Thanks for the interview. She’s an absolute gem and has such a great way of turning complicated ideas into, “of course that’s how it is!”, like you said. You asked some excellent questions and make the interview fun for you, her, and us. Also, I think she dug your mourning/melancholia joke.
Thank you for sharing this interview. It's always gratifying listening or reading Nancy McWilliams. She share her experience from her heart, and I love that!
I’m not even a psychoanalyst or psychodynamic therapist. But it is a honour to hear Nancy McWilliams. I would put her aside of John Norcross, Bruce Wampold, Clara E Hill and others as a giant reference
Great information. It’s nice to hear the collaboration between psychology and psychiatry. Who’s Chris Aiken MD he keeps popping up on your videos but I’ve never seen him.
I enjoy listening to Dr. McWilliams, but find her emphatic reliance on stigmatizing language to be outdated, uninformed, and quite jarring. I lost count of how many times she described behavior patterns as “crazy!” Imagine lecturing on intellectual disability and repeated saying a client was acting “retarded.” It’s just not acceptable use.
@@PsychoFarm heheheh whooooosh! that one went right over his head! :) I hope someone tells him about Jonathan Shedler and the whole corpus of work he has done compiling said evidence for psychodynamic psychotherapy approaches that this guy doubts exists. lol.
Thanks for the interview. She’s an absolute gem and has such a great way of turning complicated ideas into, “of course that’s how it is!”, like you said. You asked some excellent questions and make the interview fun for you, her, and us. Also, I think she dug your mourning/melancholia joke.
Thanks for the nice words!
Stable hypomania? Don't threaten me with a good time.
Thank you for sharing this interview. It's always gratifying listening or reading Nancy McWilliams. She share her experience from her heart, and I love that!
She's the best so far in helping me w/understanding PPD
I wish I heard this 30 yrs ago. What a great way to conceptualize personality disorders. Inspiring.
sooooooooooo gooooooood..............this should be mandetory watching for.....everyone!!!
Great interview!! Very helpful to balance out the limitations of our medication options :) thanks!
Absolutely loved this.
I’m not even a psychoanalyst or psychodynamic therapist. But it is a honour to hear Nancy McWilliams. I would put her aside of John Norcross, Bruce Wampold, Clara E Hill and others as a giant reference
Excited to get into this!!
Thank you for this interview
Great information. It’s nice to hear the collaboration between psychology and psychiatry. Who’s Chris Aiken MD he keeps popping up on your videos but I’ve never seen him.
Thanks! He’s editor in chief of The Carlat Report
So interesting!
Супер. Но со звуком необходимо работать.
😃
😎
I enjoy listening to Dr. McWilliams, but find her emphatic reliance on stigmatizing language to be outdated, uninformed, and quite jarring. I lost count of how many times she described behavior patterns as “crazy!” Imagine lecturing on intellectual disability and repeated saying a client was acting “retarded.” It’s just not acceptable use.
How is this psychopharm? Her theories are not scientific, not used in clinical practice, and are not pertinent for audience interested in psychopharm.
There's a reason PsychoFarm is spelled with an F 😃. I (respectfully) wholeheartedly disagree with your opinion.
@@PsychoFarm heheheh whooooosh! that one went right over his head! :) I hope someone tells him about Jonathan Shedler and the whole corpus of work he has done compiling said evidence for psychodynamic psychotherapy approaches that this guy doubts exists. lol.
I would encourage you to reconsider your views, but more importantly, in light of your clinical experiences!
I can assure you these theories are indeed used in clinical practice and not only that, there is plenty of evidence that they are used successfully.