<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd"><channel><title><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></title><description><![CDATA[This publication exists to bring awareness to mental disorders and provide psychoeducation on psychopathology and how to treat it. <br/><br/><a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast">danielyeepsych.substack.com</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/podcast</link><generator>Substack</generator><lastBuildDate>Sun, 14 Jun 2026 20:32:10 GMT</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/1904975.rss" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><author><![CDATA[Daniel Yee]]></author><copyright><![CDATA[Daniel Yee]]></copyright><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><webMaster><![CDATA[danielyeetherapy@gmail.com]]></webMaster><itunes:new-feed-url>https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/1904975.rss</itunes:new-feed-url><itunes:author>Daniel Yee</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>I help people with cognitive distortions, mental disorders, addictions, and/or neurodivergence. Subscribe to learn about psychopathology.</itunes:subtitle><itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type><itunes:owner><itunes:name>Daniel Yee</itunes:name><itunes:email>danielyeetherapy@gmail.com</itunes:email></itunes:owner><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:category text="Health &amp; Fitness"><itunes:category text="Mental Health"/></itunes:category><itunes:category text="Education"><itunes:category text="Self-Improvement"/></itunes:category><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/><item><title><![CDATA[🎙️Let’s Get Unstuck x Daniel Yee Psychology🎙️]]></title><description><![CDATA[ <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/lets-get-unstuck-x-daniel-yee-psychology</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:198643938</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology and Let’s Get UnStuck]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2026 02:12:46 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/198643938/11595cd80cbd502be20252dfe94d22fa.mp3" length="76257636" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology and Let’s Get UnStuck</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>4766</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/198643938/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[Shooting Stars Are Just Burning Rocks]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>That’s the scientific reality of shooting stars. A meteoroid — a small piece of asteroid or comet debris — enters the earth’s atmosphere at extreme velocity. Friction with the air heats it to thousands of degrees. We observe a brief streak of light as it disintegrates. Most are smaller than a grain of sand. The whole event lasts a few seconds. Then it’s gone.</p><p>That’s what you’re wishing on.</p><p>If that’s true, why do we insist that the universe is speaking to us? That signs are real? That rocks burning up in the atmosphere are sending us personalized messages?</p><p>The architecture of magical thinking</p><p>There is a term in clinical psychology — <em>magical thinking</em> — that describes this particular cognitive pattern. The belief that your thoughts, words, or rituals can influence external events without any causal mechanism connecting them. Your lucky shirt that wins the game. The wish that makes your crush text you back. Praying that God has prepared for you a good parking spot.</p><p>Some degree of magical thinking is universal. It’s a normal cognitive shortcut, especially in childhood. The problem is what happens to it in adulthood, and specifically what happens to it under stress.</p><p>Here is something I’ve observed, both in my clinical work and in my own life. People who are desperate engage in magical thinking everywhere. And people are desperate when they’re in pain.</p><p>When your life is functioning, you don’t require magical thinking. The universe is free to be a cold, indifferent place full of burning rocks, and you don’t particularly notice, because your life is yours and it’s working. You make decisions. You execute them. Some yield results, some don’t. You don’t require a sign.</p><p>When your life is <em>not</em> functioning — when you’re financially compromised, when the relationship ended, when the job didn’t come through, when the medical results came back wrong, when the future you’d been constructing has collapsed — that’s when magical thinking activates. That’s when the number 11:11 starts manifesting on clocks. That’s when song lyrics begin to feel personally addressed. That’s when you find yourself checking horoscopes again. Buying lottery tickets. Wishing on shooting stars.</p><p>The signs are not appearing more frequently. <em>You are looking for them more frequently.</em> Your nervous system, in a state of elevated distress, is scanning the environment for any indication that things are going to be okay. That you matter. That something out there is paying attention. That the situation you’re in carries a hidden meaning that will, eventually, redeem the suffering.</p><p>This is the architecture of magical thinking under duress. The brain, unable to tolerate the actual conditions of your life, constructs a parallel reality in which the conditions are temporary, meaningful, and about to be resolved by an outside force.</p><p>Beneath all of it lies one of two motivations.</p><p>You are searching for <em>meaning</em> — some larger reason this is happening to you, some confirmation that your suffering is part of a plan you cannot currently see. Or you are searching for <em>life to throw you a bone</em> — some unearned win, some lucky break, some intervention that will lift you out of where you are without requiring you to do the slow, costly work of changing your situation.</p><p>The first wants your pain to mean something. The second wants your pain to be solved by something other than you.</p><p>Both feel like hope.</p><p>Most of the time, neither of them is. Both are magical thinking with better branding.</p><p>Where are you waiting for the lottery ticket?</p><p>I don’t mean an actual lottery ticket — though if that’s part of the inventory, include it. I mean <strong><em>a lucky win that is not realistic</em></strong><strong>.</strong> An unearned shortcut. An external force you’re hoping will arrive and resolve the part of your life you don’t know how to resolve.</p><p>It might present as scratch tickets every week, even though the mathematics confirm you’re spending money you don’t have on something that will statistically never pay off.</p><p>It might present as sports betting, where you’ve convinced yourself you have a system, but the truth is the house wins, and you continue playing because the intermittent wins feel like evidence you’re chosen.</p><p>It might present as crypto. Meme stocks. Whatever the current speculative vehicle is. Telling yourself you’re <em>investing</em> when you’re actually praying.</p><p>It might present as the psychic visit every few months — paying a stranger in a draped room to predict your love life, your career, your financial future. Purchasing certainty by the hour from someone who has no access to certainty.</p><p>It might present as tarot cards before every consequential decision. Astrology apps that determine whether today is favorable for asking for a raise or if the person you like is compatible with you.</p><p>It might present as remaining in a dead-end relationship because you keep waiting for the person to <em>transform</em> — telling yourself the universe brought you together for a reason, and that reason will reveal itself if you simply stay long enough. That they are your soulmate because of x, y, or z coincidence.</p><p>It might present as remaining at a dead-end job because you’re <em>trusting the timing</em>, waiting for the correct opportunity to spontaneously emerge, instead of actually applying elsewhere.</p><p>Waiting to be discovered. Waiting for the old crush to return. Waiting for the situation to resolve itself without your participation.</p><p>Where are you waiting for the winning lottery ticket?</p><p>Hope is not the problem</p><p>I am completely in favor of hope.</p><p>Hope is one of the most important psychological resources human beings possess. The capacity to believe that things can be different, that the future is not foreclosed, that the present situation is not the final word — that capacity is what keeps people alive through circumstances that would otherwise destroy them. Hope is, in a meaningful sense, sacred. I’m not attempting to remove it from you.</p><p>What I’m describing is not hope. What I’m describing is a counterfeit of hope.</p><p>Hope is the belief that things can improve, combined with the willingness to do the work to improve them. Hope keeps you applying after the fiftieth rejection. Hope keeps you in therapy when the progress is slow. Hope keeps you trying with the relationship because the relationship is genuinely worth trying for. Hope is <em>active</em>. Hope is paired with effort.</p><p>What I’m describing is coping disguised as hope. It’s the part of us that, instead of doing the slow uncomfortable work of changing our situation, reaches for a story — a sign, a psychic, a horoscope, a lottery ticket, a manifestation routine — that allows us to feel as if we’re doing something while we’re doing nothing.</p><p>That’s the distinction I want you to be honest about with yourself.</p><p>It isn’t the hope that’s the problem. It’s the coping wearing hope’s clothes.</p><p>If you can distinguish between them — if you can retain the hope while releasing the coping — you’re approaching something real.</p><p>Sobriety as an orientation toward reality</p><p>I want to address sobriety, and not merely sobriety from substances. <em>Sobriety as an orientation toward reality.</em></p><p>Living soberly, in the deepest sense, means coming to terms with how reality functions. It means accepting that the universe does not conform to your preferences simply because you have a hard life and you deserve a break. It means accepting that wishing is not a productive activity. It means accepting that the signs you’re observing are largely your brain pattern-matching under distress, not communications from an external source.</p><p>That’s a difficult posture to maintain. It feels worse, in the short term, than the alternative. The alternative is considerably more pleasant. The alternative is <em>the universe has a plan for me, and if I remain open and read the signs and trust the timing, everything will work out.</em></p><p>That worldview functions as an embrace. It’s warm. It informs you that you are special. It informs you that something is attending to you. It eliminates the burden of being the agent of your own life, because the universe is, presumably, performing the labor.</p><p>The problem is that it isn’t true.</p><p>And the cost of believing things that are not true is that you stop doing the things that would actually alter your circumstances.</p><p>If you’re in a financial hole, no quantity of manifestation will close it. You will close it by increasing income, decreasing expenditure, improving your skills, or restructuring your life. The work is the work. The wishing is, at best, a method for feeling marginally better while avoiding the work.</p><p>If your crush does not return your feelings, no shooting star will change that. The honest assessment is that this person, for whatever reason, is not choosing you. You can continue wishing they would, which produces no change. Or you can grieve it, learn what’s available to learn, and direct your attention to someone who actually does choose you back — or you can work on yourselves. The wishing is a method for staying stuck.</p><p>If you’re cycling through addiction, depression, bad relationships, bad financial decisions — <em>additional luck is not what you require</em>. You don’t need the universe to throw you a bone. People who are stuck in cycles do not, generally, need more luck. They need acceptance — that the cycles are not the universe’s responsibility, that the cycles are originating somewhere within or around them, and that the same patterns will continue until something is meaningfully changed.</p><p>The signs you’re searching for are not coming. The reason they are not coming is that they do not exist. The reason you keep searching is that searching <em>feels like</em> an action. It feels engaged. It feels hopeful.</p><p>It is not. It is avoidance.</p><p>Wishing upon stars is avoidance</p><p>Wishing upon stars is, more frequently than not, the avoidance of emotional distress rather than a magical solution in the sky.</p><p>The discomfort of accepting that your situation is what it is — and that you are the only person who can change it — is real. Searching for signs is a method for dodging that discomfort. The signs feel like contact with something greater. They are not. They are contact with your own nervous system attempting, vigorously, to persuade you that you do not have to do the difficult thing.</p><p>What is actually available to you</p><p>The universe is not paying attention to you. The universe is not blocking you either. The same indifference that prevents the universe from swooping in to save you also prevents it from being aligned against you. It is simply present. Doing what it does. Burning rocks. Indifferent rocks. Sometimes beautiful, in their indifference.</p><p>What is also true is that you have considerably more power than the wishing-on-stars worldview credits you with. You can alter your situation. Not by manifesting it. By <em>doing things</em>. By acquiring skills. By having difficult conversations. By going to therapy. By getting sober. By leaving the relationship. By taking the job. By making the call. By sitting with your discomfort instead of fleeing it.</p><p>The thing the signs were promising you — that someone out there cares, that something is going to work out, that you are not alone in this — a version of that is actually available to you. It does not come from the stars. It comes from the people in your life. It comes from the relationships you construct. It comes from being honest with yourself about what is functioning and what is not. It comes from the slow, accumulating evidence of your own actions beginning to constitute a life.</p><p>That is more difficult than wishing. It is slower than wishing. It does not come with the warm sensation of <em>something is happening for me right now</em>.</p><p>But it functions.</p><p>Wishing does not.</p><p>The exit</p><p>If you have been participating in the signs economy — reading the tarot, wishing on stars, calling psychics, scrolling the horoscope app — I am not suggesting any of that carries shame. Most of us engage in some version of it when we are afraid. It is a human response to feeling out of control.</p><p>What I am suggesting is that if you have been doing it <em>instead of doing what you know you should be doing</em>, you are using it to remain stuck. And the exit is not more signs. The exit is sitting with the discomfort that has been driving you to look for signs in the first place. Identifying what hurts. Permitting yourself to feel it. And then taking one concrete action toward changing the thing that hurts.</p><p>That is the work.</p><p>Shooting stars are just burning rocks.</p><p>Your actions are the one thing in the universe that you actually get to influence.</p><p>Spend less time wishing on the rocks.</p><p>Spend more time moving your hands and feet.</p><p><em>If this resonated with you, I’d love to hear from you in the comments. Where have you been waiting for the winning lottery ticket? Naming it is the beginning of a new life.</em></p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/shooting-stars-are-just-burning-rocks</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:197617511</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 14 May 2026 02:25:04 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/197617511/bc6a02fdc03a2bc31b76d14c241e13e2.mp3" length="13146207" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>822</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/197617511/d85b6a6e6e3acf96212b425bd7629b51.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[When Using AI as Your Therapist Helps and When It Goes Wrong]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>Why are so many people using AI as a therapist?</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/when-using-ai-as-your-therapist-helps</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:196824122</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 07 May 2026 20:31:09 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/196824122/322971ada9d6b6df85141da926131162.mp3" length="15087623" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>943</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/196824122/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[What Having ADHD Feels Like as an Adult]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>ADHD has made my life really hard.</p><p>When I was a boy, my mom told me she thought I was possessed by the devil.</p><p>I screamed. I cursed. I broke things. I threw explosive tantrums that nobody could control.</p><p>And for years, that was the story. That I was bad. Disturbed. Broken in some moral way.</p><p>It took me 28 years, and getting to a clinical psychology program, to finally learn what had actually been happening.</p><p>I had ADHD.</p><p>At its core, ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder. That means the brain develops and functions differently than it does in a neurotypical person. The name itself — attention deficit hyperactivity disorder — points to a deficit in the brain’s ability to regulate attention and behavior. But what people often miss is that ADHD is not just about being distracted. It is also about emotional dysregulation, impulsivity, time blindness, shame, and the cumulative trauma of living your life in a way that other people do not understand.</p><p>As a preschooler, I had explosive emotional reactions and I couldn’t calm down once I was upset. My brother would provoke me, call me a crybaby, and I would cry almost every day. I cursed at him. I knocked things over. Seeing a four-year-old screaming profanity was shocking. So my mom concluded that I must be possessed.</p><p>What was really happening was that I had a brain that could not regulate emotion the way other kids could.</p><p>I was also developmentally behind. Parts of my brain, especially the prefrontal cortex, were literally slower to develop. But my parents had no map for what they were dealing with, and they had developmental issues of their own. So instead of understanding the underlying problem, they reached for convenient band-aid fixes, and those fixes compounded the difficulties in my life.</p><p>I couldn’t sit still during meals, so my dad put me in a high chair until I was seven. I was underweight, so he gave me baby formula until I was six. I wet the bed, so I wore pull-ups until I was six. I didn’t want to brush my teeth, so I ended up with cavities and abscesses and they gave me antibiotics. At the dentist, I screamed so violently that they had to sedate me with injections, which is unusual in dentistry. My life was already being organized around my dysregulation before anyone had words for what it was.</p><p>And these struggles didn’t stay at home. They followed me into school.</p><p>I got in trouble regularly from the age of four. I talked when I was supposed to be working. I didn’t follow directions. Teachers labeled me as off-task, impulsive, lacking self-control. They chided me for blurting out answers in class. In first grade I called a kid gay for sitting on another boy’s lap, and when confronted I lied badly and said I meant “happy gay.” In second grade I touched a girl’s butt and that got brought up at the parent-teacher conference too. From age 8 to 13, I got suspended six times for scuffling with other boys.</p><p>People with ADHD are not inherently violent. But I grew up with an aggressive father who had anger issues. I did not have a model for emotional regulation or healthy conflict resolution. So when distress came up in me, the only way my ADHD brain knew how to resolve it was by acting out. And I didn’t anticipate consequences well. Worse, I had been conditioned not to care because I usually got away with things. The only reason I was not expelled was because I was extremely intelligent and people liked me.</p><p>That intelligence hid a lot.</p><p>I was in the 99th percentile in math, science, and writing. But reading was hard unless something truly captured my attention. My mind would wander off the page. Then in third grade I discovered Roald Dahl, and for the first time I could actually read books. That was one of the first clues about how my mind worked: I could only concentrate if I was hooked, if I got into a flow state. Later, when I took the SAT, my mom gave me Adderall and my performance jumped to the 99th percentile. For years I didn’t understand why my brain worked this way. If ADHD means hyperactivity, why do stimulants help? Because they increase activity in the brain systems responsible for self-control and attention. ADHD brains struggle to stay engaged with tasks that are not immediately rewarding. Boredom feels unbearable. Urgency and anxiety become the only reliable motivators. Stimulants normalize dopamine transmission and strengthen systems like the prefrontal cortex that are responsible for reward regulation and self-control.</p><p>But before I understood any of that, the explanation people gave me was much simpler.</p><p>They said I was lazy.</p><p>My dad told me I was just like my mother. Lazy. The truth is that my mother and I are not lazy. We just have brains that are wired differently. If you have a parent with ADHD, there is a significant chance that you also have some neurodevelopmental difference, such as ADHD or autism. But because I was smart, no one thought to look deeper. In 2018, when I first suspected I might have ADHD and shared that with one of my high school teachers, she said, “If you had ADHD, you would not have been able to get into UC Berkeley.” She had worked with special education students and jumped to the wrong conclusion. People assumed that if I could get good grades and ace tests, ADHD could be ruled out. But intelligence does not fix executive dysfunction. It only hides it until life becomes too complex to compensate.</p><p>And eventually, life did become too complex.</p><p>One of the main features of ADHD is time blindness. For someone with ADHD, there are really only two times: now and not now. Most people can feel the passage of time like a tide slowly coming in. A deadline gets closer, the pressure builds, and they adjust. For me, that feeling was absent. If something was happening right now — if a person was in front of me, if a deadline was today, if a crisis was unfolding — my brain turned on. But if something was happening next week or tomorrow, it carried almost no emotional weight. It felt theoretical. Not real.</p><p>That is why ADHD procrastination looks like laziness from the outside but feels different on the inside. You do care. You care a lot. But you cannot make the future feel real enough to act on. So the brain solves this by relying on anxiety and panic. I used to delay week-long assignments and then somehow produce something passable in the final two hours before it was due. Once the deadline became now, my brain would finally agree to show up.</p><p>For a long time, I thought procrastination was a time management problem. But for me, much of it was emotional avoidance. A task was never just a task. It was attached to anxiety about my future, shame about already having avoided it, fear that I was falling behind. And because my brain was already low on dopamine, it was always scanning for relief. The longer I avoided something, the more emotional weight it accumulated. A task I skipped on Monday became embarrassment by Wednesday and dread by Friday. Then by the time I needed to do it, I also had to overcome all the emotion that had attached itself to it. So I would avoid it even more, and the whole thing would keep growing.</p><p>That is what ADHD looked like in my adult life.</p><p>Not a kid bouncing off the walls, but a grown man sitting at a desk, watching his day dissolve in full awareness.</p><p>I would wake up, shower, ignore the dishes, skip breakfast, go to work, sit down at my desk, and immediately start drifting. I would check stock prices, crypto prices, messages. I would watch YouTube videos. I would gamble by day trading. I would go to lunch, get distracted talking to coworkers, watch a TV show while eating, message friends, and suddenly it would be 1:30 p.m. and I had not started the tasks I was supposed to do that day. Then I would come home and do the same thing again with videos and reels and my phone for hours, telling myself I would fix it tomorrow. And then tomorrow would come and the cycle would repeat.</p><p>Knowing was never the problem.</p><p>I always knew when I opened YouTube or placed a trade or checked messages that I was not doing the right thing. The problem was not knowledge. The problem was behavior. As Russell Barkley put it, ADHD is not a disorder of not knowing what to do. It is a disorder of doing what you know.</p><p>That sentence summarized my life.</p><p>By my twenties, my life had become extremely chaotic. Your outer life becomes the manifestation of what is going on in your mind, and my mind was chaotic. I moved through jobs every one to two years. I had close calls with death. I swung wildly in net worth, going from zero to a hundred thousand, down to twenty thousand, up to two or three hundred thousand, then back down again. I started projects and abandoned them. I made huge decisions impulsively. I kept hoping the next thing would fix my life.</p><p>So one year it was joining a Christian cult. One year it was trying to become a pastor. One year it was crypto trading. One year it was joining a startup. One year it was trying to launch my own startup. Then it was writing a book. Then switching to clinical psychology. Then trying desperately to find a girlfriend on dating apps. Then fantasizing about moving out of the country. And now trying to become a social media creator.</p><p>None of those things were inherently stupid. Some of them I genuinely enjoyed. Some of them taught me a lot. But underneath all of them was the same pattern: I was switching because my brain craved novelty. Starting something new felt like progress, and that feeling was enough to satisfy a brain trying to avoid the boring, sustained effort of actual work. Underneath that was also hope — the hope that if I found the right thing, it would finally close the gap between who I was and who I imagined I was supposed to become.</p><p>I wanted to become a different person without having to sit with the discomfort of being who I already was.</p><p>That same pattern showed up in gambling.</p><p>When I was 22, I had a job that most people would have killed for: good salary, good stock options, real responsibility, a great boss, growth in a high-demand field. But I only lasted five months. Not because I got fired, but because I could not make myself do the boring parts of the job. At the same time, I got addicted to cryptocurrency trading. One week I got lucky and made $200,000, and that gave me a story: maybe I could leave corporate life, do something more stimulating, become someone bigger. I felt guilty that I was not doing my work, so I quit.</p><p>ADHD brains are drawn to gambling the way water runs downhill. Motivation does not come from knowing something is important. It comes from how the brain processes reward. The ADHD brain is functionally dopamine deficient. Ordinary tasks do not produce enough reward signal to sustain engagement. So the brain goes looking for stronger stimulation. Gambling provides that. Every trade is uncertain. Every outcome is immediate. Every win or loss is a hit of feedback. And if that is not enough, you increase the stakes to manufacture urgency.</p><p>By 24, I was addicted to gambling. By 28, I was putting tens of thousands of dollars into meme coins, penny stocks, and terrible speculative bets based on only minutes of research. I knew it was irrational. I knew retail traders do not beat the market. I knew I was gambling and that I would eventually lose. But I still watched my savings bleed away, one bad decision at a time. Three separate times I turned ten thousand into over a hundred thousand or even two hundred thousand in a matter of months, and every time I went bust.</p><p>A gambling addiction is not just about the money you lose. It is about the life you destroy trying to win.</p><p>And even when I did win, my life did not change in the way I imagined. I was still alone in my office. Still ashamed. Still disorganized. So I would move the goalpost. Maybe if I hit a million, then things would change. Then I could get a girlfriend. Then people would want me. Then I would not have to struggle. Then I could finally become the person I wanted to be.</p><p>But the real problem was not out there waiting to be solved by the next hit of success. The real problem was that I had undiagnosed ADHD and I kept trying to solve the wrong thing.</p><p>That confusion also shaped my relationships.</p><p>There is something that does not get talked about enough in the context of ADHD and neurodivergence: limerence. Dorothy Tennov coined the term to describe an intense, involuntary preoccupation with another person. It is the constant mental rehearsal of interactions, the obsessive hope, the sense that this one person holds the answer to something you have been missing your entire life. It is falling in love with the idea of someone more than the reality of them.</p><p>Most people experience that occasionally and then it fades as real intimacy develops or does not. But for people with ADHD, OCD, or autism, it can become something much more powerful. Think about what limerence provides: novelty, uncertainty, emotional intensity, reward, anticipation, hope, and a source of focus. For a brain that struggles to engage with ordinary life, this is neurologically extraordinary. The person becomes the one thing your brain can think about reliably, obsessively, voluntarily for months.</p><p>For me, limerence was not just chemistry. It was need.</p><p>I grew up carrying childhood pain I did not understand. I had eczema and health issues that made me feel like my body was working against me. I felt different from other kids. I interrupted people. I missed social cues. I made impulsive comments. I was forgetful. I was late. I went on tangents. I had poor fashion sense, I was unathletic, and I was the smallest kid in my class. That led to insecurity and rejection. People with ADHD often have rejection sensitivity — they feel even mild rejection or criticism with intense emotional force. Over time that can make social situations painful enough that you begin to avoid them, which only increases isolation.</p><p>So I needed a place to put all that pain.</p><p>Romance became that place.</p><p>It was a story I could live inside. A face for hope. A fantasy that if the right person finally saw me and chose me, all the chaos of my life would make sense. Limerence gave me motivation without asking anything concrete of me. It was an unresolved question my brain could keep returning to. Do they like me? Could this be it? Maybe this is the thing that finally fixes me.</p><p>But that made me vulnerable.</p><p>At one point, I got romance scammed. By then, I had already spent years cycling through limerent states, falling for the possibility of people I barely knew, constructing elaborate internal versions of them out of minimal evidence, generous assumptions, and projection. I was lonely. I was desperate. I wanted intimacy.</p><p>So when I matched with someone on Hinge who later turned out to be a scammer using stolen photos, my brain did not care enough about the evidence. We were supposed to go on a date, but she got sick. A month later, during the fires in Southern California, I reached out again because she said she lived there. We talked on the phone. I worried about her. She laughed at my jokes. She made me feel like I mattered.</p><p>And that was enough.</p><p>The scammers understood something important about how my brain worked. They did not ask for money casually. They created urgency. Her mother needed an emergency medical procedure. The situation was time-sensitive. There was a specific amount of money needed and a specific deadline. It was happening now.</p><p>For the ADHD brain, urgency is not a warning sign. Urgency is the condition under which the brain finally activates.</p><p>So even though part of me knew something was off, I looked away from the evidence because acknowledging it would have meant losing the connection, losing the hope, losing the possibility that maybe this time someone had chosen me. So I sent money. More than once. Not because I was stupid, but because I was lonely. And because years of limerence had trained me to trust the feeling of connection more than the reality in front of me.</p><p>ADHD has almost gotten me killed more than once too.</p><p>In 2017, I was in Croatia with my family on an island called Lokrum. People were jumping off a cliff into the Adriatic Sea. I had never done a backflip off a cliff, but I did one anyway because I was thinking about a girl back home and wanted to impress her on social media. My brain did the calculation in about two minutes: I want attention, I will probably be fine, this will make me look interesting. In the moment, it felt harmless.</p><p>But I could have died.</p><p>I did a blind backflip off a ten-meter cliff into water of unknown depth in a foreign country, and I do not even swim that well. I did it twice.</p><p>Other times, I drove on the freeway sleep-deprived and drifted toward the concrete divider before jerking awake and correcting the wheel. In each case, I knew the safe choice. But seeing and doing happen in different parts of the brain, and those parts do not always communicate in time. That is what people misunderstand about ADHD impulsivity. It is not ignorance. It is acting even when you know better.</p><p>And that pattern sat underneath everything in my life: the gambling, the abandoned projects, the risky decisions, the sleep deprivation, the shame.</p><p>Because what undiagnosed ADHD creates over time is not just dysfunction. It creates shame.</p><p>When you grow up hearing that you are careless, lazy, irresponsible, selfish, not trying hard enough, eventually you believe it. You internalize your failures not as symptoms of a disorder but as proof that you are morally defective. That shame shaped my identity. People told me I was gifted, destined for great things, special. So when I kept failing in adulthood, it was deeply confusing. If I was so smart, why could I not just do what other people did? Why could everyone else make a to-do list, work through it, go home to their family, and go to bed, while I could not even keep my life together in basic ways?</p><p>The answer I settled on for years was character. I thought I was lazy. Undisciplined. Broken at the level of willpower.</p><p>But getting diagnosed with ADHD about a year and a half ago changed that.</p><p>It did not fix my life. But it helped me move on from shame. It gave me a new lens through which to see my past. Oh, that is why that kept happening. Oh, other people experience this too. The diagnosis did not change who I was. It changed what I was trying to fix.</p><p>Because the hardest part about having ADHD is that you keep trying to solve the wrong problem. You keep thinking the answer is to try harder, to become more disciplined, to finally mean it this time. But the gap was never about conviction. The gap was structural.</p><p>Discipline is what you exert. Structure is what you build.</p><p>And when you can know something completely and still not do it, when willpower has failed you more times than you can count, eventually you stop waiting for motivation to save you. You start building scaffolding.</p><p>The most useful concept I found for managing a brain like mine comes from Greek mythology. Odysseus, sailing home from Troy, knew his ship would pass the island of the sirens — creatures whose song was so beautiful that sailors would steer toward it and wreck on the rocks. He knew that once he heard the music, he would not be able to resist. So he did not rely on knowing better. He had his men tie him to the mast before they came into view, before the temptation arrived. He built the constraints before he needed them.</p><p>This is called self-binding.</p><p>And it is the most useful framework I have found for living with ADHD.</p><p>Self-binding means making the wrong choice harder before the moment arrives when you will want to make it. For me, that means having friends or family hold money for me. Paying rent upfront. Using browser extensions that hide news feeds. Locking apps on my phone and giving the password to my girlfriend. Keeping my environment understimulating. It is not that I can never get around those obstacles. It is that the friction is often enough to break the automatic, impulsive reach.</p><p>This approach is humbling, but it works.</p><p>Odysseus tied to the mast was screaming to be untied. But he survived because he had built the structure before the moment of weakness.</p><p>The other thing that has mattered is therapy.</p><p>Therapy gave me a relationship where I had to show up consistently and be honest about what was actually happening in my life. The accountability mattered. The space for reflection mattered. Being witnessed mattered. In some ways, therapy gave me the thing I had been trying to substitute with everything else — limerence, gambling, social media, fantasy, likes, attention. I had been searching, in one form or another, for someone to really see me.</p><p>Therapy does not erase that hunger, but it softens the loneliness enough that I can think more clearly and build a better life.</p><p>I still wake up late sometimes. I still get disorganized. I still lose things. There are still days when I know exactly what I should do and cannot make myself do it. But something fundamental has changed. I no longer believe that beneath all the chaos there is some moral defect in me. I no longer think the problem is my character. I know what my brain does now. I know what I need.</p><p>I do not need more willpower. I need better systems.</p><p>I do not need more self-hatred. I need more humility.</p><p>Humility to say: I know what I am like. I know where this goes. I am going to build around that accordingly.</p><p>And I have also had to accept that my life may never look like the life I once imagined for myself. Eventually I learned that this is okay. The point is not to become neurotypical. The point is to build a life that is livable, honest, and stable with the brain I actually have.</p><p>If you recognize yourself anywhere in this, I want you to know that you are not alone.</p><p>A lot of what looks like laziness is pain.</p><p>A lot of what looks like irresponsibility is executive dysfunction.</p><p>A lot of what looks like chaos is a nervous system trying to survive without the right map.</p><p>And sometimes the beginning of rebuilding your life is just finally learning the right name for what has been happening to you all along.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/what-having-adhd-feels-like-as-an</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:191550568</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2026 05:46:42 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/191550568/362584f7a1533c9927854154e9358d16.mp3" length="35099105" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>2194</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/191550568/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[What It's Like Having ADHD Part 1: Childhood]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder. The name attention deficit hyperactivity disorder reflects a deficit in the brain’s ability to regulate attention and behavior. Listen to my experience of ADHD as a child.</p><p>I'm Daniel Yee and I am a therapist in training at Notre Dame de Namur University in Belmont, California.📧 Email me at <a target="_blank" href="mailto:danielyeepsych@gmail.com">danielyeepsych@gmail.com</a> to talk about your unique circumstances</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/what-its-like-having-adhd-part-1</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:190156835</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 06 Mar 2026 23:27:11 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/190156835/f7dd0884b73cd7f0fd167af10cd394fc.mp3" length="9333165" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>583</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/190156835/882273c2952addde5627b4009af488df.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[Signs You're Dealing with a Narcissist]]></title><description><![CDATA[ <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/signs-youre-dealing-with-a-narcissist</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:183830150</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2026 20:11:14 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/183830150/560b139b00c7ec0f66a34384181017f6.mp3" length="17075033" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>1067</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/183830150/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[How to Heal Trauma for a Fuller Life]]></title><description><![CDATA[ <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/how-to-heal-trauma-for-a-fuller-life</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:183369049</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 03 Jan 2026 18:50:20 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/183369049/2419f9b0dde840eeb29656ce205b9ed0.mp3" length="20497701" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>1281</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/183369049/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title><![CDATA[Why Therapy Alone Is Not Enough]]></title><description><![CDATA[ <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/why-therapy-alone-is-not-enough-from</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:183007569</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 30 Dec 2025 23:48:55 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/183007569/138843bcd1fcbd74dbe5c58b9d34e640.mp3" length="19983193" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>1249</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/183007569/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[4 Maladaptive Beliefs That Lead to Anxiety]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>#1 I need everyone to like me</strong>Some people are not going to like you and that’s okay. You’ll find a few people who like you for who you are and THAT IS ENOUGH!<strong>#2 It’s catastrophic if things don’t go according to plan</strong>Unfortunate things happen in life and that’s okay. Maybe you want to get married by 30, but you had a breakup or maybe you wanted to get that promotion but it went to someone else. Despite what it looks like on social media, these things happen to everyone.<strong>#3 If something is dangerous, continuing to dwell on it will help</strong>The world is full of dangers and snares and that's okay. Worrying about these things rarely helps. Take 10 minutes to develop a plan, but after that, let it go and just live your life. If it’s out of your control, it’s out of your control.<strong>#4 I need to have everything together in order to be worthy</strong>You are good at some things and bad at other things and that's okay. Don’t compare yourself to others too much. Just focus on being the best version of yourself!</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/4-maladaptive-beliefs-that-lead-to</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:146155012</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 01 Jul 2024 05:44:31 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/146155012/fbaecf904ccb76d92e43fabe1be36be6.mp3" length="934703" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>58</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/146155012/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[Men's Mental Health Awareness Month]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>40% of men have never spoken to anyone about their mental health. There is a growing need for mental health resources for men, but there is a shortage of licensed professional counselors to help them. Men's mental health is often stigmatized, leading to a lack of open discussion and delayed help-seeking. Loneliness and social isolation are contributing factors to men's mental health struggles, exacerbated by the rise of social media. Men are more likely to experience schizophrenia, substance abuse and death by suicide. Early intervention is crucial in addressing mental health issues, especially in children and young people. Eating disorders also affect men, but they are often overlooked or stigmatized. </p><p>Chapters 0:00 - 1:59 The Need for Mental Health Resources for Men2:00 - 2:28 Downplaying Symptoms of Mental Health Struggles2:29 - 3:02 Suicide Rates and Mental Health Struggles Among Men and Teens3:03 - 8:25 Social Isolation and Loneliness in the Digital Age8:26 - 10:30 Early Intervention: Catching Mental Health Problems Before It's Too Late </p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/mens-mental-health-awareness-month</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:145686229</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sun, 16 Jun 2024 05:45:54 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/145686229/e67b353affc5c4b070c9bee6fbc1386b.mp3" length="10082576" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>630</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/145686229/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[Pros and Cons of Capitalism with Jonathan Anstett]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>00:00 - 09:21 Jonathan's Journey of Beginning to Question Capitalism</p><p>09:20 - 16:21 The Impact of Industrial Revolution</p><p>16:22 - 32:40 Exploitation Possible in Capitalism</p><p>32:41- 39:26 The Influence of Neoliberalism</p><p>39:27 - 48:27 The Role of the Market in Decision-Making</p><p>48:28 - 54:24 Impact of Capitalism on Social Structures and Mobility</p><p>54:25 - 01:05:24 Questioning the Assumptions of Capitalism</p><p>01:05:25 - 01:11:01 How Does Capitalism Affect the Big Picture of Our Lives</p><p>01:11:02 - 01:19:47 How Capitalism Alienates Us From Each Other</p><p>01:19:48 - 01:25:43 The Layer of Human Psychological Needs and Social Well-Being</p><p>01:25:44 - 01:30:59 Antagonism Experienced by the Poor</p><p>01:31:00 - 01:31:30 Critical Thinking In Evaluating What World You Want to Be In</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/pros-and-cons-of-capitalism-with</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:145541346</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 11 Jun 2024 18:14:54 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/145541346/b89fe62b9a64e78d07cb27a3e30d5447.mp3" length="87972196" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>5498</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/145541346/26c7ce5428b7688776f318d71cbb33d5.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[Laura Zhu: Relationships, Losing Friends, Therapy, Psychology, and Parents]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>Laura Zhu has a psychology degree from UC Berkeley and is wise beyond her years. This is our conversation discussing relationships, losing friends, therapy, psychology, and parents.</p><p>Timestamps:</p><p>00:00:00 - 00:01:05 Changing through pain</p><p>00:01:06 - 00:02:55 Grieving the loss of relationships and innocence</p><p>00:02:56 - 00:04:15 Being desperate for love</p><p>00:04:16 - 00:10:40 Realizations through therapy</p><p>00:10:41 - 00:16:55 Being unable to admit fault</p><p>00:16:56 - 00:25:22 The danger of black and white thinking</p><p>00:25:23 - 00:28:27 How to combat black and white thinking</p><p>00:28:28 - 00:30:35 Why everyone should do therapy</p><p>00:30:36 - 00:36:45 Idealizing love, life, people and relationships</p><p>00:36:46 - 00:42:00 How to not be afraid of relationships falling apart</p><p>00:42:01 - 00:51:34 How to be more balanced / Should we be balanced?</p><p>00:51:35 - 01:04:06 Darth Vader’s choice</p><p>01:04:07 - 01:09:35 Doing the right thing even when suffering</p><p>01:09:36 - 01:15:47 Dealing with parents and intergenerational trauma</p><p>01:15:48 - 01:17:17 Outro</p><p>Unfortunately, I accidentally deleted my camera’s footage when trying to clear memory on my phone, so there’s no camera switching in this episode.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/laura-zhu-relationships-losing-friends</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:141784898</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sun, 18 Feb 2024 06:11:39 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/141784898/2b27e1bc3978b45d19ead85abdf0e875.mp3" length="74201270" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>4638</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/141784898/02043d445be30eec80c6b0458cc261a0.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[Paul Shen: Immigrating to America, Loyalty to Citibank, 2008 Financial Crisis, Pastoring and Heart Failure]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>The following is a very special episode of Defining Moments, as I got to interview Paul Shen, who is my uncle. He’s a retired financial services executive who worked at Citibank for 36 years before transitioning into being a full-time pastor. We discuss some important moments in his life such as seamingly being miraculously healed of a heart defect at birth, immigrating from Japan to the United States at just 16, getting re-assigned positions mid-career, losing most of his net worth in the 2008 financial crisis, having his heart problems resurface, pastoring in his 60’s and just recently being diagnosed with end-stage heart failure. Paul has led an inspiring life that has impacted thousands of people and we get to hear a little bit of the behind the scenes of his life in this episode. The theme of this episode is the difference between our generations (Boomers and Millennials).</p><p>Intro 0:00:00 - 0:02:30 Growing up in Japan 0:02:31 - 0:06:55 College in America 0:11:12 - 0:21:50Working for Citibank 0:21:51 - 0:36:55Meme Stocks 0:36:56 - 0:38:562008 Financial Crisis 0:38:57 - 0:44:23Loyalty to Citibank 0:44:24 - 0:45:25Transitioning to Full-Time Pastoring 0:45:26 - 0:59:20 End-stage Heart Failure Diagnosis 0:59:21 - 1:06:09 Lessons in Crisis 1:06:10 - 1:11:08Outro 1:11:09 - 1:11:43</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/paul-shen-immigrating-to-america</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:138287974</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 28 Dec 2023 01:00:02 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/138287974/1a5f8a92e6cd0a474869715d04419968.mp3" length="68844282" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>4303</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/138287974/77e98240f063c7d5b4987e318bef1b99.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[Dominik Engonge: Assassination, Torture, Running for Your Life]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>Dominik and his sister were sitting on the couch watching TV when four masked men forced their way in and executed their father. They tortured Dominik by beating him, firing rounds next to his ear, rupturing his eardrum, and stabbing him in the buttock. They dragged his sister into a room and raped her for 30 minutes and then threatened to kill them if they didn’t leave the country. How does one recover from such horrific experiences? He now lives as a refugee in Greece, but cannot find a stable job, since he doesn’t speak the language well.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/dominik-itongo-engonge-assassination</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:139381106</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sun, 03 Dec 2023 20:48:24 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/139381106/031eb5dff8710121aab111268a67b484.mp3" length="69747085" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>4359</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/139381106/fae5547689fd4b25301720b510da6044.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[Anonymous: Abuse → Limerence → Misogyny]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we hear how having an abusive mother and an absent father sent a 4.0 student down a path of limerence and narcissistic defenses, resulting in a life of failure, mental illness, suffering, and loneliness. He became obsessed with his calculus professor after she briefly was the supportive parental figure he never had. For eight years, he’s been obsessively trying to connect to her in any way possible, unable to get her out of his mind every waking hour and often even in his sleep. He dreams about her at least every other week and hopes to be able to talk to her just once more before he dies, despite a very clear message that she never wants to interact with him ever again. This phenomenon is known as limerence.</p><p>To better understand limerence, check out my series on limerence here:</p><p>In his desperation, he turned to the ideologies of narcissists and misogynists such as Andrew Tate for hope.</p><p>How can broken, unwanted men develop healthy masculinity? Is it possible to have a decent life after childhood abuse? What should one do when medication and therapy are not effective? Hear how he has tried to build resilience despite these challenges.</p><p>The biggest takeaway from this episode is that the words we say to children and the emotional support we give them determine the trajectory of their lives.<a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/tumnulit/posts/pfbid036nJ4A7JynLxUTxHchBU1LTA3i2PHQAufHsaycojz9QLDa62rvZyVDa6e6cF3LtNSl"><strong>Words </strong></a><a target="_blank" href="https://www.facebook.com/tumnulit/posts/pfbid036nJ4A7JynLxUTxHchBU1LTA3i2PHQAufHsaycojz9QLDa62rvZyVDa6e6cF3LtNSl">💬 by Tum Ulit</a></p><p><strong>                   Listen on Spotify:</strong></p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/anonymous-abuse-limerence-misogyny</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:138278090</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 06 Nov 2023 04:06:37 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/138278090/43006732defe43ad248791f59a2968b4.mp3" length="71213000" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>5934</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/138278090/133f2af0e3e4f098897cdc0d56a00df5.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[Angel Chavez: Drug Dealing, Racially Profiled, Arrested, Stabbed, Jiu-Jitsu & Joy of Doing Laundry]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p><a target="_blank" href="https://www.instagram.com/angelmuthafuckinchavez10p/">Angel Chavez</a> grew up on the streets of Oakland and his life took a turn from being an A-student to dealing drugs and eventually becoming addicted himself. He has been the victim of discrimination, but pushed through and achieved his dream of opening a tattoo shop only to lose it all after being stabbed by his brother. He now teaches jiu-jitsu and creates digital art. Listen to his story and be in awe of his resilience and positive attitude toward the hardships of life.</p><p>0:49-6:39 Being an Action Extra in Hollywood6:40-10:42 Training Kids in Jiu Jitsu10:43-11:12 Dangers of the Chokehold11:13-14:34 Trying to Prove Yourself Physically in School14:35-17:41 The Pressure to Impress Other Kids17:52-20:25 Why Pain is Necessary For Growth20:38-22:37 How Do You Teach Accountability and Responsibility?22:51-26:19 How I Fell in Love With Jiu-Jitsu26:20-28:24 How Jiu-Jitsu Changes You28:32-34:20 Getting Arrested for No Reason34:48-36:16 Defending My 2nd Amendment Rights36:17-40:36 We All Go Through Hardships40:37-42:20 Why Those Cops Were Lucky42:21-47:26 Growing Up in Oakland47:27-49:46 Fitting In49:47-50:25 We Are All Equipped to Succeed50:26-53:00 Identity Comes From Environment53:01-55:24 Having Someone to Talk To55:25-57:40 Near Death Experience + Losing My Dream Job57:41-1:00:00 Giving and Receiving Love1:00:01-1:01:40 Life is Precious1:01:41-1:02:39 Being Homeless1:02:40-1:04:06 Make Someone Else’s Day a Little Better1:04:07-1:20:14 Relationships and Breakups1:20:15-1:28:25 Being Stabbed By My Brother1:28:26-1:33:19 Addiction and Dopamine1:33:20-1:37:14 Selling Drugs1:37:15-1:41:05 Trying Drugs and Getting Addicted1:41:06-1:41:54 Appreciating the Little Things1:41:55-1:44:41 Life Lessons1:44:42-1:46:22 Influences1:46:23-1:47:59 The Impact of Jiu Jitsu1:48:00-1:53:02 There’s No Lying in Jiu Jitsu1:53:03-1:55:01 It’s Not Gonna Be Easy1:55:02-2:00:00 Conspiracy Theories2:00:01-2:05:35 Our Rights and Privileges2:05:36-2:10:50 Government Corruption2:10:51-2:17:42 The Joy of Doing Laundry2:17:43-2:25:16 Freedoms</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Daniel Yee Psychology at <a href="https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">danielyeepsych.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://danielyeepsych.substack.com/p/episode-1-angel-chavez</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:138205408</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Daniel Yee Psychology]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 23 Oct 2023 00:40:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/138205408/927ddd04fb94efc45b92bf6cd6dff496.mp3" length="175248997" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Daniel Yee Psychology</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>8762</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/1904975/post/138205408/05994fb9cd2f423414cb480127ad2aa8.jpg"/></item></channel></rss>