REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Monsters.

POSTED BY: WULFENSTAR
UPDATED: Sunday, November 8, 2009 16:59
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Thursday, November 5, 2009 8:25 AM

FREMDFIRMA



(Advisement, I am not sure how well imma be able to get this across, since it deals with issues *I* barely understand, and modern "mental health" has not a damn clue about, but I shall try - feel free to ask for clarification, etc..)

Hmm, well it's good that someone finally brought up the distinction between Psychopathy and Sociopathy.

Back in the late 80's our already pathetic "mental health" system/concept rolled them into a single diagnosis for some reason, I've never really understood why because while some of the behavior might be the same, the motivations for it are entirely different.

A psychopath HAS INTERNAL RULES - while a sociopath does not.

This is absolutely, critically important when dealing with them, because a psychopath will never save under the most extreme circumstances, and often not even then (up to and including self-preservation) violate them - whereas a sociopath is liable to do any damn thing they think will win the day for em.

And provided sufficient motivation, a real will to do so, and good enough reason, those "rules" can be changed, little by little - provided the reasons make sense to the psychopath you're trying to reach.

That said, without an awareness of those rules, or operating in complete ignorance of them by considering them sociopaths, you're playing dodgeball in a mine field - a hostile psychopath isn't going to tell you what those rules are, and crossing one is likely to result in an instantaneous explosion of violence wholly directed at you - I've seen "therapists" stupid enough not to make the distinction get blindsided that way before, it's nasty.
Sociopaths generally don't use violence unless they think they can get away with it, but cross a psychopath's internal rules and ker-blooie, no matter what.

The whole idea of a ruleset which sets them off also appears to have some relation to autism-spectrum disorders, which I am not nearly as familiar with since it's so far outside the scope of my knowledge base - which is mostly behavioral and relates to learned behavior rather than biological misfire.

I do see some correlation there, especially where what I call the Dark Spark is concerned - people who come to be partially psychopathic regardless of their upbringing or environment, almost as if their mental course was pre-destined - there's no logical explaination for it than a rare combination of genetics keyed in with some of the factors which cause autism - but that's as much as I "know" on a scientific end, and even that's stretching it.

Behaviorally, I could expound quite a bit but it's a very uncomfortable subject for me - the closest description that would fit a "medical" diagnosis is perhaps "born with PTSD", looked at from an external behavioral assessment, and without fail those who do not destroy themselves acting out eventually withdraw from society and limit their social contacts, often as not preferring to communicate socially via technology rather than face to face as it provides a necessary distance where they can relate to other people without the imminent and/or accidental threat of doing harm to them on sheer reflex.

And yet, while externally all the behavioral factors point to PTSD, the motivations and triggers are different, and again, woe unto the poor sod making an assumption rather than a diagnosis - you try to treat a Dark Spark with clonidine, for example, their internal rythyms and systems will regard it as an attack/threat as soon as it kicks in, and they'll go into overdrive, and become even MORE of a threat to those around them - in fact any medication which reduces their physical or mental capacity is likely to do this, even alcohol, which presents an additional difficulty in one who is self-destructive, the lure of deliberately provoking the euphoric-violence state as an avoidance mechanism against feelings of social rejection.

Proper diagnosis of these facets is critical, and our extremely primitive mental health system/concept lumping them into one classification is just a disaster waiting to happen - ESPECIALLY with a Dark Spark who's gonna see any attempt by an untrusted stranger to pry into their consciousness as a direct and imminent threat and respond accordingly - that's not a huge problem in an adult who is going to someone they've chosen to help them, but a schoolchild forced to see someone as a condition of continued attendance is just a ticking bomb when put in that situation.

There's also the difference between learned sociopathy and inborn, as whatever treatment might work is completely different for each one since one is behavioral and the other chemical/biological - a distinction which is difficult to determine in the first place and gets even harder the older they get as the behavior becomes more calcified - trying to treat it post puberty is like climbing a greased pole.

That's all I can think to offer on this at the moment.


That said, I salute your courage in such a difficult admission, Miss Byte - it's a hard decision between taking the risk of doing harm without real intent, and risking social alienation by giving those around you a headsup as to what the "go away NOW" warning signs are.
I likely had more problems on that front than you did, cause most of mine would get taken as exactly the opposite by the unknowing, the charm school voice, disarming smile, and terms of endearment are not exactly what most folk take for signs of imminent violence - but that is exactly what they are.
Grouchy-grumpy me is safe, charming-friendly me is not.

As to the development of regret, empathy and respect for others - I believe that comes along with two factors which combine to create it.

The first is simply reaching adulthood and enough self-sufficiency to withdraw from other people - forced socialization, especially with people who grate on your nerves, is the swiftest, surest provocation of that nature in the universe - it can be tolerated in a limited amount, like a work shift where there is a rational reason for it - but being around other humans on a constant basis for no "valid" (to you) reason is going to grind down ones control really quickly.

Well meaning friends who think you should get out more are quite often a complication to this, as it's UN-healthy for someone who's struggling with this to force themselves to socialize, it simply does not work and will in fact have a counterproductive effect by making them MORE inclined to avoidance, eventually of the pushy friend as well.

The second factor is simply the solitude, the safe little "world" all of your own where you can finally THINK, and explore thoughts without time constraint, without complications that the presence of human beings tend to cause, allowing you to internalize things you are simply unable to do when not in your "fortress" - and woe betide a Dark Spark without a safe harbor, or who's living arrangements do not allow for that type of isolation and safety.

I tend to think of it like shields, built of tolerance - only in that quiet solitude do they regenerate, and over enough time they become stronger and more complex, more durable, especially as one's understanding of other people and their differences grows - but the company of others does wear them down, and there are usually a few things that can put a crack in them in a hurry, sure.

It's mostly a lack of understanding about the NEED for that recharging period that causes problems with other people.

And I am out of time, got some hassle to arrange downtown - and gotta go mark all the damn police infiltrators so we can prevent them from starting trouble.

-Frem
"You will know my wrath."

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 8:34 AM

FREMDFIRMA



Ah, I see you posted while I was writing.

Byte - I *DID* do things like that, to the hellcamps, the folks operating them, but my violence was initially directed at the system and society which I felt had mistreated me, and over time the focus narrowed to those who were mistreating young people in the same or worse fashion, with the intent of obliterating the systems that enabled it to happen on a scale greater than individual.

I guess you could say I "won" - but the price for it...

Be really, REALLY glad you reined it in, instead of directing it against even a worthy cause, because no matter how much tougher the hammer is than the nails - the hammer takes a beating too.

But, I had my reasons, and if I *had* to do it again - I would, even knowing the terrible price.

-Frem
"There must never be, another Milliardo Peacecraft!"

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 8:40 AM

PIZMOBEACH

... fully loaded, safety off...


Quote:

Originally posted by Fremdfirma:

(Advisement, I am not sure how well imma be able to get this across, since it deals with issues *I* barely understand, and modern "mental health" has not a damn clue about, but I shall try - feel free to ask for clarification, etc..)



Perfectly clear - thx for that post Frem, that's a good one.

Scifi movie music + Firefly dialogue clips, 24 hours a day - http://www.scifiradio.com

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 10:47 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Excellent, Frem; and excellent, all...a really good discussion between some pretty knowledgeable and reasoned people. Glad there weren't any contributions from some of the more radical elements here, it made it pleasant.

One tiny one: I disagree that our psychiatric system "doesn't have a clue"...I think it has a clue, but nothing beyond that, and is its infancy in understanding these things. Maybe it always will be; the brain is inconceivably complex.

One thing not mentioned is "attachment disorder" (not sure if that's the right term), of children who don't get nurturing early on and how it can affect them to the point where it can't be changed. I think that's something accepted as being behind psychopathy; the inability to empathize, etc. But is it a brain/chemical disorder, or behavioral?

Saw an example on TV a while back, little tiny example of how it comes to be. Baby face-to-face with mother. Mother smiles, interacts, baby giggles, interacts. Mother stares off into the distance and doesn't interract. Baby looks confused, smiles, gurgles, tries to get attention...no response. Baby continues for quite a while, again looks confused, their "affect" changes to somewhat blank, then baby starts crying. Keeps it up for a long time, then the blankness returns...and stays. Mother breaks her stare, smiles at baby, laughs and interacts, and baby switches right back to gurgling and interacting.

They were saying this is just a small example of the problem, and to imagine how it would be for a baby/child who never GOT that return of attention, and what it creates in people. It's really serious, increasing, and apparently people who've adopted such children have more often than not been unable to "fix" them...it's just too late.

Those children create a LOT of the people in jail, the violent ones especially, those unable to recognize punishment beforehand, unable to have any kind of empathy, unable to control themselves, etc. How many of those come into the classifications discussed here do you think? That's a "behavioral" cause, certainly, but the result is so extreme, I don't think it comes under "sociopath", yet it's not genetic like psychopathy. ?

As to jail, I agree wholeheartedly with everything here; I wish the rest of the world were as thoughtful and intelligent. I won't even go into the number of mentally ill who inhabit our jails because of the legal system's inability/disinterest in dealing with things like that, so just toss people in prisons. I wish things could change for the better, and if there are enough people like you guys out there learning and thinking about it, maybe someday it will...it is to a small degree now, admittedly.

Jails create criminals, period. The systems are not in place to properly house people or create prisons which don't essential "force" them to learn a violent way of surviving; to rehabilitate prisoners, prepare them for life outside the prison walls, give them something to work TOWARD when they leave to motivate them, and so much more. To say it needs changing is the understatement of the week.

Over many decades my philosophy has changed to the point where I see no "evil" people, only screwed-up ones doing evil things. Even the worst, as sick as they make me feel inside, and horrible as they are, I can't bring myself to "hate"--yes, I'd kill them if they threatened me or my loved ones; yes, I'd stupidly try to intervene without thinking it through (and I have); and yes, it's terribly hard not to hate people like that guy in whose house they're discovering all those bodies.

But the basic truth, TO ME, is that nobody's born evil; mental conditions could be helped if recognized; environmental conditions that create monsters can be changed often; and all life is worthwhile. Yet I ride the fence on the death penalty--how's that for a dichotomy? I know it's cheaper to keep someone in jail for life than execute them, I know there is always potential for error in the system and death penalty is final; but sometimes I just want them not to "be". Those are my feelings. Whether I could act on them or not, I don't know. ALL feelings are valid; it's what we do with them that is judgeable.

It's good to read a discussion where a lot of the people recognize factors BEHIND evil deeds and don't just reflexively come out with "Nuke 'em, nuke 'em one and all". It heartens me. I hope any of you who take it to the next step and try to educate those around you are successful; I hope there are more of you out there in time. If we all took the time to THINK and self-educate and ponder, we could deal with these people more effectively and be better people for it. But I don't have the answer as to "how".

Thank you. It's good to read something heartening in a time when there's so much unthinking, visceral insanity around me.

________________________
Together we are greater than the sum of our parts

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 11:07 AM

WULFENSTAR

http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg


Oh, please.....

SHUT UP, HIPPIES!



Funny how you folks want to turn doing the right thing into some sort of mental disease. While at the same time saying that being selfish, self-involved, and spoiled is the good and descent way to be.


... and with that, I bid you adieu.


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Thursday, November 5, 2009 11:29 AM

STORYMARK


Only in your violent, twisted, narrow little view, Wulf.

We see your raging Rambo fantasies as mental illness.

This is separate from "the right thing".

"I thoroughly disapprove of duels. If a man should challenge me, I would take him kindly and forgivingly by the hand and lead him to a quiet place and kill him."

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 11:34 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


So, Wulfie - Are these people "monsters"? Or are tehy "doing the right thing"?

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/33678801/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/


Seven dead, at least 12 injured in shootings at Fort Hood, near Killeen, Texas.

Mike

Let the wild rumpus start!

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 11:36 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by Wulfenstar:
Oh, please.....

SHUT UP, HIPPIES!



Or... what, exactly? You'll kill us? Rape us all with your gang-banger friends? Open fire and put your "god-given" right to arm yourself to some REAL use?



Better be careful - Out2Lunch might think you're trying to have him banned!

Mike

Let the wild rumpus start!

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 12:06 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


"Doing the right thing."

Every one of us has posted that we'd take action in some way, and none of us are condoning rape. So what do you want to hear, Wulf? That if we could, we'd draw and quarter the rapists before killing 'em? That we'd like to see them slow-roasted over a low fire?

If you were to do any of those things and wind up in jail for torture and murder, in my ideal scenario you wouldn't be tossed into jail for a long butt-rape sentence. Nope. You'd first get a good neuro and psych eval, as well as a tox screening. And then you'd get therapy. It's not the heroic end you might like, but it's appropriate.
Quote:

So, Wulfie - Are these people "monsters"? Or are tehy "doing the right thing"?
Cearly, the shooter was resisting the evil Federal gubmint using his god-given right to bear arms. Must be a good thing?

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 12:23 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Ahhh, I knew one of them had to come out of the woodwork eventually! What fun, think I'll stoop to his level:
Hey, Wulf:

I'm confused, tho'
Quote:

doing the right thing into some sort of mental disease
Is he trying to say that raping that woman and violent criminals are "doing the right thing"??? I thought we were talking about people who were VIOLENT as potentially having mental illness(es); so that would make him saying that those people are "doing the right thing"...?

I also get a smile out of the fact that one of our nutwings can come into a reasoned, thoughtful discussion and make no sense at all, only post idiocy, contribute nothing to the discussion and label everyone he disagrees with as "hippies"... What's that thing at the top about "....we hope that you will provide literate and thought provoking ones"?

A picture is worth a thousand words. Wulf:
...enjoy your when it comes to your brand of absurdity, ...youre a truly pathetic The best that can be done for you is


But we love 'ya, yes we do...
________________________
Together we are greater than the sum of our parts

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 12:30 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

But we love 'ya, yes we do...
Yes, we do.

Nobody is attacking you, Wulf.

Why you you feel as if we are???

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 12:35 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Because we are all agreeing on something and disagree with him, and that makes us the enemy.

My best guess, in his mind any disagreement is a threat to his psychological integrity. He's fragile that way.

***************************************************************

Silence is consent.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 12:36 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Hey, I am, and make no apologies! A hateful nutbag who posts nothing but vile stupidity into a good discussion DESERVES mocking!

By the way Wulf, you can't even get that right: EarthFirsters are nutbags, too, and ecoterrorists, not "hippies"...

________________________
Together we are greater than the sum of our parts

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 12:41 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Oh, Niks... How can you not see the logic?

ANYBODY who stands even a half-inch to the left of Wulfie is a dirty hippy.

What's so hard to figure out about that?






Mike

Let the wild rumpus start!

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 12:58 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


C'mon guys, you're not helping.

Wulf is looking for someone to fight, and you're just obliging him. You're behaving just like him, and feeling just as righteous about your responses as he does about his. (They/ he started it.) How can anyone ever get to the point of not reflexively reacting when everyone around him is doing the same thing?

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 1:02 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


I wasn't fighting. I was trying to accurately put into words what I think is going on.

***************************************************************

Silence is consent.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 1:06 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Huh.

Okay, I see a big difference that needs explanation and prolly more thought. Guilt and forgiveness, punishment and reward, behavior and modification. They're not always tied together.

The question is: how do we modify violent criminal behavior?

Most of us are constrained by guilt and some of us are constrained by fear, but that constraint requires a number of mental processes.

1) You have to be able to put yourself in another's shoes. But if you're like my daughter, who is brain-blind to different points of view, you'll lack that capacity. (BTW- she doesn't lack sympathy. If someone is hurting, right in front of her, she responds.)

2) You have to remember the past. Some peeps don't. Nuff said.

3) You have to be able to project the future. Children younger than about five, and people who're brain-damaged (again, like my daughter) lack the capacity.

4) You have to be able to learn from pain. According to Rue, sociopaths don't. They don't even apply it to themselves.

5) You have to acknowledge a social hierarchy.

Guilt is a complex emotion. It doesn't work for many people for a variety of reasons. The MAIN reason, I believe, is that most people with PTSD... basically, people who've been abused when young and/or grew up in life-threatening circumstances... often don't even care about themselves. Its that nihilistic POV which says - when you confront a gang-banger wannabe with the horror they are creating- I don't think I'm gonna live past 25 anyway and I don't care. But, as I listed, there are many other reasons why guilt (which is self-punishment) and punishment don't work.

You'd think... wouldn't you?... that if you had to spend a week in jail, much less a year... that you'd do everything in your power not to repeat the experience! The mistake that people make is that they keep projecting themselves and their responses on others. But if you look at the recidivism rate of violent criminals, it's CLEAR that punishment doesn't work for them!

I had to take a parenting class bc my dd was so terribly ADHD when young. I had to learn that I couldn't treat her like a "normal" kid because her responses weren't "normal": ADHD kids crave attention and excitement, even punishment, if that's the only attention they get. We had to modify her behavior through reward. And yanno what??? In my experience as a parent, as a supervisor AND as an employer, reward works quite well.

Anyway, my point is that while punishment and self-punishment work for a lot of people... I daresay even most... they don't work for everybody, and if you want to modify violent criminal behavior you have to look for a new paradigm. Something not involving guilt and forgiveness



Actually, research demonstrates that punishment is not as effective as reward. ALL children should be treated as per the recommendations for ADHD and other behaviourally challenged kids.

Punishment tends to reinforce bad behaviours and leads to manipulative behaviour such as lying, blaming others etc. Parenting/teaching using rewards for good behaviour, setting firm limits, and choosing natural consequences have had the best results.

The same generally applies to perpetrators of crime. Punishment isn't effective at modifying behaviours, it reinforces them. But that's not why we lock people up. Generally, the population wants perps to suffer rather than be rehabilitated. You actually can't do both.

Incidentally, the link between perps and abuse is not based on defense testimony, but research on the backgrounds of prisoners. It's reasonably conclusive that violence and abuse begets violence and abuse. If you are really serious about reducing crime stats, you need to think about the social/economic conditions that foster such behaviours - and then think about how you might address those issues. Of course, to many that will smack of social engineering and socialism.

Niki - you are spot on re attachment disorders - it's the major reason for psychopathic behaviours (not to mention a host of other mental health problems including depression)

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 2:15 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by Fremdfirma:

Hmm, well it's good that someone finally brought up the distinction between Psychopathy and Sociopathy.

Back in the late 80's our already pathetic "mental health" system/concept rolled them into a single diagnosis for some reason, I've never really understood why because while some of the behavior might be the same, the motivations for it are entirely different.

A psychopath HAS INTERNAL RULES - while a sociopath does not.


I'm not sure where you base the evidence for your claims. Everything I've read suggests that both terms are interchangeable, and in fact, neither exist as a mental health diagnosis, which instead uses the diagnostic terms of anti-social personality disorder, or one of the other personality disorders (violent, narcissistic or combination).

There is also absolutely no evidence (that I have seen) that one is born with these traits - only that a combination of both nature (temperament) and nurture (parenting or lack of it) may result in these personality traits being evident.

All personality disorders are very, very difficult to treat - often because of the lack of insight of people with such a diagnosis.

I'd also disagree with the claims that sociopathic traits can be learnt later in life. You miss the point of these traits and their causes. Using violence is not necessarily a sign of sociopathy - aggression is a survival trait that we all have. If we live somewhere that demands aggression to survive, then a normal response is to be aggressive. That is definitely a learned behaviour.

We don't know anything about those rapists or what the circumstances around the case - it is possible that some of them were motivated by a number of factors (fear, need for approval, cultural or societal attitudes to women and sex). None of which excuses their behaviour, just pointing out that we don't know if any of them would fit the definition of sociopaths.

Plenty of 'normal' people use violence, soldiers, police officers, people defending themselves - they may, for a brief period of time, be able to clamp down their empathy - usually by means of dehumanising the other, much like Wulf does - but it doesn't mean that they generally demonstrate behaviour traits of a sociopath.



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Thursday, November 5, 2009 2:32 PM

BYTEMITE


I didn't mean to suggest I think Wulf is a psychopath, he hasn't indicated that he has these psychological imaginings of violence and gratification. Wulf's problems may not be psychological, I don't know him well enough to say. When I compared myself to him, I was trying to keep the comparison STRICTLY on the manner in which both of us have experienced a sense of being heroic, or wanting to be.

I've heard about the anti-social personality disorder, which fits me very well, I just don't have the manipulative aspect. I'm really just not very good at lying.

Psychopath as born with it and sociopath as being "created" is a definition I infer just from the names, in that "psycho" means the mind or spirit, and psychological disorders can be genetic and chemical in nature. Socio, meanwhile, comes from "society" which to me suggests a person with anti-social personality disorder traits that have been created in them through their environment.

There was nothing in my environment to cause me to exhibit these traits. I had depression, which perhaps made me self-pitying, and thus the sense of emotional neglect. The emotional neglect was not real.

Since I have plenty of other things wrong with me, like anxiety, depression like I just mentioned, paranoia, and possibly psychosis, I think probably I was born with chemical imbalances. As an infant, I was not reactive. But once I learned to walk and talk, I became a very difficult child, emotions and behaviour wise.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 2:58 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
I didn't mean to suggest I think Wulf is a psychopath, he hasn't indicated that he has these psychological imaginings of violence and gratification. Wulf's problems may not be psychological, I don't know him well enough to say. When I compared myself to him, I was trying to keep the comparison STRICTLY on the manner in which both of us have experienced a sense of being heroic, or wanting to be.

I've heard about the anti-social personality disorder, which fits me very well, I just don't have the manipulative aspect. I'm really just not very good at lying.

Psychopath as born with it and sociopath as being "created" is a definition I infer just from the names, in that "psycho" means the mind or spirit, and psychological disorders can be genetic and chemical in nature. Socio, meanwhile, comes from "society" which to me suggests a person with anti-social personality disorder traits that have been created in them through their environment.

There was nothing in my environment to cause me to exhibit these traits. I had depression, which perhaps made me self-pitying, and thus the sense of emotional neglect. The emotional neglect was not real.

Since I have plenty of other things wrong with me, like anxiety, depression like I just mentioned, paranoia, and possibly psychosis, I think probably I was born with chemical imbalances. As an infant, I was not reactive. But once I learned to walk and talk, I became a very difficult child, emotions and behaviour wise.



I think we've had this conversation before, haven't we? I don't want to butt into your experiences in any way, I'm talking theoretically what I know through my work and training. You've indicated that you have had a difficult past, with plenty of tough stuff to deal with. However, though what you have indicated, you don't seem like you fit any definition of sociopath/psychopath that I have come across, given your insight, capacity to change, remorse, lack of lying and manipulation.

The nature vs nurture debate is ongoing - I guess I tend to lean heavily towards a combination of the both, with an emphasis the impact of attachment in early infancy. That's because so much of our brain develops after birth - almost all of the connection between the neurons takes place - and it's human reactivity that creates these connections - fascinating stuff - but painful too.

I didn't mean to suggest that you thought Wulf was a socio/psychopath either. I don't think he is - he's expressing a populist view that's ill informed. Perhaps it seems to him that by focusing on the perp and what they have been through, we lose sight of the victim's experience. That's probably true. I believe victim's of crime do need to receive justice of some kind for their suffering - as well as trying to address underlying causes of criminal behaviour. Restorative justice is one way that this can happen.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 3:20 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


I've sometimes wondered if depression or other neurological disorders can mess with the 'reward' function. After all, if nothing makes you feel good, or even a bit better, how are you supposed to associate loving human interaction with the pleasure it normally sparks ?

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 3:29 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by rue:
I've sometimes wondered if depression or other neurological disorders can mess with the 'reward' function. After all, if nothing makes you feel good, or even a bit better, how are you supposed to associate loving human interaction with the pleasure it normally sparks ?

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Probably true - but rewards still have a better chance of working on a depressed person than punishment - Seligman - the dog tormentor - talks about it in terms of learned helplessness. keep giving the dog electric shocks and it gives up.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 3:44 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Re: Depression and "reward". We bipolar IIs swing from "hypomania" ("Less than" mania) to the complete depressive scale. I can tell you that depression (even for Unipolars--depressives) isn't a constant thing...it may last quite a while, medication may help, it may come and go over time, but it's not a continuous state.

Chronic, as in never-ending, low-grade depression is called "dysthymia"...my husband has it, and yes, pleasure is tough for them, but they do get it. It's just harder for them to appreciate than negative aspects of life. Depressives and bipolars are quite capable of enjoying rewards...maybe not when in a deep depressive state, but we're not always IN that. And we're as smart as anyone else, we understand what "reward" IS, even if we can't feel it at the moment. Just FYI.

P.S. I wasn't fighting with Wulf, just commenting on his coming in and spitting, the first person to do so in an interesting discussion. I'm not exchanging barbs with him; I had my say. I'm not sure what reaction you expect in response to what he posted; that was mine.

________________________
Together we are greater than the sum of our parts

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 3:56 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I'm a human genetic experiment. I share with someone the exact same genes and (presumably) in utero environment. My clone and I have many traits in common- sometimes scarily so. Our biomechanics are almost exactly the same: we laugh the same, we have the same gestures, we both have problems with "stuck song", and often the same phrase will pop into our heads at the same time if we're looking at the same situation. We're both shy. But we have some surprising differences. She has always been taller, stronger, and smarter than me. And when it comes to temper and attention-span, we're very very different.

Things happen during development not at all related to genes or even in utero environment. And I believe that, yes, kids... even "normal" kids... ARE born with a personality, however that personality came to be. Some kids are quiet and reflective, others are boisterous. Some are observant. Some hear well, some are sensitive to the feelings of others, some blunder through their environment looking for excitement, some are shy, and some can't sit still and are frustrated. That personality interacts with the caregivers' personalities in negative or positive ways, which many times creates self-reinforcing cycles- a depressed child may stress already depressed parents who then withdraw, a defiant child may elicit the force/ resistance cycle from an authoritarian parent. Its a complex interaction, like diabetes in an environment full of addictive junk food. I can't claim to understand even a fraction of it, but this complex interaction goes a long way to explaining why many abused children grow up pretty average while others who grew up in average circumstances may not feel average when they grow up.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 4:00 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


And I see the conversation has moved far!

Niki, check your PMs.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 4:11 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
I'm a human genetic experiment. I share with someone the exact same genes and (presumably) in utero environment. My clone and I have many traits in common- sometimes scarily so. Our biomechanics are almost exactly the same: we laugh the same, we have the same gestures, we both have problems with "stuck song", and often the same phrase will pop into our heads at the same time if we're looking at the same situation. We're both shy. But we have some surprising differences. She has always been taller, stronger, and smarter than me. And when it comes to temper and attention-span, we're very very different.

Things happen during development not at all related to genes or even in utero environment. And I believe that, yes, kids... even "normal" kids... ARE born with a personality, however that personality came to be. Some kids are quiet and reflective, others are boisterous. Some are observant. Some hear well, some are sensitive to the feelings of others, some blunder through their environment looking for excitement, some are shy, and some can't sit still and are frustrated. That personality interacts with the caregivers' personalities in negative or positive ways, which many times creates self-reinforcing cycles- a depressed child may stress already depressed parents who then withdraw, a defiant child may elicit the force/ resistance cycle from an authoritarian parent. Its a complex interaction, like diabetes in an environment full of addictive junk food. I can't claim to understand even a fraction of it, but this complex interaction goes a long way to explaining why many abused children grow up pretty average while others who grew up in average circumstances may not feel average when they grow up.



Nicely put. Yes, I'd agree with pretty much all of what you say. You twins - you enlighten us all.

We're not really off topic either - we're discussing the concepts of 'monsters'.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 4:41 PM

FREMDFIRMA


Niki
Quote:

One thing not mentioned is "attachment disorder" (not sure if that's the right term), of children who don't get nurturing early on and how it can affect them to the point where it can't be changed. I think that's something accepted as being behind psychopathy; the inability to empathize, etc. But is it a brain/chemical disorder, or behavioral?

Actually both, over time, one BECOMES the other.

Here's the technical data, courtesy of Doc Perry and CTA.
http://www.childtrauma.org/CTAMATERIALS/Attach_ca.asp
http://www.childtrauma.org/CTAMATERIALS/neuros~1.asp
http://www.childtrauma.org/ctamaterials/Neuroarcheology.asp

Problem is that when it goes into the details and technical aspects most folks don't have the background to really grok it - only reason I do is years of dealing with those people and finding solutions for them outside the scope of conventional medicine and psychology.


Wulf - Don't piss me off, until you realize just how these folk who do such awful things come to be, and YOUR OWN ROLE in formenting the very denial that allows our society to continue to create them, you've no proper business discussing the matter since you lack both the understanding to address the problem, and the inclination to develop it.

So either buy a fucking clue and discard the bullshit ideology that you damn well know was fed to you with ill intent, by the same folk who lied to you about everything else - or keep your two cents in your own wallet, kiddo.

Expect no sympathy for the ripping you're catching this time around.


MAGONSDAUGHTER
Actually all of my knowledge of this rests on a combination of well over twenty years of empirical experience backed up by the research of wiser folk with better educations like Alice Miller and Doc Perry.

I learned a lot of it by observation, by more or less watching how these folk come to be all around me in my own environment and realizing it's effects on myself as well in a toxic and hostile environment that tended to bring about these kind of results in children who already had issues or were vulnerable for other reasons.

I learned even more by trying to help folk written off as beyond any hope, people who had been all but psychologically destroyed, or damaged in ways that forced them to all but start from scratch - mostly I watched them self destruct, but those I did manage to pull back from the brink...
That's the one shining light which keeps the horror at bay for me.

You are correct in that we *NEED* to learn more, cause we sure as hell don't know enough now to be of much help to these people on the scale that we should be.
Quote:

There is also absolutely no evidence (that I have seen) that one is born with these traits - only that a combination of both nature (temperament) and nurture (parenting or lack of it) may result in these personality traits being evident.

That is what I was tryin to say, and might not have gotten across so clear - genetics can load the gun, but environment is what pulls the trigger on it.
The key is being aware of it early enough to drive that train off the rails BEFORE it comes to a crisis, something I am all too familiar with in the case of my one niece, and feel damned horrible about.
I KNEW the factors were there, and despite my best efforts she found herself in very much the same environment (hell they even sent her to the same damn school!) but at least she has a "helping witness" to aid her steps, so far as I can do so from several hundred miles away.
http://www.alice-miller.com/articles_en.php?lang=en&nid=41&grp=11
Quote:

Using violence is not necessarily a sign of sociopathy - aggression is a survival trait that we all have. If we live somewhere that demands aggression to survive, then a normal response is to be aggressive. That is definitely a learned behaviour.

Ah, on this I was speaking of something else - see, the "line" that gets crossed, the trigger, with some damaged people may not be immediately apparent to someone externally, and crossing it unawares can result in a sudden explosion of violence without any visible warning sign or apparent causation.
That can go badly for a therapist or psychologist who's not as aware of the possibility due to misdiagnosis - which is a very serious problem dealing with youth issues because a lot of the time the diagnosis they are working from has been distorted by other issues, well meaning parents who don't understand, parents projecting their own issues, a school shading the diagnosis to fit a category suitable for removing their "problem" or the juvenille justice system shading it one way or the other for legal or liability reasons...

Proper diagnosis is, again, critical, and proceeding on assumption with those patients can be physically and personally *dangerous* to the unaware - was the main thrust of that, not whether or not the violence itself was a symptom.

One of the school therapists wound up having a close encounter with a letter opener over that, a regrettable and entirely avoidable incident which would not have happened had they taken the time to make a proper diagnosis of exactly what was wrong with the girl in question instead of proceeding on the assumptions that the information from her parents was accurate - which is why I feel the need to mention it in this discussion.

As for the rest, what I call the Dark Spark is something fairly unique and even more poorly understood than conventional disorders in that it seems to have no logical cause - WHAT causes it is a particular fascination of mine because so far every single explaination has fallen flat, it was trying to figure it out in the first place which lead me to Doc Perrys work initially.

All signs so far point to malformation or overdevelopment of the HPA axis, but still the initial cause escapes any attempt to pin it down.

Wiser and better educated people working on it would help, because I really do think that is the rosetta stone of treating some of these disorders if only we could decipher it - and also HOW they manage to adapt instead of self-destructing, because it's very, very rare for them to survive to adulthood.

Anyhows, that's all I got on it at the moment.

-F

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 4:43 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Niks

I have this sense though that depression and other painful/ uncomfortable neurological states - might act like abuse. After all, abuse is on its own timetable and not consistently related to action. It isn't constant. It comes and goes. And despite the mitigation people experience, it does have its effects.

It seems like there could be similar responses going on.

Any thoughts ?

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 7:35 PM

BYTEMITE


Frem, your mentioning of the Hypothalamus/Amygdala and Pituitary kind of strikes me, I've thought for a while that I might have something wrong there.

Something else, I just read that the HPA axis is responsible for releasing a hormone in response to dehydration, a "water conservation hormone."

I don't really notice my own thirst often, and I drink very few fluids. I can do strenuous hiking, 1,000 to 2,000 feet elevation gain and several miles in 80 to 100 degree weather for hours (in Utah, a desert) with only sixteen ounces of water. When I was hiking in groups for my geology classes, I always had plenty of water to share with people who ran out and drink five times as much as I do. I never experienced any adverse dehydration effects from taxing myself this way, though recently I found out that I have signs of developing kidney stones.

Is it possible for the chicken to go before the egg? Could I be overproducing this hormone (and others governed by the HPA axis), and that is causing me to feel like I need less water? Could this be a symptom of the other problem?

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Thursday, November 5, 2009 7:44 PM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

I think we've had this conversation before, haven't we? I don't want to butt into your experiences in any way, I'm talking theoretically what I know through my work and training. You've indicated that you have had a difficult past, with plenty of tough stuff to deal with. However, though what you have indicated, you don't seem like you fit any definition of sociopath/psychopath that I have come across, given your insight, capacity to change, remorse, lack of lying and manipulation.


We might have, I have an exceedingly poor memory.

I wasn't always this calm or reasonable.

And in regards to manipulation, now that I think of it, I'd like to amend my earlier statements.

I'm still not much of a liar, but when I was younger, I was exceptionally skilled at making adults feel guilty for punishing me, and also at getting adults to exact my revenge on people who caused me grief.

I may unwittingly be more manipulative than I realize. I can think of one situation recently that I think my actions could be considered manipulative, though I'd also like to think that my actions were justified and not malicious. Of course, that's what everyone would like to hope. I'll have to watch this closer.

Quote:

I didn't mean to suggest that you thought Wulf was a socio/psychopath either. I don't think he is - he's expressing a populist view that's ill informed. Perhaps it seems to him that by focusing on the perp and what they have been through, we lose sight of the victim's experience. That's probably true. I believe victim's of crime do need to receive justice of some kind for their suffering - as well as trying to address underlying causes of criminal behaviour. Restorative justice is one way that this can happen.


I agree, good explanation.

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Friday, November 6, 2009 12:16 AM

FREMDFIRMA



Miss Byte,
Quote:

Frem, your mentioning of the Hypothalamus/Amygdala and Pituitary kind of strikes me, I've thought for a while that I might have something wrong there.

I can usually nail that one with a single question.

Do you often get "catapulted" out of sleep after a mere three hours, and find yourself unable to sleep for up to 11-16 hours after even if you are still tired ?

I suspect that's not even a question to you.

You might find some ongoing research relative to it quite useful.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15471614
http://www.onderzoekinformatie.nl/en/oi/nod/onderzoek/OND1277207/
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/554738

Reason I mention this ties into why the need for that safe harbor or personal fortress is so damned important.

The HPA Axis has crash priority within the brains heirarchy, ok ?
Which means that once it is active all other systems are only allocated resource afterwords - even at a low level activation of HPA response, cogitation and internalising of thought and feeling are less functional.

And unfortunately for a Dark Spark, the presence of other humans is kind of an automatic activation cause the HPA Axis goes on a kind of automatic low level standby, causing a bunch of mental static related to threat response which in some children mimics ADD/ADHD and other behavioral disorder symptoms closely enough that without a longterm assessment most providers are loathe to give (and most insurance won't pay for) there's no way to tell the difference.

Lemme explain how the priority works, so you understand, ok ?

Say you're driving a car and discussing politics with a friend, the car hits a patch of ice and slides sideways - the HPA Axis lights up like a christmas tree, dumping a massive flood of chemical reactants into the system in a desperate fight-freeze-flight reaction - and also shuts off noncritical systems - at that moment you would be UNABLE to continue the discussion because that part of the brain is shut out, firewalled, inactive, you see ?

At it's *most* extreme, it's almost a euphoric state, time perception skews to where everything and everyone else is in slow motion, due to increased blood pressure and altered sensory focus, hearing drops out to something like a 60-cycle hum, language is perceived as noise and even visually the "threat" is hyperfocused with any non moving persons or objects in vision blurred out.
Pain sensitivity and response becomes almost nonexistent, and respiriation and heart rate scale up into what can potentially be dangerous levels, which in addition to the hum is often described as "the sound of drums" (heartbeat) by those who's consciousness does not block out the details of the event as a defense mechanism to prevent additional psychological trauma.

The latter is something learned from questioning of police, firefighter and EMT personnel who've displayed hyperdynamic behavior during a crisis, due to a prosecutors frustration with some officers who were unable to testify as to the details of what, exactly, happened - because their own mind blanked out the exact events or did not record them properly since the HPA Axis was given priority, which also functions as a post-event trauma preventing psychological defense.

On the other end, it's a low-level "static" which frustrates thought and function so long as there are other humans in range to trigger the threat response.

And of course it can, depending on the situation, run between those two extremes, but at any point it does interfere with the normal neurochem/psych responses of the brain and it's internal systems - worse, it has a tendancy to "hiccup" for no reason, or a minor alteration/interference with daily routine or unexpected hindrance (finding oneself out of dishwashing liquid when planning to do the dishes) and go into "alert" mode disproportionately to the threat, which means several hours of a hyperalert state which can in some individuals scale into a panic attack without apparent external cause.

Now, with an intermittent activation, and the way traits become states - once you've become psychologically and physically enured to that low level activation, when it DOES stop - it results in near complete despondency, a feeling of weariness so intense that even lifting oneself off the floor becomes a challenge of willpower, and at it's most extreme a feeling of "impending doom" which can also trigger into anxiety or panic attacks, feeding the cycle and eventually resulting in a total mental meltdown.

You see why I call deciphering this the rosetta stone of this whole concept now ?


Oh, and lemme mention one other price, in relation to hyperdynamism aka berserkerang - the human body and it's framework generally operates within limits that serve the same purpose as a governor on a pump or generator motor, to keep it from wrecking itself trying to do it's job.
Pain is one of those systems, a warning to stop before you do further damage.

Once the HPA Axis goes to the fullest extreme and lights up like an overpowered christmas tree, pain perception and response is all but non-existent, and whatever psychological or other limitations exist are all but ignored - extensive misuse of psychoactive chemicals, particularly Phencyclidine (PCP) can also cause this effect.

That's where the whole berserker effect comes from, and also one reason that people can and have died from it - the blood is forced into the musculature at the expense of other organs, and that plus the temperature rise and exertion can cause damage to internal organs particularly the liver and kidneys.
(don't freak, it takes a LOT more than hiking to do anything like that.)

And that's not even touching on sprains, pulled and torn muscles, ligaments, stress fractures, and all those other things which catch up quick once the berserkerang lets go.

This extreme of it is thankfully, incredibly rare - and one reason I am usually loathe to discuss it is that yes, there HAVE been cases of someone going berserkerang on police and then dropping dead from it - but to take that one in a million chance and try to use it to explain away some guy capping it cause they tasered him to the chest nine times when he was already down means I don't hold with "excited delirium" as a diagnosis without videotape evidence of the incident in question, which is oh-so-coincidentally NEVER available once they start pushing that as cause of death, yes ?

And, since you mentioned it...

In regards to manipulation, instead of trying to suppress it I chose to embrace it - you might say I was inspired by Reynard the Fox, noteable trickster and folk hero, since I had read some of those books when much younger - but I *DO* put it right up front and center and flat TELL them imma shyster and a trickster, ain't my fault if they don't take me seriously.


That's all I got for the nonce - this topic kinda wears me out since I have to fight my own "TELL THEM NOTHING!" automatic psych-defense mechanisms to even discuss it.

-Frem
"This, is for you."

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Friday, November 6, 2009 12:51 AM

FREMDFIRMA


Oh yes...

Re: Reflexive heroism and manipulation...

Yanno, it doesn't help having an ex who KNOWS that particular reflex is in there and is prone to playing damsel-in-distress to deliberately provoke it when she needs something.

Even worse is that my own inner trickster sees it for EXACTLY what it is and goes "Oh hey, that's pretty slick, innit ?" - and so the combination of those two factors kind of makes it a foregone conclusion.

In the short run, it means my ass will be moving furniture today, oh joy wonder...

-Frem
There always has to be a price.

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Friday, November 6, 2009 4:11 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

we lose sight of the victim's experience. That's probably true. I believe victim's of crime do need to receive justice of some kind for their suffering - as well as trying to address underlying causes of criminal behaviour. Restorative justice is one way that this can happen.
IMHO victims and their families usually get relief/ closure one of two ways:

1) Vengeance on the perps, which usually means a thirst for harsh punishment and/ or the death penalty and
2) Helping other victims.

It's not like vengeance is the only emotionally satisfying way to resolve victimhood, and of the two responses the second is far more constructive.

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Friday, November 6, 2009 6:58 AM

PERFESSERGEE


@ Frem and Byte:

There are a couple of misconceptions in your recent posts about the HPA axis (I teach endocrinology and this area is one of my research interests). HPA is the acronym for Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Adrenal axis. The amygdala is a separate portion of the brain from the hyopothalamus, and may be related because it helps mediate emotions, but that's out of my area of expertise. The HPA axis controls only the adrenal cortex - the outer region - and is responsible for the secretion of cortisol, the famed "stress hormone" that is the cause of such stress-related pathologies as heart problems, immunosuppression, suppressed reproduction and others. It's not associated with water/thirst regulation. It also takes some time to activate because it involves a cascade of secretion of hormones from all 3 organs - a minimum of 2-3 minutes before you'd notice a response.

Frem, the response you a referring to on the occasion of hydroplaning (or even just seeing flashing red lights behind you when you are doing 110 on the freeway) comes in part directly from the central nervous system (CNS) but also in part from the adrenal gland, but the central portion, the medulla. Most of your innards are hooked up to the autonomic nervous system, which can very rapidly jump-start your heart rate, and increase blood pressure and sugar levels (this is the classic "fight or flight" syndrome). The adrenal medulla is also hooked up in the same manner, and rapidly starts pumping out large amounts of adrenaline and its sister hormone noradrenaline in a matter of seconds. These two hormones support the initial effects of the CNS. In truth, the HPA axis is activated at the same time, but there's a delay in response time because of the cascade.

Byte, The hormone that you are referring to is called aldosterone, and it also comes from the adrenal cortex (a separate layer), but it's not regulated by the HPA axis. It's regulated by a separate system that's too complicated to explain here, but it involves the kidney, liver and a blood pressure sensor. Aldosterone is a very potent stimulator of thirst, though, so it's possible that you undersecrete it. However, its primary function is water conservation - it increases water reabsorption from urine, which would argue in the opposite direction. In either case, I can't diagnose anything, not being a physician!

I hope this provides some clarification.

perfessergee


ETA. Frem, you are right about pain perception, memory effects and increased strength. They are influenced by both the HPA axis and the medulla simultaneously.

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Friday, November 6, 2009 7:56 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


"Most of your innards are hooked up to the autonomic nervous system ..."

Despite knowing about conditioned reflexes for decades (Pavlov), it just occurred to me about 10 years ago how weird they are.

Here you have a brain - which takes in and interprets stimuli - directly and reflexively influencing the autonomic nervous system over time. When you take into account that for people words are another form of stimuli, you can tap into the autonomic nervous system 'artificially'. A person who has no concept of a gun will not be afraid if one is pointed at them. A person who has never been shot or even shot at, who has no direct negative sensory experience, but who has been TOLD what one is, will. And they will experience all the attendent hormone secretions.

I find that very strange.

My first degree is biology. Where do you teach ? Do you allow people to audit your classes ? (sorry if this is pushy)


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Silence is consent.

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Friday, November 6, 2009 9:23 AM

FREMDFIRMA


PERFESSERGEE

Man what I woulda gave to have known you back at the beginning of this.

You see, I have no real background in this, neither scientific or psych - in laymans terms imma jumped up street thug who by virtue of a crusade of destruction against abusive behavior modification facilities, wound up having to treat folks rescued from them, without any knowledge base initially beyond observation and response.

So knowing as much as I *DO* is practically a miracle, you understand ?
And I did say right up front I have only the barest technical understanding of the subject - it almost exclusively by virtue of trying to treat folks who no one else could...

Most of the folk we took outta there, they were pretty badly damaged, often physically as well as mentally, and being that mainstream psych personnel were often involved in getting them sent to these places, or even complicit in the abuse at them, there was flat out no way they could be treated by conventional methods due to that betrayal of trust, and without *some* kind of treatment they were all but doomed.

Just imagine the world shattering effect on a teen of being forcibly dragged from their own bed in the middle of the night and "renditioned" to what comes down to a freakin concentration camp using extremely abusive and destructive behavior-modification tactics - a living nightmare from which there is little or no hope of escape, which demolishes their trust in anything, even their own family.

That's not hyperbole, some of these places really were that bad, and I was a direct participant in collecting much of the evidence which proved it.

Anyhows, now take that kid trapped in a nightmare, and enter our team coming in for the rescue - initially this was pretty aggressive and destructive, but as more media and legal attention became focused on these places eventually boiled down to us presenting legal demands at the door, and them flinging the kid out to us, often as not right after loading them up REAL heavy on psychotropics so that they could discredit any testimony and the kids behavior would lend credence to their assessments.

The rescue and transport to whatever family member had commissioned it tended to form a rather strong attachment - and because of their experiences that was for many the ONLY trust-attachment they had at all, period.

And therefore any initial treatment HAD to come from that source, so it was either fumble through or leave them to their fate, which would defeat the purpose of the rescue in the first place.

Ergo, I have a *LOT* of experience dealing with very badly damaged people, to the point of almost instinctive, uncanny ability - but what technical/scientific knowledge I have is minimal, clobbered together from the research of others who have touched upon the same issues - problem is, while someone like Perry would do a better job, if they only have a trust attachment to one person and see all others as a threat, that one person HAS to do it.

So I am not likely to take offense to correction by someone with an actually educated idea of what the hell they're talkin about opposed to my "battlefield medicine" catch as can, imperfect understanding.

And yes, the upshift from the initial reaction to full on berserkerang does take about four minutes, or perhaps less - the time tends to "stretch out" at the end due to altered perception, so it may well be only 2-3 subjectively.
It's also not an on-off switch as it scales up gradually, live a motor revving into higher RPMs, I guess one could say.

It does indeed provide some clarification, as one element of what I refer to as the Dark Spark seems to be a constant trickle-dose of those hormones, what I call low level activation, and if such is the case that could be physically measured and tested, couldn't it ?

I wonder if anyone has tried - most of the research I've seen based around this was testing cortisol levels, which I am not sure would be sufficient of itself.

Anyhows, welcome to the discussion and feel free to add anything you know without fear of me taking offense, since a better technical knowledge of the processes involved is something I have long desired.

-Frem

There always has to be a price.

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Friday, November 6, 2009 4:09 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


So I guess we all agree... except maybe Wulf... that there are no monsters, just people with different neurologies, hormone sets and life experiences?

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Friday, November 6, 2009 11:38 PM

PERFESSERGEE


Frem,

Please check your PM's in response to this post

perfessergee

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Saturday, November 7, 2009 12:15 AM

PERFESSERGEE


Quote:

Originally posted by rue:
"Most of your innards are hooked up to the autonomic nervous system ..."

Despite knowing about conditioned reflexes for decades (Pavlov), it just occurred to me about 10 years ago how weird they are.

Here you have a brain - which takes in and interprets stimuli - directly and reflexively influencing the autonomic nervous system over time. When you take into account that for people words are another form of stimuli, you can tap into the autonomic nervous system 'artificially'. A person who has no concept of a gun will not be afraid if one is pointed at them. A person who has never been shot or even shot at, who has no direct negative sensory experience, but who has been TOLD what one is, will. And they will experience all the attendent hormone secretions.

I find that very strange.

.



This is a very good point. All of us critters with backbones respond to stressful events in the same way (i.e., we secrete the same hormones). If you harass a fish, it will secrete the exact same hormones as a human. But, I doubt you could tell a fish that you were going to harass it and elicit a response, whereas humans would. The cognitive link for people is critical. Having a jerk for a boss in the workplace can elicit the same stress response as physical abuse. This is something corporate culture hasn't taken into account - it probably costs very much money in health care and lost productivity, but I don't know of any studies of this, despite the well-known health consequences of chronic stress. It would be very interesting (to me the biologist) to see the hormonal effects of job insecurity in the current marketplace. Maybe I should start studying humans............

perfessergee

PS please check your PM's

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Saturday, November 7, 2009 4:01 AM

FREMDFIRMA


Oh, bleh - I cannot receive PMs, PERFERSSERGEE - the email addy attached to this account has been dead for years.
If it *really* needs privacy I can sort a dead-drop box for ya, maybe.

Siggy
Quote:

So I guess we all agree... except maybe Wulf... that there are no monsters, just people with different neurologies, hormone sets and life experiences?

Not quite - while there are mostly "just people" (and wasn't it Joss who said people were scarier than any aliens, yes ?) you do on occasion run into something... else.

Imma refer you to a bit by Ellis Amdur here which sticks with me cause I've met folks that far off the end myself before.

Satsujin no Ken - Katsujin no Ken
The Sword that Takes Life, the Sword that Gives Life
http://www.vachss.com/guest_dispatches/ellis_amdur.html

(Quoted slightly out of order for clarity)
Quote:

When I interviewed that boy, I knew what he was capable of doing. I had no expectation that treatment would help him, but that was the best suggestion I could come up with. I knew he would, sooner or later, do something horrible to some poor child.

Am I a moral failure in that I did not kill him?


That's a question that haunts me too - to which my answer has been to do my utmost, and beyond, in efforts to prevent the creation of someone so internally wrecked they can hardly even be considered "human" anymore, to whom treatment would be as cruel as murder because of what they have already done, and the impossibility of living with that knowledge if sanity was returned to them.


And then there are those who make an active, conscious CHOICE to follow a path of evil, who derive joy and satisfaction from enabling oppression of people they don't like, or crave the respect and adulation of the power elite...

You know, the kind of people without whom, tyranny cannot occur - I don't mean the ignorant, I mean the people who KNOW EXACTLY WHAT THEY ARE DOING, and actively, intentionally chose it on purpose.

There's no excuse, it's beyond inhumane, it's downright insentient.
And I do not, once they have made that choice, consider them human whatever, since by their actions they have abandoned any claim to that legacy.


But yeah, mostly just messed up people - thing is, the tiny fraction of the two facets described about does a huge percentage of the damage.

WHO IS THE SERIOUS, VIOLENT, HABITUAL OFFENDER?
http://www.vachss.com/av_dispatches/lifestyle.html
Quote:

The second characteristic is lack of perception of the future. He has none. If you ask a kid like this, "What are you going to be doing next year?" you will get an absolutely blank stare. Not because he's stupid, but because he simply cannot conceptualize such a distance from right now. If you want to speak with this kid, you have to speak within his time frame, and that time frame isn't ever more than a few hours from the present.

These particular types are WHY I carry a piece - no future possibility of incarceration or punishment, no empathy or negotiation works on them, the ONLY defense you have against them is a direct and imminent threat to their person, and even that is only sufficient to secure an escape route if you do not intend to kill them.

And this speech, made back in 1982, as I recall, is extremely relevant to the exact topic here from top to bottom.
Quote:

This kid does not relate behavior to consequences. He does not see a causal connection between his acts and a response. What do I mean? To this kid, life is a lottery. Everyone rolls the dice, but not everyone pays the price. He has no perception as to how the dice will come up. In his world, everyone commits crimes. Everybody. Some smaller percentage of that number are arrested. A still smaller percentage go to court; an even smaller percentage go to trial. A smaller percentage still are actually found guilty (or "adjudicated delinquent" if you prefer), and a smaller percentage of that group are committed to a youth authority. Lastly, an even smaller percentage are actually incarcerated.

And what I find terribly offensive - is that when kids express this to us, we go and call it a "distorted worldview" and a mental illness, when in fact that is the exact, literal truth stripped of all the denials and bullshit rationalizations we force ourselves to swallow so we don't have to face up to our responsibility for making this society (and thus the potential future of these kids) a dystopic nightmare.

So we espouse "treatment" in the hopes of force-feeding them the same koolaid we're choking down instead of ADMITTING they have a point and trying to fix that goddamn problem - don't we ?

There's REASONS many of these kids start hating on us and our society, and a lot of them are rooted in how we and this society treated them up to the point where they realized if might makes right (and in most "parenting" styles it does, doesn't it ?) well then, fill my hand with steel and who has the might and the right NOW, motherfuckers ?

And that path leads to "monsters" - watching it happen over and over was what drove me to work towards preventing it, but people, straight up - there are days when I look at out society...

And wonder if I am on the wrong side - not for long, you understand, civilization is a first step and a damned useful one, but you watch someone horribly abused with the help of a system where that abuse is considered proper parenting... and then when they decide to take revenge upon that system and all within it, where's your moral high ground NOW ?

My answer was aiding them in that vengeance on a far grander scale, by taking control of the system in sufficient numbers and power to forcibly change it - or attack it's roots and prevent it from victimizing others.
Quote:

In order to create the kind of sociopathic, non-empathetic, violent human being I've been talking about, you need an institution. You need a controlled environment. You need an environment where might makes right.

You need an environment where there is a hierarchy of exploitation; where the rule is "be exploited or exploit others." For many, many years we have run our institutions on a jungle model where the strong not only survive, but thrive. And when the beast is released, we all pay.


And of course Vachss was talking about prisons, but I suspect he was also hinting also at public schools and the hellcamps, cause otherwise he would have been more specific in his wording - and he is very much correct.
The NEA did some research with a followup report back in 1978 that determined without some change of environment, kids were going to start killing each other in schools within the next decade or so - it was universally ignored.

But I tell you this much, and should you ask him, so will Mr. Vachss.

When a child says "I hurt!" - it's a plea for aid, from a system that invests far more in justifying and excusing that harm than healing it...

Twenty years later when that person says "I hurt!" it's a battlecry, aimed at you, your world, and all it ever has and will represent to them.

And the ONLY difference between those two cries - is what WE do in between em.
Cause damn sure it ain't enough now.

-Frem
"A curse on upon you... a curse upon you all.."

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Saturday, November 7, 2009 12:23 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


I don't agree with your claim (or what I think you are claiming) that some people are born evil or with the capacity to do evil. People may be brain damaged at birth, which may increase the liklihood of aggressive behaviour and poor impulse control, but they aren't going to be the manipulative, violent 'monsters' that we are speaking of.

Of course if you live in a violent society, you'll learn the rules of that society. Socio/psychopaths don't learn the rules. And we know that violent and dysfunctional societies (and the two aren't necessarily connected) will breed socio/psychopaths because of what children will experience in early years - parental abuse or witnessing abuse/neglect because of poverty/drug/alcohol abuse etc etc.

In case studies of socio/psychopaths such as Ted Bundy, there has always found to be some severe attachment disorder from early childhood.

Bowlby was the first one to identify the importance of attachment through his work with institutionilised orphans after ww2 - similar studies have been conducted on present day 'eastern bloc' orphans - even when adopted into loving homes, demonstrate severe attachment disorders (such as anti social pd's) because of the lack of secure attachment to a carer when they were infants.

If doesn't matter so much what your experiences are after those early years (even though they will impact on you) - you are virtually created through those experiences from 0-3

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Saturday, November 7, 2009 6:01 PM

FREMDFIRMA



Quote:

I don't agree with your claim (or what I think you are claiming) that some people are born evil or with the capacity to do evil.

Erk, definitely a misunderstanding that - as I too do NOT believe in "born evil" - in fact I believe that to be a lame excuse used to avoid putting proper resources into fixing these problems.

I was sayin it's absolutely possible to mess someone up beyond the hope of repair before they even reach adulthood - and once they've gone that far...
Then what ?

It's a question I don't have an answer to, not directly, so like the whole issue of abortion, my "answer" is to do all I can to prevent it from coming to that.

And yes, 0-3 is THE most important window, but not the only one.

As Perry's work has shown, a lot of the brain is use-dependent - and my own experiences with this stuff confirm his statements that the earlier you get to it, the less entrenched those patterns are - but over time there's a calcification process where they are reinforced, like the way driving back and forth over the same patch of dirt creates a rut, see ?
And so these behaviors become, mentally, the path of least resistance.
Basically if you can get to it before puberty, there's still a pretty good chance, and although puberty and it's resultant flood of hormones and changes complicates matters, it's still quite possible to help them since the patterns are not so set - but in the period shortly after is where the real calcification begins, and it then becomes exponentially harder the longer after that...

So by the time these kids wind up in the juvenile justice system, there's not a lot of hope left, and even less after a hellcamp or juvie prison - like I said, I *have* pulled some back from the brink, but it's a long road and not an easy one.

Strangely enough, females seem to be more mentally resilient, and for longer, than males - of the outcasts we've been most able to help the ratio has been about 85/15 female to male, I couldn't tell ya why, but there it is.

One huge problem with it is that Child Protective Services/Social Services or whatever you wanna call it, is tremendously dysfunctional and inefficient as a safety net for this problem - Andrew Vachss also points out these flaws and possible solutions in his dispatches.
http://www.vachss.com/av_dispatches.html

These two give actual lists of the necessary reforms.
http://www.vachss.com/av_dispatches/disp_8500_a.html
http://www.vachss.com/av_dispatches/disp_8510_a.html

One additional issue is the all-or nothing sledgehammer approach which is very destructive to the public credibility of that system, we've often found ourselves in direct opposition and conflict with CPS because either they load the scale too heavily in favor of adults and reuniting "families" which never worked, cannot work, and never will work - or they go all sledgehammer about it an attack an entire community or culture instead of specifically targeting the bad actors amongst them.

Plus they suffer from a tremendous amount of burnout, secondary trauma, lack of resources and investment because politicians see only the quick-fox which benefits them while in office, instead of the tiny investments that pay off huge twenty years down the road.

Worse is the effect on the kids themselves - watching their pleas for help go ignored, or being called liars and manipulators, watching as society and the system give the appearance of tacitly condoning the abuse, as long as it's discreet - because of the status of children as less than human (and often enough, less than housepets) - this has a tremendously detrimental affect on their perception of others during critical development periods and can lead directly to antisocial behavior...

Which, it being a natural consequence OF that treatment - can we really call it a "disorder" ?

Anyhows, a lot more to say - but I am out of time, gave wendy the weekend off, so I have rounds to do.

-Frem
"Chewin on the shield rim, gonna get some hits in!"
Oliant: Berserker!

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Saturday, November 7, 2009 7:56 PM

PERFESSERGEE


Quote:

Originally posted by Fremdfirma:
Oh, bleh - I cannot receive PMs, PERFERSSERGEE - the email addy attached to this account has been dead for years.
If it *really* needs privacy I can sort a dead-drop box for ya, maybe.



-Frem
"A curse on upon you... a curse upon you all.."



Frem,

No need, what I said in my PM was that I had multiple connections (professional and personal) with the topic you and I (and Byte, and others) were addressing, which is actually a bit different than this particular thread. I'll need some time to address the issue in a coherent way, and I'll start a new thread when I have it together. 'til then,

perfessergee

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Saturday, November 7, 2009 10:28 PM

FREMDFIRMA


Well, I think it's absolutely and directly related in many ways, myself - this kind of incident is a natural fallout thereof, leastways in my opinion.

Certainly looking forward to further discussion though.

-Frem
There always has to be a price.

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Sunday, November 8, 2009 4:59 PM

DREAMTROVE


Sig

Caught it. Yay. More misinformation about proto-inca civilizations. Caral and co destroyed their own environment, committing suicide, and ecocide.

Lack of war occurs in homogenous societies, there's is a lack of anyone to fight. They're far from unique.

Not an advocate for war, just an advocate for reality over the liberal fantasy that there was once an idyllic society that we should all emulate. Honestly, *anything* looks good by comparison.

Descendents of Caral et al would be conquered by the Wari, and that civilization would be even worse. There's no win here, it's lose-lose.

This liberal fantasy resurfaces time after time with any civilization in which there is not enough information.

Reality: Humans are just a freak evolution of the bonobo ape, and animal that fights wars, has patriarchical societies, and is capable of acts of violence. If it's any consolation to the left, they're also all vegetarians, they have no rape, and they do have homosexuality. You want to know what humans are like, study animals.

Anyone who does not prepare for the eventuality of war is doomed, there's really nothing more to say about it. Homogeneous monoethnic societies are peaceful until they meet someone else who wants their land and resources. That didn't happen to Caral because they were so incredibly destructive they killed themselves and every other species of life they met before they met any other humans. Great.. There's a society to emulate.

"Open war is upon you, whether you would risk it or not."

Sorry, I'm trying to read this kinda interesting stuff on psychology.

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