Understanding Borderline Personality Disorder and Narcissism - with Dr. Frank Yeomans

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Published 2023-07-27
An introductory lecture for Transference Focused Therapy, given by Dr. Frank Yeomans.

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All Comments (21)
  • @startedfarting2336
    While I very much enjoy meme and cat videos, content such as this is the true treasure of YouTube. Knowledge is power, power to (hopefully) make this world better.
  • @malexander2438
    What an incredible person! Patients with these conditions can be so challenging to deal with and yet he has so much emotional intelligence, patience, insight and empathy and explains things so well. Amazing video for healthcare professionals :)
  • @wendi2819
    I've tried many types of therapy over 40 years and no one ever shared with me what diagnosis they assigned. I'm working with an EMDR, gestalist currently. I know I have early trauma. But not even that has been verbalized. All the therapist has said is i do not find mental illness in you, just alot of confusion. I keep trusting the process at any rate.
  • @majidasbeity
    If I could give myself a precious gift, it would be a session with Dr. Frank yeomans ❤
  • @1965simonfellows
    the most enjoyable thing about Yeomans is his very obvious humility. That screams volumes about him. Lovely, lovely.. Thankyou for posting.
  • I would like to see interviews of patients for whom transferance Forcused Therapy helped.
  • @FlowerUruguay
    14:35 boom! That’s why I feel once I make peaces with my own aggression I’ll be better at dealing with conflict
  • @rhythmofheaven1489
    “Neutral” is what my personality disorder clients describe me as and tell me it’s helpful.
  • @accordionSWE
    As a layman, and as a member from a dysfunctional family, I have always been intrigued by the contradictory behavior from people that suffer from NPD.  What is the behavior I have seen?  Most of the time it all takes place at parties or other social events that naturally makes people more relaxed and focused on leisure. The person with NPD is the odd person at the event because in some way the party is not about them or do not accommodate them according to some arbitrary norm that is not stated by the suffering person but should be known by everybody present. The person suffering from NPD is haughty, overbearing, stiff and putting wet blankets over everything and everyones experience. The person suffering from NPD both berates and humiliates other guests that naturally have their guard down until he or she reaches the guest that finally says no and instantly a scene breaks out. The rule is that the person that suffers from NPD denies it all and without any shame expects an apology from the person that protested. The person with NPD felt attacked and there were no awareness of the own behavior until he or she found the guest that said stop. It is like the position stated in the video, everything aggressive comes from the outside and inside there is no aggression to be identified.
  • @user-my5jn8js4l
    The fact that he had a narcissist patient that described a traumatic experience to him, and he cried due to having an empathetic response toward the patient and the patient thought "You're mocking me". WOW. That is astounding. I feel so bad for Dr. Yeomans! I don't know about anyone else, but it feels bad when you have deep empathy for someone, and they reject it let alone tell you that your motives are not to be empathetic and you're doing something sinister. That is next level bizarre. They are so delusional. My father is like this, and it is maddening. It is like everything is precisely backwards of actual reality to them.
  • @ddjhackers
    Such a kind and nice doctor❤, truly compassionate and opening his knowledge and heart❤
  • @JDCullum
    Oh, for more human beings like this wise man.
  • @Lamenade
    More from Frank Yeomans please !
  • I love Frank! He’s an absolute G when it comes to understanding and articulating Cluster B’s 🤙
  • @nga672
    Thank you - I just love growing new neural pathways.
  • @jimlawson1953
    Thank you Doctor. This is the most concise and clear description I've ever heard of what I have been dealing with in my own marriage for the past thirty eight years. I cannot tell you how much it means to have a framework described that makes sense of the chaos and needless pain.
  • @kwatness
    As i listened to this very helpful talk, i saw connections between this model and IFS. Its just amazing how we manage to survive in rhevworld following traumatic experiences.
  • @elsh332
    When i was in the full grips of BPD, my emotions WERE ME. They determined hpw i saw myself and others and the world around me. My emotions HAPPENED TO ME. My emotions were bogger than me and controlled me. Now, i have a healthy relationship with my emotions. They still feel bigger than they should at times, but i see how they are something i experience and can manage, rayher than being controlled by. I value my emotions and listen to them now but create space between myself and my emotions. Now, i know who i am and that my emotions are like the varying trees in my inner landscape of self. Or the colours.
  • @ravingredpanda
    Thanks for putting this out there! Liking, sharing, commenting, subscribing, all that stuff, this needs a signal boost. :D