P.S. who doesn't love themselves some murder? + Sherlock.
Eilidh + Mia's resounding: "HE IS" when Lyndsey says Sherlock isn't smart.
Lyndsey hurt me deeply with that comment.
Dancing zombies were sick people with a disease that caused uncontrollable dancing similar...it was a disease as mysterious, creepy, and deadly as the black ...
My wife has reported hearing rumbles and we have heard mystery booms, We hear booms all the time from the Army post but they are Artillery and Rocket fire, But occasionally we hear something that is certainly neither...
I heard about that. Apparently they said it had something to do with solar flares hitting the magnetic field and causing it to warp or something. Creepy as hell.. i think i even heard one of those.
Church propaganda. I'll bet the claims of people dancing till they died are
historic urban myths, and the ones who didn't die were attention seekers.
The last one where they actually loaded people to the shrine, in my
opinion, was most likely church propaganda and planned for at least a few
of the participants, the rest being attention seekers.
I really enjoy this channel and conspiracies, but this is just ridiculous.
How would you be forced to dance, and how would this be contagious? The
only way I see this possibly happening is if it was some sort of metal
illness, but mental illness isn't contagious from person to person. Just
don't see how this is real at all
The religious sect known as the Shakers were very pious and their propensity to "shake" came from their strict following to the doctrine of denial of physical pleasures.I read a book by Carlos Castaneda, This is from what I remember reading, I could not find the quote: The entities (from another realm of earth) began a funky dance in a circle. I began dancing around in a circle. I could not help myself, as if I was compelled to follow.
Depression is a disease of civilization: Stephen Ilardi at TEDxEmory
Dr. Stephen Ilardi is a professor of clinical psychology and the author of The Depression Cure: The 6-Step Program to Beat Depression Without Drugs.
+Zane Dyer Low nutritional diet is a huge part of it. I was surprised at the lack of diet aspect mentioned here, however, I think all the other points are valid.
when he says he believes clinical depression should be added to that list
collective silence is palpable.
"its a disease of lifestyle."
Wow, TedTalks Stepping up The Game. !!!!!
hello. im 13 years old and im depressed. i don't know what to do. Yes that
depression:
•everyday people are hurting my feelings
•im doing bad at school because of it
•everyday im crying or staring at the wall for 1/2 hours.
•i thinked about suicide and that thougt stays in my head
•im feeling like im nothing. just a pole. that people can piss on
pls. what do i do?
+CasNstuff That's life.. there's a lot of assholes surrounding everybody. You have to learn to be strong on your own - feed that ego, it won't hurt you. Sadly that's what this monetary system of ours creates, greed, jealousy - it feeds negative energies. Life just gets harder as you grow older, by the time you're 20 you'll have a lot of everyday stress on you. But learn to handle those feelings because they'll bring you down otherwise. Life wasn't meant to be this way but.. we're here now, we might as well adapt, be strong and enjoy life for the few years we have.
For me I think it was environmental. I remember as a child being very
social, optimistic and kind. But as time progressed and my home life became
worse and worse I became a very sad self destructive person. At my core I'm
still that child though. I feel it, the kindness towards others, the
shyness the innocence. Life however made me the man I am today. It's true
though I need to change my habits, a lot of my problems are self created.
The thing about depression though is that everything, and I mean everything
feels like an enormous task. Depression physically feels heavy, mentally
feels foggy/exhausting and emotionally sometimes just hopeless. Still I
know this won't be more whole life, and it won't be yours either so long as
you fight. I've always thought that being depression isn't a weakness, its
strength. For you to get up go to work and school deal with family, kids,
bills, etc for you to do all that and be depressed.... Damn... That's a
strong ass person. Be proud and don't quit.
+Mike Cornejo Stay strong!!!! I know what its like to be suicidal/depressed day after day to where you don't even want to get out of bed and all you want to do is sleep. Well guess what, there is hope! I became a widower at 23 and am now almost 27. I posted on your discussion page the only thing that completely healed me, gave me strength and motivation to get up in the morning, love and knowing that I'm not alone, peace and joy! So please go check it out ASAP! <3
I've been suffering depression for almost 4 years. I need someone where to
go where people understand me because, none of my friends or family
understand or believe.
Google for depression support groups in your area. In fact, most mood/social disorder support groups should have people who understand where you're coming from. You can also look for therapists to talk to. Hope things get better. :)
I think depression comes from the dissatisfaction of not being able to live
our lives in the way we imagine they should be. It's expectations for our
lives not being met. But depressed people will only think and ruminate
about how things should be, how their lives should be, and can only think,
they never take action. The lack of taking action is where the depression
comes in, I think.
Good point, and I believe it to hold true in most cases as well. And this is why Mindfulness Meditation and books like The Power of Now are geared towards helping you pay attention to the present. That way you're not stuck comparing where you are now to your past nor your perceived future. You can see your situation at present clearly, and can take the logical actions to change them for the better.
I've logged 36 years fighting depression and surviving two major suicide
attempts, I spent a long time doing exercises too used to box and train in
other arts. Soon as I am at a high point in life it returns. Meds,
counseling, socializing etc. Its has bested them all over time. Kinda lost
+Mike Smitty Personally, I feel certain that the only real way to deal with lifelong, crippling depression is by going to an all-inclusive treatment center for clinical depression -- one that insures you are neutralizing ALL causes of depression, and living a 110% anti-depressing lifestyle... including all the recommendations this speaker makes. Unfortunately, so far, I don't know of any such centers or programs that do this adequately. The speaker here mentions one, but I haven't checked into it yet. If anyone knows a good treatment center like this, let me know! I'm still looking...
I miss being in love with my wife. We're roomates raising our daughter with
lots of love. I feel ok and I'm mainly healthy but some things are just
gone in my middle aged life. Friends faded away, sex life done, can't stand
my side of the family, quick to get irritated. Strange.
There is an underlying force within us that gravitates us to certain individuals of the opposite sex with the objective being to produce a healthy offspring. Love is natures way of ensuring healthy reproduction. We fall inlove with someone, disregarding obvious differences between each other, and as a result we reproduce healthy offspring. However after the birth of a child or children, it's as if a mirror is shattered, and we begin, without the love hormones we initially were spurred on by, to realise the person we are with is not compatible with ourselves. Nature has produced a healthy baby, that is the primary goal of life, but it leaves us coupled with a stranger. This is the German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauers theory on the metaphysics of love. Hopefully this helps to explain to you that what your feeling is not an inherent flaw in yourself, but a natural occurrence that is needed to birth your healthy child. It also explains the divorce rate haha
Alzheimers Disease
Test Your knowledge! //empowern.com/2015/08/alzheimers/ Thank you so much for watching! For more videos please give this video a "thumbs up" and ...
This applies to all of your videos....I appreciate how all of the
videos include different learning styles; verbal and visual. I like how you
do speak at a consistent place a long with placing the words up on your
video. Really like how you help the information stick to your followers.
Please don't stop doing this portion of your videos. Thank you for all the
hard work that you do the put these videos up/blogs/and NCLEX style
questions.
+filippina13 Oh wow! I'm overwhelmed.Thank you for letting me know.It means so so much.I will absolutely keep more videos coming. so stay posted. :)I would love to hear from you again soon.-xoxo
The younger it hits a person, the worse and more aggressive it will be. It
seems to be something similar to mad cow disease, also causing plaque.
Awesome video!
+ranDZsg Thank you so much for the comment & for letting me know :)Looking forward to seeing you on here again very soon!xoxo- Caroline
What is Alzheimer's disease? - Ivan Seah Yu Jun
View full lesson: //ed.ted.com/lessons/what-is-alzheimer-s-disease-ivan-seah-yu-jun Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia, affecting ...
I don't think so, I've only heard of middle aged to elderly people being afflicted by the specific form of dementia, but someone 11 could have Schizophrenia or another form of dementia
My mom is only 50 and she's at stage 4 , Never have i ever thought that my
mom would get sick at the age of 50 and what makes it even worse is the
fact that i'm only 20 i'm still a student i can't help my dad with her
medical bills or anything and she's getting worse
My grandma is 71 and is at I think stage 3-4. My family recently visited Disney World and Universal with my grandparents. I remember several times she would wander away and we would have to grab her hand and pull her back to us, she bought a tablet from a TV ad, and she even forgot what my dad's name was. My dad said this started when he was in college , so it's been going on for about 20 years.My mom pulled me and my little siblings aside and told us how she was "sick in her mind" (the youngest is 9 and while my siblings are very intelligent, don't know what Alzheimer's is) and was losing her memories. She said while she was losing her memories and wouldn't remember this in a year or so, we would still have those memories of her at the parks, smiling with her infectious smile. While I might be losing her in a physical sense, I will never lose her in my heart.
My great grandma on my dads side had it really bad. I think she was somewhere in her 70's when she got diagnosed but I remember we would visit her in the old folks home and it was just really sad. I can only imagine how my Nana thought about it. But on the lighter side she was a great artist. She gave me a few drawing lessons in the hospital where she was kept which I thought was really cool.
I'm 21 and my dad has stage 6. He's older than your mom, but I just want you to know you are not alone. I know that most of the people who relate to you are older. But I'm here and young and a caregiver.
+zineb zbir You are believe me. =) And I was looking at my mom's photo albums and videos starting to see how happy and funny my mother really was. =) I'm sure you were doing the same thing right? =)
+zineb zbir You're very brave, and somehow your giving me so much hope of you're strong words. =) Thank you. =) Right now we're still waiting for my sister's call. It's making me a lot of anxious, nervous, and sacred to hear how's my mother's condition is? =(
+Alfonso Torres of course she raised me for the past 20 years i'm not giving up on her , She would've stayed by my side if the same thing was happening to me .
+zineb zbir =( I'm very sorry to hear that, and I don't blame you. =( We have to do what necessary to keep our love ones alive and well, it's our job. It's one biggest challenges we are facing now. =l My mom told me this before she lost a little bit of her memory "you have to be strong no matter what the circumstances and consequences are; 'just be strong'". =l
+zineb zbir You're right and I will, once she's back to the U.S. California. The most fucked up bad news is she just barley got out of the country since October 2 to Mexico. The good news is I have two sisters and one went along the business trip with her.
+zineb zbir Fuck. That is so so young. I'm so sorry :(
The epidemic of chronic disease and understanding epigenetics | Kent Thornburg | TEDxPortland
When will we decide to conquer chronic disease? The moment we realize the future's not only in our genes but also in our hands with the choices we make ...
Dr. Kent is just amazing. As a MPH student, I had an opportunity to hear
him as a guest speaker in one of my classes. That was the first time I
heard about epigenetics and the concept totally blew my mind.
I love this talk. If absolutely everyone listens to this talk there is a
chance things will get better
The Biggest Disease Affecting Humanity: “I’m Not Enough" by Marisa Peer
This talk by celebrity therapist, speaker and best-selling author Marisa Peer was filmed at Afest, Mindvalley's transformational event for entrepreneurs and ...