Katrisia

joined 2 years ago
[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 5 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Star Wars: The Last Jedi for me. I don't remember details, but I remember liking it and thinking it was nice to bring original things to the saga (especially because episode VII was almost a tribute to episode IV). Then fans complained and they reverted a lot of themes and things 💔.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 2 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Maybe this is about general health, like prostate cancer, phimosis, etc.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 5 points 5 days ago

Same, but with fascists/far-right wingers and their fashion. I'm shaving my head and dressing punkier because I hate this old-money vibe so many are trying to get. Sorry, no, rebellious leftists (and not billionaires) are my inspiration.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 15 points 6 days ago (1 children)

My experience is the opposite. Adolescence was horrible, young adulthood was hard, adulthood has been better. I am taking care of myself and I am happy with my relationships.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 4 points 1 week ago

I bet the videos about NPD contributed a lot. "Narcissists have dilated pupils/different eyes", "a narcissist never knows they are a narcissist", "NPD and ASPD are almost the same", etc. Pop psychology is the default information for narcissism.

Also, the ASD and ADHD videos. Starting with the RSD myth in ADHD (it has not been scientifically proven, and the reaction can be explained by the not officially recognized yet more evidence-based emotional dysregulation in ADHD), followed by the stereotypes, the anecdotes turned into symptoms, etc. I've found some inaccurate videos about dyslexia, tics, etc. The popularity of neurodevelopmental disorders has been bittersweet.

Oh! I've seen some BD misinformation, especially comparing type 1 and type 2 bipolar disorder. This is also pervasive on Reddit. For example, that type 2 depression is worse. No, type 2 may have longer and more frequent depressive episodes, but the severity is the same (it isn't "worse" or "more severe" or "deeper", they just spend more time in it in average). Another one is that type 1 do not experience hypomanias or not as often, when they are the ones experiencing more hypomanic time in average (because type 2 spends that extra time depressed, while type 1 has more balanced times in average). Also, not remembering that these are statistics, not rules. Many people with BD-I tend to a depressive polarity (some studies have found this is the case for many bipolar patients as age progresses) and many people with BD-II will spend less time depressed than others with BD-II.

Some unipolar depression videos are okay, but eventually you reach the "just go for a walk", "medication is a scam", and other antipsychiatry and pseudoscientific nonsense. There are too many of those and the algorithm will mix them up sometimes. Also, a lot of misinformation about the different depressive disorders, and about these different depressive disorders versus the specifiers of depressive episodes (two very different things).

Claims about OCD being an anxiety disorder when the DSM-5 has an exclusive category for OCD and related disorders. This one comes from old/outdated sources.

Let's not mention the DID (and other disorders that have been a) fad, that is, that people literally lied about having a mental disorder. These people also exaggerated the symptoms. "My DID causes me to switch every five minutes between my more than a hundred personalities". I mean, nobody in their right mind would think this is medical information, but still, a lot of BS there.

Recently, the "BPD does not exist and it's just a name for traumatized people, especially women" is gaining weight, when it's true that many borderline diagnoses come with a history of trauma, but not all of them. And even if we were to find that trauma is always present, that would make the classification appear in both the disorders caused by trauma/stress and the personality disorders, and studies about the difference between BPD and forms of PTSD would be needed, but the concept wouldn't just disappear because the clinical picture is still useful.

God... I guess this issue is a pet peeve of mine. I feel like I can continue, but this is a wall of text already.

I think excellent information is also on TikTok, like Dr. Tracey Marks and, for Spanish speakers, Dr. Rodrigo Corona. I've learnt some interesting things about PMDD on TikTok, and speculation often leads to interesting research (either already done but rediscovered or new and ongoing research). This is the case for other fields too. This year, I've seen more doctors recommending myo-inositol and berberine as a science-based treatment for PCOS; years ago, social media was commenting on this but doctors were just catching up and research was still scarce. You can see this shift in Dr. Tracey Marks videos, actually. Her latest videos include recommendations like yoga, keto diet, and ashwaghanda. Years ago, this was the equivalent of detox juices and crystal healing for many people, but today we know it has some therapeutic benefits (they aren't cures, they aren't enough on their own, but they help). So... yeah. My point is that there are experts on TikTok sharing good information, and that not all new information on social media is pseudoscience, it's just science on the making, incomplete science, and you can know this because there's some evidence and one just need to wait for more.

The trick is to distinguish the informative "content creators" versus the misleading ones. I believe YouTube has a verification feature for accurate health information; TikTok could (and should) follow.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 2 points 1 week ago

I like the intros in True Detective (S1), and X-Files. Animated: X-Men TAS, Gravity Falls, BoJack Horseman.

From the top of my head, I didn't enjoy much the Six Feet Under and the Spinning Out intros because they were too long.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 2 points 2 weeks ago

I mean, he can be seen as another Luigi Mangione. The Luigi not of oligarchs but of genocidal people, which, at the end, are the same people (Trump, Thiel, Musk, Netanyahu, etc.). It is, again, a person acting violently about a situation that has many of us disturbed.

Yes, his name happens to be in Spanish; I do not see how that's damning for other Hispanic people. And I say this as a person that has no opinion about this type of violence (I cannot discern if it's justified or not), and as someone of mostly Hispanic heritage. I do not know if I support this Rodríguez man, but I can understand his reasons.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

1, preferably. 20 if I forget doing the laundry...

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee -1 points 2 weeks ago

The land was already discovered, by the people living in it and even by outsiders like the Nordics. The people from the Pacific islands (I don't know if the correct term is Polinesia) are also said to have come into contact. From the 15th-16th century onwards, some outsiders decided to destroy civilizations and claim the lands. Yes, the modern nations wouldn't exist without imperialism and colonization, but I think many indigenous people would have preferred to develop and see the rise and fall of their nations during those centuries (and into the present) without said imperialism and colonization. My latter point is that it is not a "flex", in case you were thinking it is.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago

I don't read enough to consider myself a nerd; I'm kind of ignorant. But... I do like nerd topics.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

This video contains a great analysis of it.

[–] Katrisia@lemm.ee 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Huh? I explicitly said I would separate self defense for both sexes, because I believe those aren't what we are talking about. I wasn't defending or excusing "women".

Also, both women and men kill because of serious mental disorders ('insanity' in legal terms in the U.S.). How many of those maternal infanticides can be explained by post-partum psychosis or similar conditions? I wouldn't count murders by insane people (from neither sex).

I suspect you're not as unbiased as you'd think...

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