Daniel
1.4K posts


@jordanticus @treatmyocd My guess is it’s internal program evaluation.
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8/
@treatmyocd can you please provide clarification on this?
And for everyone else, please double check me. I'm no researcher or statistician and so it's very possible I misinterpreted something here. That's why I added links for everything.
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1 of 8/
Hey @treatmyocd where do you get this "90%" number from?
It's featured on your homepage yet I can't find anything on your site or elsewhere that even references it, let alone supports it. And it's quite a claim.
Also, how're "effective" and "meaningful" defined here?

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@BriansBeacon @BigBrainPhiloso I thought this was second. First was caring about what others think.
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@BigBrainPhiloso I think this was the number 1 regret in that famous viral article of Top 5 Regrets of the Dying.
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@BigBrainPhiloso One thing I do not ever see myself regretting is work.
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Daniel รีทวีตแล้ว
Daniel รีทวีตแล้ว

NEW WORD ORDER: Enamorhat'n. @MerriamWebster please add to English dictionary. Lacan called it "Hainamoration" in French.
en·am·or·hate·in
i-ˈna-mər-ˈhāt-in
Here is the straight forward breakdown:
Love and Hate are not opposites, Hate is not the absence of Love. They are two sides of the same emotional shell.
Vulnerability can turn in to resentment can't it?
Loving someone deeply leads to:
1. Complete vulnerability
2. Exposure
3. Dependence
Since we humans crave our independence, that deep reliance from the conscious love generates unconscious resentment.
You can't have one without the other? Prepare to hate something about them. You cannot intensely love someone without also harboring some capacity to hate them for the power they hold over you.
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He's either all bad or all good, I can't handle any grey area. (joke)
Why not mention the psychological warfare plan he helped the U.S. make to fight the Nazis as well?
Jung was no Nazi supporter. He fought, unsuccessfully at times, against he full Nazi takeover of the psychotherapy society in Germany, rejected pro-Nazi editorials that tried to insert his name w/o consent, and showed naivete inititally but shifted clearly before 1934, 4 years before the war even started.
Such a purposeful oversimplification really.
"A flawed intellectual trying to navigate hell in between military services while also building his analytical practice..." would be more accurate.
No excuse for him sleeping with his clients though. Regardless, his work is drastically more impactful than most analysts, psychologists, psychiatrists, or any other mental health hats.
I'm not a Jungian btw.
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Reminder: The Bible is the reason anyone thinks slavery is immoral. The entire world engaged this practice without a second thought. It was the Bible and Christians that made the world finally realize this practice was wrong.
You're welcome.
Michael R. Burhans@Vandeervecken
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I personally favor process groups over skills groups, but DBT has the most comprehensive skills training I’ve seen

Jade Stanton@jadethebpdcoach
We skipped DBT skills training today and discussed death, purpose, meaning, suffering, and absurdity. We talked about how skills, while life-saving, are also surface-level. We talked about why we choose to keep going, even when “life is one giant Seinfeld episode.” And we agreed among all of us: if we’re going to be in a life with pain in it, at least we get to be in rooms with people who are trying to love more. Homework: love more this week. 🫶
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People experience symptoms… patterns of combined symptoms are given classification… the human brain classifies things to organize them and survive… classifications are not identities but tools… tools can be helpful, misused, or put back in the tool box…
People tirelessly merry go round this. If a diagnosis helps someone then it’s useful. If it doesn’t then it’s not useful. If it’s used wrong by the diagnoser it can be harmful. Transparency from the therapist is key in this. This is why wellness model CACREP trained counselors can use the DSM 5 TR without having this problem. Tbh, we’re all taught this before getting taught dx’s at all.
I feel like many other things to advocate about can be more useful.
Examples: Insurance companies make the dx problems more often than the manuals do. Insurance is hyper complex system. Almost required for each individual to have it but doesn’t work for them like they need 30% (made up this percentage) of the time. Also, Veterans insurance is even worse, much higher suicide rate than normal population. Dxs are hyper abused re. Veterans separating and it harms them and turns them away from metal health.
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Not all therapy is equal.
If you've been in therapy for years and feel like you're paying for an expensive friendship where you mostly talk about your feelings and leave unchanged, that's worth examining.
The therapies that actually move the needle teach you concrete skills. DBT for emotional regulation. ACT for chronic pain and depression. CPT and prolonged exposure for trauma. ERP for OCD.
These are structured, researched, and usually covered by insurance.
If your therapy isn't giving you homework and building real skills, it may be time to find a different approach.
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@FeistyKittyPie I agree. The “You don’t need therapy, just…” is for people who neurotically tell themselves they have it all figured out so they themselves don’t have to grow.
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Daniel รีทวีตแล้ว

@elonmusk So if it keeps multiplying, when does it stop?
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Daniel รีทวีตแล้ว

@erikum_zemeda Never vote for anyone in the 2 party system
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