09/11/2025
The video shows a contrast between the question “How can you tell if someone has a personality disorder?” and the comment section full of aggression, contempt, and mockery.
From a therapeutic perspective, such behavior may reveal certain dysfunctional personality traits that, if persistent and intense, make life difficult and can appear in various personality disorders.
💬 Comments of this kind suggest a low level of empathy and problems with impulse control.
Psychologically, they can indicate:
defensive mechanisms (attack instead of reflection),
projection (attributing one’s own weaknesses to others),
or so-called social hostility, typical for narcissistic or antisocial personality structures.
😐 Comments like those shown in the video may reveal:
low empathy,
problems with emotional control,
projection and defensive mechanisms,
and a tendency to devalue others to maintain one’s own sense of worth.
However, this doesn’t necessarily mean that those who write such comments have a personality disorder. Although, it also shows how the internet encourages the expression of unprocessed emotions and dysfunctional traits.
Here are types of these comments:
“People like this are pathetic.”
“What nonsense — only idiots believe that.”
“You must have serious problems if you think like that.”
“What a joke, people will believe anything these days.”
“Another example of how soft society has become.”
“This is just laughable — get a grip.”
“Everyone else is so toxic and manipulative.”
“People today are all narcissists, not me.”
👩🎓From a psychotherapeutic perspective, such comments often:
✔️act as a defense mechanism against internal discomfort or shame,
✔️show low frustration tolerance and poor emotional regulation,
✔️reflect projection (blaming or criticizing others for traits one dislikes in oneself),
✔️and serve to restore a fragile sense of self-worth through putting others down.
They do not automatically indicate a personality disorder, but they do reveal unprocessed emotions, lack of empathy, and difficulty with reflective thinking — meaning, difficulty pausing to understand one’s own motives or the emotions of others.
Your therapist,
Sylwia