My take is, you behave exactly like many others (myself included) when alone. The only difference is that you have the balls to record it and post it online. I'm here for it :o)
He's just Dutch. I lived in The Netherlands for 10+ years and can say there are many people just like him and have a similar sense of humor. I love it!
While I’m sure they have the best of intentions, those commenters really shouldn’t be going around diagnosing people they don’t know on the internet just from a bunch of silly videos. They don’t know you, and you did not ask for their opinion on something so personal. Keep being you and having fun and goofing around like you do. Just a note though: being neurodivergent (as opposed to neurotypical) is not necessarily a bad thing and is actually really cool! The label was coined as a more positive umbrella term for things that have traditionally been called ‘disorders’ (e.g. ADHD or ASD), to reflect the fact that it’s important to support and value a diversity of ways of thinking in a healthy society. Unfortunately the world is currently set up in a way that favors the strengths of neurotypical people, and as a result it can be sometimes be challenging if your brain works a bit differently to what is “normal”… eg. navigating bureaucracy, figuring out social situations, keeping to deadlines, managing sensory stimulus, etc. Some people find labels like this useful to help them find ways to cope, find support from others, or to help them understand themselves better - but that should but up to the person, not imposed without consent, and certainly not without adequate context/background.
Just a note: you are displaying behavior that leads me to believe you've either narcissistic personality disorder or borderline personality disorder. I don't know which one until I watch some of your videos. I'll be able to make a proper diagnosis then. But you've definitely some loose screws, friend. Go away now.
See, this is the issue, though. I understand the intent behind these kinds of comments, but "diversity of ways of thinking" is a gross oversimplification of all the things of ADHD that truly makes it a *clinical-level disorder*. It's flowery language that actually furthers the stigma behind terms like disorder, autistic, and so on, because you're seeking to move away from using them like they're dirty terms. It's linguistic lipstick on a pig, dudeski. Even if you don't feel that's your intent, that's what you're effective doing. Won't speak to ASD (at least not beyond the perspective of someone w/ an education in psychology)...But from a direct experience standpoint, ADHD is NOT just "oh, I'm a little quirky and different and society just isn't built for me." It is a Mental. Health. Capital-D Disorder. It is disruptive, and difficult to deal with, even if you remove all the trappings of "normie"-designed society, mmk. You can be by yourself out in the freakin' woods and you are *still* going to suffer from its issues. It is not merely a problem just because other people don't know how to deal with you and your "diverse" neurology. It is a problem unto itself. _________________________ Originally it was a self-service label created by someone w/ ASD. Cool, all for that. It has since been adopted and shared. All that is fine, I think people can and should call themselves whatever TF they want. My problem is with the push for *everyone else* to use this label - and to be clear, there *is* a push for that - especially the desire to use this across disorders. Regardless of whatever intent is behind this movement, the actual, tangible results are not great. It does wind up removing consent from folks like me who don't want this label, committing exactly the kind of transgression it was originally intended to circumvent...Although I appreciate you bringing that up, because it's often either disregarded or flipped into making said labeled folks the bad guy for objecting to it. It enables people who are, as the kids would say, *terminally online*, to lob labels at others and themselves while trying to avoid accusations of armchair diagnoses - you even touched on that, yourself. As mentioned before, I think the worst part is that this inadvertently reinforces the stigma associated with terms like "autistic" and "disorder." Imagine if we talked about depression this way. "Oh, I don't have major depressive disorder, that makes it sound like there's something *wrong* with me. I'm just differently mooded, and society hasn't done a sufficient job of accommodating my feelings." That's not helpful in dispelling stigma, it's not helpful for people who are trying to get medical help with their health concern because it minimizes the issue, and it's not helpful in educating people who don't know and understand how these health issues work and how they intersect with the people who are just trying to live their lives while dealing with them. It also lumps together what should be distinct issues. Yes, ADHD and autism are commonly comorbid - meaning they're diagnosed together within the same person...But they have distinct symptoms, distinct means of evaluation by clinicians, and distinct treatments. They're not as similar as is so often implied with social media content, the "neurodivergent" label, and the "OMG so relatable!" comments from folks who don't seem to properly understand that *all* this stuff is relatable to everyone, to some extent, as part of the human experience. If you compare someone with ADHD and not autism, to someone with ASD and not ADHD, their experience of the world is not going to be as similar as you might think because of the fundamental differences between ADHD and ASD. Someone who has both ADHD and ASD? Sure, they'll have some commonalities, because they have both issues. While they're both classed as neurodevelopmental disorders, ASD tends to have more impact on development than ADHD, though the latter can sometimes be more disruptive in a "neuronormative" or whatever you want to call bog standard social environment - that's just my personal opinion, I should point out. I think it would be better if folks stuck to the original intent of the term, and relegated it to use with ASD and stopped using it as an umbrella term to describe anybody other than folks who are so boringly normal that they missed their calling as vanilla NPCs background extras in stock footage. I still think it will probably worsen stigma, but I'm not part of that community, so ultimately don't feel it's my hill to die on. Would at least be nice if people would quit trying to plop me (and others like me) onto that hill, anyway, only to have a 💩fit with me when I object to it, but that's a whole other thing.
As someone who spends a lot of time in front of a camera, I thought it was absolutely absurd to have these outbursts. That is, until I went in front of a camera completely by myself for the first time in a few years and caught myself doing some quite similar things 😂
Is it normal if one does the same thing but with one's penis instead? I still say sorry afterword so I think it's OK. Please let me know. Thanks! (Oh, no. Sorry.)
lmaoo that's the best response :D and being able to act goofy on camera is a talent - i couldn't do it, i'd be too shy to upload it and I've tried but then deleted it the next day lol
Dat kan best kloppen ja, ik had je al ergens tussen HB' er/Autisme/ADHD'er ingeschat. Misschien dat je 2 kanalen me daarom zo erg aantrekt qua herkenning!
I was actually going to ask if you possibly have tourette's. Though either way, I still quite enjoy your personality and your content. You're awesome, Posy! 👍
Neurodivergent doesn't mean a person is some kind of psychopath who should be locked up in an asylum or anything like that. it just means they have a bit of a different brain than others, like autism, ADHD, things like that. It's a very positive kind of term! I suppose this person was assuming you were neurodivergent because you act kinda strange and are confident enough to film it, but I don't think that's a good assumption
hahaha love when you take the piss out of things like this. if i were to assume anything, I'd assume you have ADHD, which constitutes neurodivergence. In the end, you could just be a goofy guy ! Wishing you well and wishing you luck, and stay safe
@@victorkreig6089 Hence why I said "if" I were to assume anything. Hence why I said he "could just be a goofy guy". I'm not making a diagnosis here. It doesn't concern me one way or the other. I think you may have misinterpreted what I was getting across.
Did you have tourette syndrome as a kid/have it now? I did for about a year but I grew out of it about when I hit puberty. For that year, I mostly behaved as you do now. Just curious.
I mean, this intro is very relatable for ADHD reasons. While I’ve certainly gotten that vibe from your videos sometimes, I think making Factual Statements about your brain from purely whatever you choose you show the audience is going too far. Stuff like autismdar (like gaydar but for autism, there isn’t a good name for the ADHD one) is, just like gaydar, a tool when interacting with a person. Not really applicable when watching a video a person shot and then chose to share. Your audience ultimately doesn’t know you and you certainly don’t know your audience. I guess comments like that stem from the whole parasocial thing - you’ve shared your music and art so now they feel they know you.
I have Asperger's syndrome (a kind of neurodivergency) and I have an IQ of ~144 (which most people don't like because they don't understand). My intelligence allows me (sometimes and then only with some effort) to pretend I'm a normal human being. But because in the long run that takes a lot of energy, I'd rather be amongst people who take me for what I am 🖖🤪👍 ❗
No. Such. Thing. There's one thin line running from here to infinity called "normal", friend. Anything else is your problem, guy. You don't define me, buddy.
You can be creative, quirky, goofy and weird without a DSM diagnosis (and also, no one can diagnose someone just by watching them online). A neurodivergent diagnosis makes you "cool" the same way a cool pair of sneakers makes you "cool" - only in a very superficial way that validates others with a shared affinity. Don't let any identity group take credit for your unique character.
All this time I just thought you were Dutch
He is Dutch.
Even worse, he's from The Netherlands!
@@User0000000000000004people from the netherlands are dutch
@@luiginotcoolWhoosh
@@lyenus8128 If that’s a joke I don’t get it
My take is, you behave exactly like many others (myself included) when alone.
The only difference is that you have the balls to record it and post it online.
I'm here for it :o)
@@Darthsigmaballs100% agree with both of these comments
I don't like to think about Posy's balls. Thanks for ruining it.
People behave like this when they're alone?
@@levick2412 some people do. But I can speak only for myself and for some dear friends whom I know really well.
@@levick2412yes because it's fun lol
He's just Dutch. I lived in The Netherlands for 10+ years and can say there are many people just like him and have a similar sense of humor. I love it!
if this is not-normal I don't want to be normal.
WHUGLRGHUHGURUHRU
"i have spit on the camera lens" well that's alright happens
>proceeds to wipe it away with finger
[internal screaming]
Why you scream? Are there people out there who don't have sacrificial UV filters in front of their fancy lenses?
@@User0000000000000004 it's the principle of the thing
You use cloths and wipes for lenses a shirt if you have no other option
While I’m sure they have the best of intentions, those commenters really shouldn’t be going around diagnosing people they don’t know on the internet just from a bunch of silly videos. They don’t know you, and you did not ask for their opinion on something so personal. Keep being you and having fun and goofing around like you do.
Just a note though: being neurodivergent (as opposed to neurotypical) is not necessarily a bad thing and is actually really cool! The label was coined as a more positive umbrella term for things that have traditionally been called ‘disorders’ (e.g. ADHD or ASD), to reflect the fact that it’s important to support and value a diversity of ways of thinking in a healthy society. Unfortunately the world is currently set up in a way that favors the strengths of neurotypical people, and as a result it can be sometimes be challenging if your brain works a bit differently to what is “normal”… eg. navigating bureaucracy, figuring out social situations, keeping to deadlines, managing sensory stimulus, etc. Some people find labels like this useful to help them find ways to cope, find support from others, or to help them understand themselves better - but that should but up to the person, not imposed without consent, and certainly not without adequate context/background.
Just a note: you are displaying behavior that leads me to believe you've either narcissistic personality disorder or borderline personality disorder. I don't know which one until I watch some of your videos. I'll be able to make a proper diagnosis then. But you've definitely some loose screws, friend. Go away now.
w comment
See, this is the issue, though. I understand the intent behind these kinds of comments, but "diversity of ways of thinking" is a gross oversimplification of all the things of ADHD that truly makes it a *clinical-level disorder*. It's flowery language that actually furthers the stigma behind terms like disorder, autistic, and so on, because you're seeking to move away from using them like they're dirty terms. It's linguistic lipstick on a pig, dudeski. Even if you don't feel that's your intent, that's what you're effective doing.
Won't speak to ASD (at least not beyond the perspective of someone w/ an education in psychology)...But from a direct experience standpoint, ADHD is NOT just "oh, I'm a little quirky and different and society just isn't built for me." It is a Mental. Health. Capital-D Disorder. It is disruptive, and difficult to deal with, even if you remove all the trappings of "normie"-designed society, mmk. You can be by yourself out in the freakin' woods and you are *still* going to suffer from its issues. It is not merely a problem just because other people don't know how to deal with you and your "diverse" neurology. It is a problem unto itself.
_________________________
Originally it was a self-service label created by someone w/ ASD. Cool, all for that. It has since been adopted and shared. All that is fine, I think people can and should call themselves whatever TF they want. My problem is with the push for *everyone else* to use this label - and to be clear, there *is* a push for that - especially the desire to use this across disorders.
Regardless of whatever intent is behind this movement, the actual, tangible results are not great. It does wind up removing consent from folks like me who don't want this label, committing exactly the kind of transgression it was originally intended to circumvent...Although I appreciate you bringing that up, because it's often either disregarded or flipped into making said labeled folks the bad guy for objecting to it. It enables people who are, as the kids would say, *terminally online*, to lob labels at others and themselves while trying to avoid accusations of armchair diagnoses - you even touched on that, yourself. As mentioned before, I think the worst part is that this inadvertently reinforces the stigma associated with terms like "autistic" and "disorder." Imagine if we talked about depression this way. "Oh, I don't have major depressive disorder, that makes it sound like there's something *wrong* with me. I'm just differently mooded, and society hasn't done a sufficient job of accommodating my feelings." That's not helpful in dispelling stigma, it's not helpful for people who are trying to get medical help with their health concern because it minimizes the issue, and it's not helpful in educating people who don't know and understand how these health issues work and how they intersect with the people who are just trying to live their lives while dealing with them.
It also lumps together what should be distinct issues. Yes, ADHD and autism are commonly comorbid - meaning they're diagnosed together within the same person...But they have distinct symptoms, distinct means of evaluation by clinicians, and distinct treatments. They're not as similar as is so often implied with social media content, the "neurodivergent" label, and the "OMG so relatable!" comments from folks who don't seem to properly understand that *all* this stuff is relatable to everyone, to some extent, as part of the human experience. If you compare someone with ADHD and not autism, to someone with ASD and not ADHD, their experience of the world is not going to be as similar as you might think because of the fundamental differences between ADHD and ASD. Someone who has both ADHD and ASD? Sure, they'll have some commonalities, because they have both issues.
While they're both classed as neurodevelopmental disorders, ASD tends to have more impact on development than ADHD, though the latter can sometimes be more disruptive in a "neuronormative" or whatever you want to call bog standard social environment - that's just my personal opinion, I should point out. I think it would be better if folks stuck to the original intent of the term, and relegated it to use with ASD and stopped using it as an umbrella term to describe anybody other than folks who are so boringly normal that they missed their calling as vanilla NPCs background extras in stock footage. I still think it will probably worsen stigma, but I'm not part of that community, so ultimately don't feel it's my hill to die on. Would at least be nice if people would quit trying to plop me (and others like me) onto that hill, anyway, only to have a 💩fit with me when I object to it, but that's a whole other thing.
Neurodivergent or not, your videos never fail to make me (a neurodivergent individual) smile every time I watch
same here
I don't find it strange, it's quite humorous. The "sorry sorry" makes it even funnier
If you are somewhat like this, humour is a necessity to survive the (so called) normals 🖖🤪👍 ❗
You make me feel understood.
In a world where I so often feel misunderstood,
You make me feel understood.
As someone who spends a lot of time in front of a camera, I thought it was absolutely absurd to have these outbursts. That is, until I went in front of a camera completely by myself for the first time in a few years and caught myself doing some quite similar things 😂
As someone who is a racecar driving stuntman millionaire, I agree with your comment.
I needed this amount of silliness this morning, thank you.
Love your content dude, keep being your silly self! ♥️
Oh, didn't I delete this video yet? 😁 (kidding)
As a neurodivergent, I agree
I second this
me too
I'm neuroconvergent. What does that mean?
@@SlusheeMe three
What a very normal person!
i am waiting for the video where he doesn't say sorry after a normal thing we all do!
Is it normal if one does the same thing but with one's penis instead? I still say sorry afterword so I think it's OK. Please let me know. Thanks! (Oh, no. Sorry.)
I haven't laughed this hard in a long time, thank you! I love it so much hahahaha 😁
lmaoo that's the best response :D
and being able to act goofy on camera is a talent - i couldn't do it, i'd be too shy to upload it and I've tried but then deleted it the next day lol
Can't thank you enough for this lmao, I was having a pretty crap day and this video made me laugh
Its so great to see you outside the other Posy videos :D
hahaha i appreciate you man and all the things you post :) will always be here to watch you vids
ND here, normally i'm very stoic, but i could feel my face really wanting to move every time you broke your composure
I keep thinking of that goat what licked the electric fence. You know the one.
Creating something new is better than creating nothing. Lazy Posy: 1, Me: 0. You’re winning.
That reminds me of Mosselman gabber song a lot for some reason
Like Professor Elemental says: "there's no such thing as normal, everybody's wierd". Sorry, sorry, sorry.
Dat kan best kloppen ja, ik had je al ergens tussen HB' er/Autisme/ADHD'er ingeschat. Misschien dat je 2 kanalen me daarom zo erg aantrekt qua herkenning!
i just went to "so normal island" and everyone knew you
Let everything out that doesnt pay rent i say
OMG I did the same!
WHEN I ALONE
I was actually going to ask if you possibly have tourette's. Though either way, I still quite enjoy your personality and your content. You're awesome, Posy! 👍
uhg... "normal" is overrated
Neurodivergent doesn't mean a person is some kind of psychopath who should be locked up in an asylum or anything like that. it just means they have a bit of a different brain than others, like autism, ADHD, things like that. It's a very positive kind of term! I suppose this person was assuming you were neurodivergent because you act kinda strange and are confident enough to film it, but I don't think that's a good assumption
hahaha love when you take the piss out of things like this.
if i were to assume anything, I'd assume you have ADHD, which constitutes neurodivergence. In the end, you could just be a goofy guy !
Wishing you well and wishing you luck, and stay safe
He doesn't "have" anything, he is normal and just likes to have fun
@@victorkreig6089 Hence why I said "if" I were to assume anything. Hence why I said he "could just be a goofy guy". I'm not making a diagnosis here. It doesn't concern me one way or the other. I think you may have misinterpreted what I was getting across.
@@AmeHart You said "hence" LOL!!!
@@User0000000000000004 ok
1:54 play at 0.25x
I love you lmao.
very normal, made me laugh, very normal, sorry sorry
I'm like this
Hope you are able to get some help soon.
♥♥♥
i personally just find you humorous
Did you have tourette syndrome as a kid/have it now? I did for about a year but I grew out of it about when I hit puberty. For that year, I mostly behaved as you do now. Just curious.
I give it hmmm maybe 2 years till neurodivergent is just another insult 🤣 i prefer to call myself a bit of a wierdo
Neurodivergent will be an insult but we'll come full circle on retard, start using it in clinical diagnoses again.
ъ .Ъ
I mean, this intro is very relatable for ADHD reasons.
While I’ve certainly gotten that vibe from your videos sometimes, I think making Factual Statements about your brain from purely whatever you choose you show the audience is going too far.
Stuff like autismdar (like gaydar but for autism, there isn’t a good name for the ADHD one) is, just like gaydar, a tool when interacting with a person. Not really applicable when watching a video a person shot and then chose to share.
Your audience ultimately doesn’t know you and you certainly don’t know your audience. I guess comments like that stem from the whole parasocial thing - you’ve shared your music and art so now they feel they know you.
"I'm perfectly normal" - but why??? Why do people want to be like everyone else? Be unique, for fox's sake!
ahahhaha
ew iPhone
Everyone is Nrbrbbbbrrrrrrrrrnrrrbbbb
i did the same
🤣
me
I have Asperger's syndrome (a kind of neurodivergency) and I have an IQ of ~144 (which most people don't like because they don't understand).
My intelligence allows me (sometimes and then only with some effort) to pretend I'm a normal human being.
But because in the long run that takes a lot of energy, I'd rather be amongst people who take me for what I am 🖖🤪👍 ❗
As far as spectrums go, I think everyone is on it, to varying degrees.
No. Such. Thing. There's one thin line running from here to infinity called "normal", friend. Anything else is your problem, guy. You don't define me, buddy.
You can be creative, quirky, goofy and weird without a DSM diagnosis (and also, no one can diagnose someone just by watching them online). A neurodivergent diagnosis makes you "cool" the same way a cool pair of sneakers makes you "cool" - only in a very superficial way that validates others with a shared affinity. Don't let any identity group take credit for your unique character.
Hey Posy! May I Have one of Your Albums for Free?
As someone who paid for his last album, go to hell.
he?
69 like on the vid at this comment, noice.
Aren’t we all?
Everyone is suddenly a supposed expert on psychology by using the latest echo chamber buzzword.
Shut up, narcissist.