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From YouTube: TEC Psychology Research #13
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B
A
A
I
am
doing
good.
I
was
off
for
these
last
two
weeks.
A
A
D
Hi
guys,
I'm
I'm
fine,
I'm
I'm
sorry
too
to
hear
that
you're
feeling
that
weight
or
get
us.
D
Yeah,
the
last
time
that
I
heard
you,
I
noticed
that
your
voice
was
like.
Oh,
I
it's
happening,
but
I
I
failed
to
ask.
I
I
believe
it's
the
same
thing.
D
Good
to
hear
and
well
and
seems
like
you're
leaving
some
something
important
bianca.
So
it's
nice
to
hear
that
you
sharing
about
your
life
and
what
you're
going
through
and
me.
D
I
have
been
a
little
anxious,
really
anxious
these
days
and
yeah
a
lot
really
a
lot.
So
I
am
in
a
training
that
it's
called
body,
mind
movement
and
it
has
been
really
useful
to
add
these
to
my
to
the
trauma
practice
and
it
has
been
really
lovely
and
the
group
and
the
learning-
and
I
really
love
it,
but
it
has
been
online
this
pandemia
time
and
right
now
we're
this
week.
We're
going
to
do
the
presents
press
essential.
Well,
the
the
part
that
that
is
presential
and
I
well.
D
How
far
has
this
been
for
me,
but
I'm
nearly
panicking
that
I
I
don't
want
to
go,
but
I
want
to
bring
myself
into
going,
but
I
don't
know
it's
like
yeah,
I'm
having
a
hard
time
with
that,
because
I
I
have
a
outright
man
condition
and
I
also
I
I
have
a
dormant
retro
virus.
D
A
A
Take
for
you
right
like
how
much
will
cost
you
the
decision
to
go
or
to
stay
and
the
value
of
going
and
being
exposed,
but
also
experiencing
something
that
could
be
really
interesting
for
you
or
staying
in
knowing
that
you're
not
going
to
be
exposed,
but
also
not
experiencing
what
you
could
be
having.
D
Yes,
yes,
and-
and
maybe
I
have
to
face
my
what
happened
to
me
in
for
for
being
isolated
so
much
time,
it
has
been
a
long
time.
A
D
A
That's
great
yeah,
so
it
seems
like
a
lot
of
decisions
about
to
be
made
dorgados
into
his
process.
A
B
I
can
explain
it
to
you
if
you'd
like
it's
a
interesting
thing,
I
don't
know
agenda
for
today,
but
I'm
I'm
happy
to.
First
of
all,
I
just
want
to
say
I'm
happy
to
you
know:
I've
been
I've
been
in
the
dec
more
than
a
year
and
a
half
so
and
I'm
almost
almost
completely,
not
concerned
with
projects
or
crypto
or
technology
at
all.
The
only
thing
I'm
here
to
do
is
care
about
people,
and
so
you
know
so,
for
my
part,
if
there's
anything
I
can
do
just
let
me
know
and.
B
You
know
I
you
may
or
may
not
know
that
basically,
yoga
is,
is
really
all
about
giving
up
things
right,
so
the
real
spiritual
life
is
about
waking
up
from
belief,
as
opposed
to
creating
some
other
kind
of
belief
right.
So
it's
not
like
believing
the
right
thing
or
the
right
teacher
or
the
like
narrow
interpretation
of
what
you
think.
It's
about
removing
all
modifications
of
your
mind.
B
Was
that
him,
you
know,
because
I've
had
a
very
difficult
relationship
which
is
essentially,
I
think,
I'm
divorced
at
this
time,
but
the
person
who
just
hates
the
fact
that
I
have
autism
presents
me
for
it
everything.
So
you
know
I've
I've.
I've
just
had
a
my
life
has
evolved
from
where
I
used
to
work
inside
out.
You
know
to
somebody
who's
much
more
concerned
with
creating
external
conditions
for
myself,
so
that
I
can
you
know,
be
happy.
B
So
I
didn't
really
like
the
way
that
that
was
going
and-
and
I
I
couldn't
even
really
keep
small
promises
to
myself.
You
know
so
like
I'd
order,
pizza
and
I'd
be
like
okay,
I'm
just
gonna
eat
a
couple
pieces
of
this
pizza
and
then
the
whole
pizza's
gone.
You
know,
so
I
recognized
that
I
had
sort
of
a
multi-layered
problem
and
that
I
need
to
go
back
to
what
I
used
to
do.
B
You
know
I
mean
in
many
ways
you
know
when
I
went
to
the
hindu
monastery,
I
gave
up
everything
I
they
repossessed
my
car.
I
took
all
the
money
out
of
my
bank
account
and
I
lived
in
a
four
by
six
shot:
developer
electricity
for
five
years,
so
that
was
a
giving
up
and
I
was
intentionally
doing
the
most
difficult
thing
you
know
imaginable.
Really
you
know
so
I
mean
I
slept
in
a
in
a
sleeping
bag.
B
B
I
need
to
do
a
difficult
thing,
and
I
was
already
you
know
so
many
pounds,
overweight
that
I
I've
been
couldn't
take
anymore.
So
I
thought
the
best
thing
I
can
do
is
fast
and
get
some
clarity
of
mind
from
you
know
doing
this
difficult
thing.
I
had
a
also
achilles
tendon
issue
seven
years
ago
that
has
taken
forever
to
heal.
So
I
couldn't
like
exercise
my
array
of
the
problem,
which
is
the
way
I've
always
lost
weight
in
the
past,
so
yeah.
B
So
it's
been
so
I
I
just
it's
a
way
of
kind
of
reclaiming
my
life
back
from
this.
This
highly
difficult
period
of
sedentariness.
It
came
with
coated
and.
B
It's
really
working
in
that
way.
It's
just.
I've
also
had
support.
So
there's
a
guy
online
waterfasting.org.
He
he's
an
expert
from
water
fast
and
I
paid
him.
We
talked-
and
he
said,
okay,
if
you're
having
this
nausea,
here's
what
you
can
do
so
so
it
helped
me
solve
the
problem
and
it
was
bang
on
the
very
first
time.
I
did
the
thing
just
like
instantly.
It
was
so
unbelievable,
so
so
yeah
I
mean
when
I'm
when
I'm
facing
difficult
things.
B
You
know
I
tend
to
be
isolated,
because
I
have
autism,
but
I'm
smart
enough
to
know
now
that
I
often
need
support,
even
if
it's
somebody
like
like
that.
So
I'm
if
I
have
trouble
parsing
my
thoughts
and
feelings,
but
I
do
have
people
that
I
can
turn
to,
even
though
I
might
still
be
stuck
in
this
room.
A
Yeah
well,
thanks
for
sharing
that,
I
see
you
and
I'm
proud
of
you
for
doing
all
that
for
yourself
for
standing
up
for
yourself
and
doing
something
that
you
know
you're
the
only
one
that
can
do,
and
sometimes
it's
hard
to
have
that
kind
of
perspective
where
we
realize,
if
we
don't
do
something
for
us,
nobody's
gonna
do
and
it's
not
it's
not
something
easy
at
all
and
going
through
all
that.
It's
yeah.
B
A
Yeah,
it's
not
it's
not
easy.
There's
a
song
that
says
that
nobody
said
it
was
easy
and
that's
for
sure,
like
it's
so
true
life,
it's
not
easy
and
in
so
many
levels
that
what
we
are
doing
here
in
different
perspectives
in
caring
about
people
in
different
ways.
A
It's
something
that's
so
valuable,
and
I
appreciate
that
a
lot,
because
it's
something
that
sometimes
we
miss
on,
but
when
somebody
really
needs
this
kind
of
help,
it's
because
they
already
went
all
the
other
ways
that
they
could-
and
I
found
myself
to
in
a
position
where
I
didn't
know
where
to
go
and.
A
A
And
I
need
to
eat
any.
I
know
it's
hard
to
get
a
decision,
especially
in
a
way
where
involves
our
health
and
when
we
are
for
so
long
in
our
own
space,
it's
scary,
to
go
in
a
different
direction
when
there
are
so
many
effects,
and
so
many
things
that
can
happen.
A
So
for
today
I
don't
really
have
an
agenda.
I
was
waiting
on
anna
because
she
was
leaving
the
call
for
these
last
two
weeks
and
she
told
me
that
she
had
some
updates
for
the
research
and
because
I
was
off
is
really
like
the
first
day
that
I'm
coming
back
and
catching
up
on
everything
I
was
waiting
for
her
to
come
up
but-
and
she
didn't
even
respawn
me,
but
I
think
she
was
very
busy.
A
Maybe
she
was
very
busy
with
that
and
she
was
resting
today.
Her
schedule
is
also
very
crazy,
but
for
the
psychology
updates,
I
don't
know
if
any
of
you
were
here
last
week,.
A
Yeah,
so
what
she
told
me
is
that
she
did
some
literature
review
and
I
think,
didn't
was
also
helping
with
some
content.
A
A
A
A
A
B
C
A
I
was,
I
think,
thinking
like
the
target
number
so
yeah
the
target
population
like
the
characteristic
of
people.
I
was,
I
would
say,
like
people
that
works
in
the
house.
B
I
was
surprised
I
went
to
a
meta
fest,
that's
going
on
right
now
and
in
manifest
I
I
saw
that
there
was
a
a
dow
that
had
created.
C
B
Tool
centered
out
right
where
you'd
like
build
your
own
down
and
then
here
are
all
the
tools
that
they
kind
of
give
you
right
for
that
and
I
think
that
they
on
their
website.
They
said
something
like
almost
3
000
individual
downs
and
built
themselves.
Just
on
that
one
platform,
so
you
have
to
imagine,
there's
you
know
10
or
100
times
that
amount
of
doubts
not
to
mention
people
participating
right.
A
But
also,
I
think,
like
there
are
a
lot
of
dolls
trying
to
become
adult.
You
know
what
I
mean
like
they're,
not
dao's,
yet
but
they're
trying
to
be
coming
out.
A
B
You
know
it's
like
and
fifty
downloads
and
use
our
tools
to
do
this
thing
and
I'm
thinking
wow.
I
had
no
concept,
there
were
so
many
dows,
and
then
I
thought,
oh
it's
way
more
than
that,
because
that's
just
the
people
who
knew
about
this
tool
said
I've
been
in
the
dallas
space
for
a
year
and
a
half
I've
never
even
heard
of
these
people.
A
B
A
How
how
do
you
feel
and
that's
a
question
for
you
both?
How
do
you
feel
that
working
in
a
dow
or
being
in
a
double
space
is
affecting
your
mental
health?
That's
something
that
I
was
it's
for
sure
like
something
that
we
want
to
know
with
the
survey
and
with
the
research,
but
this
time
that
I
took
off.
A
I
was
like
deeply
thinking
about
it,
because
I
am
trying
to
found
another
dose
with
some
folks
that
I
know,
and
some
of
them
are
giving
me
such
a
hard
time
anyways.
A
How
do
you
feel
that
working,
endow
or
being
in
the
dow
space
is
affecting
your
mental
health.
A
It
ain't
it.
He
said
I
need
to
go
first.
D
Yeah
yeah
the
I'm,
not
the
the
the
usual
person
in
these
spaces,
so
I
don't
know
if
I
represent
anything
at
all.
I
came
in.
I
was
like
following
things
that
were
written
and
said
in
on
twitter
and
on
of
daws
and
I'm
trying
to
get
near,
so
I
could
think
about
participating
sometime.
But
I
came
into
this
dao
because
I
really
felt
it.
It
was
a
gut
feeling
like
yeah
this
space.
It's
it's
good
for
me,
so
I
came
with
a
with
really
selfish
and
individual.
D
Reasons
for
me
it's
it's
part
of
a
personal
leadership
process,
because
I
I
I
didn't
know
how
to
approach
it
approach
that
issue
in
in
my
life,
and
I
need
to
work
on
that
and
I
was
about
evaluation
eval
evaluating
the
different
options
that
I
could
feel
that
are
a
fit
for
me,
and
this
one
was
the
best.
D
So
I
am
doing
inner
work
and
I
really
conscious
about
my
rhythm.
So
I'm
not
a
common
profile
for
these
questions
because,
for
instance,
last
week
I
didn't
go
to
any.
D
Meeting
because
I
was
felt
it
was
too
much
for
me
and
also
I
haven't-
contribute
in
anything
specific
just
attending,
because
I
am
orienting
myself
and
making
myself
familiar,
I'm
not
good
with
strange
people
and
I'm
not
good
with
new
things,
so
I'm
giving
myself
time
so
I
I
have
a
lot
of
consideration
for
me,
so
I'm
and
my
rhythm,
because
those
are
fast.
D
D
D
It's
it's
good
for
the
soul.
So
for
me
it's
good
and
also
organizing
my
brain
in
understanding
and
in
the
flow
that
is
really
different
from
where
I
was
at
before
I
came
in.
That
has
been
a
real
challenge.
I
can
feel
my
brain
reorganizing
and
some
days
is
just
like,
fragmented
and
then
coming
together
again,
so
I
I
it's
retaping,
so
that
is
challenging,
but
it's
good
also.
So
I'm
not
a
common
profile
for
that
question.
A
B
Oh,
I
was
saying
I
don't
know
if
you've
seen
my
thread
in
the
gravity
text
thing,
but
I
you
know
innovator
was
kind
of
asking
me.
You
know
who
else
is
championing
my
four-strand
model
and
I
kind
of
laid
out.
You
know
like
in
a
very
detailed
way
why
I
made
the
model.
Well,
it's
not
really
a
model,
it's
more
like
a
map
right,
so
you
know
it's.
B
So
if
you
don't
mind
I'll
I'll
kind
of
start
on
my
thing,
but
I
I
love
irene's
thing
and
I
I
actually
just
want
you
to
know
that
I
think.
B
The
good
going
fasting
is
not
a
given,
in
fact
advocating
for
things
to
be
more
slow
and
considered
and
to
person
you
know
properly.
Thoughtfully
is
a
really
important
thing
and
that's
what
I
try
to
do
in
that
in
that
text
that
you'll
see
in
the
gravity
channel
you
know
for
me
it's.
B
I
think
I've
gone
a
little
bit
too
far
and
with
my
participation
in
daos
because
being
on
the
autism
spectrum
and
being
almost
entirely
in
a
mental
sphere
for
the
last
seven
years,
because
of
my
my
leg,
injury,
I've
become
almost
a
bit
too
savant-like
in
my
approach
to
things
so
I
I
just
think
at
a
layer
of
complexity.
B
That
is,
I
think,
and
and
is
pretty
obviously
beyond
I'm
having
a
hard
time
reining
in
with
my
how
at
the
complexity
at
which
I
think
right
and
even
when
I
try
to
make
a
graphic
or
something
to
you,
know
rain,
that
in
and
summarize
it
and
coalesce
it
into
something.
You
know
it's
still.
You
know
too
complicated
for
most
people
so
but
yeah,
it's
been
great
for
me
because
I
feel
like
it's.
B
It's
just
allowed
my
brain
to
work
in
a
way
that
I'd
not
given
myself
permission
to
do
before,
because
you
know
I
I
I'm
just
a
high
school
graduate.
I
have
no
degrees.
I
have
no
secondary
education.
I
have
no
I'm
just
completely
self-taught
person
right
and
so
I've
either
gained
it
from
you
know.
B
Kind
of
person,
so
in
no
other
place
have
I
ever
had
the
opportunity
to
sort
of
unfold,
my
wings
as
it
were,
and
really
think
at
the
complexity,
with
the
the
idea
that
people
could
have
the
slightest
clue
what
I'm
talking
about.
So
it's
really
nice
to
have
people
that
at
least
some
people
upon
which
this
can
land
and
not
go
holy
you're.
B
B
In
that
sense,
at
the
same
time,
I
participate
in
sort
of
too
many
different
places,
and
I'm
I'm
a
little
bit
getting
adhd
on
the
back
of
that,
so
I'm
starting
to
try
to
limit
my
participation
in
the
dao
space
to
just
a
couple
of
days
a
week
and
so
that
I
can
bring
that
back
in
and
get
I
need
to
you
know.
B
Part
of
the
fasting
thing
is
to
try
to
get
out
of
being
just
a
big
sloth
laying
in
bed,
even
though
that's
what
I'm
doing
right
now
and
get
back
into
my
body,
because
I'm
also
you
know
a
master
yoga
teacher,
I
you
know
I
was
the
head
yoga
teacher
at
a
50
year
old,
you
know
monastery,
and
so
so
I
have
encyclopedic
knowledge
of
those
things
too,
and
I
coach
athletes
for
25
years.
So
you
know
I
just
need
to
get
back
into
having
a
more
embodied
experience.
A
B
And
and
because
my
mental
health
is
mostly
not
to
do
with
dao's,
the
dow
has
been
the
place
that
I've
had
to
run
to
to
get
validation
and
things
when
I've
had
a
person
in
my
life
who's
flexibly
invalidating
me,
so
I
mean
it's
been
served
my
salvation
through
this
whole,
you
know
period
of
time.
So
so
that's
that
part
of
it's
really
been
great,
but
yeah.
B
A
A
Anyways,
I
am
having
a
personal
hard
time
with
another
space
that
I'm
involved
in
and
tc
is
actually.
A
I
think
I
I
kind
of
have
like
the
same
feeling
at
there
get
us
where,
like
tc
is
the
good
part
of
it
is
where
I
go
to
to
feel
that
I
can
do
something
good.
A
So
I
feel
that
here
I
am
value
I
have
value
and
I
can
contribute
and
I
feel
good
about
it,
but
at
the
same
time,
all
this
it's
like,
I
don't
know
where
my
mental
health
is
going
to
and
being
away.
These
two
weeks
was
so
good
where
I
didn't
have
responsibility.
A
I
felt
so
good
and
I
saying
goodbye
to
my
fiance:
it
was
terrible
it
sucked
every
time
and
it
was.
It
was
hard
to
come
back
and
open
the
discord
again
and
have
a
thousand
methods
and
all
that-
and
I
was
like,
oh
god,
okay,
let's
do
it,
let's
face
it,
but
it's
also
like
good
to
see
all
these
interesting
things
happening
and
exciting
things
going
on
and
the
other
side.
A
B
B
I
was
gonna
say:
have
you
seen
this
if
I
can
share
this
graphic
that
I
made
with
you,
I
want
to
show
you
the
have
you
seen
this.
A
B
So
I
think
I
think
that
my
assessment
is,
is
that
most
people
believe
when
you,
when
they
get
into
anything
new
at
all
right-
and
I,
when
I
lived
at
the
ashram
people-
would
do
this
too
right
this.
In
this
case,
you
have
this
horrible
thing
on
the
left
side
right,
which
you
know,
psychology
is
supposed
to
help
with
which
is
sort
of
down
here
in
step
two.
But
what
I
think
we're
taught
is
that
there's
some
jesus
idea
right.
The
savior
idea
right.
B
I
know,
I
know
at
least
I
know
at
least
10
people
who
committed
suicide
after
being
at
the
ashram,
because
it
didn't
do
that
for
them.
Do
you
know
what
I
mean
it
was
they
went
there?
It
was
their
last
hope
right,
the
the,
and
so
I
think
that
our
culture
does
a
thing
where
we
we
were
so
allergic
to
thinking
with
any
nuance
or
complexity
or
anything.
It's
just.
B
You
know
we
we
need
like
a
mother
or
father
figure
to
run
to,
and
so
all
these
new
ideas
and
idealisms
is
all
we
have
to
go
to.
So
if
you
go
to
the
dallas
space
you're
like,
but
the
there's
a
few
things
I
learned
when
I
built
this
building
the
very
first
people
that
I
attracted
were
horribly
mentally
ill
people.
B
C
B
I've
just
the
amount
of
drama-
that's
happened.
The
first
few
years
of
this
place
is
just
incredible.
So
the
moment
you
put
yourself
your
hand
up
in
the
air,
saying
here's
a
place
you
can
come.
We
can
all
you
know
be
healthy
and
happy,
and
you
just
get
you
just
get
descended
upon
by
all
these
people
and
and
because
the
wider
culture
never
teaches
you
about
how
to
do
any
of
these.
C
B
Things
you
know
in
this,
you
know
re-educating,
you
know
breaking
up
power,
so
just
basic
mental
health
like
we
just
haven't
cared
for
that
at
all,
because
we
don't
care
about
people.
Our
car
education
system
just
ignores
people
functionally.
You
know,
after
fifth
or
sixth
grade
they
don't
care
about
your
mental
emotional
health,
and
you
never
talk
about
it.
It's
all
about
the
external
world
right.
So
so,
how
would
you
ever
learn
about
how
to
do
any
of
this
stuff
or
how
to
recover
from
being
involved
in
an
abusive
system?
B
It's
just
you
know
it's
just
it's
just
horrifying
to
me,
and
so
I
I
see
that
we,
even
in
the
token
engineering
commons
struggle
you
know
with
with
this
stuff
right.
I
participated
in
a
bunch
of
other
dows
and
universally.
They
have
this
issue
right.
B
So
but
thankfully
you
know
because
they're
focused
on
the
commons,
the
commons
give
you
kind
of
a
weightiness
to
your
approach
to
things
so
that
you
end
up
with
you
know
better
chance
at
you
know,
having
space,
to
create,
create
these
kinds
of
systems
and
talk
about
them
and
deal
with
them
and
that's
why
a
lot
of
the
things
like
what
you're
doing
and
gravity
itself
and
omega
and
all
these
things
can
take
seed
in
in
a
culture
like
this,
because
it's
mostly
focused
on
the
common
span.
B
So
just
to
use
one
example,
you
know
40
acres
now
you
know
they.