Views : 797,450
Genre: Comedy
Date of upload: Sep 30, 2023 ^^
Rating : 4.702 (949/11,798 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-05T02:12:28.912268Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
Watching comedians who struggle with mental illness talk about mental illness is healing. Watching comedians who don't struggle with mental illness talk about mental illness is cringey at best. I felt for a long time like I couldn't seek help for my mental illnesses because I didn't have a "right" to feel so awful all the time and hate my life because nothing very traumatic has ever happened to me. "You're privileged to have a mental illness" is a damaging take to public mental health.
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Comedy has always expressed the current things happening in the world in a unique way. It's interesting how mental health is becoming a topic, and maybe it's good...helping destigmatize it or help people realize they're not alone. I had anxiety for a long time, books like "30 Days to Reduce Anxiety" by Harper Daniels and "The Power of Now' by Tolle really helped a lot.
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Actually Neal, I was very much OK during isolation and shutdowns. It was like the Olympics, and I had been training for it my whole life.
I love Tom's take on 69. No one really wants to do it, it's just a way to get what you want from the other person. It's not a sexual position, it's a transaction. quid pro quo.
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The USA's healthcare system is so wild. As a Brit, with universal healthcare I'd never considered mental health issues a wealth/class indicator, but actually getting diagnosis and treatment legit is over there. It's kinda a weird reversal because a few decades ago the adage was poor people are crazy; rich people are _eccentric_. But I guess these days it's poor people are either so impacted they're "crazy" and avoided; while rich(er) people are diagnosed with specific conditions.
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@sparkyfromel
7 months ago
my dad told me ....." don't worry no matter how bad it is , it can always get worst "
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