Skip to main content

tv   Mindset Argentina Iceland  Al Jazeera  January 15, 2024 4:30am-5:00am AST

4:30 am
the daybreak of iceland, red chemise pendency to west streams of molten rock. i'm size began to flow into the fishing town of green dick. this is the 2nd time since november that the houses are standing empty here. it's people have to flee, offer a surge of seismic activity. iceland, civil protection agency has raises a lot system to its highest level signaling home to people, communities and the environment. it was only last november that the same area was evacuated of some full 1000 residents. huge cracks had a paid every with forcing the popular tourist destination of the blue lagoon spa result to shut down his rescue as what quickly to build barriers to protect the nearby jew single power station. people were eventually allowed to return back to the homes 6 weeks later. but it's clear this seismic activity is far from over here tomorrow,
4:31 am
and we're working with scientists and continuously assessing the situation. and what we're looking at a lava flow model to understand the volcano. so and look at what actions can be taken to protect the infrastructure that could be at risk iceland location above a volcanic hot spot and then we'll stop. land take means us quakes are a common occurrence. it average is one or option every 4 to 5 years. but this particular part of the country has experienced 5 and less than 2 years, causing widespread disruption and hazards each time the ground trembles. sonya jago, elders era. a german saucer or the salt says joins thousands of people protesting against the far right. local media have reported right wing groups and pull the titian's met late last year to discuss plans of deporting millions of migraines from germany. schultz and his foreign minister over among the thousands gavin and helps them for the test will also help of inventing the getting that and
4:32 am
then taking a stand against the far right then cause officially crowned the nation's new king. people waited outside the palace in copenhagen to witness the to start and refrigerate the tense gave his 1st speech after he was proclaimed the new monica was a straight in life. many has been named queen collins, and then you can find more use analysis on our website the on counting the costs 2024 set to be the unit of elections, lots of stores for the global economy under the umbrella. so much potential political change and we'll look at the impacts of the rising cost of shifting due
4:33 am
to tensions in the red sea. counting the costs on al jazeera who will lose the freshman anxiety around the rod, the solutions to these mental health crisis week school. the big questions and unique approach to bursting us on this week. sure, argentina is most like oh, just the cabinet anywhere on it. we make 3 therapist with a very different approach. and the last one is the highest rates of anti depressant, music in europe. we also get prescription drugs are the bad. so you, one of the world copies country is mine 6. it's actually they not been born authorities,
4:34 am
while others might be out parsing. psychologist ignacio lubarski is running root therapy. tonight's topic freedom. but i mean, that is, you know, what a christina e is a, would it be support fumey and psychologist doesn't want his people's to think or reflect through long so that will be dancing the normal way to go down. last the i'm on that to do the same friends, those if you use at the same time going into a lot of phone thing. the c and d, i'm on the, you'll see on both him perfect. you. there's all know that on yeah, you had brought psycho tango about 20 years ago, ignacio joined forces with a tangling mazda and a fellow psychologist to create this unique fusion to origin. tenants. right. passions look like,
4:35 am
love it in the i'm on the door stuff coming to know when young and today and what about meant that you needed to know how you thought i'd love it the that that would the guy that i saw the door and i think what i'll see, ya know, what do you think people looking for it in the session? one nice movie blade also and don't set the notable that they can become what it is at the bottom of my, at the bottom of a sort of some technical spit on them. and also the home of mine or less than see the connex young ladies. i see on the phone. i know i know the on the girl is. this is a via linkedin. see on there she goes. i know this is the side of the moon. looks that i'm not a sealing video, but i meant the clinic. that's one. let me check. okay. must, you know that i can think of, you know, single done. loyce is looking different. see you later. and then move the next you
4:36 am
on on boss. hang on the lemme easy now, perfect. i'm other line in the session, the participants web line phones. when i ask ignacio why? well, be safe. i have to experience the magic for myself, right? yeah. okay. don't worry. it's all under control that that makes me feel very much of a, relax please, and feel the breathing. fill your breathing. breathing of nissan. ok. you are already practically dancing and kind of walk a though the forward. s. what the kind of a quite this too is just like a meditation or exactly because tango is on in our dance. me as a dance moves come to an ent ignacio off to me how it felt. it kind of feels like
4:37 am
a rocking in a caribbean. you're buying it if it's quite a unusual experience. i've never really thought about dancing with a blindfold on, but it certainly has some form of therapy, the quality. what you just said is perfect because the baby know when i have a baby know i do this, this movement. no, i look on the baby. i take care ok. now then we come in some time ago and we just dance when we were babies with our mother. it's exactly the same thing. thank you for the education last year. the project quite
4:38 am
a left field in color full, but there are more of a 130000 psychologist here in argentina. and i'm going to make one who of visible typical therapeutic approach. a large number of therapy to switch any ships to neighborhood of border series called palermo, tori, a victoria below as a prominent doubles as a consulting group sustain dollars. now she provides mostly middle class patients with psychoanalysis, argentina's most popular therapy here in terms of demand. would you say that you completely booked out, say, think, and so i got to find a way to what the sounds like those same on us and nothing on us. you what victoria says therapy is a process that can last the years. psycho analysis focuses on the unconscious mind
4:39 am
drains and memories to help patients gain new insight. i'll let victoria explain that again. say, i don't know, but i will, emma, you know, be a 2nd wife. 30 side of louder. yeah. and see if i seen that, you know, i mean no problem though it will send me her name fine. so yeah, you a call my associate number, let's see on. got it. okay. they by sally, this is the, i'm a because when i looked, he says when i, when i don't come, you know, can be if and when the what you know, sorry. tell them that the boys who are those as a sure i'm gonna tell them what like ones to read. no one, let them pissed off. but that isn't that i don't think of for the stuff like them in the us that come on when other one know if i city safe 30. i mean take a movie garden, i look the books by the austrian cycle. i'm with sigmund freud to be popular argentina, 1st century. waves of european immigration created a population in search of identity and well meaning. and now in the age of
4:40 am
quick fixes many odds of teens, a still willing to spain use on journeys of self discovery. along that, but obviously you know, something out loud enough. i've seen them continue my something without going to have them involved at the in the say it then you must have it up. yeah. yeah. i've been insane. the psychologist, it usually it finally, when you know you have a problem that you have to navigate like this is on year of going every week. so you know, many, many years and something that really actually quite scamming me see in those into us on the lot of the, well they, the charlotte, so i see in the ninety's that a me analysis on the thing was say they'll say on when he's done any there been times where i felt sad. i felt angry and i've gone in saying the psychologist. and that's because you know, in my personal last place,
4:41 am
my parents died in hospital separately before i turn 35. as a journalist, a come to ranging from medic, incidents in a terrorist attack that goes off of the genocide. so i give a name to seek help when you're in trouble, but you know, every week as a form of self improvement. i just started with that's with a still, it's hard to ignore the needs the therapy in today's well anxiety, depression, and other psychological illnesses have skyrocketed since the pandemic and the mental health process has been stopped here to as auditing. i enjoyed some of the world's longest locked downs. the south american nation is no stranger to adversity . military, coups dictatorships, devastation, economic recession. in a country facing financial terminal and one of the world's highest inflation rates . those who can't afford private therapists can still access psychological health.
4:42 am
at this community health center on the outskirts of bonus hires, the tools are open to everyone. in this community, one of the particular names that can say, a hockey, i will just eat those people. it but it really might be gusts, getting a feel got combine yet a i thought i saw a lot of your lives here. some given what tools people who and associate out really local know me cold calling to see as i am us, but i will have more control as i say, that is that the name of the people of the monthly cost, the psychologist, kara lina, why not overseas mental health outreach you thought somebody said something that i think they'll say something by the feeling i put up with that as i get it that. yes, i lou fully amazing. see a little fully guy and i can see now it's going to dallas. stop in sagamore me with the side of it. i think we're not going to thought out fully got good. i have to
4:43 am
get a look at c. c. c and the kerosene invites me to watch a group session at the same time when low to women are using ribbons as part of an imagination exist. sleep ought to work out who is wanting the data fitting. perhaps because lots of the programs have to come to therapy. a fishy as i seek associated daniels have satisfied the 55 seal. a book at the moment though he facing is a little guessing, was this one that i'll go to bed and then they look at most less and will see on this be that i'm only going to finish. i mean, those were on say they don't bogo on pm buttons on their nose. they got most of the hard, especially if you come in to go know what a book a lot of us, you must say that. but so not to say that in itself is some way a go not that get hit by the book every single point on sunday the, like i said, so last k one to sit on kind of pasco, is it showed them what i'm doing? the ample, i'm already in the say at that i'll a had yeah me,
4:44 am
i grew up with some of the employees mostly to move up front so i'm not going to the i'm going to do something else. i leave the associate basil and i said, because i'm a be a how to so and that's it gives them as they don't need the that a good way that sylvia carlita says the center enables the whole community to be empowered through sarah and i speak with a he a forwarded by that is names that i leave as in less i lose k or cut out, but i also can see the document that it, you know, when i 1st heard about adding pain is obsession with psychology. i thought people might be self installed. at the very least starting to think is that since being here, i discovered that people really care about their mental health and therapy is a tool of good to help the most vulnerable and you know, whether you're into blind phones or ribbons. that's a beautiful thing to odds and tina, i'm curious to know what solutions are out there. countries with mental health
4:45 am
support is in short supply. the northern region of europe is some of the world's highest rates, a prescription drug usage to treat bonuses like depression. jeremy begins here in rural last month. i'm making use of anti depressants to fund of these tools as helping to improve the mental health. there was no aust trust the daughter was just a chain when she took those, those pills for anxiety and depression. you know, awesome prescription drug use amongst 2 young girls is risen by around 90 percent over the past decade. i've been using them for 10 years. they've changed me a lot. it's kind of changed me from being just a little anxious and depressed girl and to someone who can
4:46 am
regulate their emotions 1st, by going to a therapist when i was little like i don't know, 89, due to bullying and school. i tried like meditation as well. just nothing seemed to do the trick. i was getting inside the bags every day before school. for me it was crazy. i didn't sit and i was a quiet kid and i also have to read sometimes. so i can pull in a lot that's necessary. she sparring after she was sexually assaulted at a scout can of course a turning point of my flight depression anxiety a lot worse if this got worse over the years because i didn't talk about it. so eventually i just broke down the,
4:47 am
the, the, for the billing communities are among the highest uses of antidepressants, in iceland, me and my sister rape both, take it and sell. so i find this take it as well. so it's definitely a pretty common thing. can you imagine office outlook? no one's like a week or something without taking them at the withdrawal central. so were, but i was just, i was crying. everyone was so busy and hot and cold. it was hotter fi. so i don't really want to go awesome. if i don't have to, how does that stick me for you personally coping to as a coping to i would definitely not be in the same place i am right now in watson, are there alternatives to antidepressants? really?
4:48 am
there's not a good access to therapist. it's very difficult to get an appointment. it can be super expensive um just a pain. 1 listening to the story, she's definitely strong and she's definitely a survivor. but it, she, here's a guarantee. the presence is a sort of stop gap to deal with promo, to navigate problems. 90 bit. if the system is expensive, understaffed, a lot of jobs. you know, iceland, a box of anti depressants is 7 times cheaper than how well with the scientology. it's why prescription to the same as a quick easy treatment in a country mental health system. these plague buy stuff shortages and the washington it's broken, it needs the money, it needs resources. i feel like in the system,
4:49 am
you're just the number on the paper and it's just the want to get rid of you. the nina council, a close door to the punk group, is trying to strike a chord in a country famous the buell and a sea of alternative musicians. today, mean if these were hosting a song about being prepped in a violent relationship. it's just one of the many trauma she's experience the that is getting under the person when i was 15 or 16 and it was just like the way it was presented to me was you have depression and anxiety and here's a pill that will solve all your problems when i was 17, i attempted suicide and after 2 days at the hospital they just gave me
4:50 am
a new prescription for the presence on something me on my way. and then came post natal depression, emotional been asked, and the abusive relationship therapy didn't help. and often multiple suicide attempts, you know, was admitted to a psychiatric units. i just remember thinking i'm going to feel like this forever. and there's nothing i can do about it that i had to be depressed and or take pills for the rest of my life. there wasn't some good news stop taking anti depressants, but now, but she's not against using pills again. if a crisis occurs, i hope that i'd never have to use them again. but if it's an one i will and that's like height. right? yeah, that's okay. they can help me and i just don't take them and then just go lay in bed and wait like i did before. now i'm not on pills,
4:51 am
but i did to work together to be able to quit my work. lean is referring to the program. she's done here at cuba. it's the largest p run organization, providing mental health services in the country. offerings supports and activities and enabled people to design their own talk to recovery. to get off of the trend name is lots around. today, she volunteers here. how does, who did it ross? where perhaps the traditional mental health system does not. uh, there's no time limits and you're in charge of your own recovery. like when i was putting my medication, i was getting helpful tips and stuff. and what are side of them? again, i told them about it and i'm like, okay, good for you. like it's individuals, does more works for me that i look around and i say people just doing their own thing. it's not like your in a center in sitting in a room and being spoken to people of working on their own projects,
4:52 am
working on. so yeah, it's not the step place to tell people what to do here. retribution soon works as a guidance counselor here. he says you grapples community oriented approach is considered radical in iceland. what? who i was thought fast as we are open house. we welcome people in and we offer the many things you can play music. you can to arts and crafts. you can do your, you can come here for a cup of coffee or chit chat, or you can go into quite a more serious meetings and talk about your experience, your trauma, your feelings here. you can just or be your self osland, consistently cops, the least of the world's copy as nations data says that's an illusion. rather, it's a society that needs to make spies to people, to embrace their emotions. we have medical life, so most of our life too much. we are really quick when we're having
4:53 am
a crisis to think, oh, we need to go to the doctor and when you go to attempt to get on, get scribe medicine, especially at the depressed and then s t i x i t. and on board people go there to push these until ask themselves the serious question. like, why am i speaking this can not get through this, what can i do there? how do you want the system to change? like what, what would be a good outcome? we want the government fund best or alternative approaches. so they are reliable. and why of the option for people who wants to try something else, then the medical model treatment to expire, alternative options out there, correct? so invites me to join in an officer activity cold a motion therapy, a popular i swear to pop out.
4:54 am
before we type plus one member call, tom leads us into the i was the
4:55 am
i feel like coming take the burden. i feel like you actually raise now notice how or get freezing air is compared to the ocean and that was the back in the warm embrace of a t i central cool caresses says this experience is the just a quick deal. how is the bathing helped you?
4:56 am
definitely helped me victims my excited started to in the 201617 when i was reading well stress soon as i hit the cold water, everything was quiet. everything was quiet. and when i came up tonight to generate monthly, it's like it was like a startled work and all that over again. with my nervousness, it's like a drunk. you feels euphoria afterwards. the packet need is has she's trying at a new on one of the friends. it's another typical make of mena, now works on film and theater productions as a special effects makeup august. so what is your dream? i'm living it. i'm in a really good place. i can actually honestly say, and i don't know a few years ago, i couldn't imagine as being in this press like,
4:57 am
no way more than 42 dollars night of the mess you know, stuff is it is the simple answer really because i'm not good with the fine lines, i'm not good with it, like everything needs to be perfect. so i love doing messy. what by embracing imperfection means has look to let go of the wire east and focus on the prison. i was always thinking of what happens next. love it, and it was usually with anxieties. i was scared of the future and i was depressed about the past. so after working out the past, i'm seeing that i cannot be dwelling in most may or may not happen. just enjoy the know, the
4:58 am
the latest news as it breaks. i don't want you to remember that all day i'm not seen on restoring national, in unity with fearless journalism. these people copying shop drawings to escape from the relentless bombardment from the hall to the story. many people born long, the q is open for a meal. so with all very crowded cans, unlimited aids, many are left with desperate need the lock, so during lockdown, held in an infamous us detention center. immigrants documents the whole vendors, conditions during the cold pandemic separated from their families and to 9 basic protections they fight to have their voices heard demanding their whites to release the facility with this
4:59 am
documentary on, i'll just see if it's on disputed. the 72 muslims were massacred in the village of indiana, india, and 1987 witnesses say the perpetrators or a mobiles locals along side the state governments provincial. i'm constabulary personnel. over 30 years later, the district court acquitted the accused. to date, no one has been held accountable. people in power asks why the victims continue to be denied justice. india's forgotten must occur on the jersey to the
5:00 am
of the net. 824000 palestinians are killed and 100 days of his ready bunk bomb and in god's un says more than 1000000 people are experiencing extreme food shots the voluntary johnston. this is i'll just say we're well life. and so also coming up and israel families of the caps is maintain pressure on the government to end the conflict. but for testing on the 100 day.

16 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on