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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
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LearningTranscript
00:07Hey Youssef, continue
00:08He told me to tell him, "Doctor"
00:10Have you tried the month of fear before?
00:11Of course, you were one of those who were afraid of us.
00:13So, what should I do when this fear increases?
00:16When fear increases, we come here.
00:17I'm afraid of you, doctor.
00:19You are smart and aware of your illness.
00:21This is your biggest problem
00:22When I know he's gone, you know
00:24I'm afraid the advice might be malicious; I might forget I have a problem.
00:27I'm afraid the club might have important things to do now.
00:29I've forgotten her
00:30Tell me, have you ever seen someone else?
00:33Your friends or family, for example
00:36I'm not sure, to be honest.
00:37I'm not sure about the time.
00:39I'm not sure if I saw anyone or not
00:42I'm in my days
00:43He forgot her
00:44When an obligation comes back to you
00:45What do you remember about these times?
00:47Eye tone
00:48Not blinking
00:49No long sleep
00:51This is exactly what Daqeed Sarhan said.
00:53I can open it after that.
00:54I find that days have passed over me
00:55The subject is difficult, Doctor.
00:57I'm trapped here
00:58Find the toughest opponent
01:00You might meet him in your life
01:02It's your mind
01:03Because your mind
01:04I know what you did
01:05And what you will do
01:06It was very easy for him
01:08It shows you
01:09Reality other than reality
01:11I've forgotten about life within us, Doctor.
01:12For example
01:14All of this is true.
01:15It stays in my mind
01:16Ward
01:18everything
01:19Ward
01:20no
01:21All of this is happening
01:22This is available
01:23This one is available
01:25And I am here
01:26And you are here
01:27I'm not solving it
01:28correct
01:29That's how it is
01:30What you see and feel
01:32It happens
01:33Okay, I'm dealing with your senses.
01:35So, Habhash is hallucinating.
01:36Habash for you
01:38reality
01:39No, I want to know where life is.
01:40I want to know what happened and what didn't happen.
01:42And that's the definition of truth that you know.
01:44It's very possible it's not real
01:45That's enough.
01:47adequacy
01:47adequacy
01:48No one is certain about anything around them.
01:51You can attract it yourself.
01:52Where are you right now?
01:53I don't know
01:54I don't know
01:55I'm here
01:56I'm supposed to be here
01:58Here's the
01:58It could be anywhere
02:00Your illness will take you to her
02:01It might take you to the crazy ones
02:02three
02:03And convince you
02:04You are in it
02:04Shut up already
02:10Shut up already
02:17Viewers warned
02:19May the peace, blessings, and mercy of God be upon you
02:19Welcome to a new episode
02:21Dahya program
02:22The one who stopped you here, my dear, you startled me
02:23On August 26, 2019
02:25American newspapers published the following news
02:28Charles Lennox
02:29Governor-General
02:30Comprehensive for America and Britain
02:32The fourth Duke of Lichbound
02:33He was on an inspection tour to check on absences.
02:35On the banks of the Waqtawa River
02:37And Um Khaim is there with his companions
02:39They had a party
02:40But he
02:41Mile on his friend Colonel Cockburn
02:43He had a glass in his hand and said to him
02:44I don't know how, Cockburn
02:46But, unusually for me
02:48I can't enjoy the nighttime music
02:50And I have this feeling
02:51If I were a dog
02:52I must be killed like a rabid dog
02:55They usually don't get drunk
02:56What is the most important thing?
02:57What are these beers?
02:57Our duke is confused, my dear
02:59The noise began
03:00To the point that he could no longer use it
03:02for him?
03:02Because he couldn't take it anymore
03:04The idea of water itself
03:05No to Sharm or the other
03:07And when I understood
03:07It's necessary right now, immediately.
03:08He takes a boat and goes to Montreal
03:10To show the doctor
03:11He couldn't get close to the riverbank.
03:13Any proximity to me by the water
03:14They were experiencing muscle spasms
03:16But he gathered his pride and shouted
03:18Charles Lunik is difficult and afraid of everything.
03:21He boarded the boat
03:22What does it mean that Doc is afraid of water?
03:23Are we joking or what?
03:24During, my dear, my blackness
03:25The shore was dry again
03:26My neighbor got out of the boat
03:28To the astonishment of those present
03:29The people took him and gave him a rural village house in the area.
03:31But his condition continued to deteriorate
03:33Until he couldn't anymore
03:34He can withstand the sound of water
03:35With the gurgling sound we play
03:37Let's study
03:38They understood that Shalhou is a Labeela.
03:39Like any ordinary patient
03:40There's no more English colonialism or anything like that.
03:42And they took him out
03:43Two names for him, according to your status
03:44On the pen that is the first house
03:45They put him on a pile of ash
03:47And within moments
03:48The fourth Duke of Richbound
03:50expire
03:51That's true.
03:52It seems to you that it's a strange thing
03:54But let me tell you
03:55This was not a rare occurrence at the time.
03:56On the contrary, ordinary people, even more so than doctors, are in a state of great pride.
03:58They were aware of this situation.
03:59They also have a name for her.
04:00This is a case of hydrophobia.
04:02Aquaphobia
04:03This was its first medical use.
04:04For the ancient Uranian word
04:06phobia
04:06Dad, let me tell you
04:07It is the first use of a load
04:08Medical or linguistic
04:09At that time in the 19th century
04:10There was near-unanimity
04:12From the doctors
04:13and ordinary experts
04:14Why did he say that?
04:15It is a disease
04:15Why is it related to a money transfer bite?
04:17All my dear, what overcomes him is a sick person.
04:18He tells you that you will find such and such a member
04:19Qarm Ulf
04:20What is this?
04:21Anything
04:21and ordinary experts
04:22He told me, "Oh Abu Hamad, time has passed."
04:23There were ordinary experts
04:24Spacey experts
04:25Add cheese
04:26No, dear
04:27These are just ordinary experts.
04:28A term found in obscure books
04:29And he tells you
04:30The doctors
04:31They were not the only therapists
04:34I'm Zack
04:35There was a barber in it
04:36And the square's sweets
04:37And also
04:37There were some con people
04:38It contained a desert
04:39And we don't want
04:40That's why
04:40Water's awe
04:41It was treated as a separate disease
04:43Not a symptom of illness or infection
04:44Because they didn't ask questions
04:45The idea of contagion
04:46And as a disease, they could have treated it
04:47Various reasons
04:48And sometimes conflicting reasons
04:49We may disagree on the treatment.
04:51It includes everything nearby
04:52From electric shock
04:53Treatment of the head and drinking blood
04:55To take the drug
04:56Those like the belladonna
04:57or atrope
04:58and toxins
04:58The one like Streakman
04:59My dear, I'm not just saying what you're saying
05:01There are cases recorded in history
05:02This happened to her
05:03We don't need to say it
05:04Many of these treatment strategies
05:06It was hastening the patient's death.
05:07It means the man is coming to you afraid of the water.
05:09Then his head
05:09He electrocuted him
05:11And the east is blood
05:12Even if we come from countries
05:13His religion is poison
05:13Okay, brother, think for a moment.
05:15How will he swallow the poison?
05:16And in my case, dear, this happened to her.
05:18Personally registered in The Lancet
05:21In the 19th century
05:21Until our uncle Louis Pasteur came along
05:24He decided to treat the child, Joseph Meister.
05:26From the number of dogs
05:27He condemns him with 14 rights
05:28Maester Khaf because he baited or cooked
05:31Pasteur assumed that hydrophobia
05:32The virus has returned and is suspected of being a virus.
05:34He killed and was present from him, truly
05:36The counted one takes it
05:36So that his body can produce antibodies
05:38Louis Pasteur in 1985 made two important theories
05:41Discover the disease rabies
05:43Hydrophobia is merely a symptom of it.
05:45That, my dear, was a founding moment.
05:47Microbiology
05:48This is Muhammad
05:49The signif is a pile
05:50This, my dear, is the science of foundation.
05:51On the number of words
05:51So, my dear, hydrophobia is over as a disease.
05:54But the word phobia will continue with us.
05:56And the word remains widespread
05:58And a degree in our medical and social discourse as well.
06:00And it will continue for decades.
06:02Phobia is a later syllable
06:04This means that Saphix originated from Greek mythology.
06:06Myth means
06:07A cup appeared for the god Phobos
06:09God of Fear
06:09Son of Ars and Aphrodite
06:11Aaa Abu Hamad
06:12They struggle in the social river
06:13I see them
06:13So, my dear, if you are interested in a tree
06:15Greek gods family
06:16And you want to match them
06:17This map is important to her
06:18I was just kidding, my dear, if you were going to marry someone from the Al-Reeh family.
06:20Let me just say that he's not in good shape.
06:22The idea of phobia or exaggerated fear in
06:24Among things, animals, or situations
06:25It is a psychological complaint found in the verses of Amokrat
06:28In the fifth century BC
06:29But it is said that the first person to use the word phobia to express it
06:34He is Olas Cornelius Saints
06:36And his design is Olas, O Muhammad
06:37It was a dish and no one complained.
06:39Aulas is a Roman scholar
06:40He was born 25 years before Christ
06:42He used this word when he coined the term hydrophobia.
06:45As for the rest, it was in one of the doctoral dissertations at the University of Pennsylvania.
06:48Don James McLaughlin discussed the history of the term phobia and its connotations.
06:51In a message titled "Contagious Teasing"
06:53Phobic imagination in American literature
06:55Dr. McLaughlin's use of the word phobia
06:58And I mentioned that the thirties in the fifth 19 witnessed the birth of the terms for color phobia.
07:02Calirophobia or fear of black people
07:04nigrophobia
07:12Meaning after 1865
07:14At the hands of the German psychiatrist Karl Friedrich Otto Westphalen
07:18This, my dear, was most likely the coaching staff of Borussia Mönchengladbach.
07:22The owner, my dear, has a problem if Atletico Madrid plays at their stadium.
07:25Because his name is Professor Wanda Metrou Mauritano
07:28The story of big names, my dear, you and Laksh are in it.
07:30You want to talk about phobias, right? I'll get back to you.
07:32The important thing, my dear, is that this doctor coined the term "paid phobia".
07:35Or agoraphobia in 1871
07:37And then phobias became the scientific description of types of fear.
07:42Louis Pasteur's doctoral dissertation is being discussed
07:44The treatment of phobias has permeated language, culture, art, and politics.
07:47Through ongoing dialogue, especially within the scientific community.
07:49Individual 19 around hydrophobia
07:51Which, as we said, is one of the symptoms of rabies
07:53This dialogue ended in a complete separation.
07:55Between phobia and rabies
07:56After Louis Pasteur's discovery
07:58And after about 150 years
07:59Everyone is using the "phobia" treatment.
08:01Its definition is like a common psychological mirage.
08:03In a crystallized and perfectly defined manner
08:08The scientific definition of phobia now, my dear
08:10Or specific or particular phobia
08:11According to the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
08:14For mental disorders
08:16It is an intense fear or anxiety about a specific thing or situation.
08:20This thing or situation always causes fear or anxiety
08:24And the first thing this disciple experiences is this influential figure who is connected to him.
08:27Either he will avoid it completely
08:29Or he will endure it, but with a high degree of fear and anxiety.
08:31Something important, my dear
08:32This fear is disproportionate to the actual level of danger.
08:36Or the suspicious stance towards him
08:37And also with the socio-cultural context
08:40Another thing is that these symptoms must persist.
08:42At least six months
08:43It must cause a clear degree
08:46Out of distress or wonder
08:47Doors in social or professional performance
08:49or other important functional aspects
08:52Phobia is a type of anxiety disorder.
08:54or Ingsite
08:55Phobias are so common
08:56That 7.4% of humans
08:59They should try him at least once in their lives
09:00It is known that it is more suitable for satin.
09:02According to the definition
09:03The two most important factors in diagnosing phobias
09:05What are they?
09:06Yes, may God enlighten you, my dear.
09:08Disproportionate to the actual level of risk
09:11socio-cultural context
09:12The line from the lion doesn't mean it should be a phobia.
09:14Because the lion is frightening to all of us.
09:16This is proportional to the actual danger posed by the lion.
09:17He's not just a hairy animal, he's a creature of God.
09:19This is dangerous
09:20But my dear, despite all this
09:22If you, for example, are from the Dream family
09:23The most famous families of thieves and lion breeders in Egypt
09:26Lower Ghalib
09:26We can't even use that example.
09:28A child from the dream family
09:29And Iran is being weaned on a small cub.
09:30As they grow older, they begin to steal.
09:32Or, for example, if you grew up in a village on the edge of the Kenyan forests
09:36The one who's afraid of the lion is here
09:37It is governed by social and cultural contexts.
09:40The diagnostic manual divides phobias into four types.
09:43They are countries of the basic and common types
09:46Whether it's the objects or situations that trigger phobias
09:49First thing
09:49animals
09:50The costume of the hyena and the insects
09:51Number two
09:52natural environment
09:53High places
09:54For highlands, meaning
09:55and storms
09:55Third thing
09:56persistent pricking sensations
09:57Any puncture that brings blood
09:59Like a needle prick and a syringe
10:00Medical and surgical procedures
10:02Fourth, after
10:02Some terrifying situations
10:04Airplane uniforms, elevators, and enclosed spaces
10:06and crowded places
10:07And it contains space for a fifth wave
10:09And other things and situations
10:11Situations and things
10:12They don't belong to any of the clauses that are in
10:14But it might cause a phobia
10:15Beautiful viewers
10:16What mental illness needs to be diagnosed?
10:17The symptoms must be causing severe distress.
10:19Social or professional disability
10:21Sorry
10:21We all find cockroaches disgusting.
10:23And we're afraid of the type of people who live in Damascus.
10:25People we mostly deal with
10:26With slippers
10:27With the mop area
10:28Each one according to their social context
10:30and cultural
10:31But the one who refuses to be exterminated in an apartment
10:33There might be one small cockroach in it.
10:36He is literally being challenged and exterminated
10:38In the street
10:38In the dead of winter
10:39In Zamarin
10:40He needs psychological treatment
10:41I'm sorry, my dear
10:41Scientifically, I don't know how phobias occur.
10:43Up to the time
10:44In theories about its being a grazing animal
10:46In two basic theories
10:47Either a little experience
10:49The injured person lived through it
10:49Surah Ka'na'i Biha Wa Fakirha Aw La
10:51Either internalizing someone else's experience
10:53This is what is called transnamogenesis.
10:56I call him a countryman who sees people's troubles
10:57So, you're the one who made your job silent?
10:58What I kept quiet
10:59He shut up on my face
11:00To understand the connection via Namozen
11:02One man entered and saw his friend drowning.
11:03He didn't drown here, nor did he even go into the water.
11:06He forgot what was in the house
11:07But he saw a model in front of him
11:09He will have a fear of water.
11:10or fear of drowning
11:11There are two other types of phobias.
11:13Why independent?
11:13Non-simple phobia
11:15social phobia
11:15Or what is called today
11:17social anxiety disorder
11:18Or, as it's known, social media parts of a disorder.
11:20And what is clear from its titles
11:21It is linked to existence
11:22Wastinas
11:23Afla is now a lecturer
11:25Even eating in restaurants
11:26Or using public restrooms
11:27Clean public restrooms
11:29Creator's phobia
11:30If you repeat
11:30This is the phobia that Dr. Westphane described.
11:32Isn't this the one from Russia, Abu Hamad?
11:33Two dear ones, there was a stop in it.
11:35Match, I swear, I'll release her luck, my dear.
11:36I'm afraid everything will be taken literally.
11:38Creative phobia, my dear, is a very unfortunate condition.
11:40You can pay the patient
11:41This is the most common.
11:42She is committed to it
11:43And sometimes she adheres to her sleep schedule
11:45And she was pleased for years
11:47And sometimes for decades
11:48The treatment for phobias is difficult.
11:50Essentially, it is psychotherapy.
11:51Psychotherapy
11:52It is represented by the CBT
11:53Or what is known as cognitive behavioral therapy
11:56Cognitive behavioral therapy, my dear
11:58The quorum is gradually exposed
12:00In the dreadful march
12:01The thing he is afraid of
12:02Through the sessions
12:03Then, after a picture of a kidnapping, he took it on the two sides.
12:04It ends with exposing the injured person
12:06With the thing he is afraid of
12:08tired, for example
12:08Or a large, real spider
12:10He holds it in his hands
12:11In parallel
12:11Techniques are implemented
12:13Give the patient a gift
12:14Like playing soft music
12:15And other things remain from Technics
12:16This is exposure therapy
12:18Or what is called Exposure Therapy
12:20Mohammed, we're used to anything
12:22Why its problems and flaws?
12:23correct
12:23Tell us then
12:24What's the problem with exposure therapy?
12:26Why don't they do it?
12:27Cypress therapy
12:28The problem, my dear, is with exposure therapy.
12:29Change his name
12:30There are opinions in it
12:30In modern psychiatry
12:32She says
12:32This doesn't treat anything at all.
12:33Haaa
12:34Modern psychiatry says so
12:35Yes
12:36Why are you stretching it out, my dear?
12:37The treatment was offered to you
12:38Or you're the one who puts it in
12:39What's wrong, dear?
12:39normal
12:40Treatment and medicine criticize it
12:41Oh my dear, stay with me
12:42I'm telling you the modern theory
12:44In biopsychotherapy
12:45Biological Psychiatry
12:47How does this method separate fear and anxiety?
12:49The topic is related to memory
12:51And methods of building it
12:52For the entire century, my dear
12:53The medical conception of memory formation
12:55easy
12:56The perception says
12:56The information is stored in memory.
12:59Range reduction
12:59And it takes a long time
13:01It develops
13:02And over time it turns into a memory
13:04long term
13:05Its operation is simple
13:06Memory becomes stronger and more stable
13:07It can't be changed.
13:08When you reach this stage by force
13:10And this is his name
13:11Memory Consolidation
13:12But over the course of the past two decades
13:14The endowments proved to us
13:15This process isn't a one-way street.
13:17Because even the fixed memory
13:19When we activate it and relive the events
13:20It is going through a phase of reshaping
13:23And it is confirmed in a new image
13:24You are going through a similar moment
13:25At the moment of creating new memories
13:27That's why they named it Zahra
13:28Memory reshaping
13:29or memory reconsolidation
13:32As mentioned in the paper with the same title
13:33In the journal Current BioLissi
13:342013
13:35But what's wrong with you, my dear whale?
13:36What I told you
13:37For regular memory
13:39Your old memories
13:39In your elementary school, for example
13:41Memories of ten years counted from your life
13:42normal
13:43But as for the short memories
13:45The Boutoua is different
13:46Your life is precious, have you ever asked yourself?
13:47Why do you forget what your wallet was?
13:48But if only you could forget the moment of the assault
13:50Or an old incident that happened to you
13:51Why would a girl forget all the details of her life?
13:53But please remember
13:55Memories of an attempted kidnapping by God's will
13:57Its issuance is decided
13:58Flashbacks are playing right in front of her eyes.
13:59As happens with PD-S patients
14:01Because of anxiety and fear
14:02They activate emotional memory
14:04Because it teaches the ratio of a substance called
14:06Neuro-Epinephrine
14:07brain
14:08What is this, my dear? Is it the sister of Adrenaline?
14:09I mean, my dear, so that if you want to give them the status of a family
14:11And this, my dear, promotes emotional learning.
14:14or Emotional Range
14:15Here, the brain forms a memory of fear.
14:17Not an ordinary memory
14:18Just like your wallet when you forgot it
14:19Or what did she say yesterday?
14:20And in order to build upon this topic, my dear
14:21Instead of being scientifically deprived of us
14:22And we find sources and hyperlinks all around us.
14:25Let's put it briefly
14:26To be a painful memory
14:28Different from the structure of ordinary memory
14:30And its restoration will result in reconstitution
14:33This also happens in an atmosphere of anxiety and fear.
14:36This is in addition to the secretion of Europ Nefern
14:37Which reinforces the painful experience
14:39Everything you see is now coming from Europe, a different place.
14:42Each time, the painful memory is reconstructed and strengthened.
14:46Now, horror
14:47Hell never ends.
14:49Let's go back to CBT, my friend.
14:51Because we are far from him
14:52And we captured him in his right, a solid one.
14:53gradual exposure therapy
14:55They don't erase painful memories.
14:57People who thought that way
14:58This, my dear, is working on creating a new memory.
15:01There's nothing to fear
15:01But dear, the memory should be in conjunction with the old one.
15:04And it makes our situation reconcile with the presence of the two memories.
15:07The lonely and the sweet
15:08What remains of the CBT's shortcomings?
15:10There are possibilities for the knot to return.
15:13Or this phobia after a while
15:14This is what Dr. Richard Friedman spoke about.
15:16Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
15:18any?
15:18Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
15:21Oh Abu Ameed
15:21He's a normal, psychiatrist man who's just passing it on.
15:23Professor of Psychiatry
15:24I mean, count it, no
15:25Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
15:27clinical psychiatrist means limiting
15:29There is a university in Walcore
15:30Friedman was talking
15:32He had a seizure attack.
15:34And that what happened to him was a trap
15:35While on vacation in a mountainous region of Kotarak
15:44And he succeeded
15:45But he
15:46When he climbed another mountain
15:47Zay says so
15:47His condition returned
15:48In an important article he wrote for the New York Times
15:50He was advocating for a new approach to treating phobias.
15:53chemical or pharmaceutical orientation
15:54Why don't we present the patient?
15:55For the one who is afraid of him
15:57At the expected moment
15:58To reconstruct the memory of the past
16:00The reconsolidation we talked about
16:01We quickly lock in two on the effect of neuro-epinephrine
16:04Thus, new experience is formed for us without fear.
16:07Simply new
16:08You have a psychological condition related to the presence of a chemical substance.
16:12Dr. Friedman tells him
16:13You don't have to keep re-enacting the psychological state.
16:17no
16:17You can do it again
16:19During the release of the chemical
16:21The one who says your body has lost weight now, hurry up!
16:23He intervenes, rolls up his sleeves, and puts his hands on it.
16:26It prevents the release of the chemical substance D
16:27The psychological state is free of chemicals.
16:30The thing you're afraid of
16:31See her again
16:32But you're a sadist
16:33I don't feel anything
16:34What's the secret?
16:34How are you doing?
16:36In short, my dear
16:37We bring the patient and put a cloth on his hand.
16:38We show him a substance called beta blocker
16:40This substance is like pills
16:41So the neuro-epine substance works
16:43It can't work because of the beta blocker.
16:45We have disrupted the country of Canada.
16:47Therefore, our patient has nothing to fear.
16:49And why isn't the patient afraid during exposure?
16:51With the need he fears
16:52He develops a new, fear-free memory.
16:54And it proves to the memory of this in the nag
16:56And here, the phobia is eliminated from the value of the things that cause you anxiety.
17:00So, let's get down to business.
17:01Come on, my dear
17:02This is not a theoretical hypothesis from your uncle Friedman
17:05Rather, he was relying on a study that had already been conducted and was successful.
17:08It was published in 2015 in the journal Comprehensive Psychiatry
17:11Dutch researcher
17:12And what he said was a cure for fear
17:14Friedman argued
17:15This could be the future of phobia treatment.
17:18And also post-traumatic stress disorder
17:20And the new salt in general
17:21Chemical coping with fear and anxiety
17:23Something like that under the slogan
17:25Take a pill
17:26And saying "phobia" is enough
17:27My dear, we've stopped being afraid of anything.
17:30Oh, that's a terrifying idea, Abu Hamid!
17:32Either give her a pill
17:33It's not my harvest, my dear.
17:34The fear of phobia
17:35Not even courage pills
17:36The one from the land of hypocrisy
17:37I am my harvest
17:38We stop being afraid of things
17:40Which is supposed to be scary in normal life
17:42The one I cherish
17:42If our human being turns into a viral human
17:45He's not afraid of anything
17:46Even if it's ordinary
17:48That's how it is in the country
17:48His heart is still
17:49As the old folk saying goes
17:51He who fears is safe
17:51The current
17:52Text of bravery
17:53And live Jbad
17:53And the one who is being described
17:54Find yourself a wall and walk in its path
17:56Mohamed, and wasn't this a program to simplify science and stuff?
17:58What brought us to the village of Al-Finjan?
18:00I'm harvesting, my dear, so I can use the neem tree of folk heritage.
18:03I tell you that fear
18:04It is what protected many people from destruction.
18:07This could be a reason for the evacuation of Seralat and Ankara, among others.
18:10Imagine if humans weren't afraid of predatory life.
18:12Believers in phase psychology, like Dr. Friedman
18:15They say that fear is a mechanism that creatures have developed for their own benefit.
18:18Here, my dear
18:18Fear remained a compound inside the brown ears
18:20Hardwired is inherent in their nature as a means of survival and continuation.
18:23Ghraida, as we call it
18:25Instinct evolves with our lives and upbringing
18:27Our cultural and social contexts
18:28A child can play with a lion with complete innocence.
18:31Until once
18:35What? You don't know, my dear, I'm squeaking
18:37Be careful, my dear, I am an old roar
18:39Here, my dear, the sound of the roar frightens the child simply because of its loudness.
18:42Or maybe as a child you play with your dog with complete innocence until it grows old, so why would you be afraid of dogs now?
18:47Evolutionary psychology theory will extend all these matters in their proper order.
18:50And she argues that humans are just like animals
18:52They learned instincts themselves over millions of years.
18:55In explanations of the general fear of darkness, fatigue, or heights
18:59It won't be true, but rather theoretical assumptions and speculations.
19:02The important thing is that the result of all these theories and individual opinions
19:05Fear is indeed beneficial, my dear; he who fears is safe.
19:08If we examine the language, we find that fear is not a negative thing, and its opposite is not courage, nor anything of the sort.
19:13The opposite of fear is peace, tranquility, or reassurance.
19:16It's normal for all humans to be afraid, and they should be afraid.
19:18Mohammed, what's the opposite of courage? Cowardice, my dear.
19:21Rumi? This cheese, my dear, is a completely different story, not to mention fear.
19:24Fear is a feeling, but cowardice is a decision. Cowardice can be practiced out of fear.
19:29Let me tell you, my dear, that within our cultural context, we consider cheese a preferable decision.
19:34That is to say, there are better decisions than this. There were better options than cheese, but you're afraid.
19:39It scares you, it paralyzes you, it makes no difference.
19:42Here, the one who doesn't allow cowardice to cover him up is described as courageous.
19:45But the one who bravely reaches out to a lion is the one who doesn't know how.
19:49This is one of the meanings of Al-Mutanabbi's saying: "Opinion precedes the courage of the brave; it is first, and courage is second."
19:54My dear, I need you to have a rational opinion and think before you decide to do something.
19:58Knowledge is more important than courage, and as Abdul Malik Zanzour says, "The dose is sweet, no doubt about it, but taking what is rightfully yours is a skill, and it's a burden."
20:05Excuse me, but this place is neither crafted nor does it have any connection to the walls.
20:09In animals, instinct remains the primary driving force.
20:12Try, my dear, to make a big fuss and you'll see the cat on the tarp.
20:15And Orini, your doubt after that is not metaphorical.
20:16Don't show me your face, seriously, because he didn't see anything.
20:19Your face will look like Mall of Arabia on Friday afternoon
20:21There's no room for either the man or the passenger because of all the scratching.
20:24The cat will roast her, and then she'll be scared because of the loud noise you made.
20:28She will move on instinct for survival, and her movements will be completely unpredictable.
20:32The same idea applies if you corner a Frockle's dog or he enters your tartary territory.
20:35Without caution or permission from its owner
20:37Here's your instinct
20:38Be careful, my dear, a human being also has fears and instincts.
20:41There is a difference, my dear, between humans and animals; humans are capable of developing their humanity.
20:45And he will move from acting like an animal to acting like a human being, and there will still be a folk healer telling him, "If you have a fever, put your son under your feet."
20:53And another facilitator advises him that cowardice is the master of morals, and that he should hit his friend with a lot of cowardice.
20:57But man will always have the choice and will always understand and bear the responsibility for his choices.
21:01It's not right to speak from instinct or to throw around excuses.
21:04Stephen Covey said in his famous book, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
21:08Between stimulus and response there is a space
21:10In this space lies our ability to choose our response between the stimuli and the stimulus element.
21:17The decision we will make in the space
21:19This space is our choice space
21:20How will we interact? How will we see you?
21:22And Stephen Covey concludes by saying that our growth and freedom lie in our response.
21:27This is a meaning that Dr. Covey drew from Dr. Victor Franklin, the author of the beautiful book, Man's Search for Meaning.
21:32My dear, humans have a brain and higher cognitive functions than animals.
21:36He possesses imagination, historical knowledge, self-awareness, and the conscious ability to evaluate his actions and self-criticism.
21:41That's why, my dear, humans have levels of courage and fear.
21:44He has a clear distinction between fear and cowardice, and he knows this difference very well.
21:47Between boldness and mere courage
21:49Not everyone has to be a leader and change the world, naturally.
21:52There remain leaders and followers
21:54Courage, bravery, generosity, and magnanimity are not easy things.
21:57Everyone became great, and that's the meaning of Al-Mutanabbi's verse.
22:00Sorry, my dear, I'm coming with a lazy person from the land of
22:01If it weren't for what he had torn, all the people would have stayed up all night.
22:04Generosity impoverishes, and boldness kills.
22:06It's not important to be black and lead, sir.
22:08The important thing, my dear, is that you remain human.
22:09You could be a tall, broad-shouldered person who's afraid of the jaweed.
22:12But the important thing is to remain a respectable person
22:13And that's why, my dear, to be very honest...
22:15I'm in a person's mind, meaning I'm not very enthusiastic.
22:17Regarding the topic of chemical intervention in fear
22:19And I am not optimistic about the end of fear in our lives.
22:22This is our right
22:23I wish that the irrational phobia
22:25Or the phobia ends in the world
22:26But the feeling of fear, I'm afraid it will end.
22:28I think people need my life, and I'm even more afraid of them.
22:31Unjustified phobia
22:33This is something humans have known for a very long time.
22:35But what affected them the most was
22:36Hydrophobia: Imagine a person who is afraid of water.
22:39This represents 70% of planet Earth.
22:41Imagine a person who is afraid of something
22:43That's what keeps him alive.
22:44For centuries, the subject matter has dominated them.
22:46Until they understood the cause of hydrophobia
22:48Nervous system disorder due to a disease like rabies
22:51The virus that loves nerves
22:52The disorder causes the pharynx, which is the canal, to become blocked.
22:54The part that connects the mouth to the esophagus is where this happens.
22:56Severe, painful muscle spasms with swallowing
22:59Convulsions begin as soon as
23:00What is the brain exposed to in terms of sensory experience?
23:02Water-related
23:03Imagine, my dear, how many times a day you are exposed to water
23:06You see the water right now on the planet every
23:07You hear the sound of water all the time
23:09You smell water, you make water
23:11Your whole life is water in water
23:13Imagine what it's like to have a patient like this hydrophobia patient.
23:15He's afraid he'll smell it when he sees you at the water house.
23:17The one who has these painful stabs working
23:19Here the eye is turned away, flees, and closes its eye.
23:21He's trying to stop his brain from imagining water.
23:23The one who causes him all this pain
23:24Those who have hydrophobia
23:26It almost disappeared from science once they understood it.
23:29Unfortunately, cases of rabies occur every year.
23:31Thousands, especially in India.
23:33Due to the spread of unvaccinated stray dogs
23:36Even in America it happens every year
23:37A few cases, more than a handful.
23:39The main cause is the bats
23:40If the patient abandons himself and rabies takes hold of him
23:42He might be admitted to the hospital with the final symptoms.
23:45This terrible disease includes hydrophobia.
23:47And the patient's chances of survival after reaching it
23:49It is almost non-existent
23:51Although it was the origin of the term, it
23:53It's not considered a type of phobia today.
23:55They differentiate it from aquaphobia.
23:56Which is a simple psychological phobia of water
23:59It can be diagnosed and its causes identified.
24:00And treating it with C-Ti is utterly despicable.
24:03And no organic cause or danger
24:05Unless you don't get treatment and remain untreated, you'll have to endure it.
24:07And she decided to live in mourning alone
24:08If she does whatever she wants, she'll become a danger to those around her.
24:11My dear, phobia is like a psychological disorder, and that doesn't shame the person with the disorder.
24:14We are all walking on four legs, each according to their own desires in this world.
24:16And this profession has no leader, my friend.
24:17But what remains is a natural and justifiable fear.
24:19This could be a motivation for stinginess and perseverance.
24:22The term "sweetness of the soul" is very beautiful, my dear.
24:24To express the instinct of stinginess
24:25My dear friend, man was at his most elevated when he had the ability to choose.
24:28At some point, no matter how brave you are
24:30Or bold, daring, or courageous
24:32You might have to flee.
24:33Even if the first one flees, he will be followed by a commotion.
24:36strategic withdrawal
24:37That's it, my dear, finally, my dear
24:39Just watch the previous episodes, then watch the new episodes.
24:41You go down and look at the sources, and we're on YouTube.
24:43Subscribe to the channel. You know, my dear, that's what I'm most afraid of.
24:45I'm not afraid, no need.
24:46He told me, my dear, at the end of this episode, I'll call a point.
24:49Quoted from Wadi Alam
24:50The question of children's clothing is relevant here.
24:53She heard him
24:55Where does the frenzy come from?
24:57She said to him, "If we bit a dog..."
24:58He tells you that the following week he was walking in the street
25:01One woman gave birth to three children.
25:03Oh my God, this is definitely a very, very, very big dog!
25:06Bite it with childlike love, my dear
25:07But my dear, I hope that point brings you joy.
25:10I hope you'll watch more of the films I've made.
25:13And I have some advice for you from the artist Mohamed Fouad
25:15And Danny is afraid
25:17Or I'll see you as a fool
25:19No, no, no, no
25:20He is a frightened member
25:22Oh my heart