsi1 2 년 전 +5

      Humility 101

    • @HuckleberryHim
      @HuckleberryHim 2 년 전 +28

      @@jimscanoe Untrue, "I and my colleagues" is completely grammatical. All that matters is that the two nouns joined by the conjunction are in the proper case (nominative, which only changes "I" from "me" or "my'). Their order doesn't matter.
      In the same way, "Sarah and he love to play", though it has the pronoun second, still sounds ungrammatical. But "he and Sarah love to play" doesn't. Either way, all four are grammatical.

  • @lmoral222
    @lmoral222 4 년 전 +1882

    This guy screams passion in his voice and demeanor. I like this dude.

    • @annepanetti353
      @annepanetti353 4 년 전 +15

      He wrote a great book called
      'This is your brain on joy'

    • @sanjayw9878
      @sanjayw9878 4 년 전 +7

      Hes a cancer they can speak with much passion and emotion

    • @Kamelhaj
      @Kamelhaj 4 년 전 +9

      Daniel Amen has always been a class act. He gets better every year!

    • @PatrickHuynh222
      @PatrickHuynh222 4 년 전 +3

      I agree with you he can scream lol

    • @lainienorris3931
      @lainienorris3931 4 년 전 +3

      Me toooo!!! If he's right about what he's saying he is a modern-day genius

  • @laflakvar
    @laflakvar 17 일 전 +3

    I started listening to Dr. Amen and I can’t stop now ❤

  • @rachelroseg9295
    @rachelroseg9295 9 개월 전 +49

    Why did KRplus have a warning on this video? Oh yeah, because it deals with science and facts.

  • @8randi
    @8randi 3 년 전 +560

    Gives a whole new meaning to the question "were you dropped on your head as a child?" doesn't it.

    • @8randi
      @8randi 3 년 전 +1

      @Elishanda It was pretty immediate 🤷‍♀️

    • @butteredarmy9129
      @butteredarmy9129 3 년 전 +2

      Well, I came to think of how my head banged to an object when I was met with a motor accident, possibly brought some changes in brain

    • @butteredarmy9129
      @butteredarmy9129 3 년 전 +1

      @@user-pl7tf9gv8e dont worry ,if you have any pain and such visit a doctor friend❤

    • @user-pl7tf9gv8e
      @user-pl7tf9gv8e 3 년 전 +1

      @@butteredarmy9129 Thank you so much❤️.
      The incident was happened when I was a kid, my motoric is better few years later, now I can make sure I'm fully recovered from it. I hope you're the best also❤️

    • @butteredarmy9129
      @butteredarmy9129 3 년 전 +1

      @@user-pl7tf9gv8e 🥺❤❤❤

  • @italianstallion9148
    @italianstallion9148 4 년 전 +593

    "Treatment needs to be tailored to individual brains, not clusters of symptoms."

    • @codyjamessingleton5098
      @codyjamessingleton5098 4 년 전 +2

      Just use Dianetics man. I've cured PTSD with it, Tourettes, chronic pains, depression.
      Thought regulates structure.
      Thought is boss and thought is energy, not chemicals.

    • @zazugee
      @zazugee 4 년 전 +5

      @@codyjamessingleton5098 i think this comes from the other side
      but i remember that line, "its just chemicals" and you're saying "its not chemicals"
      the best approach to this, is to say "its more than chemicals"
      i'd like to use the computer analogy, or even smartphone one
      software, pictures are and are not electrons
      without the electronics on the lower hardware layer, there wont be any computing and no software nor memory that stores images
      but images and softwares arnt' electrons
      so love isnt purely chemicals, thoughts arnt purely chemicals, you cant reduce something to something basic that constitutes it
      a brick house isnt just a pile of sand and gravel, a plane and a car isnt just rocks either

    • @raindropsfukushemiaflavore9914
      @raindropsfukushemiaflavore9914 4 년 전 +1

      That should mandatory..

    • @SuperNewf1
      @SuperNewf1 4 년 전 +2

      @@codyjamessingleton5098 Your thoughts are electro-chemical.

    • @codyjamessingleton5098
      @codyjamessingleton5098 4 년 전 +1

      @@SuperNewf1 no there not. They are energy. Which exists outside this universe. And you already know that.

  • @user-mm6jl9if1z
    @user-mm6jl9if1z 2 일 전 +1

    I can't believe this video was uploaded ten years ago, when I was 16, and now I have finally know the existence of this video at my 26.. The point is why has anybody never told me about this, and why the society of my country do not ever think about his theory.

  • @rajivcherian5161
    @rajivcherian5161 7 개월 전 +43

    All that he said is relatable . No person is born bad. Families and
    society should take responsibility in identifying the problem of our fellow beings.
    Treatments to be done based on proper investigation rather than providing band-aid solutions.
    A visit to a nearby mental hospital will clearly explain the need of such studies. Thanks doctor. People like u are most needed in our society.

    • @tonystonem9614
      @tonystonem9614 4 개월 전 +1

      Some ppl are

    • @reitairue2073
      @reitairue2073 4 개월 전

      ​@@tonystonem9614Or did they hit their head as a toddler? Wouldn't know unless you scan.

    • @ihatespam2
      @ihatespam2 3 개월 전

      That’s not even his idea. It’s old. But he’ll sell you some supplements.

    • @PowersBenzoCoaching
      @PowersBenzoCoaching 2 개월 전

      You all seem to put way too much on nature rather than nurture. I’m a therapist and most mentally ill people have had trauma or negative experiences. Their illness wasn’t brain related.

    • @ihatespam2
      @ihatespam2 2 개월 전

      @@PowersBenzoCoaching at a certain point it becomes semantic. My genetic and birth environment verses my birth process, my parents and my neighbors etc. it’s all environmental. Either way we are the products of our environment.

  • @silverhawk348
    @silverhawk348 2 년 전 +1566

    “Treatments need to be tailored to each individual brain, not clusters of symptoms.” Very well said! And i am so touched after listening to Andrew’s story. I really hope more psychiatrists would use brain scan for patient analysis and heal more brains. Thank you so much!

    • @ryanwogget
      @ryanwogget 2 년 전 +17

      I hope the opposite. It seems criminal to me to charge desperate patients $3500+ for brain scans with practically no scientific validity for diagnosing/treating mental illness...

    • @serpentines6356
      @serpentines6356 2 년 전 +11

      @@ryanwogget Huh? How can this have no scientific basis?

    • @ryanwogget
      @ryanwogget 2 년 전 +3

      @@serpentines6356 Amen's work lacks evidence that it's more effective than the currently accepted methods for psychiatric diagnosis/treatment (much of which is based on patients' symptoms). He doesn't have randomized, controlled, peer-reviewed studies backing his treatments. He can say, "Oh yeah, we treat loads of people!" and maybe they do, but it's meaningless if he can't actually say that it's better than the traditional way. The traditional way, by the way, doesn't cost nearly as much and is usually paid for by insurance, unlike the treatments that Amen Clinics offers. From what I've gathered, this is why his work isn't generally accepted by (and receives criticism from) the rest of the psychiatric community.
      There are plenty of websites where you can read about the criticisms of Daniel Amen/Amen Clinics. I'm not a doctor; I'm not the best person to explain it.

    • @nmplab
      @nmplab 2 년 전 +5

      Sadly, they’re very expensive though.

    • @erikduvald6703
      @erikduvald6703 2 년 전

      Psychiatrists are, unfortunately, incapable of healing ANY brains.

  • @Metzerii
    @Metzerii 3 년 전 +526

    "When you have the privilege of changing someone's brain you not only change his or her life you have the opportunity to change generations to come" DEAR GOD this sentence is so powerful. I will never forget that.

    • @ClintonOrtiz
      @ClintonOrtiz 3 년 전 +6

      DEAR GOD, that sounds like eugenics.

    • @dmac5935
      @dmac5935 3 년 전 +2

      Who should or why is he granted that" privilege" is the question ⁉️

    • @claudiafegari5116
      @claudiafegari5116 3 년 전 +10

      A whole new meaning to the expression: "When you heal yourself, you heal the world..."
      OR "When you heal within yourself, you heal your family line." This last one is a true statement!

    • @rasconromero8202
      @rasconromero8202 3 년 전 +1

      Don't you think it sounds a little bit eugenically? Do our laws and ethic are ready to fulfil these ideas truly and correctly without any damage and voluntarism?

    • @ayeshak6822
      @ayeshak6822 3 년 전 +7

      Societal rot in America really starts with its wars. Soldiers driven mad by war go home to their families as alcoholics and addicts and thus begins the cycle of dysfunction, traumatized kids, and intergenerational trauma. Stop being such a bully country and maybe your society would stop being the madhouse it is today.

  • @OfficialKorrupt
    @OfficialKorrupt 4 일 전 +1

    I worked for someone who worked with and does the same thing Dr Amen does. One of the “brain rehabilitation programs” he’s referring to is called neurofeedback. It is extremely powerful and uses the principle of operant conditioning (similar to Pavlov’s dogs but a bit different) in order to train the brain to heal itself while having a baseline EEG to determine which brain waves are overactive or under active. The training can be paired with nutritional counseling and biofeedback. It’s real and my sister had it done over a period of time and it corrected non-epileptic seizures she was having daily to the point of being seizure-free for 4 years now. Neurofeedback training is getting more popular but is not covered by insurance yet because the government wants to treat symptoms instead of heal. We need lobbying to get the treatment legitimized in the government’s eyes so we can address the insane mental health crisis

  • @FirelillyHeals
    @FirelillyHeals 2 개월 전 +3

    This is completely world changing, the same sort of thing they won’t go for because it helps people.

  • @bekstie
    @bekstie 3 년 전 +1426

    15 years ago I had a car accident that resulted in serious brain damage, i was paralyzed and was told i was not gonna read and function again, ten years later i got distinctions in my majors at uni and i have no set backs (physically and mentally). I saw my neuropsychologist last week for the first time in 15 years and when i was speaking to him and he noticed how functioning i am he looked at me like hes seen a ghost. It is very very very very very real how the mind is capable of changing the brain and anything is possible as long as you put in the hard work and believe in your self (fk the haters). the brain is forever reinventing itself and renewing itself and the saying you cant teach an old dog new tricks and becoming slaves to your habits is wrong. I think what society has become is a shame in relation to how much of a lack of an understanding how powerful the brain is and what is possible through hard work because everything is instant and reality has been put into Hollywood movies making us believe these things are not possible in 'real' life.

    • @amuse1964
      @amuse1964 3 년 전 +21

      Hi.Brian.I really believe in you.
      My brother has same problems.Having brain tumours.Nt cancers though.
      You are the great hope how did you manage to get better ?
      I am the only reliable family but Totally exhausted to repair him.
      Please do not say you have wonderful family members and surrounded by lovely friends.
      I did have friends but drifted away as too busy worrying about bro.
      So any books whatever help me.Regards.

    • @amuse1964
      @amuse1964 3 년 전 +4

      SORRY meant Byron.thats how exhausted i am

    • @mickberry164
      @mickberry164 3 년 전 +34

      I'm with you brother. I used to have a horrible problem with depression. No longer. I learned how to think in self-helping ways rather than self-defeating ways. Here's to level-headed thought.

    • @amuse1964
      @amuse1964 3 년 전 +6

      @RealestRealist many many thanks....very much appreciated.
      You are much kinder than FB friends.whom i call fakebook.

    • @bekstie
      @bekstie 3 년 전 +10

      @@mickberry164 positive psychology (its hard work maintaining it) i am bipolar and its hard work i have to do and at times my head plays tricks on me and my god, but i know what i have to do to keep sane and make sure i do it and its work

  • @watcher6935
    @watcher6935 3 년 전 +634

    If someone had looked at my brothers brain when he complained to his doctor about bad headaches, he might still be alive today.

    • @manjudevi3352
      @manjudevi3352 3 년 전 +6

      What did he have?

    • @marys3127
      @marys3127 3 년 전 +82

      ☹️ Many doctors are moving through their day too quickly and don’t listen. After almost a decade of seeing doctors, I finally diagnosed my rare condition by myself. I then went to go see a geneticist and she confirmed my diagnosis. Sometimes, we have to take our health into our own hands because the doctors just don’t know what they’re doing. I’m so sorry to hear about your brother.

    • @pavansridharan
      @pavansridharan 3 년 전 +15

      @@manjudevi3352 bad headaches.

    • @watcher6935
      @watcher6935 3 년 전 +65

      Manju Devi , a rare tumour that was vascular and one of the veins ruptured and put pressure on his brain stem. He ended up a ventilator for two months before dying. He went to his doctor about the headaches and was told to take Advil.

    • @watcher6935
      @watcher6935 3 년 전 +5

      Friendly Bone , thank you. ❤️

  • @tamtamr9081
    @tamtamr9081 3 개월 전 +4

    wow just amazing!! this needs to be broadcasted everywhere !! thank you doctor for your passin in helping save lives and generations to come! im in tears

  • @suzymagan7575
    @suzymagan7575 4 개월 전 +4

    Thank you so much for this. As someone who has experienced TBIs, multiple times, it's refreshing to see doctors who "get it."

  • @lorielb-v7492
    @lorielb-v7492 2 년 전 +174

    “Treatment needs to be tailored to individual brains, NOT CLUSTERS of symptoms.”

    • @kenjones5645
      @kenjones5645 2 년 전 +1

      Same with Covid, rather tha a universal vaccine for most people who don't need it

    • @jivz3360
      @jivz3360 2 년 전 +7

      Your comparison is very questionable. A Virus vs disease.

    • @user-qi7kk7su3l
      @user-qi7kk7su3l 2 년 전

      @@kenjones5645 right let's make individual vaccines for each of 8 billion people, or only for just a couple of billion people who need it

  • @smoothy4045
    @smoothy4045 3 년 전 +1526

    I love when medical experts, care heart and soul, for humanity.

    • @videoqualia
      @videoqualia 3 년 전 +34

      and makes 20 M$ a year in the process... nothing suspicious there, except the fact that he is peddling pseudoscience.

    • @sinaghoddous890
      @sinaghoddous890 3 년 전 +16

      Marie-Louise Gariépy can you show me a doctor who makes $20M a year?

    • @kalaln323
      @kalaln323 3 년 전 +2

      You don’t need commas b/t experts and care and b/t also soul and for. 😉

    • @komaljeet7884
      @komaljeet7884 3 년 전 +2

      @@videoqualia watch videos of nanak naam 🙏

    • @jassonla
      @jassonla 3 년 전 +5

      yeah, you can take their drugs... not me!

  • @frontpuff
    @frontpuff 2 개월 전 +6

    Im in tears! What really should be a best common practise. Is here simply brilliant!!

  • @millename
    @millename 15 일 전 +1

    It’s crazy that “viewer discretion” pops up before playing this video!

  • @345kobi
    @345kobi 2 년 전 +687

    Would really have liked to hear some on how they rehabilitate the brain.

    • @kleinerflugel65
      @kleinerflugel65 2 년 전 +18

      same

    • @philiphudgens4726
      @philiphudgens4726 2 년 전 +42

      Just what I was thinking throughout the latter section of this vid, expecting that the eminent doctor would get around to that part...but nope!

    • @heracliox
      @heracliox 2 년 전 +67

      Same here. It’s like a joke with no punchline.

    • @jon-michaelgaffney4511
      @jon-michaelgaffney4511 2 년 전 +12

      @@heracliox Well said...perfect!

    • @fiddlestix6468
      @fiddlestix6468 2 년 전 +29

      Magic mushrooms Lion's Mane Mushroom Meditation

  • @tinyfreckle
    @tinyfreckle 5 년 전 +2936

    This was 5 years ago, why are these scans not common practice already?

    • @bjulianaleo3025
      @bjulianaleo3025 5 년 전 +315

      Daniel said - "When you have the PRIVILEGE to change someone's brain"....is Key to why this isn't available to ALL People with issues. MEDICAL IS STILL BIG BUSINESS - and until it's made available to all peoples....many will suffer, die or do Crazy things.

    • @KAClown
      @KAClown 5 년 전 +162

      The US over invested in CT scanners and underinvested in MRIs. CTs expose you to a lot of radiation, so you can only get them every few years. MRIs in the US are marketed as expensive and reserved for the top consumers, "VIP Patients", as they are called in hospitals.
      There's also an aspect of the US medical system which bends over backwards to avoid confirming the endemic abuse culture via medical technology. In the US, doctors are class warriors and gatekeepers to people's health and well being; they are a kind of informal judge, jury, and executioner that decide who "deserves" care and who "deserves" to die slow and painful deaths.

    • @evanking4109
      @evanking4109 5 년 전 +146

      Thats merely an excuse. the pros outway the cons. one succesful scan could lead to alot more preventative measures than the damage it would cause. otherwise we wouldnt use this method at all. the real reason is weve got ourselves into a systemic nightmare, where profit is more favourable than truly saving lives.

    • @kristinar.6600
      @kristinar.6600 5 년 전 +55

      @Bárður Joensen I think the destroyed life's are more.. expensive

    • @smoothy2278
      @smoothy2278 5 년 전 +20

      It will not unless they find a business as good as current med business.

  • @LocuraAndante
    @LocuraAndante 10 개월 전 +1

    This is one of the best, if not the best Ted talk I’ve ever seen. He’s so passionated it’s insane

  • @bedopskepop7936
    @bedopskepop7936 4 개월 전

    This whole field is so radical yet so promising. Absolutely beautiful

  • @familyontheway3300
    @familyontheway3300 3 년 전 +2607

    Whom so ever watching this video, I wish you health, wealth and lot of happiness to you from the bottom of my heart.

    • @peneleapai
      @peneleapai 3 년 전 +26

      Right back at you

    • @tanuj1253
      @tanuj1253 3 년 전 +11

      Same to you as well, buddy

    • @chaserofthelight1737
      @chaserofthelight1737 3 년 전 +15

      With great love, respect and admiration, may you walk with grace all the days of your life. Thank you so much.

    • @kellyberry4173
      @kellyberry4173 3 년 전 +11

      Thank you. And much love to you! You are kind!❤

    • @t.brahma2645
      @t.brahma2645 2 년 전 +7

      🧡

  • @goldenblooms6672
    @goldenblooms6672 3 년 전 +1174

    “Psychiatry is the only medical field that never looks at the organ they treat.” - Daniel Amen.

    • @enger6561
      @enger6561 3 년 전 +18

      This man don't tell how you can change a damaged brain. It's the principal thing I would like to know. I wonder who you give your brain when you expect a result?
      The power of someone that can control all American's brains, can be out of control. CIA would like that so much.

    • @TIJyears
      @TIJyears 3 년 전 +3

      Yes Enger Our government would love that! I'm quite sure! The power that could give them.

    • @ravirumplestiltskin598
      @ravirumplestiltskin598 3 년 전 +11

      E: I agree. No mention of the actual treatments for the various brain 'dysfunctions'. There currently exists a tool called 'social engineering' AKA 'brain-washing'. I just hope and pray that this new development will not be used to dupe the general public even more.

    • @lorenachaweles.5849
      @lorenachaweles.5849 3 년 전 +19

      Psychiatry never proved any real diagnosis. They can' t prove with a blood test that someone is "bipolar" and yet they claim it is a "chemical" imbalance, and they drug you to death, literally.
      They can' t cure any thing.
      They use drugs, electro shock and lobotomies as a " treatment" and then they just let you rot..
      Psychiatry is the bigest fraud in human history .

    • @pearlmas5924
      @pearlmas5924 3 년 전 +23

      @@lorenachaweles.5849 I don't know if I'd go that far...
      I know a few people who have found lots of very real and very good help in psychiatry. It's people like this guy that's the problem. Or the gullibility of the populace, whichever.

  • @rrtag
    @rrtag 2 개월 전 +7

    I've watched too-many-to-count tedTALKS and none of them comes close relative to this in terms of impact. I've had goosebumps from the beginning up to the end. I'll tell you what, I haven't had my brain scanned yet but just simply knowing this, my life is changing by the second. This is brilliant. Thank you so much.

  • @breathnstop
    @breathnstop 3 년 전 +64

    After being a psychiatric nurse for 15 years I was horrified by what a failure the psychiatric field was in treating or curing sick people. Neuropsychiatry is a brilliant field that will save lives.

  • @Shaowolf
    @Shaowolf 9 년 전 +132

    For people who don't want to see the whole video: 10:00 is the moment where he tells the most important lesson.

    • @sana260
      @sana260 9 년 전 +14

      Thanks

    • @DrJohnPollard
      @DrJohnPollard 9 년 전 +4

      Shaowolf247 then don't bother with that because he doesn't say anything there either.

    • @CezarMS1
      @CezarMS1 9 년 전 +3

      Shaowolf247 The whole video is very interesting in my opinion. One never knows what he/she needs to hear in order to make a radical positive change in his/her life.

    • @Shaowolf
      @Shaowolf 9 년 전

      In this video it wasn't the case

    • @MichaelMuryn
      @MichaelMuryn 8 년 전

      Dr John Pollard Dr John Pollard But... He said it very clearly and his speech look staged: "The single most important lesson my colleagues and I have learnt [...]".

  • @rameshpant1309
    @rameshpant1309 2 개월 전 +5

    God has gifted doctors like you...is a blessing to us...

  • @D1900fas
    @D1900fas 4 개월 전 +3

    I saw this about 7-8 years ago. I'm glad its now at 20 million views 🙌 👏

  • @andrewcliffe4753
    @andrewcliffe4753 4 년 전 +733

    Started to work out at gym first time at 77years, gradually ramped up over time, brain function improving all the time.
    Worth a try...

    • @eaumartineau7890
      @eaumartineau7890 4 년 전 +11

      My friend had a massive brain hemorrhage at 78. Died.

    • @homeloanzain
      @homeloanzain 4 년 전 +2

      Awesome!

    • @monkeyrobotsinc.9875
      @monkeyrobotsinc.9875 4 년 전 +4

      @@eaumartineau7890 lmfao u finny

    • @eaumartineau7890
      @eaumartineau7890 4 년 전 +19

      @Frank from Iowa listen my friend who died was not athletic and never worked out in this life and started working out in his mid-70s. And I'm not saying that contributed to his Hemorrhage and stroke but when you're in your seventies and working out for the first time that is dangerous territory. Be careful that's all I'm saying pretty much reality sucks but it's the truth

    • @StartingOverSingleAgain
      @StartingOverSingleAgain 4 년 전 +3

      Great job, keep going, keep growing!

  • @saranyav.o3267
    @saranyav.o3267 2 년 전 +728

    “When you have the privilege of changing someone’s brain, you are not only changing his or her life, but you have the opportunity to change generations to come” - Amazing and Inspiring!! 🙌😮 👏

    • @poisonedchrist7802
      @poisonedchrist7802 2 년 전

      And where is the world headed ma’am?

    • @poisonedchrist7802
      @poisonedchrist7802 2 년 전 +3

      Wish I could take you to dinner and explain so many things

    • @Factology
      @Factology 2 년 전

      Who cares about generations to come we will be dead

    • @poisonedchrist7802
      @poisonedchrist7802 2 년 전

      @@Factology spiritually yes, but what makes you think literally too?

    • @Factology
      @Factology 2 년 전

      @@poisonedchrist7802 literally? Like how everyone who has ever lived has died? Yeah like that 🤦🏼‍♂️

  • @tank27_56
    @tank27_56 2 개월 전 +1

    Dr Daniel Amen and this video deserve a lot more recognition.

  • @TheGuyWithFunny
    @TheGuyWithFunny 4 일 전

    Grand, just what i needed to remember today. Thank you all.

  • @darlaboo08
    @darlaboo08 4 년 전 +732

    This made me emotional knowing there’s hope. We need more doctors like this.

    • @showbuster
      @showbuster 4 년 전 +2

      You probably got emotional because of your gender but yes, it was a fascinating talk. Keep it up ted

    • @dogwoodtree7682
      @dogwoodtree7682 4 년 전 +4

      Prayers for you to find the blessings Our Heavenly Father has for you Darla.

    • @matthewhorizon6050
      @matthewhorizon6050 4 년 전 +9

      @@dogwoodtree7682
      Stop. Just stop. Please. You folks are overwhelmingly toxic.

    • @r4x2
      @r4x2 4 년 전 +1

      The hope is that your mind is stable enough to maintain regular employment. If not, good luck with that disability that won't get taken care of!

    • @tristanjohn
      @tristanjohn 4 년 전 +2

      Yep so did I! Hard not to get emotional with that last story..

  • @australianhuntanstuff
    @australianhuntanstuff 4 년 전 +1346

    Imagine actually treating patients instead of seeing them as a dollar bill!!!

    • @mustangmikep51
      @mustangmikep51 4 년 전 +9

      thats the way it used to be

    • @alexbigalinator6911
      @alexbigalinator6911 4 년 전 +5

      Or as a political tool

    • @trude8073
      @trude8073 4 년 전 +10

      I feel like most health professionals in our country do that, although not all, but we are a socialist country, and don't have the set up like America do. We don't pay anything, and doctors are paid by the government.

    • @katehobbs2008
      @katehobbs2008 4 년 전 +3

      mike maurer I think we have that great system in Australia, affordable world-class medicine

    • @dreamhousehunting
      @dreamhousehunting 4 년 전 +14

      The program sounds amazing, but just getting the scans costs like $4,000. Not covered by insurance. Does it really need to be that much?

  • @duediligence791
    @duediligence791 11 개월 전

    Thank you for everything that you do. Even if not for me you’ve brought hope to this word. Wish I had learned about this early in life.

  • @lordnamaste27
    @lordnamaste27 2 개월 전 +1

    This gentleman is along with his colleges a real hero!!!! Bravo!!! A thousand times BRAVO!!! 👏👏👏👏

  • @persephassa217
    @persephassa217 3 년 전 +390

    I'm clapping and I'm not even there. This wise man deserves way more than that, really.

    • @tanksareback5146
      @tanksareback5146 3 년 전 +8

      This was an amazing speech. Truly inspiring and gives me hope.

    • @sizhnorrhena6524
      @sizhnorrhena6524 3 년 전

      @@tanksareback5146 case was

    • @yolantapasikowski-kucz.2686
      @yolantapasikowski-kucz.2686 3 년 전 +4

      Thank you Maverick for being for because of you there is hope for us as humans . Sending gratitude and love ❤️🙏🏻

    • @jeannedarc7533
      @jeannedarc7533 3 년 전 +4

      If I'm being honest, he deserves a Nobel prize fr.

    • @cusapr
      @cusapr 2 년 전

      Me too sister, me too

  • @yepitsme3336
    @yepitsme3336 2 년 전 +411

    Dealing with depression and anxiety for over 40 years (symptoms began at age 8), I can't believe that mental health professionals don't do brain scans on everyone who suffers ANY kind of mental illness. He's so on point when he says every other organ or skeletal problem is looked at internally. It's so simple it's almost laughable - but it's so sad. I wonder what he thinks about inheriting mental illness (thanks Dad!)? Why does medication work on some people, but not others?

    • @bestieswithtesties
      @bestieswithtesties 년 전 +28

      Brain scans are not cheap. Nor are they something 90% (probably more) of mental health professionals are trained in or have access to the tools to do. That is why they aren't done all the time for everyone. It's just not that easy. It's expensive and requires a doctor who's actually trained in it. As far as medication goes, like he explained in his talk, people can have the exact same symptoms or problems meanwhile what's going on in their brains can be completely different or even opposite of each other. So what one person needs, like a specific medication for example, is not always the same thing that another person needs even if they have the same symptoms.

    • @yepitsme3336
      @yepitsme3336 년 전 +39

      @@bestieswithtesties - if what you say is true, then it's time they get on the ball and train more mental health doctors to read these scans. Make more machines, and therefore, hopefully make it cheaper. It's just so incredible to me that the most important organ in the body is least looked at.

    • @a.o.9199
      @a.o.9199 년 전 +17

      MRIs for reading brains are now a lot more common than you think, and most insurances will cover MRIs. There are trained radiologists that read said brain scans and maybe in more rural areas it’s less common but for most cities there is at least 1 facility that can do a brain scan. The real problem is that this knowledge needs to be made more widespread to other psychologists or those in training. Another problem is the US’s health care system being highly flawed and insurance companies constantly denying payment of care to pts who really need it…

    • @yepitsme3336
      @yepitsme3336 년 전 +4

      @@a.o.9199 - thank you for explaining! I really don't know all about this stuff, I just know how it is to be the patient! I guess we have a ways to go yet, but hopefully, we will get there.
      I am watching 2 school shooting trials on youtube and I think had these shooters been looked at much more closely in their childhood & teen years (like an MRI brain scan), "maybe" things would have turned out differently? It's impossible to know, but I think it could only help.

    • @miad6160
      @miad6160 년 전 +1

      @@yepitsme3336 exactly. Thank you for using common sense. People like the guy you’re replying to can’t seem to think outside of the box smh.

  • @Hal9grand
    @Hal9grand 일 전

    I don’t have any physical brain injuries, but, I have practiced and lived with the idea that my thoughts, feelings & emotions, like my actions, are optional & my choice, that I can choose to experience or not & in doing so is why I no longer have the anxiety, depression or meds I used to experience or take, 25 years ago.

  • @honantong
    @honantong 11 개월 전

    his voice goes into your heart

  • @amitojha9545
    @amitojha9545 4 년 전 +386

    I liked the way he gave credits to his colleagues and didn't take whole credit.

    • @ramade9040
      @ramade9040 4 년 전 +18

      @Amit Ojha because he has a healthy brain

    • @virsingh1040
      @virsingh1040 4 년 전

      No.

    • @daranag1946
      @daranag1946 3 년 전

      @@virsingh1040
      plz ll let kkkk I'll lo all posts lo kkkk loll let look kk look LLL LLL lol LLL LLL LLL LLL LLL ll LLL LLL lol LLL LLL lol all all LLL llllll

  • @Farooqueakhan
    @Farooqueakhan 3 년 전 +342

    This is shocking .. absolutely. We must bring psychiatrists and neurosurgeons to work together like cardiac physicians and surgeons.

    • @butteredarmy9129
      @butteredarmy9129 3 년 전 +7

      That's absolutely correct sir.

    • @SciFiGirl007
      @SciFiGirl007 3 년 전 +2

      Clearly your not in health care.... Surgeons working alongside other professionals? Herding Cats

    • @tonyacumbest9361
      @tonyacumbest9361 3 년 전 +1

      Add psychiatric nurse practitioners

    • @Farooqueakhan
      @Farooqueakhan 3 년 전 +1

      @@SciFiGirl007 Surgeons do take time looking at the reports, diagnosing, discussing options with their colleagues, and the patient, during which time they may consult people from other discipline. Never meant during the surgery, which you seem to understand.

  • @rinoking88
    @rinoking88 2 개월 전 +1

    I love hearing someone who is passionate about one of the more maligned fields - e.g. psychiatry, criminal defense, news media, etc. Doing it for the right reasons and passionate about it.

  • @nepenthe_1610
    @nepenthe_1610 2 개월 전 +3

    Such a brilliant lecture indeed! So glad I found this on my recommended page (even though it's been so late).

  • @eliseleon5460
    @eliseleon5460 3 년 전 +746

    I also work in radiology and I agree that we need to promote more diagnostic imaging in terms of psychology and mental health. I’m an administrator and I’m hoping to push the rehabilitation hospital that I work at onto this path. We treat all types of brain injuries, stroke aliments, neurological issues.

    • @tonyacumbest9361
      @tonyacumbest9361 3 년 전 +15

      This sounds like a doctoral dissertation needs to get behind your effort, Elise. Great idea to keep pushing!

    • @agatawiech8836
      @agatawiech8836 3 년 전 +5

      Good luck

    • @arkhavenland
      @arkhavenland 2 년 전 +2

      Elise look into immunocal. It's phenomenal!

    • @cikguhanincerita8250
      @cikguhanincerita8250 2 년 전 +7

      Thank you Elise. People will benefit much from this. Couldn't understand why doctors condem this beneficial thing. It is a real jealousy.

    • @jengable4888
      @jengable4888 2 년 전 +6

      Yes ! Treatment should be all encompassing for a precise mental health diagnosis: PET scan, therapy, possible psychoptropic medication (only when applicable), exercise, nutrition plan, and monitoring other lifestyle/environmental aspects !

  • @jasonmixon5060
    @jasonmixon5060 4 년 전 +20

    I AM A PATIENT OF DR.AMEN AND HE SAVED MY LIFE AND HELP ME BE A BETTER FATHER AND HUSBAND! I had a football Injury and got hit in the head with a baseball bat I suffered from Addiction depression ,anxiety ,and ADHD! He saved my life.

    • @BuddhaLove77
      @BuddhaLove77 4 년 전 +3

      Thank you for sharing your experience.
      May your path be blessed with Joy!

    • @brandiveh
      @brandiveh 4 년 전

      Whered you get scanned? Did insurance pay? How much does it cost

    • @theayesha147
      @theayesha147 4 년 전

      That's great! What was the procedure? How did they do it?

  • @Crookedwrld65
    @Crookedwrld65 2 개월 전

    This gave me chills. Bravo.

  • @jdfuchsia
    @jdfuchsia 7 개월 전 +5

    Truth! The statement around those who committed crime is so important and profound and relevant to me. I wish the justice system would listen to this...I could use it for someone very close and important to me right now. I am the victim and I don't want him to do hard time; I want him to get treatment for the MH issue he has that underlies the hurtful actions he uses against me.. 😢

  • @teslah2997
    @teslah2997 2 년 전 +278

    I am a retired MRI tdchnologist…..and, usually, if a person was having mental issues, their physician would order an MRI of the brain to look for any physical signs, pathology, that might cause their mental problems…..such as the cyst that this Doc says Andrew had. An MRI scan of the brain should always be part of a psychiatric workup when trying to diagnose mental illness. As should a nutritional workup and questioning of the patient’s physical environment to see if any chemical toxins present that may have caused the mental problem (if it is a fairly sudden onset)

    • @shaneodonnell3697
      @shaneodonnell3697 2 년 전 +15

      Oh only if we lived in a perfect world?😳

    • @human-qp1mf
      @human-qp1mf 2 년 전 +16

      I have suffered from mental illness all my life. Not until I figured out I'm a empath did I start to heal. I didn't realize I took on other people's energy. I'm learning to block it but it's hard to find a happy medium.
      I was diagnosed bipolar. I can see my highs and lows now and I evaluate whether I want certain energy in my area. I also TRY to wake up grateful, helps too.
      Through the years meds never helped, I have seen meds help some people but they just use us like guinea pigs in my opinion.
      There have been some great breakthroughs, I will admit, it does help to seek help! Even if it's the wrong help. Trail and error, type thing.☹️ It's exhausting.

    • @biblecartoonsforall
      @biblecartoonsforall 2 년 전

      @@human-qp1mf MRI is useless because it does not show brain activity.

    • @KateLate____
      @KateLate____ 2 년 전 +9

      Wouldn't you be biased though? If you're a tech, you're not meeting the patients who aren't offered a scan. I've never heard of anyone getting an mri for mental health problems.

    • @teslah2997
      @teslah2997 2 년 전 +8

      @@KateLate____ it is done in order for the attending physician to rule out any physical reason that a person may be havng mental issues, such as a brain tumor of some type….which, depending on its location in the brain, could be the cause of some mental changes. it is not done in every case, but I don’t think it is a bad idea, especially in the case of someone who has been mentally/emotionally stable in the past.I don’t see why you would think any bias is in play at all in my statement. what sort of bias are you thinking of?

  • @foraquid
    @foraquid 4 년 전 +737

    Impressive lecture, but I would have loved to hear about how they go about rehabilitating someone's brain once they discover these issues (although the removal of the cyst was obvious).

    • @seeker6088
      @seeker6088 4 년 전 +26

      Meditation

    • @akashcash
      @akashcash 4 년 전 +13

      @@seeker6088 really?

    • @aymanektiriidrissi2600
      @aymanektiriidrissi2600 4 년 전 +133

      Based on dr Amen’s books the main thing is to give supplements ( or medication when the supplements doesn’t give the effect ) after doing a brain scan + other things such as neurofeedback, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, meditation... What dr Amen work is different is that other psychiatrist never look at the brain before giving medication, so for example adderall would make a person A work great while it can make a person B become angry, rigid and commit suicide, while both of them have ADHD. The explanation of this is that when you do brain imaging there’s 7 different causes and different areas that can be responsible for the symptoms of ADHD and thus different types of ADHD. This makes looking at the brain a must to cible the malfunctioning area in the brain because when you don’t see you can take it to a worse situation and unwanted sequels.

    • @rcche3778
      @rcche3778 4 년 전 +2

      Cognitive remediation

    • @tammybain6582
      @tammybain6582 4 년 전 +6

      Caroline Leaf teaches how to retrain your brain

  • @milkteame
    @milkteame 2 개월 전 +18

    I'm a medical student currently and have a bachelors in Psychology but will be taking Psychiatry in specialization. I graduated at a time where stigma was craaaazy. I am in awe how this ted talk explained it intricately and so beautifully... the whole i'm WOWED.

  • @marynoonan6111
    @marynoonan6111 9 개월 전 +11

    My sister (who has frontal temporal dementia) was misdiagnosed initially by a Dr on Zoom. She was described Parkinson's meds and went off her trolly, virtually overnight. It took her saying she knew it was the meds and for her family to believe her, to finally wean her off the bloody toxic things, for her to return to her new normal. Talk about that original Dr throwing darts in the dark. I'll say. He was simply going on symptoms & not taking into account her as an individual. She may have had several similar symptoms to Parkinson's. But in fact she didnt have the disease & those meds exacerbated her condition, and she very nearly had to be institutionalized. It was awful to see her rapid decline and mental confusion. She was terrified at what was happening to her. Her husband & kids stepped in and stopped it, but it should never had happened in the first place. Never!! If only they'd done a scan eh? And this Dr is right. Why don't psychiatrist scan all their patients? It's utterly negligent that they don't.

  • @trcherrera
    @trcherrera 4 년 전 +541

    Wow. One of the best TEDx talk Ive watched. PASSION. Education. Experience.
    Commands attention.

    • @farhatnajar1986
      @farhatnajar1986 4 년 전 +1

      Tonitot hi

    • @lifewatchgroup1587
      @lifewatchgroup1587 4 년 전 +8

      Unfortunately, this "doctor" is a hoax. He claims he did research in Philadelphia. Their hospital research department there denied this. Careful, the brain does not get restored as he claims. Read comments from two prestigious Journals: of nuclear medicine and radiology who commented they asked him to send his work for peer review, but he refused claiming it was proprietary ( because it isn't science, just hoax) mixed with some truths, so this is dangerous. Stay away form him

    • @bradchambers5886
      @bradchambers5886 4 년 전 +2

      @@lifewatchgroup1587 gotta watch out for these charismatic types.

    • @flexflex7054
      @flexflex7054 4 년 전 +1

      Agree...one of the best for sure...

    • @kateanderson3779
      @kateanderson3779 4 년 전 +2

      Really? I honestly couldn’t understand what point he was trying to make. We (the affected) should all do the brain rehabilitation? But what is it consisting of? So much talk but no concrete guide

  • @pronoob0
    @pronoob0 8 년 전 +108

    This guy is right. People with mental illness should be treated according to their individual brains, and not their symptoms. Psychiatric symptoms can be misunderstood by the doctors or even be misdescribed by the patient, thus potentially leading to a misdiagnosis. Also, psychiatric medications affect the brain chemistry, therefore the mind (mood, behavior, etc), but they don't affect the mind directly. See the patient's brain, and you can know which medication is needed, and not by just assuming, which psychiatry is all about at the moment.

    • @dugebuwembo
      @dugebuwembo 7 년 전 +5

      Artist Neuroleptic medication is fundamentally flawed because they don't take into the fact how complex the brain is and how mood and well-being is never a simple chemical issue in the brain. The brain is a complex organ that gives rise to consciousness.

  • @kingorigitahi
    @kingorigitahi 27 일 전

    This is sooooo touching. The story telling skill is also absolutely fantastic.

  • @groominator-magneticequato7195

    The most important take away- this approach will change generations to come and quell generational trauma more so than anything now available. Utterly grateful I found Amen 🙏🏻

  • @cosmicmuse2900
    @cosmicmuse2900 4 년 전 +922

    He seems very frustrated with how the system works. Too bad that this didn't get the clout it deserved but nonsensical tiktok videos did
    Update: when this comment was posted, this video barely had views. KRplus put this in everyone's recs lately and now the views have skyrocketed in a few weeks. Good for the doctors noble cause 🙏🏼

    • @cbdcrystal2359
      @cbdcrystal2359 4 년 전 +24

      Ms. Bhumika Bhavya 100% agreed! A good portion of our society is focused on all the wrong things!

    • @01mustang05
      @01mustang05 4 년 전 +15

      Ever consider that the system is really a scheme?

    • @cosmicmuse2900
      @cosmicmuse2900 4 년 전 +3

      @@01mustang05 I understand what you mean. Me considering anything will not amount to anything. The only thing I look for are genuine solutions. Gladly I've found quite a few that work with 100% efficiency.

    • @andrewgraves9636
      @andrewgraves9636 4 년 전 +1

      The Medical Industrial Complex will do that.

    • @mascara1777
      @mascara1777 4 년 전 +2

      Dr. Amen is very famous!! If you follow health news, and ignore time wasters like Tik Tok, you would have heard of him.

  • @moonwitch8852
    @moonwitch8852 3 년 전 +120

    The biggest issue here is that this isn’t available for everyone. I actually called the place and it’s over 5 grand just for an initial meeting. I find it interesting that even though this person is dedicated to helping people, he only helps people who can afford it.

    • @drchristineobrien9704
      @drchristineobrien9704 3 년 전 +14

      Not at his Orange County California clinics. It's 4K without insurance. And that's for the WHOLE PROGRAM, multiple appointments.

    • @yomega8336
      @yomega8336 3 년 전 +18

      i mean good stuff is epensive, especially in a country with a dogshit healthcare system, much easier for them to make 20k pills for 2$ and sell at 1000% profit margin because it still be a cheap solution

    • @em3361
      @em3361 3 년 전 +13

      U can tell somethings off the way he speaks... Like hes selling to fools...

    • @Erin-rg3dw
      @Erin-rg3dw 3 년 전 +4

      @@yomega8336 Even in countries with socialized medicine, these types of treatments aren't necessarily available, or if they are, there's a waiting list/proof needed before the treatment can be approved. In Canada, lots of alternative medicines (ones that are prescribed by doctors) aren't covered by the national insurance, so patients pay out of pocket. My guess is the machines/specialists needed to do his analysis and treatment plan aren't cheap, making the process expensive. In order for a government or private insurance to cover a procedure or treatment, someone has to repeatedly prove that the system works (for example, proved drug trials), otherwise they won't cover it. Insurances (private and government) also don't like to pay any more than they have to to get the job done.

    • @quuqeemonster
      @quuqeemonster 2 년 전 +3

      @@em3361 I agree - something is not right

  • @SarkanyGergogaming
    @SarkanyGergogaming 3 개월 전 +1

    He is one of the greatest speakers I have seen

  • @MrJdcirbo
    @MrJdcirbo 4 년 전 +128

    Every psychiatric student needs to see this.

    • @johncoll4456
      @johncoll4456 4 년 전 +5

      Everybody needs to see this.

    • @geraltvonriva9873
      @geraltvonriva9873 4 년 전

      Nobody needs to see this liar.

    • @MrJdcirbo
      @MrJdcirbo 4 년 전

      @@geraltvonriva9873 what makes you say he is a liar?

    • @tahaqtr7439
      @tahaqtr7439 4 년 전

      @@geraltvonriva9873 why is he a liar? I have been trying to find answers.

    • @benfactor
      @benfactor 4 년 전

      @@tahaqtr7439 cause all those companies that thrive on profit selling pills for this and that must preserve the status quo.

  • @AG-io5wr
    @AG-io5wr 4 년 전 +511

    I appreciate that I am alive to witness this. Knowledge is powerful.

    • @waltervega7798
      @waltervega7798 4 년 전 +4

      Yes, knowledge is the most powerful thing!

    • @easonsolitud6098
      @easonsolitud6098 4 년 전 +2

      that's so true

    • @afour9618
      @afour9618 4 년 전 +9

      @@waltervega7798 Knowledge is useless without wisdom and understanding.

    • @waltervega7798
      @waltervega7798 4 년 전 +2

      @@afour9618 Do you think that the one can exist without the other? they are always together

    • @hawkstrike18
      @hawkstrike18 4 년 전 +4

      @@waltervega7798 you only mentioned knowledge in your first comment, though. And many people care only about knowledge and not about being open-minded, objective, and generally having the values that will make them use knowledge right, for the greater good, and with balance.
      So, his reply was perfect. Too bad few ppl who only value knowledge will ever read it...