NOTE: this is not the experience of ALL psych ward patients. many have found them pleasant and extremely beneficial. please watch the full video before jumping to any conclusions. come back next week for *I spent a day with DOMINATRIXES* ≡ ▸ open.spotify.com/show/5aOLuPenneHbhLh05fmkeu ▸ podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/i-spent-a-day-with/id1550213250
Imagine an SA victim becomes suicidal and goes to a mental hospital, just to be held down by multiple men after being stripped naked. You should never be stripped naked, that is a complete violation.
This is exactly what I was thinking of. If that happened to me on a good mental health day I would end up a complete mess. Thinking about that happening at the peak of a breakdown.... I would not survive it unless multiple new alters formed to make me forget it happened (I have DID)
I went to a mental hospital and yelled at all the nurses to not let the men touch me while they looked at me like I was stupid while the women just stood around and let the men strap me down
And then when that incident triggered me (more than ever) and I was completely out of myself, I get diagnosed with schizophrenia. Even though I was already diagnosed with PTSD and it should be obvious I was triggered. Now it has almost been 2 years of me trying to remove that diagnose of my diagnoses list and it’s finally almost ending. 2 years. Because it took them some few hours of a meltdown to diagnose me with something I do not have, but years to believe every argument I have to explain that: I do not have schizophrenia, your staff triggered me.
As an SA victim I can confirm, especially since I was 15 when I was admitted. It was a complete violation of my privacy to be stripped down like that, and there were several other instances that occurred during my stay as well. Still, mine wasn't nearly as bad as the speakers' experiences. I can't imagine going through something like what Lauren went through.
That's the true story for about every job ever .. there is one guy holding everything together and just new people filtered in while the higher ups just yell at them on how us to be better.
I went voluntarily to a mental hospital because I was extremely depressed. I was raped by an orderly. I was suddenly described as autistic according to my medical records because I started avoiding eye contact with the male staff. In my medical records, the autism was supported by the fact that I had asked a doctor for a hearing test 10 years earlier and they now decided what I really meant is that I don't understand people, and also that I'm an engineer and enjoy sci-fi as a female which is apparently an autism symptom? They changed my stay to involuntary to observe me for this "autism" but did not inform me of the reason (I only found out from my medical records later). Then they also suddenly determined me to have "paranoia" because I didn't want to take their anti-depressants and "calming" medications anymore and because I put my arms across my chest to prevent a male doctor from putting his hand down my shirt to check my heart. A week later I saw the head doctor. All he wanted to talk about was whether I would go to the police. I assured him that I wouldn't, and I was immediately released. He wrote in my medical record that I had suffered a breakdown after being dumped, which was a complete fabrication. Two separate nurses told me they had heard from several patients that they had "slept with" staff (like we have a choice when we're trapped in a room with staff who can do whatever they want with us). These two nurses seemed to find this mildly concerning, but they mostly seemed to accept it as just what happens in psychiatric hospitals. I want to ask the world to stop giving mental health professionals the power to lock people up, rape them, and then use psychiatric diagnoses to cover it up.
@Saying N*igro Makes UA-cam Cry They'll just say I'm crazy and the police will believe them. If the police were likely to do anything, then they never would have done it in the first place. They already changed my voluntary stay to involuntary when they found out about it. What would they do if I went to the police?
@@lalala-lt8fe that is so ture but it so fucked up at the same time and the fact that today mental health is still rising no one is really doing jack shit about and I know that it Austraila for sure - yes I live in Austraila
As someone who's been in a psych ward for kids and teenagers being restrained at 10 years old is the most terrifying experience I've ever had. Being pinned down by several adult men and even though I'm screaming for someone to help me because I don't know what's going on no one gives it a second thought. I didnt even know what the meds I was being given were and to this day I've never been told. I'm 15 now and I've been admitted a total of 7 times, all against my will because they never helped me, they traumatized me. Thankyou Anthony for handling such a sensitive topic so well, you're amazing Edit: I'm doing far better than I have been. Thankyou for all your words of support kind internet people. I still deal with the memory of what happened there but I'm beginning to recover
I’m so sorry you had to experience that, sending you all the good vibes and positivity. Don’t forget that you’re loved and people care about you, keep your chin up 💕
I have Autism. I have been to to a special needs school. I have been “Physically helped” and I was screaming and crying until I apologize, they didn’t stop.
I work in a hospital with a ward but we call it behavioral health. It’s scary because the staff has a rule to not trust the patient and I’ve talked to some of them, and one of them cried because she said she just wanted to go home. She said she was she came in for PPD but she felt fine after realizing she missed her hubby and new family. But no one will listen to her😔
@@itsthat1jerk387 it’s not that easy as the patients health is on record plus she has to be discharged by her doctor which clearly the doctor won’t let her out. They have high security so they can’t exactly sneak out.
Some practices are harsh but the procedures are there to keep people safe. When I was being treated for mental health, a patient tried to hang herself in the admittance area with her bra. I have mixed feelings about being strip searched. They check on patients every 15 minutes at night sleep in these places are impossible, because you can strangle yourself with sheets. Mental illness effects people differently and they don't know what an individual is going to do. The place I was at didn't have toilet paper on a roll, because I guessed you can make a noose our of it. It was dispensed like tissues incase you were wondering.
@Raine whispers I agree with this, but these places lack the resources and the staff. I was lucky to have a doctor who knew my background and sent me to a facility that had these resources. My doctor actually checked on my status and even came to visit when I was in the hospital. A lot of people treat mental illness as a weakness and taboo. Until people start accepting it as any other illness like diabetes or heart disease people are going to be mistreated.
Right!? I'm hoping/trying to learn to present myself in the similar manner he has to make people comfortable talking about uncomfortable things. He has an amazing skill at it!
It is so crazy to me that what would be considered sexual assault in every other setting is okay at institutions like this??? (talking about the stripping)
@@gracelewis4016 You strip yourself in jail unless you object. From what I’ve heard, you get pinned down in mental hospitals. And you get yourself in jail by your own fault but people can’t influence their mental health… Also unless I’m wrong, you are examined by guards of the same gender😅 neither is ideal but the stripping in mental hospitals sounds so brutal😅 I felt especially bad for the girl who just got locked in a room with a sindow without any clothes🥺
I have never experienced anything other than the typical shit everyone feminine pretty much goes through (catcalling, a stranger grabbed my ass once) and yet I would've straight up broken down, like full-on fuckin dissociation I would be _gone,_ especially because I'm nonbinary so having to also just look at my body and have other people look at body would make me want to vomit can't fuckin imagine how awful it would be for someone who has trauma due to abuse/assault, especially with how they're held down and tied up
@@crowsoto9612 I cannot even imagine. Why is it so brutal though??? Especially if somebody wants and agrees to getting admitted... I would be scared for my life if I went to a mental hospital to get help and then without warning was sexually assaulted... It's so cruel. Many people experience body dismorphia, have eating disorders, 1 out of 5 (or three, I can't remember rn) women have been a victim of sexual assault or rape, what about people who have PTSD from any sort of an attack? This must be so hurtful, humiliating and scary for them. This must be hurtful, humiliating and scary for anyone who has to go through this but these people especially...
Jail is kind of different though although I still don’t think it’s appropriate that situation either. Most people in hospital are innocent, they never did anything to deserve being stripped down. It’s just horrible.
People who strip SA victims down and strap them down like that deserve the death penalty like how does that help someone? You’re putting them through the same trauma they’re being admitted for, don’t take clothes off people! Like wtf
Defintiely not the death penalty. Stop overreacting, it isn't helping anyone. They're just doing their jobs, they have their own lives, families to raise.
@@flwrsforlay i agree, not the death penalty, but it deffo shouldnt be legal and i also think that prison systems are bad so ive created a dilema in my head
I’m a psychiatric nurse and the way these people were treated breaks my heart. I’m in Australia so it might be different in my hospital but I hope that I never make anyone feel this way
I don’t know about psychiatric hospitals in Australia but the U.S has a extremely long history of psychiatric hospitals being dangerous, traumatic, and corrupt. There are many horror stories. Old facilities used to do experiments on patients with forced concent and a majority of facilities now are not healing to the patients and cause much more trauma.
Im not that surprised duo to past of psychiatric but im surprised it still goes on this day forward where we understand human mind and we need to occupy it by being productive and not just put in a locked room. I am a nurse i was in psychiatric hospital and yes there are closed sections for ones that harm others or themselves but with cruicial evidence of them doing that. But usually the people i worked with the patie ts were happy we went to walk with them outside on the sun let them smoke their cigarete as it calmed them down if they were really good behaved and get better than previous week on Sunday they even got coffe or cake for a reward. So i guess it really depends on a lot of stuff.
@@googlegmail9888 Um... No they're not.. And even if they're in your words "fuzzed beyond repair" that doesn't warrant or excuse the incredibly inhumane treatment that these normal innocent people just in need of actual support and help should be receiving. It's like you didn't even watch the video or understand the message? The whole point is to humanize people struggling with mental illnesses and not let the abuse and cruelty in Pyhsic Wards go unnoticed and unexcused. Have some empathy good lord.
Having bounced between 8 different hospital stays in 5 different hospitals over the course of about half a year, I can without a doubt confirm that this is not an isolated issue. Some hospitals are certainly better than others and believe it or not, the only State run hospital was a thousand times better than the 4 private run hospitals were.
seriously, the only time I saw the doctor was after I got booty juiced and the only thing I remember is her asking me how much and the last time I pooped. I still think about that like how did she even know what medicine to give me.
I’m stingy with the benzodiazepines. If I can calm someone down without it, I always go for that method first. I know some nurses go straight for the as-needed psych meds, though. Not me. The best yet: Patient yelled, “I’m leaving, and you can’t stop me.” I came up started talking a little, and then I said, “You know what? I got some apple juice today. You want some?” He went from 😡 to 😁 … No drugs needed.
Yup. When I was there, I saw the psychiatrist once and he prescribed me 4 new pills, on top of the one I was already taking. I couldn't stay awake during the day at all and later found out that all 4 were sedatives.
Her poem really summed up my stay as well. If someone mentioned wanting to die they would immediately send you to the isolation room. Which was your mattress (that they dragged from your room) and one thin blanket on the floor. They didn’t even treat us like human beings, I felt like a dog being trained to be good.
As bad as the hospital stays were, jail is infinitely worse. I got brought in manic and in a state of psychosis. They locked me in the drunk tank with the lights on 24/7 , completely naked, nothing but a mat, no blankets pillows or toilet paper. Just a thin mat and a shoebox size hole in the floor as a bathroom. They ended up leaving me there for 6 days straight which felt like an eternity in the state I was in/ never knowing what time of day it was. I would bang on the door and yell so they would just constantly ask me what drugs I was on and I told them nothing but nicotine, caffeine, and marijuana but they wouldn't believe me. They know nothing about mental health and just assume if someone is acting different it's because of drugs. I was brought in on a friday after the doctor had already left and they don't come in on the weekends so I begged for the 2 meds I had been taking for 3 days straight before the Doc finally came in on monday. They then gave me all 7 different meds that had been previously tried on me over the previous 6 months and with the state I was in I just took them. Taking all those meds finally went far past sedating me and to the point where I couldn't chew or swallow food and couldn't even lift myself off the mat. It wasn't until I had not moved in 2 days straight that they finally decided I needed to go to the hospital.. I had plenty of rough and depressing times in the hospitals but, my god, those 6 days are the only true trauma I have ever experienced and it's upsetting knowing that there are thousands of people in America alone that are being treated the same way when all they need is help.. Hope you're doing better now.
That poem was accurate. I lost my sister after she had a long battle with mental health. I truly think the hospitals she was in made her worse. A different one every time.
I was admitted to a psych ward by force over a panic attack in a therapy session. It was only made worse when the police threatened to arrest me if I fought back. I was 16, off my medication at the moment, sleep deprived, and genuinely terrified. I witnessed horrible things in the ward. I made a friend, just to watch her get into physical fights with the nurses because they didn’t properly help her with her feelings. She was told to “stop it” and “behave, or we’ll give you the shot”. She always got the shot. I had another friend, who was sexually assaulted when they put a young man in our group. They blamed her, and moved him to the guy’s group.
over a panic attack?!? wow im so sorry. i haven't even been admitted for trying to kill someone. the system is so fucked oh my god. i really hope youre healing♡♡
@@sofiaaa3120 yep, i was going through a terrible schizophrenic episode and was screaming and crying for help and tried to kill my mom. not fun, and i didnt end up getting help either way. the system is so shitty.
I wanted to be a psychiatric doctor for a long time. But after meeting my late step mom, I realized how much I didn’t want to. She was a paranoid schizophrenic, she was the most gorgeous woman on the planet. She would never hurt anyone. Before I met her, she had already gone to a psychiatric hospital and absolutely never wanted to go back. After she started getting really bad, talking about people in the walls, talking about “eyes” following her, getting paranoid that the cops were following her, we realized she was not longer taking her meds. After we talked to her about the medication, she got extremely paranoid about being sent back to the ward. It didn’t help that her daughters were threatening to send her back. She took matters into her own hands and took her life. I will never stop thinking about the fact that she would rather die than go back.
I’m actually surprised that no one talking about some staff and doctors, not everyone but some really strange in a way of not having a soul , primitive , zombies , very heartless to the point it’s scary . One doctor was looking at me smiling but his eyes were black. Honestly I think there is more going on than we remember , especially after giving a shot. I tried my best to forget and thought I was. Imagining things but after 3,5 years of healing and meditation, living a normal life it came back to me thru meditation , I started crying uncontrollably . I’m more than fine now after I left USA, but I’ve been told thru meditation that it’s very dark, I went thru that,because I chose it, I remember everything for a reason. I mean there is normal human nurses and staff ,but some of them are not .
@@raziyadamenova4921 Where do you live now since leaving the USA??? Do they lock people away like they do here??? I agree with about the nurses and staff! They're ALL evil! I'll NEEEVVVEEERRR have respect for them! Hell, I'd pay money just to watch them die in front of me! I HATE healthcare workers of ALL kind! ALWAYS WILL!!!
Anita's poem made me tear up and gave me chills. I felt that. So wonderfully written. You're not alone. I've been in many psychiatric hospitals. I was 12 the first time I was placed in one for being defiant. During restraining a 7 year old, they murdered that child. I saw it. I heard him scream, cry, and moan until the silence. Then all the staff freaking out. I was placed in so many psych wards as a pre-teen and teenager. I've been in 3 times for suicide attempts as an adult. There's no shame in getting help. I do believe many people experience more harm in many institutions. We see you and you matter.
It's REALLY scary. You can have all the "normal" responses of a person, but once they label you as "crazy", all your actions become a motif. It's insane. It's like there is always a closed path for all the possible solutions you can think of.
History is written by the victors, and it's the same case here but with regards to who is normal or who is insane. Just because they are the ones in power, they are the ones able to label everyone, and force their narrative down on "normal people."
@@Rahnonymous then i guess im a victor because i told the apa what i know and threatened a lawsuit if so much as one of their psychiatrists so much as touches me, and now they are legally scared to even see me, thing is just give threats of lawsuits and prove you will do it and they will avoid you like the plague, i feel more people need to know this
I ended up being severely traumatized from a mental hospital. The place that was supposed to help me ending up scarring me for life. To this day it makes it hard for me to ask for help out of fear they’ll send me back.
I was put in a psych ward when I was 13 which was 2 years ago. They still do all these things even to the kids. I left 10x more suicidal than I was before. We got asked the same questions over and over. One of the doctors full on body shamed me when I said I was insecure. There was barely any therapy at all instead me and the other patients relied on each other for ranting and opening up. They were extremely transphobic- they told all the trans people it was just a phase and they would force them to go to the day room of the gender they were born as (there was a male and female day room). If you harmed yourself even if it was an obvious accident they would put you on 24/7 watch. They would watch you sleep, use the bathroom, and even watch you shower. If you refused to take your meds or refused to behave they would give you booty juice (yes ik the name is weird). It was mentioned in this video. It made you woozy and then they would force the pill down your throat while you were in the woozy state or passed out.
Holy shit that sounds HORRIBLE! I really hope you're okay now 🤍💞 tell me if you ever need someone to talk! Im not forcing you or someone its just i feel soo bad hearing your story
UPDATE: around a month ago I ended up in a phych ward again. I'm happy to say this one was genuinely helpful and respectful. They didn't use booty juice or anything. Hell they even had good food. The day room was gender neutral which means any gender can hang out in there. They actually had a lot of therapy every day. Such as multiple groups a day and the wrap up before we go to bed. They would ask you what your interests are and use that as a way to get you into a therapy group that you would genuinely enjoy. And if you were on watch they wouldn't watch you sleep, shower, or use the bathroom. You could just close the door while a nurse stays outside your room and checks up on you every 10 minutes or so. (Also a lot of the nurses and doctors there were kinda hot-)
Wow...the bit in Anita's poem about 'this is one of the GOOD psych wards' really hit home. I was in one summer 2020 (voluntary. I bailed after 4 hours; even getting out as a voluntary patient is difficult, slow, & dependant on having a safe home/people to live with. It's very Cuckoo's Nest - I could've gone in voluntary and never made it out...), & while the place was AWFUL, no psychiatric care provided at all, women screaming and sobbing all over the place (usually it was patients tending to other distressed patients, not the staff!), there was this one beautiful young-ish girl there (most women were in their 40s) who came up and said to me, 'You'll be ok here, it's one of the good ones'. She was very clear and coherent, but you could see in her eyes that she was either over-medicated or somewhat dissociated, & I just thought...shit, what are the other wards round here like?! What've you been through? But I just wanted to get out - I didn't chat with her. I would love now to have heard her stories... Overall it left me with a terror of ever, ever being in a crisis state again, because I know I can't hack those places - if I stayed I would've been driven legitimately crazy and never gotten out, I truly believe that. Huge sympathies to these people & all other psych ward survivors...
So powerfully worded. You could hear every little detail in her voice. Personally I was sitting on the edge of my seat and I’m sure I’m not the only one. Much love 💝
although a lot of it wasnt my experience of a psych ward, some of it really hit home with me and the kind of cheery attitude is really eery and reminded me of how some of the staff acted.
As someone who’s been admitted to a pysch ward, I’m so shocked about these experiences! Maybe every ward is different but for me staying there, I felt the best I had in a long time and I was connected with a free professional support team post discharge. I live in Australia btw. It’s horrible that these people were treated like that. I feel like I would leave even more traumatised 😥
Oh yeah, just seeing little snippets of videos from psych wards outside the US it's immediately apparent that they are WAY better. Like, oh my God, the staff cares?? :0
The entire mental health system in America is about as broken as the prison and health system mixed, I'm glad from the comments it's apparently better other places
so many people are making it seem like it's the worst thing ever in America and whatnot and just saying all these stories but like- I've been to three and all these stories literally just sound like the stereotypes and in all reality it's nothing like that
Honestly, it's so heartbreaking and scary to hear these stories of these survivors- there really needs to be a reevaluation of patient advocacy, and understanding of mental health- the biggest thing that all these stories had was a lack of sympathy from the staff which in turn can make some mental illnesses worst as my anxiety rised just hearing about it so I couldn't imagine dealing with it first hand was like. There is not enough thanks I can give to the guests on today's episode for being so courageous and brave to talk about their experiences while also keeping an open mind that not everyone endured the same treatment they did
As a survivor myself, I totally agree. I remember having a panic attack at a psych ward, not knowing what it was and scared I was having a heart attack, and a nurse scoffed at me and told me it was just a panic attack and to drink some water. One of the patients tried to help but the nurses kept telling her to be quiet. I would never wish what I've been through even for my worst enemies. My experiences have traumatized me to the point I don't want to see a therapist in fear of being put in the same situation even though I know I really should.
@@Nom1fan Yeah, the other sad part is I live in the US and can't afford a therapist. Not like I have much time anyways for one where most of my days are at work or taking care of myself, my home, and my loved ones. 😅 I really appreciate the advice and sentiment though. 💕
When I was 13 I was put into a psych ward hospital, it was very traumatizing for me. I still get uneasy about a simple trip to the hospital. I remember screaming and crying to my mother for her to help me, only to see her look down on me in shame. I remember the loneliness I felt and how cold my bed was when I went to sleep. I remember sobbing and sobbing, begging to go home. I remember how uneasy I felt around the nurses, I remember them shoving pills in my face. I remember faking how I felt so I could leave early. I remember how much I hurt from it. Her poem hit so close to home. But after I left, my mother treated me like I’m crazy. My whole world crumbled into pieces after I left, the psych ward did not help me, it made me feel worse.
I am genuinely so so sorry for that. This is an evil world. I’ve been there . But our existence is a rebellion and self care is our biggest act of defiance. Hospitals like that thrive off of vulnerable people to make a profit. Take care of yourself and take care of anyone who’s at risk of ending up in a place like that. I wish you peace of mind, you’re loved and you deserve all the respect In the world.
dear, please take care of yourself. i do not know what it feels like, since ive never been in one, but i can tell it is absolutely horrid. i hope you push through this and get the right help you need. best wishes to you and stay well. ❤
my psych ward that i went to was amazing. i just got discharged yesterday, and i finally feel somewhat mentally stable for the first time since 7th grade. it felt like a huge weight that i was holding on my shoulders for multiple years was just lifted
Hey Anthony, maybe you could do “I spent a day with Deaf and Hard of Hearing people”, so they could tell us about what it’s like to be a deaf person, and talk about the Deaf and Hard of Hearing community.
same some the sweetest people ever i met there no one deserves the way we get treated by staff tho i only ever had one nice nurse and she wasn’t even nice she just didn’t treat us like animals
The strip search was the hardest part for me. I just remember crying and being forced into a corner trying to cover myself with my hands. In a room with no doors. All the other patients could see. I laid on my plastic mattress for the whole first day just crying. This was only a year ago. It's still really fresh in my mind. Next time I wont let anyone know.
@@sodium_ i’ve been to wards 3 times but just never considered myself as a ‘psych ward survivor’ i’ve never heard anyone else refer to themselves as that either so this is just a new perspective
I was admitted to a psych ward when I was 13 for severe depression and anxiety, and that poem hit hard. I was woken up before sunrise every morning by a doctor sitting beside my bed, shining a light in my face, and questioning me over and over on how I felt and if I still wanted to kill myself. My windows were locked and sealed yet the door to my room was a curtain that other patients I didn't even know regularly wandered through to talk to me. They took away the sentimental rounded, dull necklace I wore as a reminder to be strong "in case I tried to cut my wrists with it", yet left posters in my room hung by tacs and nails, and gave me papers with sharp metal clips on them. I asked for my necklace over and over which only earned me punishments, such as being placed in a room where one of the walls was completely glass for them to watch through. They withheld shampoo, toothbrushes, soap, and denied me basic hygiene rights. I had my period and bled in my underwear, yet I was offered no new undergarments or nor tampons/pads for my entire stay. The pajamas they gave me to wear had dried blood all down the legs and arms before I even put them on, like they were stained or unwashed from the previous patient. I was told if I didn't get better fast enough, I would be flown to a different city and put in an asylum. They cut me off from my best friend and family, put me in solitary confinement with nothing but a pen and notepad, and told me to "work it out" by myself.
I was thinking the same thing hearing it!! It was very validating hearing someone put my feelings of being in the psych ward into such a beautifully written and performed poem.
I am absolutely shocked by some of these stories, and I’ve been admitted to these places multiple times it was horrifying and traumatizing, but not to this extent. In the facilities I got better it was in the emergency room where I was really traumatized and treated like an animal.
my experience in the emergency room was the only moment of peace to be honest. i was just laid in a bed with my father next to me. the psych ward itself was horrible. i was a voluntary patient too
Seriously! I felt everything she was saying. It wasn’t even just the words but the inflections she placed on the words, ramping up the energy until the listener is gripping at their seat and then all of a sudden just cutting it, giving you a second to breathe and starts ramping up a again. It’s seriously was all so well done
Anita's story was spot on. I struggle with PTSD, anxiety, and severe depression. I have been involuntarily hospitalized twice. The first time I was feeling suicidal and reached out for help. I was placed under a 72hr hold against my will receiving ZERO mental health care & was ignored by staff. I attempted to explain my situation to several nurses & techs and that I was just seeking outpatient care for suicidal thoughts and was being held against my will. Every single one of them either flat out ignored me or just told me the doctor would be there to see me in 3 days. They even took away my phone privilege's (which all patients are supposed to have) and wouldn't let me call my mom. It was the only time I've ever pulled a "karen" and demanded they let me talk to my mom under the threat of suing. ... But yeah, legal kidnapping is what this is. The 2nd time I was hospitalized was an actual attempt to take my own life. This time the staff were a lot nicer, however, I still received ZERO mental health care. There's also nothing to do in the psych ward aside from laying in bed, coloring, or joining group "therapy" sessions which mostly consisted of playing board games with the other patients and not actually receiving any therapy. Also, one of the nurses did threaten that if I didn't attend the group sessions that they would keep me there longer. To get out you really do have to act the right kind of way & be the right amount of social despite how you may be feeling. (I also have severe social anxiety so the group sessions were a nightmare especially when all of the attention was on me). And once they decide you are going to be admitted you can forget seeing any friends/ family/ any emotional & mental support you may have in your life for at least a few days if not weeks. Aside from phone calls to my emergency contact (my mom) I was not allowed to contact anyone. They strip you of all your electronics & personal items (including shoes). I also wore the same outfit for 3 days because I had no one available to bring me a change of clothes. If you have responsibilities (school, work, children, pets) to take care of.. they will not contact anyone to let them know you are hospitalized. If you don't have anyone in your life that can take care of these things for you then you just have to pray that your prof will let you retake that exam, that you won't be fired for missing work without notice, that your children won't be taken away from you, or that Fluffy won't die of starvation. Our system here in the U.S. is truly awful & mental health continues to be ignored and mishandled. P.S. This psych ward was one of the good ones
You literally just summed up the hell that I have gone through in this abusive system that should be outlawed. I suffer tremendously to this day from going through the exact things you talked about and even more, and having been told I was being “helped”. I would always say, the only “help” I got was being more depressed and anxious, etc. I have learned to keep my problems to myself and I would never go back to “therapy” or anything like that ever again in my life. I’d rather just struggle. I am glad I am not alone in my perspective of this outright abusive, evil and manipulative system and I wouldn’t wish this on anyone.
I’m sorry you went through this but the one thing I want to say to you is: demanding to have a basic right does not make you a Karen. My mom told me I was being a Karen after being sexually assaulted and being completely traumatised. Sorry I just had to tell you that
"We didnt cause your social anxiety. We only heightened what was already there." I havent been in a mental institution myself, but i need to say, this line is making me cry. i dont know, this hits a really big cord with me; maybe i had past trauma or im feeling for everyone who had to go through this. thank you
Anita's poem, specifically the verse surrounding "we didn't cause your social anxiety. We only heightened what was already there," reminds me a lot of the Wraith episode from Supernatural, which ironically happened in a psych ward. Except the wraith didn't feed on social anxiety, it fed on fear and made you go crazy
@@saragarofano6471 Same! nearly all my abusers used to tell me to "look into my eyes when I'm speaking to you!" The fact that I'm autistic makes me hate eye contact even more.
I was first placed in a children's psyche ward in Pembroke, MA in the 80's when I was 11. I was actually suicidal, but placing a child in a locked ward, putting them in restraints and medicating them to the point where they can barely stay awake is not help. I too only saw my doctor once a week, and I spent the rest trying to stay awake and participate in the schedule they made us go through every day- which had little to do with actual help. Sleeping in the outfield did nothing for me except give me a sunburn- especially with the medication they had me on: Thorazine and Stelazine. It took months to wean off that shit when I got out after the weeklong stay that turned into months. Being in a psyche ward taught me that there are things I can't say to certain authority figures.
I'm so sorry you went though that. Pembroke is still one of the more terrible wards in MA now, I can't imagine the 80s. I participated in a partial program there, and I have friends who did full residential who had terrible experiences as well within the past 3 or 4 years.
so anyone wondering, ECT is when shocks are administered to your brain as an attempt to help you, but it has a small chance of wiping out large chucks of memory and you can even forget who people are like your friends or parents.
@@brookewilson1950 its a side effect. "Brain Manipulation Therapy." I'm going based off of my knowledge in psychology. Memory loss is a side effect that can last either a short amount of time or years.
thats inhumane and beyond anything that even sounds like the word compassion. i feel for you and everyone. i would expect those "doctors" to try to help by giving space, love, time, and a really caring therapist. you/anyone who got that and everyone who went through what these inspiring beautiful ladies and gentlemen didnt deserve any pain they caused. you deserve everything good and love and affection like hugs and stuff :)
I don’t think that’s correct. It’s not a 50/50 chance. There’s a chance of it not working but not forgetting everything unless that’s what happened when it first came out? Because that’s not how it is now. I think that might be old information
I went to the psyche ward when I was about 16 for extreme delusional thinking. I didn't know if I'd be safe for myself or others, sense my delusions were so intense. My parents first brought me to the normal hospital sense they didn't know what else to do, and from there I was admitted into a psychiatric hospital. I was put in the ambulance-access waiting room with my parents, made to strip down and give them my clothes and put into a paper hospital gown. I was then sat in the waiting room there for FOUR HOURS waiting for someone to bring me up to the ward itself. That was four hours of sitting there with my parents in a paper gown that barely covered my body enough for me to sit on the seat without my ass touching it directly. I had another breakdown in that waiting room because "even the people supposed to help me don't want me here" (my exact words according to my mother as I was sobbing sitting there.) There was no real therapy I went to, I was forced to explain all of my trauma and situation ONE TIME to a psychiatrist who took my years and years of hallucinations, delusions, and depressive episodes that I only recently had realized wasn't normal and diagnosed me with anxiety and major depressive disorder. It was explained to me that it was "surprising how bad anxiety can be" when I asked why I wasn't diagnosed with anything that'd explain the hallucinations. I was given an SSRI and anxiety medication. I have Bipolar Disorder with Psychotic Features. This means the hormone fluctuation that gives me manic/depressive episodes also causes me to have Psychosis symptoms. It is well known that people with Bi-Po when given SSRI's are often put into even worse manic/depressive episodes, and when you have Bi-Po with Psychotic features this causes the hallucinations and delusions to get EVEN WORSE. The "treatment" I was receiving LITERALLY MADE IT WORSE. here's some more little things that made it a living hell: -Nurses telling patients to "pray to the savior" to cure them being LGBT and/or mentally ill -Nurses threatening patients with the knockout-juice needles used in EMERGENCIES for literally anything done wrong -Staff including therapists and psychologists ignoring people with panic attacks/mental episodes unless they were literally attacking themselves or others -Staff putting people in the "safe room" (padded room) for minor inconveniences.
I feel so sorry for you, all of these stories from survivors (which they should not have to be in the first place) are legit horror stories and shouldn’t even be happening in the first place
I’m so tired of psychiatrists throwing SSRIs at every single person who walks in the door. There’s two years of my life that I absolutely cannot even remember because of SSRIs, and I completely destroyed everything i had built so far in life during that time. Also bipolar here (type II) and have ADHD. Now that I’m on low doses of seroquel and adderall, I’ve been perfectly fine for over a year. Not one incident. Looking back it makes absolutely no sense why someone would think my symptoms were just anxiety and depression. Why is getting fcked by SSRIs almost like a rite of passage before doctors will actually treat the symptoms you have.
This is why one of my DREAM jobs is a psych ward. I want to make a difference. I want to help people...I'm not super stable myself but Def. Have become stable enough to know I'd like this for someone else, for someone to reach a point where they too feel at least okay:)
@@joannevanderhoeven thank you, I'm in college right now as a psych major. And I can't wait to just show some kindness to someone that I know really needs it. I've been there, and sometimes that's all we need man.
i thought the same thing and i went and got a job in a psych ward (i live in the uk). it was hell, i couldnt help anybody because everything has to be so done by the book. i couldnt just help or chat or hang out with them, i couldnt make the difference i wanted because of the structure of the hospital. everything was done hour by hour and so many tasks were menial. i dont want to put you off but it was nothing like they made it out to be. the patients werent the issue AT ALL, i made friends with them all so quickly. the staff were the problem, they had been working there for so long they didnt care about the patients anymore. it was hard hearing the staff bitch about the patients and mock them. its not an environment you can thrive in if you want to help people. it feels like you make them worse working there. i watched people go more insane being in the ward. and we wondered why the same people would come back over and over.
I’ve been put in a psych ward twice when I was younger. Once when I was 10, and another time when I was 12. I was not happy there. There’s a lot of trauma I accumulated from my time there. The intake process was terrifying. Asking me for details about the abuse I endured as a kid was horrible. Then the whole strip search was even worse. They checked every inch of my body and screamed at me when I tried to cover myself up. It was horrifying. It’s scary being there. It’s a lot like prison. It’s not a place for children especially children like me who were just misunderstood and depressed. Edit: I feel so bad for everybody who has a bad experience in a psych ward. Just know you’re not alone
I was 16, I was the youngest person in the psych ward. They told my mom "she cries too much" when I left because I genuinely didn't stop crying pretty much the entire time I was there. It sucked.
I was 16 when I visited my first psych ward. I'm not entirely sure how old everyone else in there was but my surrounding rooms, the patients all looked over their 40s. Though I did see this one person walking the halls often and they looked as if they were similar to my age. At my first behavioral hospital, there were many younger people on my unit. The youngest I saw was a girl who was five. It's crazy to see so many young people in these situations and hearing the things they've been through. Almost makes things worse. But when in psych wards, before mental hospitals and behavioral hospitals and whatnot, you don't really see a lot of younger people because they usually get to skip out on the psych ward and go straight to residential facilities
@@libramoons I never went back! So that's a bonus ☺️ It's been 8 years and I'm definitely not where I wanna be but I'm very glad I got through all of that and have continued to push ☺️ Thank you!!!
I am 28 and have been hospitalized over 30 times since I was 13. Some of the experiences were like what they said, but some of them really saved my life and I wouldn’t be here today if I wasn’t there. Some places abuse their ability to restrain people but that place was shut down. Most places only do that if someone is being violent and it’s absolutely necessary. If you need help and you’re thinking of going to a psych ward, try talking to the staff other than the doctors because they can listen and be helpful. Also talking to the other patients can give you a sense you’re not alone although take everything they say with a grain of salt. Make a list of what you want to say to the doctor. These places can be scary but if you need help, I would go
This comment only got 40 likes, while the trauma poor has amassed thousands of interactions. I think we know what message people came away with and that makes me so so sad. :(
I have been in about 10 different hospitals numerous times and I agree with you. Getting help can be a good thing. Not all hospitals are bad. Most are a mix of good, bad and everything in between. Some staff are nice some are mean. Same thing goes for the patients. If you are a danger to yourself it is worth taking a chance and getting help.
From my 2 experiences at different wards… honestly my experience with patients was significantly better than with any staff. I guess the big problem is both of them don’t allow you to have any way to find the other people on the outside (for obvious HIPAA and safety reasons) which can make depression from loneliness worse.
@@ThatDevMatOfficial I found this to be the case at some places but not all. Esp in children’s units they don’t allow you to exchange contact information but when I was younger we usually found a way to exchange info secretly but in adult wards I’ve been to they allow you to exchange information but encourage you to focus on yourself
Being forced to do ANYTHING when you're in an emotionally vulnerable place is traumatizing. I can't even imagine being restrained and injected with something even if I wasn't emotionally vulnerable. That's terrifying to think about.
I went to one of those places and you were forced to share everything about how you got there and what’s wrong with you while everyone looking at you and sharing those things didn’t help me recover at all and the only reason i shared is because you can’t get out otherwise and i had extreeme social anxiety i wouldnt talk otherwise it was terrifying
When I was 11. The RCMP saw me jumping in front of a car. Police took me in the backseat to our local hospital. I lived in a small town so there was only one hospital, no psych ward. The hospital couldn't find a place for me to stay so they put me in a room meant for prisoners when they were going to the hospital. I slept on a metal table, not seeing anyone or being given food. There was even a toilet-sink that you'd see in stereotypical prison movies (the sink didn't work so I couldn't keep clean). Two days later, they found a place for me to stay. I was kept in a room, locked from the outside, no way to move around to talk to anyone. I was put in a hospital gown, not being allowed to cover my scars. There was always a volunteer (not trained, just a random citizen volunteering) watching me through a window 24/7. If I went to the bathroom for too long, doctors would break open the door. After another two days, a psychiatrist came to see me. She called me a rat and attention seeker. I told her I thought I had CPTSD but she just instantly diagnosed me with Anxiety, then gave me a sedative. She told me the only reason I was "stressed" was because I saw other people on social media and got jealous even though I never even used social media at that time. She didn't listen to me. I asked for another doctor (because I knew it was in my rights as a young Canadian) but she was the only one who was trained to "help" me. I was eventually allowed to walk down a hallway to grab books after one and a half weeks of staying. The nurses were unprofessional and were murmering about my sh scars and what the other nurses thought of me. I remember sneaking a bathrobe belt and suffocating it around my neck. I eventually looked at the bathroom mirror and saw a purple face with blue, bulging veins, bloodshot eyes. I tried to undo the knot, but couldn't. I was panicking. Eventually I got the knot undone (loosing a nail in the process) before I could go unconscious. I still see my young panicked face looking at me whenever I see a mirror. This wasn't a psych ward but I still wanted to tell me story here as a youth.
Sharing a story like that was brave if their jobs were to help you they should know not to spread or talk or whisper anything Absolutely horrible I hope u have a great rest of your Life
11:43 she is so right. when you’re in that situation and you show any normal human emotional response you’re seen as “crazy” and “in need of help.” i remember crying until like physically had no tears left at a psychiatric ward waiting to be transferred to another and regular patients were walking by and many nurses looked at me as though i was crazy when i was just a 14 year old alone in a psych unit on christmas eve.
THIS!!! They are SO inhumane and we are often there due to being insanely gaslit from people with just as little empathy and jus as much desire to hurt people for pleasure and to feel powerful over them
I spent 6 weeks at a psych ward when I was 13 or 14, and the only saving grace was the fact that I was in a children’s ward where I met some incredible people who were also suffering. But I will forever be haunted by some of those past experiences
i hope one day, schools possibly would be able to use these interviews as a way to make people aware and have little quizzes at the end. i would pay attention a lot more.
I went to a psych ward earlier this year for the first time because I was suicidal. They told me they would help me, but they put me in the disabled ward because there wasn’t any other beds, drugged me to make me sleep all day, and the one “therapy” session I had was a group church lecture to make me feel bad for being depressed. Finally they left me with a 10,000 bill for a 5 day stay were I was forced with pills down my throat, little food, and other patients who tried to harm me because I was a new comer.
i’m so sorry this happened to you! the hurt you must have felt being in that place is unimaginable. i feel so lucky to have had the courage to talk to my mother and her send me to a therapist when i started having suicidal thoughts. i honestly remember my therapist as a saint. even thought i cannot remember her face (this was when i was around 9 years old). i genuinely hope you are doing much better now and if not i send all my love that you feel and live better soon. ❤️
this honestly makes me realize just how lucky my experience was. My admissions were both voluntary and i even wanted to go, but regardless, My personal experiences were extremely positive. I was about 11 and 12 the times i went so that may have contributed but its still amazing that i was able to receive help in the necessary way i needed.
same, I had that same kind of experience. I wanted to go, I was 15, 16, and 17 I believe. The worst experience was when I was 17 and I was in the ER for 11 days, but once I got onto the unit it was okay.
My dad actually studied to be a psychiatric nurse, he said once he saw how bad the conditions were he quit and became a teacher trainer for developing counties. Hes been to Kazakhstan, spent 4 months in Bangladesh extra
I was involuntary committed at 16 and came out severely traumatized. I’m now 22 and start therapy tomorrow but I’m hesitant because of what the other “mental health professionals” put me through.
If your therapist doesn't work for you, you can always swich to another one. Don't give up on trying for help. Sorry that experience was so terrible for you.
@@krissiekitten i Hope it’s at least a bit better now… As the other commenter said you can always switch therapists if the one you’re working with now isn’t helping you. If you have made it to a point where you and your current therapist have started a healing journey it can only get better. Look out for yourself before accommodating anyone else in your life you definitely deserve all the good that comes at you
I was involuntarily committed to a psych ward as a teenager, and that poem was spot on. I was kept there for a month, and never received therapy. I saw the attending psychiatrist only when I was admitted. I left with significantly more issues than when I arrived. It's been nearly 10 years and I'm still dealing with those issues every single day
Never related to a comment more, same here. I was put away for 10 and a 1/2 months. I wonder if He has done any videos about these "rehabilitation houses" for young adults yet. I was in Island View.. so glad it's been shut down.
I was in a psych ward recently. It’s an oxymoron. You go there to prevent yourself from ending your life, But end up wanting to end your life even more the longer youre there.
I mean, I've been to a couple of psych wards before and there are a lot of misconceptions about them. Some psych wards, like the ones here in the video are absolutely awful and inhumane. However, a lot of others are actually pretty decent and work hard to get you back on your feet. It's really just a gamble
@@Chikaboom_Boom Well if there's two cupcakes in front of you and you know one of them is poisoned, are you still gonna take the risk and eat one of the cupcakes? I think of it like that.
@@_nyx it's not just a simple choice to not be committed. if you're severely ill and not capable of taking care of yourself anymore, a psych ward is often the best/only option. but not all psych wards are awful, many are genuinely helpful, and if you have the time, you can do research to find a program that doesn't have these kinds of horror stories.
My experience started with being escorted by a cop from the ER to a creepy, windowless, dark prison-like area at the basement of the hospital. They made me strip in a room with a window while they watched, and made me change into a literal paper gown. No underwear, nothing warm, and it was freezing. I walked down a hallway with a concrete floor and white walls, and little cells with thick windows. Someone was screaming down the hall, obviously having a mental health crisis of their own. I felt like I had to run away, this place was not a safe place and I wouldn't find comfort here. Then there was the room. I was locked away, alone, for several hours. My belongings were gone, the only thing in the room was a mattress. The walls had clearly been scratched and punched over the course of years. Other people who felt the need to escape just like me. No TV because someone had previously tried to swallow remote batteries in order to commit suicide. I didn't blame him, anything was better than this place. All the while I was shivering and alone in a paper shirt with no one to talk to or help me in any way. That was my experience.
as a seven year old I was stripped from my clothes in a showering room (a handicap shower and a wet room on a psych floor) and shoved under the water to "bathe" I was there bc I was having issues with clothing sensitivity... I am now diagnosed with ptsd with a variety of reasons but like still, I was seven
Reading all the comments and watching the video, i just want to say to all the victims who've been admitted and traumatized: I'm so sorry. I cry reading and/or hearing about your stories. You should have never been treated as cruely as you were. I hope you will at least somewhat recover, if you can't ever fully do that. I just want you to know you are loved. You are important and don't let them treat you bad.
A note on how much psych ward experiences can vary: My friend was admitted twice to the same hospital, 4 years apart, both times due to a suicide scare. The first time was incredibly traumatic to them, due to the lack of privacy, guilt-tripping by nurses, and lack of contact with the outside world. The second time, which happened after a lot of staff changes and reform at the hospital, (I know this because of a psychologist in my family who works there) was very beneficial to them. They were able to have some time with their phone, go outside for a little while each day, and had enough time with a therapist over that week and a half for it to actually make a difference. It’s really all a matter of treating patients like humans rather than pests. Also please note that I’m Canadian, I know the system in the US is a lot worse.
Literally same I always put on closed captions and I did before the video started and it was like “Aw man only auto generated” and then they actually talked about it and I was like 👀🤨
Yeah im wondering what happened, as the accident is now described as "i fell get my cat loft and broke my neck" ? did anyone hear what he actually said?
I could recite her poem when i was in a psych ward myself, translated it into german and the other patients used it to get a voice for themselves. It was a psych ward for kids in the age range from 10 to 17 and it was exactky the same as the movies. I was in there for over three months, there were others that were there for 4 years and they all became dull, i had friends that were there too. And they all came back changed, we talked about all of that, no one got therapy, most of the things they did back then became worse. The hospital kitchen gave us all tape worms but nothing happened, if they didn't wanted to deal with you, they used that to throw you out with the explanation "we dont have any solidary rooms." I was in a room with six other people that just came in that week while i was in "quarantine" for two weeks bc of the tape worms. Nurses made fun about us. One had bulemia in my room, so the bathroom was locked at all times. There was a guest bathroom down the hall but we werent alloed to use it, so they let me sit there for two weeks without a bathroom or a shower. I cant be with more than one person, if its more i often pass out bc of the panic, can't go with much noises, cant be too bright.. never had a minute for myself in those three and a half months. Tbh all of the stuff that i had before coming there just got worse, plus they got me more problems. I was there for so long and multiple times, but they never diagnosed me with anything. But a therapist that a youtuber put me through diagnosed me with several things in just six weeks of talking on the phone. So psych wards, mental hospitals.. they dont want to help you, they dont want to give you a diagnosis, they dont want to give you things to make it easier for you. They just dont give a damn.
Also when they found out that i wanted to be a psychologist, they just screamed at me bc i am too dumb, i would never make it, wouldnt even get the chance. If the staff just found one thing that you're aspiring, they just tried to crush that down, to keep you quiet.
TW of suicide⚠️: My 13 year old cousin was in and out of a children’s psych ward for months before she ended her life (jumped in front of a car on a busy highway). My Aunty who was 35 also ended her life (hung herself in my grandmas garage) and left 2 babies behind. My family has been deeply impacted and let down by our county and state’s mental health system (Australia). We are currently advocating for change 💪🏼
Also live in Australia. My big brother took his life a few months ago, on the heels of my stepbrother taking his life a month before. They both hung themselves from a tree in our backyard. Their psychiatrists severely mismanaged their care, specifically their medication, and we found they were on multiple meds that interacted. My brothers deserved better.
I can only imagine what Britney Spears went through staying in that psych ward involuntarily for a month making her take medication and sit in a room for 10 hours doing constant therapy. That is totally why she is a completely different person these days.
I was 13 when I first “took a visit” to the psyche ward. The place was like a prison. The poem definitely gave me flashbacks. I’m thankful Anthony Padilla is there to clear up rumors about it and interview people who have gone through this.
I have never been to a ward but from everything I have heard it sounds like a legal kidnapping and the system needs a rework, I feel really bad for what you went through and hope it has got better but I don't think that wards are the exact right way
For me ot felt very inaccurate since i was in one of the actual wards. But we could just getup and leave and we did so regularly. I do not understand why in the usa people can be locked for anxity or even suicidality. People where i wqs were sometimes right after a suicide attempt and they were qlso aloud to leave.
i cant put into words how much i appreciated this video. i was involuntarily committed, and i left with more trauma and less trust than i came in with. and when i try to speak about this, i am often shut down, called "ungrateful". why should i be grateful to be insulted, stripped nude and examined, forced on drugs, and locked in a filthy little room where they took away every person, item, and activity that brings me joy and comfort? my therapist believes i may have ptsd from what happened, and yet most people will shame me...because i was harmed by a system that promised to help me. seeing someone with a large platform compassionately bring attention to these stories makes me feel the slightest bit more hopeful and less alone. thank you
I’ve had a similar experience with the psych ward. I am very sorry you’ve had to experience this and hope that you are able to find people that are compassionate towards you if you try to talk about your experience. Thank you for sharing your experience and showing others that they aren’t the only one that is feeling what they’re feeling. 💙
I’m actually surprised that no one talking about some staff and doctors, not everyone but some really strange in a way of not having a soul , primitive , zombies , very heartless to the point it’s scary . One doctor was looking at me smiling but his eyes were black. Honestly I think there is more going on than we remember , especially after giving a shot. I tried my best to forget and thought I was. Imagining things but after 3,5 years of healing and meditation, living a normal life it came back to me thru meditation , I started crying uncontrollably . I’m more than fine now after I left USA, but I’ve been told thru meditation that it’s very dark, I went thru that,because I chose it, I remember everything for a reason. I mean there is normal human nurses and staff ,but some of them are not .
in my experience with psych hospitals, they have been 'okay' for the most part. I lived in florida for 11 out of 12 of my stays in short term stays. In Florida, they have a system that i believe no other state has, and that all hospitals dealing with psych-admitted patients had to follow, there are set guidlines and expectations each ward has to meet in order for for them to be viable to start treatment. In the USA it is standard for hospitals to strip you down to underware only (for girls some require to take off your bra but that is as far as they can go unless they have specific instructions from the state or county officials to do so) and they search you, and tempoarily take your clothes so they can search them for any potentially harful items or drugs. some will put you into scrubs, which is what nurses at hospitals usually wear but there arent as nice and are typically uncomfortable. but after they are searched properly they are given back to the patient for comfort. a lot of places when they first open have as many things as they can to make the stay more enjoyably theraputic as possible, but someone always finds a way to do something, and once it happens, that thing gets taken away, and the cycle repeats. another thing is that these short term stays are meant for unstable people, and to get them stable enough for re-evaluation for either discharge, more time there, or sent to a RTC (residential treatment center, which is basically a long term version of the short term, ranging from one month stays - 10+ years. the shorter the stay, usually the more comfortable and 'at home' feeling). a lot of psychiatrists will perscribe meds that they think will work, when half of them barley even know what they are doing despite having their degree. In the USA, every patient has the right to refuse medicine or other forms of treatment, but cant refuse to be admitted if you meet requierments to go. with a patient being able to refuse meds, if they are being unsafe to themselves or others its required that they give a 'shot' that usually contains Adivan, benadryl, and an anti-psychotic element thats dependent on the patient, if the psychyatrist orders this, its something the patient cant refuse if they are acting out. the most recent one i went to that wasnt in the state of florida was nasty, they had carpet flooring that was stained from bodily fluids and such, they gave me the shot 2 times becasue i med they put me on made me overly agressive and i started to kick in metal boxes that were ment to keep patients out (im female btw, im not some strong guy) i had never recieved a shot in the prevcious 11 stays i had, something wasnt right about that place. im truly sorry you were treated so horribly, if it come to you having to go back, research places ahead of time so if you are forced to go, you can hopefully choose where, not all of them are bad, some are quite good, one i actually liked and chose to go too if i knew i needed to
Psych ward for me was triggering due to the similarities of abusive authority I grew up in. I swore to myself that I’d never go back there again. Being locked up because you’re suffering only makes you suffer more.
I can completely understand where you are coming. I was sent to a psych ward and having that experience in the back of mind can be even more traumatizing. When I get depressed I think about being locked up and I don't ever want to go back to that place of suffering again.
That's definitely true. The middle school I went to locked me in the teachers classroom, followed around school by staff and couldn't come to school without being drugged up with meds. I told the high school what happened and the highschool made a complaint about the middle school for neglecting students. The middle school refused to allow me to go to regular classes and withheld lunch from me! The highschool I went to would never do that to any students! The highschool actually treated me like a human being. I got all my freedoms back right away once I got out of that middle school. I was struggling and needed help not being isolated and tormented by a Middle school!
I work in a psychiatric ward and it blows my mind to hear all that happened to these folks but I understand that there are places that are like this. I have seen times in my ward that some of this has happened, but everything in my ward is made to help, but there are times it doesn’t help. I work with teens and children and I do not always believe that it is helpful. We have 7 day minimums and I always try to make the kids feel welcome and comfortable
David has a great personality. Having serious disabilities, he is still a charming and positive person, joking and laughing around. That takes courage, that takes strength.
As someone who worked at a psych facility, these people's stories break my heart. Their human rights were violated at their facilities, and I hope they pursue legal charges against those hospitals. Nobody should ever be stripped down naked to a bed like that. Furthermore, IM drugs should never be threatened or administered unless there is a severe emergency. Restraining someone and giving them IMs just because they don't want to take medication is against their patient rights. Refusal to take meds alone does not constitute an emergency. Mental healthcare has not evolved nearly enough over the last century, and reform needs to happen now! I know a lot of other staff working in these positions that truly want to help people, but don't have the resources or training to actually make a difference. Staff can quickly get burnt out and experience second-hand trauma from the work that they do and the helplessness they feel at not being able to systematically change the policies to help patients. One of the primary reasons why I left was due to the limited resources and abusive policies that I had no power to change, as well as seeing people leaving in a worse state than what they arrived in. The guest speakers were right when they said that the purpose of these units is primarily to keep you safe until they hook you up with services, and that it's not a rehabilitation center. But keeping someone safe shouldn't mean taking away their dignity and humanity! Don't get me wrong, some units are great, but most programs are underfunded, understaffed, and ill-equipt to meet the needs of their patients.
in the hospital i was at they would restrain n booty juice you for fighting, self harming (based off how long u were sh not really how severe) and in some cases refusal to take meds or go to bed
My problem is that I only respond best with IM injections for antipsychotics and certain sedatives. However, the facility that will accept me knows this yet unless the patient is "acting out" (whatever the fuck the staff are viewing acting out as for the particular minute/charge nurse on shift) won't give IM medication UNLESS that is the only route of administration for the drug that is best suited for the patient's needs.
That woman’s poem was AMAZING! If anyone who was in this video or anyone who has been admitted into a Psychiatric Hospital in their life is reading this, I can’t even begin to describe how STRONG and BRAVE you are. You deserve so much love and support for what you have gone through! Thank you Anthony for making videos like this, it’s great to see people talking about their struggles in front of millions of people to spread awareness and help others feel more accepted ❤
I’ve been in a mental hospital three times this year. They weren’t as bad as most people think. Did it help, not that much. I was at Rogers, but the other people there were amazing. My suicide attempts were traumatizing, but the mental hospital was not traumatizing. Some are terrible, but not all
I also had a positive experience at the ward I was admitted to. Even if it didn’t help as much as I wanted to, to get away from reality for a few days helped me to reset. In my opinion, of course.
EXACTLY! I hate how it is portrayed as if ALL psych wards are like this. It is necessary most times and if I wouldn't have been hospitalized I definitely would have killed myself
@@littlesimsfreak2931 same. I’m still in touch with a few of them. We all just watched movies, did yoga, did groups and karaoked. We got to take naps and play outside like we were kids lol
I’ve had both involuntary stays in psych wards and then turned to them when I wanted to get clean (rehab) later on in life. ALL of the times I was admitted against my will NOTHING GOOD EVER CAME and maybe even as spite it was 1000x worse after I was discharged not just for me but for the person/people who “did this to me” the hospital(s) I went back and sued, as well as any innocent bystanders around me because it was literally like fucking pouring gas onto a fire… However, when I VOLUNTARILY went to rehab and stayed in a psychiatric like facility for 6 months after my detox while getting sober - it was the BEST THING THAT I COULD HAVE DONE! The staff was amazing, my experience was memorable and I’ve been sober now for years without a relapse because of all the connections they set me up with for long-term success. Soo we need a MASSIVE overhaul of the healthcare system and the justice system for that matter because half of my story they are fucking intertwined and they SHOULDN’T be. This isn’t a unique story and neither are theirs, that’s what sad, but we can and should do better.
@@iris5678 you cannot help people who do not want to help THEMSELVES and that’s with anything, mental health or drug rehab, etc. People may want help but it might not be with that issue, it’s usually they want an instant fix to something that they can’t have, until seeing that it’s not that simple so they then go seek to help themself…
Rewatching this as I just started a new job in a psychiatric ward in sweden. We had our introduction day today. We got to practice self defense and techniques to safely putting ppl on the ground. They encourage everyone to act as the patient and try to fight back so we can get some sort of idea of how it might feel to have 3-5 people holding you down. We also got to try the belt bed and all that. But the instructors were very clear that these are last resort and hopefully we won't need to use it. Always try to de escalate the situation and calm them down. The "aggressive" behavior typically comes from a place of fear. I've worked for about a month and thankfully so far I haven't had to use any force. We mainly play alot of card games with the patients, go for walks, drink coffee or just sit and talk. We also try to bake for the patients on Saturdays.
The nice conditions and training made sense the moment you said Sweden, lol. I have a friend who had to go into intensive care and to a mental support school. She's out, hates it, is terrified and never wants to go back. I had another friend who called the sedative "booty juice" because it was the only way her and the other patients could talk about it and not cry. She saw people stripped naked, she heard about the abuse and rapes. She got the booty juice a few times when it wasn't really needed. Her therapy dog in training helped her more than an entire hospital. An animal that CAN'T TALK did more good for her. Fuck the American system.
most places are taught being pinned down is the last resort but these people only ever want to make other look bad not tell the full story as to why it got the last resort
The poem was ON POINT. Honeestly i felt less safe in psych wards. Went in for ptsd and suicidal ideation... Some dude tried to kill me. Ended up having the worst panic attack of my life and screaming and kicking at people. Staff needs to be a lot better. There are some amazing staff but so many who let so many bad things happen to mentally vulnerable people.
I had a VERY different experience then the interviewees. I was going through therapy for an extended amount of time for OCD, ANXIETY, SUICIDAL THOUGHTS. My therapist recommended going to a facility in Wisconsin that was residential treatment (some may have called it a psych ward). It sucked as it's never going to be fun but it definitely was focused on my healing and making sure the experience would benefit. Granted it wasn't all locked doors except for the unit door. But if you harmed yourself you would either be sent to the hospital next door ward, or you would have to be in eyesight of a RC 24/7. I was never injected or forced to take meds. I was also 16 when I first went and the second time I was 17. The facility I went to was so much different than the stigma that most experience and I really think they do a great job with adolescents and adults.
Phych wards and residential treatment facilities are very different. The purpose of a psych ward is to intervene during a mental health crisis, and a residential treatment facility is there to actually treat the illness. I've been to both. My experience with the psych ward was incredibly similar to Anita's. My 10 week stay in a residential treatment was fantastic and incredibly healing, though also quite difficult at times.
Sounds like what my girlfriend at the time experienced when she was in the psych ward at the children's hospital in Montreal, where we live. She was under pretty much constant supervision and had very limited access to things in the room, only got homework delivered to her and entertainment if she had been doing good (communicating w the merry go round of psychiatrists/psychologists, not hurting herself, participating in group sessions, etc.) She was 17 at the time and went there because of what we later found out was BPD and not just chronic depression. It was horrible for me cuz I had no news, and basically neither did her parents, I was worried sick about her and kept waiting for her to be released so we could see each other again, but it took a whole month and she then spent over 7 months in a youth centre, being able to go to school part time and then full time after a month or two in there. The psych ward helped her massively to get treatment and go to a longer term place where she could understand herself better, but they did have her on antipsychotics and it was very bleak and stressful a lot of the time. She's good now thankfully, but it definitely traumatized me a little and after almost two months of constantly worrying about her and getting physical reactions every time I'd think about her or hear news I decided to break up on one of the few short phone calls we got. It was for the best, we both needed to focus on ourselves, but boy did it suck.
I've heard the poem before, it always gives me chills. I've been in 3 different psych units 7 times. this is excruciatingly accurate. especially the weekends not counting as days spent in the hospital.
NOTE: this is not the experience of ALL psych ward patients. many have found them pleasant and extremely beneficial. please watch the full video before jumping to any conclusions.
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hi
Imagine an SA victim becomes suicidal and goes to a mental hospital, just to be held down by multiple men after being stripped naked. You should never be stripped naked, that is a complete violation.
This is exactly what I was thinking of. If that happened to me on a good mental health day I would end up a complete mess. Thinking about that happening at the peak of a breakdown.... I would not survive it unless multiple new alters formed to make me forget it happened (I have DID)
💯 messed me UP during my active trauma years
I went to a mental hospital and yelled at all the nurses to not let the men touch me while they looked at me like I was stupid while the women just stood around and let the men strap me down
And then when that incident triggered me (more than ever) and I was completely out of myself, I get diagnosed with schizophrenia. Even though I was already diagnosed with PTSD and it should be obvious I was triggered.
Now it has almost been 2 years of me trying to remove that diagnose of my diagnoses list and it’s finally almost ending. 2 years. Because it took them some few hours of a meltdown to diagnose me with something I do not have, but years to believe every argument I have to explain that: I do not have schizophrenia, your staff triggered me.
As an SA victim I can confirm, especially since I was 15 when I was admitted. It was a complete violation of my privacy to be stripped down like that, and there were several other instances that occurred during my stay as well. Still, mine wasn't nearly as bad as the speakers' experiences. I can't imagine going through something like what Lauren went through.
The scary part about some mental hospitals isn’t even the patients, it’s the staff
This 100%
THIS!!!
Have you guys even been inside Psychiatric wards? Lmfao
That's the true story for about every job ever .. there is one guy holding everything together and just new people filtered in while the higher ups just yell at them on how us to be better.
This genuinely sounds like youve never been in one- I work in one and the staff overextend themself for each and every patient
I went voluntarily to a mental hospital because I was extremely depressed. I was raped by an orderly. I was suddenly described as autistic according to my medical records because I started avoiding eye contact with the male staff. In my medical records, the autism was supported by the fact that I had asked a doctor for a hearing test 10 years earlier and they now decided what I really meant is that I don't understand people, and also that I'm an engineer and enjoy sci-fi as a female which is apparently an autism symptom? They changed my stay to involuntary to observe me for this "autism" but did not inform me of the reason (I only found out from my medical records later). Then they also suddenly determined me to have "paranoia" because I didn't want to take their anti-depressants and "calming" medications anymore and because I put my arms across my chest to prevent a male doctor from putting his hand down my shirt to check my heart.
A week later I saw the head doctor. All he wanted to talk about was whether I would go to the police. I assured him that I wouldn't, and I was immediately released. He wrote in my medical record that I had suffered a breakdown after being dumped, which was a complete fabrication.
Two separate nurses told me they had heard from several patients that they had "slept with" staff (like we have a choice when we're trapped in a room with staff who can do whatever they want with us). These two nurses seemed to find this mildly concerning, but they mostly seemed to accept it as just what happens in psychiatric hospitals.
I want to ask the world to stop giving mental health professionals the power to lock people up, rape them, and then use psychiatric diagnoses to cover it up.
I wish you peace, love, and growth after your experience💕
God that's horrible, I hope you are doing better now and that you have found peace.
@Saying N*igro Makes UA-cam Cry They'll just say I'm crazy and the police will believe them. If the police were likely to do anything, then they never would have done it in the first place.
They already changed my voluntary stay to involuntary when they found out about it. What would they do if I went to the police?
WOW THAT must of been SHIT lots of love and hugs
@@lalala-lt8fe that is so ture but it so fucked up at the same time and the fact that today mental health is still rising no one is really doing jack shit about and I know that it Austraila for sure - yes I live in Austraila
Her poem and the way she read it was exactly like how I experienced my psych ward admissions.
Feel so bad 4 u
Hope u r better ❤
Thats how I felt when I went to the psych ward
same was a horrible experience
I saw her poem on button poetry
It’s so pretty
That woman deserves multiple awards for that poem
For realll
ALIE
The line “But she does now” seriously hit
true that
No seriously
that poem was INCREDIBLE. the delivery, the pacing, the rawness, wow.
I’m scared
It was amazing. 🧡
As someone who's been to one it was very accurate
im high asf i really wasn’t prepared for alldat
Thank you!
As someone who's been in a psych ward for kids and teenagers being restrained at 10 years old is the most terrifying experience I've ever had. Being pinned down by several adult men and even though I'm screaming for someone to help me because I don't know what's going on no one gives it a second thought. I didnt even know what the meds I was being given were and to this day I've never been told. I'm 15 now and I've been admitted a total of 7 times, all against my will because they never helped me, they traumatized me. Thankyou Anthony for handling such a sensitive topic so well, you're amazing
Edit: I'm doing far better than I have been. Thankyou for all your words of support kind internet people. I still deal with the memory of what happened there but I'm beginning to recover
that is absoulutely terrifying, i'm so glad you are out of there and wish you the best
I’m so sorry you had to experience that, sending you all the good vibes and positivity. Don’t forget that you’re loved and people care about you, keep your chin up 💕
I'm sorry you went through that.
I am wishing you with all my heart to stay safe and to fully heal.
I have Autism.
I have been to to a special needs school.
I have been “Physically helped” and I was screaming and crying until I apologize, they didn’t stop.
I work in a hospital with a ward but we call it behavioral health. It’s scary because the staff has a rule to not trust the patient and I’ve talked to some of them, and one of them cried because she said she just wanted to go home. She said she was she came in for PPD but she felt fine after realizing she missed her hubby and new family. But no one will listen to her😔
tgen help her out of there
@@itsthat1jerk387 it’s not that easy as the patients health is on record plus she has to be discharged by her doctor which clearly the doctor won’t let her out. They have high security so they can’t exactly sneak out.
Some practices are harsh but the procedures are there to keep people safe. When I was being treated for mental health, a patient tried to hang herself in the admittance area with her bra. I have mixed feelings about being strip searched. They check on patients every 15 minutes at night sleep in these places are impossible, because you can strangle yourself with sheets. Mental illness effects people differently and they don't know what an individual is going to do. The place I was at didn't have toilet paper on a roll, because I guessed you can make a noose our of it. It was dispensed like tissues incase you were wondering.
@Raine whispers I agree with this, but these places lack the resources and the staff. I was lucky to have a doctor who knew my background and sent me to a facility that had these resources. My doctor actually checked on my status and even came to visit when I was in the hospital. A lot of people treat mental illness as a weakness and taboo. Until people start accepting it as any other illness like diabetes or heart disease people are going to be mistreated.
awe poor thing 🥺
I really appreciate how accepting Anthony is with everyone and he doesn't make them uncomfortable
always has been
he really treats everyone as equals, it makes my heart so happy
yeah I know how some people could make topics weird but Anthony makes them comfortable
Right!? I'm hoping/trying to learn to present myself in the similar manner he has to make people comfortable talking about uncomfortable things. He has an amazing skill at it!
@@Audhumbla005 for sure i'd say showing your emotions and tones is what helped me feel better while asked personal questions!
* Lauren’s camera quality is better than my eyes*
It is so crazy to me that what would be considered sexual assault in every other setting is okay at institutions like this??? (talking about the stripping)
I think that happens in jail too
@@gracelewis4016 You strip yourself in jail unless you object. From what I’ve heard, you get pinned down in mental hospitals. And you get yourself in jail by your own fault but people can’t influence their mental health… Also unless I’m wrong, you are examined by guards of the same gender😅 neither is ideal but the stripping in mental hospitals sounds so brutal😅 I felt especially bad for the girl who just got locked in a room with a sindow without any clothes🥺
I have never experienced anything other than the typical shit everyone feminine pretty much goes through (catcalling, a stranger grabbed my ass once) and yet I would've straight up broken down, like full-on fuckin dissociation I would be _gone,_ especially because I'm nonbinary so having to also just look at my body and have other people look at body would make me want to vomit
can't fuckin imagine how awful it would be for someone who has trauma due to abuse/assault, especially with how they're held down and tied up
@@crowsoto9612 I cannot even imagine. Why is it so brutal though??? Especially if somebody wants and agrees to getting admitted... I would be scared for my life if I went to a mental hospital to get help and then without warning was sexually assaulted... It's so cruel. Many people experience body dismorphia, have eating disorders, 1 out of 5 (or three, I can't remember rn) women have been a victim of sexual assault or rape, what about people who have PTSD from any sort of an attack? This must be so hurtful, humiliating and scary for them. This must be hurtful, humiliating and scary for anyone who has to go through this but these people especially...
Jail is kind of different though although I still don’t think it’s appropriate that situation either. Most people in hospital are innocent, they never did anything to deserve being stripped down. It’s just horrible.
People who strip SA victims down and strap them down like that deserve the death penalty like how does that help someone? You’re putting them through the same trauma they’re being admitted for, don’t take clothes off people! Like wtf
Defintiely not the death penalty. Stop overreacting, it isn't helping anyone. They're just doing their jobs, they have their own lives, families to raise.
@@MrMiyagikarateMaster I'd be mentally ill, so my brain literally wouldn't be functioning properly.
@@MrMiyagikarateMaster okie dokie
@@flwrsforlay i agree, not the death penalty, but it deffo shouldnt be legal and i also think that prison systems are bad so ive created a dilema in my head
as someone who has been in these hellholes, they dont give a fuck usually. SA is so common in acutes
jesus that poem gave me goosebumps. she's incredible
I saw her perform her poem before (not in person, I saw it on social media) in front of a audience on a stage!
Yeah I was a bit scared but mostly shocked like the pause turning into creepy smile and then the chilling sentences.
That poem is truth.
Thank you !
Same-
Anita's poem was extremely powerful. She's very talented!
It was cringe
@@musicimpact7120 are u gonna reply this every comment she was expressing her feelings
@@musicimpact7120 you’re embarrassing
@@musicimpact7120 You're sad
@@musicimpact7120 don’t embarrass yourself
I’m a psychiatric nurse and the way these people were treated breaks my heart. I’m in Australia so it might be different in my hospital but I hope that I never make anyone feel this way
I don’t know about psychiatric hospitals in Australia but the U.S has a extremely long history of psychiatric hospitals being dangerous, traumatic, and corrupt. There are many horror stories. Old facilities used to do experiments on patients with forced concent and a majority of facilities now are not healing to the patients and cause much more trauma.
Im not that surprised duo to past of psychiatric but im surprised it still goes on this day forward where we understand human mind and we need to occupy it by being productive and not just put in a locked room. I am a nurse i was in psychiatric hospital and yes there are closed sections for ones that harm others or themselves but with cruicial evidence of them doing that. But usually the people i worked with the patie ts were happy we went to walk with them outside on the sun let them smoke their cigarete as it calmed them down if they were really good behaved and get better than previous week on Sunday they even got coffe or cake for a reward.
So i guess it really depends on a lot of stuff.
I’m in Australia too and I’ve never heard of them being like this. I guess it’s one more thing that America does “better”
I been in there they are worse than prdin at the Gold coast the police used the eea authority to toutre me
@@maddijasnyy nop they like this to just we have privacy laws that America doesn't
our mental health system is fucked and needs to be fixed. these people need help and to be heard not terrified and antagonized.
Aren’t some of them fuzzed beyond repair
@@googlegmail9888 Um... No they're not.. And even if they're in your words "fuzzed beyond repair" that doesn't warrant or excuse the incredibly inhumane treatment that these normal innocent people just in need of actual support and help should be receiving. It's like you didn't even watch the video or understand the message? The whole point is to humanize people struggling with mental illnesses and not let the abuse and cruelty in Pyhsic Wards go unnoticed and unexcused. Have some empathy good lord.
Some people need help but psychiatry is just not help at all. Horrifyingly and sadly. 👎🏼
It's bad in Australia too but better than nothing :(
Having bounced between 8 different hospital stays in 5 different hospitals over the course of about half a year, I can without a doubt confirm that this is not an isolated issue. Some hospitals are certainly better than others and believe it or not, the only State run hospital was a thousand times better than the 4 private run hospitals were.
The poem is scary accurate. Everyone was given diazapam to keep us emotionless and I barely saw the doctor.
To think I begged to be in one of these places but my parents refused.
I'm so sorry that this happened to you. I hope you're doing better now and that you'll never have to even think about going back to that place
seriously, the only time I saw the doctor was after I got booty juiced and the only thing I remember is her asking me how much and the last time I pooped. I still think about that like how did she even know what medicine to give me.
I’m stingy with the benzodiazepines. If I can calm someone down without it, I always go for that method first. I know some nurses go straight for the as-needed psych meds, though. Not me. The best yet: Patient yelled, “I’m leaving, and you can’t stop me.” I came up started talking a little, and then I said, “You know what? I got some apple juice today. You want some?” He went from 😡 to 😁 … No drugs needed.
Yup. When I was there, I saw the psychiatrist once and he prescribed me 4 new pills, on top of the one I was already taking. I couldn't stay awake during the day at all and later found out that all 4 were sedatives.
“Because sometimes existing is exhausting” - Anthony Padillia 2021
Period
That’s true
that's true
that’s true
that’s true
her poem was SO POWERFUL. literally i just got the strongest chills
same
It was creepily chilling. In a good way tho.
Her poem was so good
Could go in a horror movie already!
Same!
Her poem really summed up my stay as well. If someone mentioned wanting to die they would immediately send you to the isolation room. Which was your mattress (that they dragged from your room) and one thin blanket on the floor. They didn’t even treat us like human beings, I felt like a dog being trained to be good.
im so sorry you had to go thru that :(
@@ExistingSmiles Thank you 🙏Luckily i’m doing much better now :)
there aren't many people who deserve to die but the people who work at those places do
Who treats dogs like this? Its wrong to treat anything like that
As bad as the hospital stays were, jail is infinitely worse. I got brought in manic and in a state of psychosis. They locked me in the drunk tank with the lights on 24/7 , completely naked, nothing but a mat, no blankets pillows or toilet paper. Just a thin mat and a shoebox size hole in the floor as a bathroom. They ended up leaving me there for 6 days straight which felt like an eternity in the state I was in/ never knowing what time of day it was. I would bang on the door and yell so they would just constantly ask me what drugs I was on and I told them nothing but nicotine, caffeine, and marijuana but they wouldn't believe me. They know nothing about mental health and just assume if someone is acting different it's because of drugs.
I was brought in on a friday after the doctor had already left and they don't come in on the weekends so I begged for the 2 meds I had been taking for 3 days straight before the Doc finally came in on monday. They then gave me all 7 different meds that had been previously tried on me over the previous 6 months and with the state I was in I just took them. Taking all those meds finally went far past sedating me and to the point where I couldn't chew or swallow food and couldn't even lift myself off the mat. It wasn't until I had not moved in 2 days straight that they finally decided I needed to go to the hospital..
I had plenty of rough and depressing times in the hospitals but, my god, those 6 days are the only true trauma I have ever experienced and it's upsetting knowing that there are thousands of people in America alone that are being treated the same way when all they need is help.. Hope you're doing better now.
That poem was accurate. I lost my sister after she had a long battle with mental health. I truly think the hospitals she was in made her worse. A different one every time.
I’m so sorry for your lost
I’m so sorry. God bless her soul.
God bless
💙💙💙
I went on one and tbh it only made things worse. I'm so sorry for your lose and I hope you and your family gets better soon
I was admitted to a psych ward by force over a panic attack in a therapy session. It was only made worse when the police threatened to arrest me if I fought back. I was 16, off my medication at the moment, sleep deprived, and genuinely terrified.
I witnessed horrible things in the ward. I made a friend, just to watch her get into physical fights with the nurses because they didn’t properly help her with her feelings. She was told to “stop it” and “behave, or we’ll give you the shot”.
She always got the shot.
I had another friend, who was sexually assaulted when they put a young man in our group. They blamed her, and moved him to the guy’s group.
over a panic attack?!? wow im so sorry. i haven't even been admitted for trying to kill someone. the system is so fucked oh my god. i really hope youre healing♡♡
@@loserfrom_loserville u tried to kill someone ? 😭
@@sofiaaa3120 yep, i was going through a terrible schizophrenic episode and was screaming and crying for help and tried to kill my mom. not fun, and i didnt end up getting help either way. the system is so shitty.
@@loserfrom_loserville i really hope you find the happiness you deserve, panic attacks suck so much. Really wish they change the system
@@loserfrom_loserville that so scary I’m sorry you had to go through that 🙁
I wanted to be a psychiatric doctor for a long time. But after meeting my late step mom, I realized how much I didn’t want to.
She was a paranoid schizophrenic, she was the most gorgeous woman on the planet. She would never hurt anyone.
Before I met her, she had already gone to a psychiatric hospital and absolutely never wanted to go back. After she started getting really bad, talking about people in the walls, talking about “eyes” following her, getting paranoid that the cops were following her, we realized she was not longer taking her meds.
After we talked to her about the medication, she got extremely paranoid about being sent back to the ward.
It didn’t help that her daughters were threatening to send her back.
She took matters into her own hands and took her life.
I will never stop thinking about the fact that she would rather die than go back.
Iam sorry to hear that i wish I could help.
I’m actually surprised that no one talking about some staff and doctors, not everyone but some really strange in a way of not having a soul , primitive , zombies , very heartless to the point it’s scary . One doctor was looking at me smiling but his eyes were black. Honestly I think there is more going on than we remember , especially after giving a shot. I tried my best to forget and thought I was. Imagining things but after 3,5 years of healing and meditation, living a normal life it came back to me thru meditation , I started crying uncontrollably . I’m more than fine now after I left USA, but I’ve been told thru meditation that it’s very dark, I went thru that,because I chose it, I remember everything for a reason. I mean there is normal human nurses and staff ,but some of them are not .
Better dead than in psych ward!
She's no longer in pain or worried! I don't blame her ONE BIT! 🙅🏽♀️🙅🏽♀️🙅🏽♀️🙅🏽♀️
Better dead than in psych ward!
She's no longer in pain or worried! I don't blame her ONE BIT! 🙅🏽♀️🙅🏽♀️🙅🏽♀️🙅🏽♀️
@@raziyadamenova4921
Where do you live now since leaving the USA???
Do they lock people away like they do here???
I agree with about the nurses and staff! They're ALL evil!
I'll NEEEVVVEEERRR have respect for them!
Hell, I'd pay money just to watch them die in front of me!
I HATE healthcare workers of ALL kind! ALWAYS WILL!!!
Anita's poem made me tear up and gave me chills. I felt that. So wonderfully written.
You're not alone. I've been in many psychiatric hospitals. I was 12 the first time I was placed in one for being defiant. During restraining a 7 year old, they murdered that child. I saw it. I heard him scream, cry, and moan until the silence. Then all the staff freaking out.
I was placed in so many psych wards as a pre-teen and teenager.
I've been in 3 times for suicide attempts as an adult.
There's no shame in getting help. I do believe many people experience more harm in many institutions.
We see you and you matter.
May you know the peace of the LORD Jesus Christ, God bless you and keep you!
im sorry that happened to you :(
Holy fuck. They killed that child, what the hell is wrong with people
wow that is so terrible. They KILLED A GOD DAMN SEVEN YEAR OLD. people are so so terrible.
One kid had his head cracked open while everyone was eating lunch I still remember them holding a towel under his head until the ambulance arrived
It's REALLY scary.
You can have all the "normal" responses of a person, but once they label you as "crazy",
all your actions become a motif.
It's insane. It's like there is always a closed path for all the possible solutions you can think of.
That's what Catch 22 was all about
History is written by the victors, and it's the same case here but with regards to who is normal or who is insane. Just because they are the ones in power, they are the ones able to label everyone, and force their narrative down on "normal people."
@@Rahnonymous then i guess im a victor because i told the apa what i know and threatened a lawsuit if so much as one of their psychiatrists so much as touches me, and now they are legally scared to even see me, thing is just give threats of lawsuits and prove you will do it and they will avoid you like the plague, i feel more people need to know this
True I felt like I didn't know how to "act"
Sad but true
Her poem is deep as hell and her emotions she put into it. On how a psych ward is actually build to make you crazy then help you
They want you to act out to see what label they can put on you
@@hannahwillis9838 and honestly that in my opinion is the worst kind of method (or way of doing it [sorry my english sucks] )
@@Elainethecoolest2 your English is perfectly fine. Don’t apologize for knowing more than one language ❤️
I agree.
Not true at all
*the poem was SOOO powerful. It should be in a movie or sth.*
Nah it was cringe
@@musicimpact7120 how. Tell me.
@@musicimpact7120 k marley💀
@@musicimpact7120 ur embarrassing
It was SO good
I ended up being severely traumatized from a mental hospital. The place that was supposed to help me ending up scarring me for life. To this day it makes it hard for me to ask for help out of fear they’ll send me back.
Same
Me too i was so scared i didn’t talk the whole time
I’d rather go anything than go back
Same.
Me as well.
I was put in a psych ward when I was 13 which was 2 years ago. They still do all these things even to the kids. I left 10x more suicidal than I was before. We got asked the same questions over and over. One of the doctors full on body shamed me when I said I was insecure. There was barely any therapy at all instead me and the other patients relied on each other for ranting and opening up. They were extremely transphobic- they told all the trans people it was just a phase and they would force them to go to the day room of the gender they were born as (there was a male and female day room). If you harmed yourself even if it was an obvious accident they would put you on 24/7 watch. They would watch you sleep, use the bathroom, and even watch you shower. If you refused to take your meds or refused to behave they would give you booty juice (yes ik the name is weird). It was mentioned in this video. It made you woozy and then they would force the pill down your throat while you were in the woozy state or passed out.
Holy shit that sounds HORRIBLE! I really hope you're okay now 🤍💞 tell me if you ever need someone to talk! Im not forcing you or someone its just i feel soo bad hearing your story
Most people don't know that psych wards are actual prisons, suicide/attempts are illegal in the US
The tranquilizer was called the same thing at where I was admitted when 13
UPDATE: around a month ago I ended up in a phych ward again. I'm happy to say this one was genuinely helpful and respectful. They didn't use booty juice or anything. Hell they even had good food. The day room was gender neutral which means any gender can hang out in there. They actually had a lot of therapy every day. Such as multiple groups a day and the wrap up before we go to bed. They would ask you what your interests are and use that as a way to get you into a therapy group that you would genuinely enjoy. And if you were on watch they wouldn't watch you sleep, shower, or use the bathroom. You could just close the door while a nurse stays outside your room and checks up on you every 10 minutes or so. (Also a lot of the nurses and doctors there were kinda hot-)
OMG NOT THE BOOTY JUICE thank god ive never gotten it
Wow...the bit in Anita's poem about 'this is one of the GOOD psych wards' really hit home. I was in one summer 2020 (voluntary. I bailed after 4 hours; even getting out as a voluntary patient is difficult, slow, & dependant on having a safe home/people to live with. It's very Cuckoo's Nest - I could've gone in voluntary and never made it out...), & while the place was AWFUL, no psychiatric care provided at all, women screaming and sobbing all over the place (usually it was patients tending to other distressed patients, not the staff!), there was this one beautiful young-ish girl there (most women were in their 40s) who came up and said to me, 'You'll be ok here, it's one of the good ones'. She was very clear and coherent, but you could see in her eyes that she was either over-medicated or somewhat dissociated, & I just thought...shit, what are the other wards round here like?! What've you been through? But I just wanted to get out - I didn't chat with her. I would love now to have heard her stories...
Overall it left me with a terror of ever, ever being in a crisis state again, because I know I can't hack those places - if I stayed I would've been driven legitimately crazy and never gotten out, I truly believe that. Huge sympathies to these people & all other psych ward survivors...
oh hello there! I recognise you! xD
Yooo it's you-! Dude, you're pretty awsome. Love your content :D
Thanks for sharing it made me understand what my daughter must feel when she’s been hospitalized even more 😪
Hey I watch your videos and I’m happy to see you here
ur videos are the best! cool to see you in this comment section
That poem was fantastic. You can hear the pain and power in her voice. She’s amazing.
The intense talking to the small sweet talk parents give us when we tell them something happened.
So powerfully worded. You could hear every little detail in her voice. Personally I was sitting on the edge of my seat and I’m sure I’m not the only one. Much love 💝
And it’s extremely, true
My jaw was slowly going to the floor during the entire poem
although a lot of it wasnt my experience of a psych ward, some of it really hit home with me and the kind of cheery attitude is really eery and reminded me of how some of the staff acted.
Anita: she/her
Laura: she/they
David: David
Omg bro that was the first thing I noticed when I started watching 😂
David
Imagine you just can't call him by any pronouns.
😂😂😂
@@urfrend01 wdym david has pronouns david’s pronouns are david.Are you invalidating david’s pronouns?
I love how respectful he is no matter the guest and no matter the topic
He should be. Set the standard.
@Bruh Bruh u say that like gay is a bad thing pff clown
@Bruh Bruh ur 14 right?
@Bruh Bruh me thinking i’m funny 😩😩
@@thottusthottusxoxo pretty sure the guy is joking
As someone who’s been admitted to a pysch ward, I’m so shocked about these experiences! Maybe every ward is different but for me staying there, I felt the best I had in a long time and I was connected with a free professional support team post discharge. I live in Australia btw. It’s horrible that these people were treated like that. I feel like I would leave even more traumatised 😥
Oh yeah, just seeing little snippets of videos from psych wards outside the US it's immediately apparent that they are WAY better. Like, oh my God, the staff cares?? :0
The entire mental health system in America is about as broken as the prison and health system mixed, I'm glad from the comments it's apparently better other places
In America, psych patients barely have any rights. They are supposed to be hospitals, but they're really just prisons.
so many people are making it seem like it's the worst thing ever in America and whatnot and just saying all these stories but like- I've been to three and all these stories literally just sound like the stereotypes and in all reality it's nothing like that
@@sapphe3784 I'm guessing it depends a ton on the place you go, like statewise even, because there would be different standards and regulations
Honestly, it's so heartbreaking and scary to hear these stories of these survivors- there really needs to be a reevaluation of patient advocacy, and understanding of mental health- the biggest thing that all these stories had was a lack of sympathy from the staff which in turn can make some mental illnesses worst as my anxiety rised just hearing about it so I couldn't imagine dealing with it first hand was like.
There is not enough thanks I can give to the guests on today's episode for being so courageous and brave to talk about their experiences while also keeping an open mind that not everyone endured the same treatment they did
Sun Tzu agrees
As a survivor myself, I totally agree. I remember having a panic attack at a psych ward, not knowing what it was and scared I was having a heart attack, and a nurse scoffed at me and told me it was just a panic attack and to drink some water. One of the patients tried to help but the nurses kept telling her to be quiet.
I would never wish what I've been through even for my worst enemies. My experiences have traumatized me to the point I don't want to see a therapist in fear of being put in the same situation even though I know I really should.
@@raynsmith6759 I'm so sorry you had to go through that. Hugs from an internet stranger.
@@raynsmith6759 Joining on the internet hugs
@@Nom1fan Yeah, the other sad part is I live in the US and can't afford a therapist. Not like I have much time anyways for one where most of my days are at work or taking care of myself, my home, and my loved ones. 😅 I really appreciate the advice and sentiment though. 💕
When I was 13 I was put into a psych ward hospital, it was very traumatizing for me. I still get uneasy about a simple trip to the hospital. I remember screaming and crying to my mother for her to help me, only to see her look down on me in shame. I remember the loneliness I felt and how cold my bed was when I went to sleep. I remember sobbing and sobbing, begging to go home. I remember how uneasy I felt around the nurses, I remember them shoving pills in my face. I remember faking how I felt so I could leave early. I remember how much I hurt from it. Her poem hit so close to home. But after I left, my mother treated me like I’m crazy. My whole world crumbled into pieces after I left, the psych ward did not help me, it made me feel worse.
I'm sorry for what you went through.
You are definitely very smart and worthy.
Power and peace to you.
So sorry for what you had to experience, it sounds completely horrible 😢🖤
I am genuinely so so sorry for that. This is an evil world. I’ve been there . But our existence is a rebellion and self care is our biggest act of defiance. Hospitals like that thrive off of vulnerable people to make a profit. Take care of yourself and take care of anyone who’s at risk of ending up in a place like that. I wish you peace of mind, you’re loved and you deserve all the respect In the world.
dear, please take care of yourself. i do not know what it feels like, since ive never been in one, but i can tell it is absolutely horrid. i hope you push through this and get the right help you need. best wishes to you and stay well. ❤
Jesus loves you and will be your friend for life. ❤
my psych ward that i went to was amazing. i just got discharged yesterday, and i finally feel somewhat mentally stable for the first time since 7th grade. it felt like a huge weight that i was holding on my shoulders for multiple years was just lifted
I’m so happy you’re doing better!
i’m so happy for you!!
Yay! Good job, remember to live your best life
Wow! Thats great! Would you mind saying what it was like?
nice, man
Hey Anthony, maybe you could do “I spent a day with Deaf and Hard of Hearing people”, so they could tell us about what it’s like to be a deaf person, and talk about the Deaf and Hard of Hearing community.
Yeah, I'd love to see that! And he could have people on were born that way, or who lost their hearing later on, etc
@@qa377 let’s not forget that the Deaf and Hard of Hearing community is extremely small, so it’d be nice if it got more attention.
As a hoh person I can tell you that UA-cam closed captions are trash
@@Hannacalebclark oh 100% agreed. The auto generated ones are not accurate for a video.
@@GhostKnight2021 yup. I have no idea what David said in this video
Being at a psych ward was probably one of the most traumatic things I’ve experienced because of the staff but the patients the patients really helped
I can totally relate to this.
Ikr it's the same for the child psych wards.
All the fellow patients were so nice!! The nurses and doctors however....
same some the sweetest people ever i met there no one deserves the way we get treated by staff tho i only ever had one nice nurse and she wasn’t even nice she just didn’t treat us like animals
me too
The strip search was the hardest part for me. I just remember crying and being forced into a corner trying to cover myself with my hands. In a room with no doors. All the other patients could see. I laid on my plastic mattress for the whole first day just crying. This was only a year ago. It's still really fresh in my mind. Next time I wont let anyone know.
💜 I’m so sorry this happened to you bud
You deserve so much more respect
Psychs are seggual abusers. You can be sure its the pervs who came up with the strip search rule.
I'm sorry that happened
That's terrible
you never deserved that. nobody deserves to be treated like that. i’m so sorry i wish i could give you a big hug.
as a psych ward survivor myself, i can’t wait to watch. never considered myself a ‘survivor’ though
Elaborate please 🤔
@@sodium_ i’ve been to wards 3 times but just never considered myself as a ‘psych ward survivor’ i’ve never heard anyone else refer to themselves as that either so this is just a new perspective
I'm sorry
@@deleteforevr mmm
Same honestly
I was admitted to a psych ward when I was 13 for severe depression and anxiety, and that poem hit hard. I was woken up before sunrise every morning by a doctor sitting beside my bed, shining a light in my face, and questioning me over and over on how I felt and if I still wanted to kill myself. My windows were locked and sealed yet the door to my room was a curtain that other patients I didn't even know regularly wandered through to talk to me. They took away the sentimental rounded, dull necklace I wore as a reminder to be strong "in case I tried to cut my wrists with it", yet left posters in my room hung by tacs and nails, and gave me papers with sharp metal clips on them. I asked for my necklace over and over which only earned me punishments, such as being placed in a room where one of the walls was completely glass for them to watch through. They withheld shampoo, toothbrushes, soap, and denied me basic hygiene rights. I had my period and bled in my underwear, yet I was offered no new undergarments or nor tampons/pads for my entire stay. The pajamas they gave me to wear had dried blood all down the legs and arms before I even put them on, like they were stained or unwashed from the previous patient. I was told if I didn't get better fast enough, I would be flown to a different city and put in an asylum. They cut me off from my best friend and family, put me in solitary confinement with nothing but a pen and notepad, and told me to "work it out" by myself.
I hope ur doing okay!
How is that legal?
THAT'S SO STUPID, THEY SHOULDN'T BE ALLOWED TO DO THAT!
What you went through was odious! You deserved none of that lady
Wtf that can’t be legal
Her poem literally embodies everything I’ve ever wanted to say ! When she was done, I felt relief
I was thinking the same thing hearing it!! It was very validating hearing someone put my feelings of being in the psych ward into such a beautifully written and performed poem.
felt the same exact way
Same
😂
Yet nothing changes...how is it even legal?
I am absolutely shocked by some of these stories, and I’ve been admitted to these places multiple times it was horrifying and traumatizing, but not to this extent. In the facilities I got better it was in the emergency room where I was really traumatized and treated like an animal.
Hope u r better
@@notwerkinginthishouse8634 so much better honestly
What lead you up to that point? The curly hair lady seemed crazy
my experience in the emergency room was the only moment of peace to be honest. i was just laid in a bed with my father next to me. the psych ward itself was horrible. i was a voluntary patient too
@@googlegmail9888no way you're serious rn
"Reach your full potential as a patient" I... no. that gave me chills
Her poem was incrediable also you can tell how strongly she feels about this in her voice
Seriously! I felt everything she was saying. It wasn’t even just the words but the inflections she placed on the words, ramping up the energy until the listener is gripping at their seat and then all of a sudden just cutting it, giving you a second to breathe and starts ramping up a again. It’s seriously was all so well done
@@sean_mccadden YES!
Anita's story was spot on. I struggle with PTSD, anxiety, and severe depression. I have been involuntarily hospitalized twice. The first time I was feeling suicidal and reached out for help. I was placed under a 72hr hold against my will receiving ZERO mental health care & was ignored by staff. I attempted to explain my situation to several nurses & techs and that I was just seeking outpatient care for suicidal thoughts and was being held against my will. Every single one of them either flat out ignored me or just told me the doctor would be there to see me in 3 days. They even took away my phone privilege's (which all patients are supposed to have) and wouldn't let me call my mom. It was the only time I've ever pulled a "karen" and demanded they let me talk to my mom under the threat of suing. ... But yeah, legal kidnapping is what this is.
The 2nd time I was hospitalized was an actual attempt to take my own life. This time the staff were a lot nicer, however, I still received ZERO mental health care. There's also nothing to do in the psych ward aside from laying in bed, coloring, or joining group "therapy" sessions which mostly consisted of playing board games with the other patients and not actually receiving any therapy. Also, one of the nurses did threaten that if I didn't attend the group sessions that they would keep me there longer. To get out you really do have to act the right kind of way & be the right amount of social despite how you may be feeling. (I also have severe social anxiety so the group sessions were a nightmare especially when all of the attention was on me).
And once they decide you are going to be admitted you can forget seeing any friends/ family/ any emotional & mental support you may have in your life for at least a few days if not weeks. Aside from phone calls to my emergency contact (my mom) I was not allowed to contact anyone. They strip you of all your electronics & personal items (including shoes).
I also wore the same outfit for 3 days because I had no one available to bring me a change of clothes.
If you have responsibilities (school, work, children, pets) to take care of.. they will not contact anyone to let them know you are hospitalized. If you don't have anyone in your life that can take care of these things for you then you just have to pray that your prof will let you retake that exam, that you won't be fired for missing work without notice, that your children won't be taken away from you, or that Fluffy won't die of starvation.
Our system here in the U.S. is truly awful & mental health continues to be ignored and mishandled.
P.S. This psych ward was one of the good ones
This sounds so awful! I have never been to a psych ward not do I live in America but I hope you are okay now!
You literally just summed up the hell that I have gone through in this abusive system that should be outlawed. I suffer tremendously to this day from going through the exact things you talked about and even more, and having been told I was being “helped”. I would always say, the only “help” I got was being more depressed and anxious, etc. I have learned to keep my problems to myself and I would never go back to “therapy” or anything like that ever again in my life. I’d rather just struggle. I am glad I am not alone in my perspective of this outright abusive, evil and manipulative system and I wouldn’t wish this on anyone.
That was one of the good ones?! I'd hate to see what the bad ones are like! I hope you're doing better now.
I’m sorry you went through this but the one thing I want to say to you is: demanding to have a basic right does not make you a Karen.
My mom told me I was being a Karen after being sexually assaulted and being completely traumatised.
Sorry I just had to tell you that
@@residentevil2142 That's terrible, hope you get justice 😢
"We didnt cause your social anxiety. We only heightened what was already there."
I havent been in a mental institution myself, but i need to say, this line is making me cry. i dont know, this hits a really big cord with me; maybe i had past trauma or im feeling for everyone who had to go through this. thank you
Anita's poem, specifically the verse surrounding "we didn't cause your social anxiety. We only heightened what was already there," reminds me a lot of the Wraith episode from Supernatural, which ironically happened in a psych ward. Except the wraith didn't feed on social anxiety, it fed on fear and made you go crazy
Social anxiety is traumagenic, so social anxiety is fear. I fear people's eyes. I've grown to associate them with people hurting me
@@saragarofano6471 I never thought of it that way but I'm sorry to hear about that
@@saragarofano6471 Same! nearly all my abusers used to tell me to "look into my eyes when I'm speaking to you!"
The fact that I'm autistic makes me hate eye contact even more.
So true, good analogy!
Yes! I agree that's a very smart comparison to point out😄
That Poem had me SPEECHLESS. Her delivery hit me like a boulder. Jesus.
I was first placed in a children's psyche ward in Pembroke, MA in the 80's when I was 11. I was actually suicidal, but placing a child in a locked ward, putting them in restraints and medicating them to the point where they can barely stay awake is not help. I too only saw my doctor once a week, and I spent the rest trying to stay awake and participate in the schedule they made us go through every day- which had little to do with actual help. Sleeping in the outfield did nothing for me except give me a sunburn- especially with the medication they had me on: Thorazine and Stelazine. It took months to wean off that shit when I got out after the weeklong stay that turned into months. Being in a psyche ward taught me that there are things I can't say to certain authority figures.
I'm so sorry to hear that. I hope you're feeling better these present days. :/
I'm so sorry you went though that. Pembroke is still one of the more terrible wards in MA now, I can't imagine the 80s. I participated in a partial program there, and I have friends who did full residential who had terrible experiences as well within the past 3 or 4 years.
I’ve been to Pembroke,the worst hospitals ever.
@@theressalafaille9304 ya it is very bad
This is exactly what happened to me earlier this year at 15, its sad to see that things haven’t changed
so anyone wondering, ECT is when shocks are administered to your brain as an attempt to help you, but it has a small chance of wiping out large chucks of memory and you can even forget who people are like your friends or parents.
@@MrMiyagikarateMaster yeah, its still legal
ECT is a safe and effective treatment for patients. Stop spreading fear and misinformation.
@@brookewilson1950 its a side effect. "Brain Manipulation Therapy." I'm going based off of my knowledge in psychology. Memory loss is a side effect that can last either a short amount of time or years.
thats inhumane and beyond anything that even sounds like the word compassion. i feel for you and everyone. i would expect those "doctors" to try to help by giving space, love, time, and a really caring therapist. you/anyone who got that and everyone who went through what these inspiring beautiful ladies and gentlemen didnt deserve any pain they caused. you deserve everything good and love and affection like hugs and stuff :)
I don’t think that’s correct. It’s not a 50/50 chance. There’s a chance of it not working but not forgetting everything unless that’s what happened when it first came out? Because that’s not how it is now. I think that might be old information
David seems like such a fun and interesting person to talk to! And Anita's poem was just so impressive.
yea
Youre just saying that about David because of his disability
@@abbskebabs6288 bruh what's wrong with you?
@@RoyHoy
poem: A verbal composition designed to convey experiences, ideas, or emotions in a vivid and imaginative way.
no, no it's definitely a poem.
Hmmmm
I went to the psyche ward when I was about 16 for extreme delusional thinking. I didn't know if I'd be safe for myself or others, sense my delusions were so intense.
My parents first brought me to the normal hospital sense they didn't know what else to do, and from there I was admitted into a psychiatric hospital. I was put in the ambulance-access waiting room with my parents, made to strip down and give them my clothes and put into a paper hospital gown. I was then sat in the waiting room there for FOUR HOURS waiting for someone to bring me up to the ward itself. That was four hours of sitting there with my parents in a paper gown that barely covered my body enough for me to sit on the seat without my ass touching it directly. I had another breakdown in that waiting room because "even the people supposed to help me don't want me here" (my exact words according to my mother as I was sobbing sitting there.)
There was no real therapy I went to, I was forced to explain all of my trauma and situation ONE TIME to a psychiatrist who took my years and years of hallucinations, delusions, and depressive episodes that I only recently had realized wasn't normal and diagnosed me with anxiety and major depressive disorder. It was explained to me that it was "surprising how bad anxiety can be" when I asked why I wasn't diagnosed with anything that'd explain the hallucinations. I was given an SSRI and anxiety medication.
I have Bipolar Disorder with Psychotic Features. This means the hormone fluctuation that gives me manic/depressive episodes also causes me to have Psychosis symptoms. It is well known that people with Bi-Po when given SSRI's are often put into even worse manic/depressive episodes, and when you have Bi-Po with Psychotic features this causes the hallucinations and delusions to get EVEN WORSE.
The "treatment" I was receiving LITERALLY MADE IT WORSE.
here's some more little things that made it a living hell:
-Nurses telling patients to "pray to the savior" to cure them being LGBT and/or mentally ill
-Nurses threatening patients with the knockout-juice needles used in EMERGENCIES for literally anything done wrong
-Staff including therapists and psychologists ignoring people with panic attacks/mental episodes unless they were literally attacking themselves or others
-Staff putting people in the "safe room" (padded room) for minor inconveniences.
I feel so sorry for you, all of these stories from survivors (which they should not have to be in the first place) are legit horror stories and shouldn’t even be happening in the first place
I’m so tired of psychiatrists throwing SSRIs at every single person who walks in the door. There’s two years of my life that I absolutely cannot even remember because of SSRIs, and I completely destroyed everything i had built so far in life during that time. Also bipolar here (type II) and have ADHD. Now that I’m on low doses of seroquel and adderall, I’ve been perfectly fine for over a year. Not one incident. Looking back it makes absolutely no sense why someone would think my symptoms were just anxiety and depression. Why is getting fcked by SSRIs almost like a rite of passage before doctors will actually treat the symptoms you have.
I'm sorry for you. I hope you are fine and healthy now!
And which country and year was that? Sounds like a horror story from the 50's/60's, geez
@@anzabi1543 America in 2019
This is why one of my DREAM jobs is a psych ward. I want to make a difference. I want to help people...I'm not super stable myself but Def. Have become stable enough to know I'd like this for someone else, for someone to reach a point where they too feel at least okay:)
I hope you will get your dream job. You're probably gonna be amazing.
@@joannevanderhoeven thank you, I'm in college right now as a psych major. And I can't wait to just show some kindness to someone that I know really needs it. I've been there, and sometimes that's all we need man.
@@Layra151301 I really hope you get the job and make that difference❤️
Yo best of wishes and luck to you! ✨🤙
i thought the same thing and i went and got a job in a psych ward (i live in the uk). it was hell, i couldnt help anybody because everything has to be so done by the book. i couldnt just help or chat or hang out with them, i couldnt make the difference i wanted because of the structure of the hospital. everything was done hour by hour and so many tasks were menial. i dont want to put you off but it was nothing like they made it out to be. the patients werent the issue AT ALL, i made friends with them all so quickly. the staff were the problem, they had been working there for so long they didnt care about the patients anymore. it was hard hearing the staff bitch about the patients and mock them. its not an environment you can thrive in if you want to help people. it feels like you make them worse working there. i watched people go more insane being in the ward. and we wondered why the same people would come back over and over.
I’ve been put in a psych ward twice when I was younger. Once when I was 10, and another time when I was 12. I was not happy there. There’s a lot of trauma I accumulated from my time there. The intake process was terrifying. Asking me for details about the abuse I endured as a kid was horrible. Then the whole strip search was even worse. They checked every inch of my body and screamed at me when I tried to cover myself up. It was horrifying. It’s scary being there. It’s a lot like prison. It’s not a place for children especially children like me who were just misunderstood and depressed.
Edit: I feel so bad for everybody who has a bad experience in a psych ward. Just know you’re not alone
That is horrible and you were 10 and 12 being stripped! That is causing trauma and screaming when they were naked. I hoped you are better.😟🥺
I was 16, I was the youngest person in the psych ward. They told my mom "she cries too much" when I left because I genuinely didn't stop crying pretty much the entire time I was there. It sucked.
Thats makes me really angry. I’m so sorry you went through that. I hope they were fired.
I was 16 when I visited my first psych ward. I'm not entirely sure how old everyone else in there was but my surrounding rooms, the patients all looked over their 40s. Though I did see this one person walking the halls often and they looked as if they were similar to my age. At my first behavioral hospital, there were many younger people on my unit. The youngest I saw was a girl who was five. It's crazy to see so many young people in these situations and hearing the things they've been through. Almost makes things worse. But when in psych wards, before mental hospitals and behavioral hospitals and whatnot, you don't really see a lot of younger people because they usually get to skip out on the psych ward and go straight to residential facilities
i went in bawling at 13
i hope you’re doing much better today 💜
@@libramoons I never went back! So that's a bonus ☺️ It's been 8 years and I'm definitely not where I wanna be but I'm very glad I got through all of that and have continued to push ☺️ Thank you!!!
I am 28 and have been hospitalized over 30 times since I was 13. Some of the experiences were like what they said, but some of them really saved my life and I wouldn’t be here today if I wasn’t there. Some places abuse their ability to restrain people but that place was shut down. Most places only do that if someone is being violent and it’s absolutely necessary. If you need help and you’re thinking of going to a psych ward, try talking to the staff other than the doctors because they can listen and be helpful. Also talking to the other patients can give you a sense you’re not alone although take everything they say with a grain of salt. Make a list of what you want to say to the doctor. These places can be scary but if you need help, I would go
I should also note that every time I was admitted was voluntary and out of 30+ I’ve been hospitalized, I was never once restrained
This comment only got 40 likes, while the trauma poor has amassed thousands of interactions. I think we know what message people came away with and that makes me so so sad. :(
I have been in about 10 different hospitals numerous times and I agree with you. Getting help can be a good thing. Not all hospitals are bad. Most are a mix of good, bad and everything in between. Some staff are nice some are mean. Same thing goes for the patients. If you are a danger to yourself it is worth taking a chance and getting help.
From my 2 experiences at different wards… honestly my experience with patients was significantly better than with any staff. I guess the big problem is both of them don’t allow you to have any way to find the other people on the outside (for obvious HIPAA and safety reasons) which can make depression from loneliness worse.
@@ThatDevMatOfficial I found this to be the case at some places but not all. Esp in children’s units they don’t allow you to exchange contact information but when I was younger we usually found a way to exchange info secretly but in adult wards I’ve been to they allow you to exchange information but encourage you to focus on yourself
David seems like such a cool guy, hope he's doing well
He needs no pronouns, he is simply David
@@ryant6434 david/david just david
5:01 That poem and the way she performed it, was absolutely amazing. I’m so sorry she had to endure what she did.
Being forced to do ANYTHING when you're in an emotionally vulnerable place is traumatizing. I can't even imagine being restrained and injected with something even if I wasn't emotionally vulnerable. That's terrifying to think about.
I went to one of those places and you were forced to share everything about how you got there and what’s wrong with you while everyone looking at you and sharing those things didn’t help me recover at all and the only reason i shared is because you can’t get out otherwise and i had extreeme social anxiety i wouldnt talk otherwise it was terrifying
When I was 11. The RCMP saw me jumping in front of a car. Police took me in the backseat to our local hospital. I lived in a small town so there was only one hospital, no psych ward. The hospital couldn't find a place for me to stay so they put me in a room meant for prisoners when they were going to the hospital. I slept on a metal table, not seeing anyone or being given food. There was even a toilet-sink that you'd see in stereotypical prison movies (the sink didn't work so I couldn't keep clean). Two days later, they found a place for me to stay. I was kept in a room, locked from the outside, no way to move around to talk to anyone. I was put in a hospital gown, not being allowed to cover my scars. There was always a volunteer (not trained, just a random citizen volunteering) watching me through a window 24/7. If I went to the bathroom for too long, doctors would break open the door. After another two days, a psychiatrist came to see me. She called me a rat and attention seeker. I told her I thought I had CPTSD but she just instantly diagnosed me with Anxiety, then gave me a sedative. She told me the only reason I was "stressed" was because I saw other people on social media and got jealous even though I never even used social media at that time. She didn't listen to me. I asked for another doctor (because I knew it was in my rights as a young Canadian) but she was the only one who was trained to "help" me. I was eventually allowed to walk down a hallway to grab books after one and a half weeks of staying. The nurses were unprofessional and were murmering about my sh scars and what the other nurses thought of me. I remember sneaking a bathrobe belt and suffocating it around my neck. I eventually looked at the bathroom mirror and saw a purple face with blue, bulging veins, bloodshot eyes. I tried to undo the knot, but couldn't. I was panicking. Eventually I got the knot undone (loosing a nail in the process) before I could go unconscious. I still see my young panicked face looking at me whenever I see a mirror. This wasn't a psych ward but I still wanted to tell me story here as a youth.
Thank you for sharing your story
Sharing a story like that was brave if their jobs were to help you they should know not to spread or talk or whisper anything
Absolutely horrible
I hope u have a great rest of your Life
Some doctors are patient themselves
man sorry for what happened, doctors and nurses need to be more aware.
thank you so much for being vulnerable. i wish i could give you a hug rn
11:43 she is so right. when you’re in that situation and you show any normal human emotional response you’re seen as “crazy” and “in need of help.” i remember crying until like physically had no tears left at a psychiatric ward waiting to be transferred to another and regular patients were walking by and many nurses looked at me as though i was crazy when i was just a 14 year old alone in a psych unit on christmas eve.
THIS!!! They are SO inhumane and we are often there due to being insanely gaslit from people with just as little empathy and jus as much desire to hurt people for pleasure and to feel powerful over them
14!? I feel so sorry for you
I hope you’re better now ❤
I find it a little "funny" that that would be me. I hope you're doing better now
Don't you let that break you. Your more than that
THIS MUST STOP IM BEING SERIOUS WE NEED TO PROTEST
I spent 6 weeks at a psych ward when I was 13 or 14, and the only saving grace was the fact that I was in a children’s ward where I met some incredible people who were also suffering. But I will forever be haunted by some of those past experiences
i hope one day, schools possibly would be able to use these interviews as a way to make people aware and have little quizzes at the end. i would pay attention a lot more.
Agreed.
@Bruh Bruh whatever you say dude! 👍👍
I went to a psych ward earlier this year for the first time because I was suicidal. They told me they would help me, but they put me in the disabled ward because there wasn’t any other beds, drugged me to make me sleep all day, and the one “therapy” session I had was a group church lecture to make me feel bad for being depressed.
Finally they left me with a 10,000 bill for a 5 day stay were I was forced with pills down my throat, little food, and other patients who tried to harm me because I was a new comer.
i’m so sorry this happened to you! the hurt you must have felt being in that place is unimaginable. i feel so lucky to have had the courage to talk to my mother and her send me to a therapist when i started having suicidal thoughts. i honestly remember my therapist as a saint. even thought i cannot remember her face (this was when i was around 9 years old). i genuinely hope you are doing much better now and if not i send all my love that you feel and live better soon. ❤️
This is why people don't get help. I wouldn't pay a cent of that bill either
👏👏👏👏👏👏💉💉💉💉💉💉 these ARE PRISONS!!!!!! the food is much worse than prison
this honestly makes me realize just how lucky my experience was. My admissions were both voluntary and i even wanted to go, but regardless, My personal experiences were extremely positive. I was about 11 and 12 the times i went so that may have contributed but its still amazing that i was able to receive help in the necessary way i needed.
same, I had that same kind of experience. I wanted to go, I was 15, 16, and 17 I believe. The worst experience was when I was 17 and I was in the ER for 11 days, but once I got onto the unit it was okay.
My dad actually studied to be a psychiatric nurse, he said once he saw how bad the conditions were he quit and became a teacher trainer for developing counties. Hes been to Kazakhstan, spent 4 months in Bangladesh extra
Omg I'm from Kazakhstan!
I was involuntary committed at 16 and came out severely traumatized. I’m now 22 and start therapy tomorrow but I’m hesitant because of what the other “mental health professionals” put me through.
How was it
@@TheeKittyPie it was honestly terrible. I just got diagnosed with ptsd and it might be a part of why I have it.
If your therapist doesn't work for you, you can always swich to another one. Don't give up on trying for help. Sorry that experience was so terrible for you.
@@krissiekitten i Hope it’s at least a bit better now… As the other commenter said you can always switch therapists if the one you’re working with now isn’t helping you. If you have made it to a point where you and your current therapist have started a healing journey it can only get better. Look out for yourself before accommodating anyone else in your life you definitely deserve all the good that comes at you
same at 16. the staff was horrible. definitely not a place for teenagers who are suicidal smh.
That wasnt a "rhyming" poem but it sure as hell was something, got chills
Not all poems are rhyming- you do know there are different types of poems right? LMAO 💀
@@wxnnie3728 Lol yeah
@@wxnnie3728 69th like
this type of poetry is called “spoken word”. it conveys a message as if it’s a letter to someone rather than rhyme!
Yeah- it was a poem. Poems don't need to rhyme at all
I was involuntarily committed to a psych ward as a teenager, and that poem was spot on. I was kept there for a month, and never received therapy. I saw the attending psychiatrist only when I was admitted. I left with significantly more issues than when I arrived. It's been nearly 10 years and I'm still dealing with those issues every single day
Damn man that’s crazy
Never related to a comment more, same here. I was put away for 10 and a 1/2 months. I wonder if He has done any videos about these "rehabilitation houses" for young adults yet. I was in Island View.. so glad it's been shut down.
I need to know what happened
I was in a psych ward recently.
It’s an oxymoron.
You go there to prevent yourself from ending your life,
But end up wanting to end your life even more the longer youre there.
That’s sad
True
So real
I've heard so many horror stories about Psych Wards. How they're even allowed is beyond me. I hope I never end up in one.
Same.
I mean, I've been to a couple of psych wards before and there are a lot of misconceptions about them. Some psych wards, like the ones here in the video are absolutely awful and inhumane. However, a lot of others are actually pretty decent and work hard to get you back on your feet. It's really just a gamble
@@Chikaboom_Boom Well if there's two cupcakes in front of you and you know one of them is poisoned, are you still gonna take the risk and eat one of the cupcakes? I think of it like that.
@@_nyx I'd take a risk if I'm suicidal and miserable anyway
@@_nyx it's not just a simple choice to not be committed. if you're severely ill and not capable of taking care of yourself anymore, a psych ward is often the best/only option. but not all psych wards are awful, many are genuinely helpful, and if you have the time, you can do research to find a program that doesn't have these kinds of horror stories.
My experience started with being escorted by a cop from the ER to a creepy, windowless, dark prison-like area at the basement of the hospital. They made me strip in a room with a window while they watched, and made me change into a literal paper gown. No underwear, nothing warm, and it was freezing. I walked down a hallway with a concrete floor and white walls, and little cells with thick windows. Someone was screaming down the hall, obviously having a mental health crisis of their own. I felt like I had to run away, this place was not a safe place and I wouldn't find comfort here.
Then there was the room. I was locked away, alone, for several hours. My belongings were gone, the only thing in the room was a mattress. The walls had clearly been scratched and punched over the course of years. Other people who felt the need to escape just like me. No TV because someone had previously tried to swallow remote batteries in order to commit suicide. I didn't blame him, anything was better than this place.
All the while I was shivering and alone in a paper shirt with no one to talk to or help me in any way. That was my experience.
That's horrendous. I'm sorry you went through that.
😭🧡
as a seven year old I was stripped from my clothes in a showering room (a handicap shower and a wet room on a psych floor) and shoved under the water to "bathe" I was there bc I was having issues with clothing sensitivity... I am now diagnosed with ptsd with a variety of reasons but like still, I was seven
I am so very saddened to hear that you had to go through that.
Reading all the comments and watching the video, i just want to say to all the victims who've been admitted and traumatized:
I'm so sorry. I cry reading and/or hearing about your stories. You should have never been treated as cruely as you were. I hope you will at least somewhat recover, if you can't ever fully do that. I just want you to know you are loved. You are important and don't let them treat you bad.
thank you so much :) i have been doing a lot better and im glad there is ppl like you in this world.
anthony: turn on cc if you are struggling to understand david
also anthony: *only has the auto-generated cc which are known to be wildly inaccurate*
fr like dude you might as well have them off if they're auto-generated
we have official subtitles now B]
Yeah it would be great if @AnthonyPadilla made these videos more accessble!!
@@Mary-op8hi he does
the captions are available now
A note on how much psych ward experiences can vary:
My friend was admitted twice to the same hospital, 4 years apart, both times due to a suicide scare. The first time was incredibly traumatic to them, due to the lack of privacy, guilt-tripping by nurses, and lack of contact with the outside world. The second time, which happened after a lot of staff changes and reform at the hospital, (I know this because of a psychologist in my family who works there) was very beneficial to them. They were able to have some time with their phone, go outside for a little while each day, and had enough time with a therapist over that week and a half for it to actually make a difference. It’s really all a matter of treating patients like humans rather than pests.
Also please note that I’m Canadian, I know the system in the US is a lot worse.
Anthony: "use the closed captions"
*turns on closed captions and they are auto generated*
come on...
lmao exactly my thoughts
lmaooo fr. at least i don't think it was on purpose because some of his other vids have captions lol
i think the video is just too recent for the handmade captions. hopefully they'll be on by tomorrow or next
Literally same I always put on closed captions and I did before the video started and it was like “Aw man only auto generated” and then they actually talked about it and I was like 👀🤨
Yeah im wondering what happened, as the accident is now described as "i fell get my cat loft and broke my neck" ? did anyone hear what he actually said?
I could recite her poem when i was in a psych ward myself, translated it into german and the other patients used it to get a voice for themselves. It was a psych ward for kids in the age range from 10 to 17 and it was exactky the same as the movies. I was in there for over three months, there were others that were there for 4 years and they all became dull, i had friends that were there too. And they all came back changed, we talked about all of that, no one got therapy, most of the things they did back then became worse. The hospital kitchen gave us all tape worms but nothing happened, if they didn't wanted to deal with you, they used that to throw you out with the explanation "we dont have any solidary rooms."
I was in a room with six other people that just came in that week while i was in "quarantine" for two weeks bc of the tape worms. Nurses made fun about us. One had bulemia in my room, so the bathroom was locked at all times. There was a guest bathroom down the hall but we werent alloed to use it, so they let me sit there for two weeks without a bathroom or a shower.
I cant be with more than one person, if its more i often pass out bc of the panic, can't go with much noises, cant be too bright..
never had a minute for myself in those three and a half months.
Tbh all of the stuff that i had before coming there just got worse, plus they got me more problems.
I was there for so long and multiple times, but they never diagnosed me with anything.
But a therapist that a youtuber put me through diagnosed me with several things in just six weeks of talking on the phone.
So psych wards, mental hospitals.. they dont want to help you, they dont want to give you a diagnosis, they dont want to give you things to make it easier for you. They just dont give a damn.
Also when they found out that i wanted to be a psychologist, they just screamed at me bc i am too dumb, i would never make it, wouldnt even get the chance.
If the staff just found one thing that you're aspiring, they just tried to crush that down, to keep you quiet.
that’s horrible, i’m sorry to hear that
TW of suicide⚠️: My 13 year old cousin was in and out of a children’s psych ward for months before she ended her life (jumped in front of a car on a busy highway). My Aunty who was 35 also ended her life (hung herself in my grandmas garage) and left 2 babies behind. My family has been deeply impacted and let down by our county and state’s mental health system (Australia). We are currently advocating for change 💪🏼
hope y'all are doing okay,, good luck in everything :]
:(
Thank you ❤️
im sorry if this is rude but if youre gonna put a TW please tell us what the trigger warning is about
Also live in Australia. My big brother took his life a few months ago, on the heels of my stepbrother taking his life a month before. They both hung themselves from a tree in our backyard. Their psychiatrists severely mismanaged their care, specifically their medication, and we found they were on multiple meds that interacted. My brothers deserved better.
I can only imagine what Britney Spears went through staying in that psych ward involuntarily for a month making her take medication and sit in a room for 10 hours doing constant therapy. That is totally why she is a completely different person these days.
And if it can happen to someone world-famous, then it can happen to those of us who aren’t
I was 13 when I first “took a visit” to the psyche ward. The place was like a prison. The poem definitely gave me flashbacks. I’m thankful Anthony Padilla is there to clear up rumors about it and interview people who have gone through this.
and that “visit” was really you being called a crazy 13 year old? is that true? if so, what was your experience?
sorry, im 13 and i kinda want to know
wish he interviewed someone that enjoyed their stay too, tho
I have never been to a ward but from everything I have heard it sounds like a legal kidnapping and the system needs a rework, I feel really bad for what you went through and hope it has got better but I don't think that wards are the exact right way
@@purplepurina almost anyone who goes to the psyche ward don't like the stay and it causes more trauma than what you came in with.
For me ot felt very inaccurate since i was in one of the actual wards. But we could just getup and leave and we did so regularly.
I do not understand why in the usa people can be locked for anxity or even suicidality. People where i wqs were sometimes right after a suicide attempt and they were qlso aloud to leave.
That poem was incredible, such raw emotion in her voice, deserves an Oscar 🏆
I don’t know about an Oscar as that’s for acting
Maybe a Noble Prize 🪙
the reason it was good was because it was real, not acting
i cant put into words how much i appreciated this video. i was involuntarily committed, and i left with more trauma and less trust than i came in with. and when i try to speak about this, i am often shut down, called "ungrateful". why should i be grateful to be insulted, stripped nude and examined, forced on drugs, and locked in a filthy little room where they took away every person, item, and activity that brings me joy and comfort? my therapist believes i may have ptsd from what happened, and yet most people will shame me...because i was harmed by a system that promised to help me. seeing someone with a large platform compassionately bring attention to these stories makes me feel the slightest bit more hopeful and less alone. thank you
Well it seems like youre not alone, appetently some psych wards are absolutely horrible
I’ve had a similar experience with the psych ward. I am very sorry you’ve had to experience this and hope that you are able to find people that are compassionate towards you if you try to talk about your experience. Thank you for sharing your experience and showing others that they aren’t the only one that is feeling what they’re feeling. 💙
I’m actually surprised that no one talking about some staff and doctors, not everyone but some really strange in a way of not having a soul , primitive , zombies , very heartless to the point it’s scary . One doctor was looking at me smiling but his eyes were black. Honestly I think there is more going on than we remember , especially after giving a shot. I tried my best to forget and thought I was. Imagining things but after 3,5 years of healing and meditation, living a normal life it came back to me thru meditation , I started crying uncontrollably . I’m more than fine now after I left USA, but I’ve been told thru meditation that it’s very dark, I went thru that,because I chose it, I remember everything for a reason. I mean there is normal human nurses and staff ,but some of them are not .
in my experience with psych hospitals, they have been 'okay' for the most part. I lived in florida for 11 out of 12 of my stays in short term stays. In Florida, they have a system that i believe no other state has, and that all hospitals dealing with psych-admitted patients had to follow, there are set guidlines and expectations each ward has to meet in order for for them to be viable to start treatment. In the USA it is standard for hospitals to strip you down to underware only (for girls some require to take off your bra but that is as far as they can go unless they have specific instructions from the state or county officials to do so) and they search you, and tempoarily take your clothes so they can search them for any potentially harful items or drugs. some will put you into scrubs, which is what nurses at hospitals usually wear but there arent as nice and are typically uncomfortable. but after they are searched properly they are given back to the patient for comfort. a lot of places when they first open have as many things as they can to make the stay more enjoyably theraputic as possible, but someone always finds a way to do something, and once it happens, that thing gets taken away, and the cycle repeats. another thing is that these short term stays are meant for unstable people, and to get them stable enough for re-evaluation for either discharge, more time there, or sent to a RTC (residential treatment center, which is basically a long term version of the short term, ranging from one month stays - 10+ years. the shorter the stay, usually the more comfortable and 'at home' feeling). a lot of psychiatrists will perscribe meds that they think will work, when half of them barley even know what they are doing despite having their degree. In the USA, every patient has the right to refuse medicine or other forms of treatment, but cant refuse to be admitted if you meet requierments to go. with a patient being able to refuse meds, if they are being unsafe to themselves or others its required that they give a 'shot' that usually contains Adivan, benadryl, and an anti-psychotic element thats dependent on the patient, if the psychyatrist orders this, its something the patient cant refuse if they are acting out. the most recent one i went to that wasnt in the state of florida was nasty, they had carpet flooring that was stained from bodily fluids and such, they gave me the shot 2 times becasue i med they put me on made me overly agressive and i started to kick in metal boxes that were ment to keep patients out (im female btw, im not some strong guy) i had never recieved a shot in the prevcious 11 stays i had, something wasnt right about that place. im truly sorry you were treated so horribly, if it come to you having to go back, research places ahead of time so if you are forced to go, you can hopefully choose where, not all of them are bad, some are quite good, one i actually liked and chose to go too if i knew i needed to
Psych ward for me was triggering due to the similarities of abusive authority I grew up in. I swore to myself that I’d never go back there again. Being locked up because you’re suffering only makes you suffer more.
I can completely understand where you are coming. I was sent to a psych ward and having that experience in the back of mind can be even more traumatizing. When I get depressed I think about being locked up and I don't ever want to go back to that place of suffering again.
That's definitely true. The middle school I went to locked me in the teachers classroom, followed around school by staff and couldn't come to school without being drugged up with meds. I told the high school what happened and the highschool made a complaint about the middle school for neglecting students. The middle school refused to allow me to go to regular classes and withheld lunch from me! The highschool I went to would never do that to any students! The highschool actually treated me like a human being. I got all my freedoms back right away once I got out of that middle school. I was struggling and needed help not being isolated and tormented by a Middle school!
I work in a psychiatric ward and it blows my mind to hear all that happened to these folks but I understand that there are places that are like this. I have seen times in my ward that some of this has happened, but everything in my ward is made to help, but there are times it doesn’t help. I work with teens and children and I do not always believe that it is helpful. We have 7 day minimums and I always try to make the kids feel welcome and comfortable
I’m glad to hear that you’re providing those kids with so much empathy and care ❤ even if wards aren’t always good, I’m sure they appreciate you
David has a great personality. Having serious disabilities, he is still a charming and positive person, joking and laughing around. That takes courage, that takes strength.
Her poem was so powerful. I loved it so much, she's a true poet.
As someone who worked at a psych facility, these people's stories break my heart. Their human rights were violated at their facilities, and I hope they pursue legal charges against those hospitals. Nobody should ever be stripped down naked to a bed like that. Furthermore, IM drugs should never be threatened or administered unless there is a severe emergency. Restraining someone and giving them IMs just because they don't want to take medication is against their patient rights. Refusal to take meds alone does not constitute an emergency. Mental healthcare has not evolved nearly enough over the last century, and reform needs to happen now! I know a lot of other staff working in these positions that truly want to help people, but don't have the resources or training to actually make a difference. Staff can quickly get burnt out and experience second-hand trauma from the work that they do and the helplessness they feel at not being able to systematically change the policies to help patients. One of the primary reasons why I left was due to the limited resources and abusive policies that I had no power to change, as well as seeing people leaving in a worse state than what they arrived in. The guest speakers were right when they said that the purpose of these units is primarily to keep you safe until they hook you up with services, and that it's not a rehabilitation center. But keeping someone safe shouldn't mean taking away their dignity and humanity! Don't get me wrong, some units are great, but most programs are underfunded, understaffed, and ill-equipt to meet the needs of their patients.
in the hospital i was at they would restrain n booty juice you for fighting, self harming (based off how long u were sh not really how severe) and in some cases refusal to take meds or go to bed
My problem is that I only respond best with IM injections for antipsychotics and certain sedatives. However, the facility that will accept me knows this yet unless the patient is "acting out" (whatever the fuck the staff are viewing acting out as for the particular minute/charge nurse on shift) won't give IM medication UNLESS that is the only route of administration for the drug that is best suited for the patient's needs.
That woman’s poem was AMAZING! If anyone who was in this video or anyone who has been admitted into a Psychiatric Hospital in their life is reading this, I can’t even begin to describe how STRONG and BRAVE you are. You deserve so much love and support for what you have gone through! Thank you Anthony for making videos like this, it’s great to see people talking about their struggles in front of millions of people to spread awareness and help others feel more accepted ❤
I’ve been in a mental hospital three times this year. They weren’t as bad as most people think. Did it help, not that much. I was at Rogers, but the other people there were amazing. My suicide attempts were traumatizing, but the mental hospital was not traumatizing. Some are terrible, but not all
I also had a positive experience at the ward I was admitted to. Even if it didn’t help as much as I wanted to, to get away from reality for a few days helped me to reset. In my opinion, of course.
EXACTLY! I hate how it is portrayed as if ALL psych wards are like this. It is necessary most times and if I wouldn't have been hospitalized I definitely would have killed myself
@@emilya9947 getting away from everything was definitely the best part of it and the other patients there
@@littlesimsfreak2931 same. I’m still in touch with a few of them. We all just watched movies, did yoga, did groups and karaoked. We got to take naps and play outside like we were kids lol
Little sims freak If they don’t help, then doesn’t that kinda defeat the purpose?
I’ve had both involuntary stays in psych wards and then turned to them when I wanted to get clean (rehab) later on in life.
ALL of the times I was admitted against my will NOTHING GOOD EVER CAME and maybe even as spite it was 1000x worse after I was discharged not just for me but for the person/people who “did this to me” the hospital(s) I went back and sued, as well as any innocent bystanders around me because it was literally like fucking pouring gas onto a fire…
However, when I VOLUNTARILY went to rehab and stayed in a psychiatric like facility for 6 months after my detox while getting sober - it was the BEST THING THAT I COULD HAVE DONE!
The staff was amazing, my experience was memorable and I’ve been sober now for years without a relapse because of all the connections they set me up with for long-term success.
Soo we need a MASSIVE overhaul of the healthcare system and the justice system for that matter because half of my story they are fucking intertwined and they SHOULDN’T be.
This isn’t a unique story and neither are theirs, that’s what sad, but we can and should do better.
Problem is they want to FORCE people to go to rehab and become reformed. You CANNOT help people who do not want it.
@@iris5678 you cannot help people who do not want to help THEMSELVES and that’s with anything, mental health or drug rehab, etc. People may want help but it might not be with that issue, it’s usually they want an instant fix to something that they can’t have, until seeing that it’s not that simple so they then go seek to help themself…
Rewatching this as I just started a new job in a psychiatric ward in sweden.
We had our introduction day today.
We got to practice self defense and techniques to safely putting ppl on the ground. They encourage everyone to act as the patient and try to fight back so we can get some sort of idea of how it might feel to have 3-5 people holding you down.
We also got to try the belt bed and all that.
But the instructors were very clear that these are last resort and hopefully we won't need to use it. Always try to de escalate the situation and calm them down. The "aggressive" behavior typically comes from a place of fear.
I've worked for about a month and thankfully so far I haven't had to use any force. We mainly play alot of card games with the patients, go for walks, drink coffee or just sit and talk.
We also try to bake for the patients on Saturdays.
That's wonderful! I wish we had care like that here in the US. But our health care system is notoriously fucked. 😑😔
The nice conditions and training made sense the moment you said Sweden, lol. I have a friend who had to go into intensive care and to a mental support school. She's out, hates it, is terrified and never wants to go back. I had another friend who called the sedative "booty juice" because it was the only way her and the other patients could talk about it and not cry. She saw people stripped naked, she heard about the abuse and rapes. She got the booty juice a few times when it wasn't really needed. Her therapy dog in training helped her more than an entire hospital. An animal that CAN'T TALK did more good for her.
Fuck the American system.
I wish that's what it was like here. That place actually sounds pretty nice, lol
That is lovely! I’m glad your so good to your patients! ❤
most places are taught being pinned down is the last resort but these people only ever want to make other look bad not tell the full story as to why it got the last resort
The poem was ON POINT. Honeestly i felt less safe in psych wards. Went in for ptsd and suicidal ideation... Some dude tried to kill me. Ended up having the worst panic attack of my life and screaming and kicking at people. Staff needs to be a lot better. There are some amazing staff but so many who let so many bad things happen to mentally vulnerable people.
I had a VERY different experience then the interviewees. I was going through therapy for an extended amount of time for OCD, ANXIETY, SUICIDAL THOUGHTS. My therapist recommended going to a facility in Wisconsin that was residential treatment (some may have called it a psych ward). It sucked as it's never going to be fun but it definitely was focused on my healing and making sure the experience would benefit. Granted it wasn't all locked doors except for the unit door. But if you harmed yourself you would either be sent to the hospital next door ward, or you would have to be in eyesight of a RC 24/7. I was never injected or forced to take meds. I was also 16 when I first went and the second time I was 17. The facility I went to was so much different than the stigma that most experience and I really think they do a great job with adolescents and adults.
I’m glad your experience was not this, my self and my oldest child both had horrible scary traumatic experiences.
Phych wards and residential treatment facilities are very different. The purpose of a psych ward is to intervene during a mental health crisis, and a residential treatment facility is there to actually treat the illness. I've been to both. My experience with the psych ward was incredibly similar to Anita's. My 10 week stay in a residential treatment was fantastic and incredibly healing, though also quite difficult at times.
Sounds like what my girlfriend at the time experienced when she was in the psych ward at the children's hospital in Montreal, where we live. She was under pretty much constant supervision and had very limited access to things in the room, only got homework delivered to her and entertainment if she had been doing good (communicating w the merry go round of psychiatrists/psychologists, not hurting herself, participating in group sessions, etc.) She was 17 at the time and went there because of what we later found out was BPD and not just chronic depression. It was horrible for me cuz I had no news, and basically neither did her parents, I was worried sick about her and kept waiting for her to be released so we could see each other again, but it took a whole month and she then spent over 7 months in a youth centre, being able to go to school part time and then full time after a month or two in there. The psych ward helped her massively to get treatment and go to a longer term place where she could understand herself better, but they did have her on antipsychotics and it was very bleak and stressful a lot of the time. She's good now thankfully, but it definitely traumatized me a little and after almost two months of constantly worrying about her and getting physical reactions every time I'd think about her or hear news I decided to break up on one of the few short phone calls we got. It was for the best, we both needed to focus on ourselves, but boy did it suck.
Did you go to Rogers?
@@kero6298 yes!!! I'm Oconomowoc
Anita: She/ Her
Lauren: She/They
David: No gender, only David
Edit: the chaos that this caused,
😭
@Big Bird They/them pronouns do exist
@@vent_here_lovely how
@@maryam4782 Wydm how?
@@vent_here_lovely wait I read that as ,,they/them pronouns don't exist" ☠️
@@maryam4782 Oh 😂
as a person who was in a psych ward 3 times for 3 weeks. her poem PERFECTLY explain how it is in there. such a powerful piece
I've heard the poem before, it always gives me chills. I've been in 3 different psych units 7 times. this is excruciatingly accurate. especially the weekends not counting as days spent in the hospital.