‘Diagnosed psychopath’ explains shocking reality of what being drunk is like for her

If you were wondering what a night on the ale with a diagnosed psychopath looks like, this woman is more than happy to fill you in on her usual behaviour while on a bender.

Content creator Vic Path, better known online as @victhepath, often shares videos on social media which give people an insight into what it’s like living with antisocial personality disorder (ASPD).

The mental health condition is characterised by impulsive, irresponsible and often criminal behaviour.

According to the NHS, a person with ASPD can be manipulative, deceitful and reckless, while going about life without giving two hoots about anyone else’s feelings.

Psychopaths are considered to have a severe form of ASPD, leading to Vic describing herself as a ‘diagnosed’ one.

Vic has openly admitted she ‘can’t understand love’ which has impacted her ability to forge a meaningful relationship, as well as discussing the fact that she doesn’t have the bandwidth to experience certain emotions.

But in the same breath, she also says she can ‘cry on demand’ – which goes to show how complex it can be to deal with a psychopath.

And it seems that a lot of people think that throwing alcohol into the mix would be like pouring fuel onto a fire, however, Vic says it is actually the opposite.

In a recent video posted on TikTok, she detailed how she behaves after hitting the booze.

The 22-year-old, who boasts 277,300 followers, began by pointing out that she is speaking on her own experience with the hard stuff, rather than on behalf of all psychopaths.

Vic says her pals can barely tell the difference between when she is drunk and sober (TikTok/@victhepath)

Vic says her pals can barely tell the difference between when she is drunk and sober (TikTok/@victhepath)

“Drunk me is extremely similar to sober me,” Vic said. “It’s actually very difficult to tell the difference between me drunk and me sober.

“My friends have a really hard time knowing if I’m drunk or not, and there are only a few tells that I give away which will let them know that I’m really drunk.”

Vic explained that like the majority of people, she’s quite the chatterbox when she’s had a tipple and she often ends up volunteering the news that she is three sheets to the wind to her pals.

She continued: “When I’m really drunk, I’ll just say it. I’ll just tell my friends that I’m drunk upfront.

“I’ll just tell people that I’m drunk unprompted because I like to talk when I’m drunk…so I talk a lot more.”

She explained that as she doesn't have any inhibitions in the first place, her behaviour remains consistent (Getty Stock Image)

She explained that as she doesn’t have any inhibitions in the first place, her behaviour remains consistent (Getty Stock Image)

Apparently, the state of her eyes are also another telltale sign that Vic might have had a few too many, as she explained they ‘look completely empty, gone’.

And although a lot of people end up losing all motor skills and sense of coordination when they’ve took the boozing too far, the content creator claims that hers get a boost.

“I get really good at drinking games,” she went on. “The more drunk I am, the better I get – and I know that sounds cliche and I don’t know why it happens, but I just get really good when I’m drunk.”

Vic then showed a screenshot of a text message which one of her mates had sent her while they were debriefing about the weekend.

It read: “I didn’t think you were that hammered.”

Vic explained that this demonstrated the point she made about her pals struggling to distinguish between drunk her and sober her.

She continued: “She had no idea that I was so drunk. I was wilding out, I spent the whole next morning throwing up, but she had no idea that I was that level of drunk.

“Because I just don’t give it off, there’s no signs.”

Vic then revealed why she thinks it is so difficult for people to realise that she has had a lot of alcohol.

“I don’t do things that I wouldn’t do sober, I don’t say things that I wouldn’t say sober,” she said.

“Really, the only reason that I drink is that it gives me a sense of euphoria.

“I actually do feel good when I drink, I feel happier. Everything becomes more fun when I’m drunk. So that’s why I do drink even though there is really no tells in my behaviour.

“As a psychopath, I don’t really have issues with confidence or embarrassment, I don’t really follow social constructs…so adding alcohol to the mix really doesn’t change my mindset at all.

“Because I don’t have inhibitions to begin with, alcohol doesn’t really lift any inhibitions for me.”

Featured Image Credit: TikTok/victhepath

Topics: Mental HealthHealthTikTokAlcoholFood And Drink

Diagnosed psychopath explains the basic emotions that she 'doesn't feel at all' and can't understand

Diagnosed psychopath explains the basic emotions that she ‘doesn’t feel at all’ and can’t understand

She talked about four common emotions she doesn’t feel

Joe Harker

Joe Harker

A woman who says she is a diagnosed psychopath explained some of the standard emotions which she doesn’t feel.

She’s previously talked about some of the morbid interests she had as a kid

and on TikTok goes by the name of @victhepath.

Explaining that she has been diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) and is hoping to raise awareness of it, she’s made a whole load of videos explaining the world from her perspective.

Vic did say that she calls herself a psychopath even though you can’t get a formal diagnosis for that as she identifies ‘much more with the traits of a psychopath than I do with the traits of a sociopath’.

One of her more popular videos had her running through some of the emotions she didn’t feel which most of us would.

She said she did feel many emotions, but they were 'muted' compared to other people. (TikTok/@victhepath)

She said she did feel many emotions, but they were ‘muted’ compared to other people. (TikTok/@victhepath)

Starting off by stressing that there were plenty of emotions she did feel, even if they were ‘muted’, she then went on to talk about the ones she didn’t feel.

“When I think about these emotions I feel like my brain is going through a blender, like I can’t conceptualise it,” she explained.

“It’s like telling you to think of a colour that doesn’t exist, it’s impossible because you’ve never experienced that colour so you don’t know how to reference it.

“Some emotions that I don’t feel at all are emotional empathy, love, regret and anxiety.”

She then told her followers she had ‘a complete misconception of what empathy is’ as she’d not experienced it.

The TikToker added that she didn’t feel love for anyone, ‘not my friends, not my family, not my boyfriends’ and said that ‘the concept of love is so foreign to me’ that she just didn’t understand it.

Regret was an emotion she said she understood more as she could get what someone meant when they were talking about regrets, but ‘I just don’t feel it’.

She felt that dovetailed with a lack of anxiety, saying: “I feel like regret and anxiety happen together, and anxiety again it doesn’t make sense to me when people talk about it.

“I think I can understand what people mean when they say ‘oh my thoughts are working against me’ or ‘I’m scared to do this thing’, but I’ve never actually experienced that.

“So I’m not really sure if my concept of it is correct or not.”

Naturally, this video made many of her followers even more curious, as people asked why she would seek out romantic partners if she didn’t feel love.

In another video, she said the question confused her as she thought it was ‘obvious you can still enjoy something without being in love with it’.

Saying that relationships between pretty much anyone ‘starts off with two people enjoying each other then it grows into love’, she said that if you ‘just take the last step of falling in love with each other out of the equation’ a relationship would otherwise work ‘exactly the same’.

Featured Image Credit: tiktok/victhepath

Topics: HealthMental HealthTikTok

Diagnosed psychopath explains how she makes herself cry on demand and why she does it

Diagnosed psychopath explains how she makes herself cry on demand and why she does it

Diagnosed psychopath Vic Path has shared what makes her cry

Anish Vij

Anish Vij

A diagnosed psychopath has revealed how she is able to make herself cry and why she would want to make herself cry in the first place.

Content creator Vic Path spreads awareness of antisocial personality disorder (APD) on her TikTok page (@victhepath).

Psychopaths usually have a severe form of APD, which is characterised by impulsive, irresponsible and often criminal behaviour, according to the NHS.

Diagnosed psychopath Vic Path has shared what makes her cry (TikTok/@victhepath)

Diagnosed psychopath Vic Path has shared what makes her cry (TikTok/@victhepath)

In Britain, eight percent of men and two percent of women in the criminal justice system have high levels of psychopathy, Psychopathy Is’ latest stats from 2020 show.

Meanwhile, Vic has insisted that ‘psychopaths do have feelings’.

“Our emotions are just different than other people,” she said.

“For the most part, they’re very muted as compared to a normal person, and there are some emotions that we don’t have at all, but overall we do feel things, we do have emotions.

“We can be sad over things, we can feel upset, and the biggest reason that I have cried in my life is over stress.”

On why she cries on demand, she explained: “I find that crying really helps me reduce the stress levels in my body.

Vic shares APD awareness videos online (TikTok/@victhepath)

Vic shares APD awareness videos online (TikTok/@victhepath)

“So I try to cry when I can tell that I’m stressed out, and what l’ll do to induce myself to cry is I’ll watch something or I’ll read something or l’ll hear something that evokes emotion that makes me sad and upset, and if I concentrate on that feeling, I can make myself cry.”

Vic said that the ‘things that will make me cry are tied to emotions that I already have’.

She continued: “Because I didn’t have any love for my grandpa, it didn’t make me sad that he was dead, and because I don’t have empathy, my family members being sad over his death didn’t make me sad.

“So overall I just didn’t have a reason to cry. Nothing about his death evoked any emotions within me or played on any emotions that I already had.

“But when I cry over movies, it’s typically because I’m crying over something in the movie that evoked an emotion that I already had underlying.

“So for example, one of the things that makes me the saddest in life is the fact that l’ve never loved anybody, I’ve never been in love, I don’t know if I’ll ever be in love, I have a lot of trouble actually connecting with people, and I feel lonely all the time.

“So my favourite movie to cry over is the first 10 minutes of Up because it’s such a beautiful love story, and it’s something that I wish that I could experience.

“So watching these two people meet as children, fall in love over their life, create a home together, create a business together, grow old together, and specifically when Ellie dies, how sad Carl is, that makes me really really sad, because I wish that I could love somebody that much or that somebody could love me that much and I could feel that love.”

Featured Image Credit: tiktok/victhepath

Topics: TikTokHealthMental Health

Diagnosed psychopath reveals the common human action that might show someone is one

Diagnosed psychopath reveals the common human action that might show someone is one

M.E Thomas discussed the one human action that she’s ‘never been comfortable with’

Lucy Devine

Lucy Devine

A diagnosed psychopath has revealed the common human action that might indicate someone has a psychopathic personality.

M.E Thomas is a lawyer, author and a diagnosed psychopath, and regularly discusses her experiences.

The common human action that could indicate someone is a psychopath (Getty Stock Photo)

The common human action that could indicate someone is a psychopath (Getty Stock Photo)

The NHS explains that a ‘psychopath’ is someone with an antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) which means they lack empathy, are manipulative and ‘often have a total disregard for the consequences of their actions’.

They add: “People with an antisocial personality can sometimes pose a threat to others because they can be violent. Most people with psychosis are more likely to harm themselves than others.”

According to awareness group PsychopathyIs, around 30 percent of people have some level of psychopathic traits, though only about 0.6 percent of Brits could actually be classed as a psychopath.

Speaking about her experience, Thomas appeared on the What It Was Like podcast where she discussed one human emotion that she’s ‘never been comfortable with’, explaining that she often wondered if it was simply a method of manipulation.

Most of us feel empathy when we see another person in tears, but Thomas explained: “I’ve never felt comfortable with people crying. So people would cry and I’d be like, ‘is this kind of a manipulation tactic?’

“And then if it kept going and it kind of seems serious, I thought ‘wow, I did not see this coming, they have definitely jumped off the tracks of what I projected them to say or do today.'”

Discussing how she felt when her own sister would cry, she added: “My sister cried a lot too and I would just be like, ‘I don’t understand why she’s constantly leaking from crying’ it’s like everyday there’s a new leak from her, like mouth and nose, even her eyes, you know.”

At this point, podcast host Julian Morgans, interrupted and said: “Even that language there you know, you’re so far removed from this experience of crying.”

Thomas said she's never been comfortable with crying (Getty Stock Photo)

Thomas said she’s never been comfortable with crying (Getty Stock Photo)

Thomas, who wrote the book Confessions of a Sociopath, A Life Spent Hiding in Plain Sight, has previously explained how she struggles to ‘relate to [her] own emotions’.

Writing in Newsweek in 2022, she said: “I also have traditionally struggled to relate to my own emotions, much less the emotions of other people.

“I had learned as a very young child that people were often repulsed by me—by my chronic need to know which they labeled ‘nosiness,’ by the way I could read their minds and use their hidden fears and insecurities to manipulate them, and by the way I showed no empathy to those whom I guiltlessly used.”

Featured Image Credit: Getty Stock Images

Topics: HealthMental Health

Woman explains 'shocking' things eating only sardines for 3 months did to her body

Woman explains ‘shocking’ things eating only sardines for 3 months did to her body

She said people think she’s ‘absolutely nuts’ for the diet

Jess Battison

Jess Battison

If you were to eat the same thing for three months, it’s likely you might choose your favourite meal, maybe a pasta dish or a good hearty stir fry. Or perhaps you’d go for something quite simple that you wouldn’t get sick of.

But you probably wouldn’t choose a stinky tin of fish, right?

Well, prepare yourself for the thought of that, as a woman explained the ‘shocking’ things eating just sardines for three months did to her body. Yep, sardines and nothing else.

Jane Crummett was struggling with her health due to extreme foot pain, inflammation and food addiction when she decided to make a dramatic lifestyle change.

The 62-year-old retired military therapist weighed roughly 17 stone at her peak, and suffered from plantar fasciitis, which made walking tough.

Crummett reckons it's worked wonders. (Youtube/Dr. Boz [Annette Bosworth, MD])

Crummett reckons it’s worked wonders. (Youtube/Dr. Boz [Annette Bosworth, MD])

So, in 2020, Crummett adopted a carnivore diet and lost 65 pounds, but she ended up hitting a plateau and her weight crept back on. It was time to try something else.

In May, she hit a weight of 14 stone and decided to try out Flordia physician Annette Bosworth’s 72-hour sardine fast. The method from ‘Dr Boz’ is supposed to jump-start metabolism and send a person’s body into advanced ketosis to rapidly burn fat for energy.

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But the woman didn’t leave it at three days, and has stuck to the fish.

“People think I’m absolutely nuts,” she told Bosworth on her YouTube show last month.

Crummett explained she eats four cans of sardines every day and supplement with MCT oil.

Consuming around 1,500 daily calories (the NHS advises the average man needs 2,500kcal and the average woman 2,000kcal), she said she’s ‘not starving herself’. The woman claimed that her oily fish only diet had restored her energy, reduced her blood sugar and relieved her pain.

She's hooked. (Getty Stock)

She’s hooked. (Getty Stock)

Crummett also said she lost 12 pounds of fluid in the first two weeks of this regime.

A UK doc from healthcare company Jude pointed out that mercury can accumulate in the body despite sardines being low in it in small amounts as well as pointing out other potential downsides.

“Firstly, [sardines] contain zero fiber. Fiber is crucial for gut health and digestion. A diet based solely on sardines could lead to constipation,” Dr. Masarat Jilani told Surrey Live. “The way sardines are canned means they are usually preserved in either salt or oil.

“If they are salted sardines, you will be consuming an excessive amount of sodium, which can raise your blood pressure and put strain on your kidneys.”

The NHS stresses the importance of a healthy, balanced diet to help maintain good health including at least five portions of fruit and vegetables every day. It’s important to speak to a doctor or registered dietitian if you’ve got concerns about your diet.

Featured Image Credit: Youtube/Dr. Boz [Annette Bosworth, MD] / Getty stock

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