- Admin
- #25
anthony
Founder
I'm not bringing PTSD into this... it is irrelevant based on your question.I totally agree that PTSD is PTSD
All trauma is unique, but by no means distinct, and by no means is one abuser type worse than another, which is what the question poses. We could make assumptions and futuristic thinking on behalf of deceased gunmen, stating they could have been a sociopath or such, and completely disregard known tendencies that define sociopathic / psychopathic behaviour, of which the majority of these kids who go kill random student do not have, have been proven beyond a doubt in past cases, yet if you asked those who got shot and survived, they would likely call the kid with the gun a psychopath anyway, because they shot them in their school.
Sociopath is another word for psychopathy, which binds psychopathic behaviour, or psychopath as you want to call it here.
A parent who abuses their child for years and years, the majority aren't suffering psychopathy... they're just shitty parents, they're selfish, uncaring, alcoholics, drug addicts, and the list goes on. Ask a child abused by a parent who suffers PTSD. The parent isn't a sociopath or psychopath, they suffer PTSD and yet they can abuse a child to such an extent both emotionally and/or physically (vietnam vets have a long string of these cases) that the child has complex trauma as a result. Enjoyment isn't even in the equation... yet the child's trauma is complex, obtained throughout their childhood and youth until they could get the hell out of the home... and if you asked them, they would say that parent was a psychopath or such, which is factually inaccurate. The parent had PTSD.
I can keep coming up with these all day... counters for the argument fore. When such counters can be established for a person to have the same outcome, then it means that type of abuser is not unique for the outcome. It may seem that way to you, but it's not, which is why getting back to the title of this thread... therapists don't entertain such aspects because they have zero foundation, factual basis. Trauma is unique to each person, and underlying personality disorders or other disorders of an abuser, simply underline that the abuser was suffering a mental health condition also.
So if you have done things because of PTSD, aren't proud of things because of PTSD, then now reverse that to another with a mental disorder. Everyone isn't in control as you the abused may think they are, not with mental health presence, thus negating such comments as psychopaths liking it. Again, a psychopath liking it is a minuscule statistical number within all psychopaths, if you research psychology statistics from experts who treat such mental health disorders. The problem is they struggle with emotion identification, they do things to try and feel something... just like those who cut to feel something. A negative behaviour to try and obtain a positive feeling, but at a more severe level for psychopathy.