Disorganized Episodic Aggression: (psychopath-born)
Organized Sociopathic Hatred: (sociopath-made)
Ritualistic behaviorSuperficial charm and "good" intelligenceAttempts to conceal mental instabilityAbsence of delusions and other signs of irrational behaviorCompulsivityAbsence of "nervousness" or psychoneurotic manifestationsPeriodic search for helpunreliabilitySevere memory disorders and an inability to tell the truthuntruthfulness and insinceritySuicidal tendencieslack of remorse or shameHistory of committing assaultinadequately motivatedantisocial behaviorHypersexuality and abnormal sexual behaviorpoor judgment and failure to learn by experienceHead injuries; injuries suffered at birthpathological egocentricity and incapacity for loveHistory of chronic drug or alcohol abusegeneral poverty in major affective reactionsParents with history of chronic drug or alcohol abusespecific loss of insightVictim of childhood physical or mental abuseunresponsiveness in general interpersonal relationsResult of an unwanted pregnancyfantastic and uninviting behavior with and sometimes without drinkProduct of a difficult gestation for mothersuicide rarely carried outUnhappiness in childhood resulted in inability to find happinesssex life impersonal, trivial, and poorly integratedExtraordinary cruelty to animalsfailure to follow any life planAttraction to arson without homicidal interest
Symptoms of neurological impairment
Evidence of genetic disorder
Biochemical symptoms
Feelings of powerlessness and inadequacy
AnswerPeople often DO NOT WANT TO BELIEVE...I myself have had that experience. I now warn people, but some of them insist on liking me anyway. The weird irony is that I know a very kind, empathic woman who gets picked on and hurt deeply everywhere she goes, just about. Seems a bit misguided to me...
But what do I know about fairness?
TRUTH IS...
AnswerSociopaths -- psychopaths; people with ASPD (Antisocial Personality Disorder) -- actually feel very little. The sociopath is essentially a hollow shell.Yet, according to Robert Hare, an expert on psychopathy, they are "not fragile" -- their character is "set in stone" for life.
But there are no human beings without some vulnerability. I'm not the only one pointing this out. Two other sociopathshere have written of it. (See below, after the end of my essay answer.)
Even after being told one is a psychopath or sociopath, it often seems meaningless to the one being diagnosed.
Sociopaths rarely feel true happiness. If they do, it is usually in the condition that some kind of intervention -- such as one of the small number of medications made for other conditions that may also help somewhat with theirs -- has taken place, and it will be fleeting. For all their frantic racing around, they are really very dead inside, and this is tragic beyond description. Imagine spending your entire life trying to get your brain to wake up! And failing. Thousands of times.
There are stories of people diagnosed as sociopaths who did improve to some degree, with the most ceaseless and diligent help. But since the vast majority of this huge body of people (there are more than three hundred million sociopaths on Earth) cannot get that kind of attention, they turn to abusing those they envy, and often to crime.
It is certainly vengeance: "If I can't have any of this, why should you?" This is the real reason sociopaths lash out at strong and kind people. No matter what they say, they know that inside, they are always empty and damaged beyond repair.
Only in neuroscience is there hope for these incomplete people. The key lies in awakening the cerebral cortex of brain, which is risky because sociopaths are much more prone to seizures than the rest of the population, and that -- an uncontrolled blast of electrical discharge spreading through the brain and causing violent convulsions -- is likely to be the first response from brain pathways that, after years or even decades of silence, are suddenly flooded with impulses.
But if the devices of neurosurgeons can be tweaked to avoid this shock, and all else related to this idea is workable, it's feasible that small electronic devices planted in the brain (these already exist, but are not yet being used for mental illness) could open up a closed connection.
That leaves us with the problem of whether a lifetime of scattered information can ever be set into order. Probably the best that could be hoped for would be a kind of retraining -- like what is now done with stroke survivors and head injury patients -- that would be both intensive and compensatory.
One of the things that would be necessary would be to try to socialize the person whose congenital birth defect made such a thing completely impossible before. Whatever intervention is used, be it drugs or computer chips or what have you, it would probably -- I'd say certainly -- be excruciating for the patient at first. With no knowledge of how to cope with the emotions the rest of the world has been dealing with all their lives, the recovering sociopath would be rendered as vulnerable as a baby. Which makes sense, because some of the most basic aspects of the human mind would be developing from the primordial stasis in which they had remained since birth!
A person thus treated would never be fully normal, but the human brain is amazing in the way it adapts and continues to develop all through life. And given the utterly joyless and meaningless existence a sociopath leads, any improvement is better than none. Robert Hare agrees with that latter statement.
The matter of missing neurotransmitters in a sociopath is, of course, another problem. Would "waking up" the cerebral cortex eventually stimulate production of these? Or would they have to be synthesized? Only time will tell.
Indeed, for years I didn't really get it. But as one clinic after another rejected me, often with venom and even threats, I began to realize I'd better see what there was about the diagnosis I'd been given that could possibly carry such a terrible stigma.
So, I had no real clue what I was as an individual, until the diagnostician emphatically and angrily told me what I was.
And he said that one of my most insidious actions was to attempt to make contact with and even become friends with other, unsuspecting people.
I tried to tell him I actually wanted to help people and that I simply had a normal need to make friends, but he said he wasn't buying it. Not from the likes of me.
Yet, even though warmth almost never touches my frozen core, I still seek it...
Another psychopath (sociopath) wrote this on another answer:
Sociopaths, though born that way, are people too. To avoid an entire group of people is absurd. That's like saying, "Since these people have dark skin, everyone should completely avert themselves from them." I am a moderate sociopath, and though part of me doesn't want to change, another does. Many times it is really entertaining to see how stupid people can be, especially when they're so gullible as to believe every word that mellifluously flows from my lips. Yes, I am parasitic, but even so, there are some people I would like to stop hurting. I can't find any websites that can provide a way to help my sociopathy. Maybe people like you should stop your self-victimisation and start trying to actually help people like me! I knew I was a sociopath before the age of ten but have only recently had it officially diagnosed. I am eighteen years old now, and I have been lying and destroying others' sanity for a long time. So, please post some helpful tidbits that might help sociopaths resist the sweet urges we get when we encounter weak human beings. When you cut us, do we not bleed? When you kill us, do we not die? Do you honestly think that you're being lied to and manipulated when we sincerely ask for help. Listen to yourselves! This is the internet; ergo, you're safe from our fortified mental grasp.
The essay that follows was written in another answer by another self-admitted sociopath, who actually might not be a sociopath. Still another person added the brief comment to that effect after her tragic essay.
Comment: The above testimony is clearly notindicative of a sociopath because she seems to make efforts to keep from harming others, even if it doesn't benefit herself.
Comment: It's really interesting that these answers appeal to our pity. Appeals for pity are one of the key hallmarks of the Sociopath as identified by Martha Stout. Ph.D in her book "The Sociopath Next Door".
Generating a 'poor me' feeling is one of the main tactics used by sociopaths to coerce behaviours out of those around them and as such should be a real red flag. It's fascinating that a Sociopath would use the very diagnosis of their condition as one of the main tactics in their controlling arsenal, but not entirely unexpected.
As to saying it's not fair to ignore an entire group of people (Sociopaths) because it's tantamount to racism (using both the 'poor me' and the responsibility displacement tactic) is like saying that locking up people who have committed crime is discriminatory against criminals. Sociopaths should be avoided because they're extremely hazardous to the mental, emotional and possibly even physical heath of those around them. That's their defining characteristic. Last time I looked that wasn't true of skin colour.
Legacies are things left behind by civilizations. For example, a Japanese legacy is haiku.
It's "Historical truth". Historical truth is is the truth about the past.
Sojourner of Truth
what did sojourner truth usually wear
The address of the Truth Or Consequences Public Library is: 325 Library Lane, Truth Or Consequence, 87901 2375
a truth thing that tells the truth
tells the truth about your topic
The Australian lyre bird never tells the truth.
"Truth in time tells all" means that after time, you will get the answers you need.
The 4th tells him that he is his father.
what instrument never tells the truth
ikikki
Trustworthy !
8th
right here
They cannot BOTH be telling the truth.
I think a Christmas book is when it tells you a tale about Christmas! Also what happens and what it feels like at Christmas time! Addittionally it tells you a tale a fiction is when they make it up but in the Christmas time. Then non-fiction is they tell the truth about Christmas and how it is celebrated!