Tuesday, March 16, 2010

The Traits and End of a Psychopath

A psychopath has:

1) behavior problems in childhood due to a lack of a long-term, loving care with the teaching of good morals by an authority figure (like a parent) which leads to the child doing wrong often in childhood and their conscience becoming seared to the point where it no longer will produce a feeling of guilt, even in adulthood;

is:

2) shallow (which can be determined by a their great resistance or unwillingness to learn past what is easy to understand or moderately hard) and will complain or show frustration about the difficulty they had in learning subjects that require much patience and concentration which did not interest them (for example may say, “it was really hard to study these things”);

3) arrogant (for example sees themselves as much better than most people yet having no evidence for this, and may boast aloud of some existing or non-existent trait they have (like clairvoyance) thinking that that trait gives them great uniqueness and a level of goodness or intelligence that makes them much more worthy of attention than other things, including people, and much more valuable than other things, and so if they are interrupted when they are wandering, rambling or ranting or interrupted at all, will make a reply like, “well if you would let me finish” or “don’t cut me off” even if what they are saying is not relevant or obvious, even if that is told to them, and will behave as if what they have to say is relevant, original/not obvious and profound and unable to be known by the person they are talking to unless they tell it to them.);

4) obsessed with finding uniqueness and non-repetition in others (for example may insult someone for not being original and “repeating” themselves) and without realizing it is implying that the uniqueness and originality that they are seeming is immoral and illogical (which they often call “random”) behavior;

5) often quick to lie to save or keep an appearance of being very unique, wise and or whatever their idea of “good” is;

6) skilled at lying from practice and observation;

7) lives a parasitic lifestyle/takes advantage of others to survive and live without having to do hours worth of hard or complex physical or mental work;

8) will do complex mental work only if they see absolutely no other likely way for them to accomplish their long term goal of having an easy-going life, for example doing math work that bores them in order to get through college

9) has no conscience, and therefore feels no regret or sorrow or guilt regardless of how badly or how many times they disobey God

10) may try to display appropriate sorrow to having done wrong or seeing wrong done or over some sad thing (like a suffering child dying in front of them) if they think they may lose their advantage over others or be unable to gain an advantage over others if they don’t display this sorrow

11) their displays of sorrow over wrong-doing or someone suffering or dying lack a sad expression and they do not feel very sad

12) they feel great distress and worry when they perceive an immediate threat to their life-style

13) callousness (for example will tell someone who gets off a subject they want to be the focus of a discussion, “you’re wandering”, rather than asking them a question on the desired subject to bring them back to it, yet if themselves are asked a question to get them to give an immediate answer or more concise answer, tend to give a reply like, “well if you would let me finish” or “stop interrupting me” with a hostile or strained, high pitched, aggravated-sounding or condescending tone,

14) self-centered (for example may brush off a request from a friend’s request for some emergency merely because they desire more sleep or hoard money to the hurt of others though not necessarily out of greed)

15) though they may sometimes feel sorrow for seeing someone else in a bad position, it does not last long, are unwilling to give more than what they consider to be of little value to help the person they feel sorrow for, though for their own entertainment they are willing to give a little physical help to or chat for a while

16) poor emotional self-control/impuslive (for example will touch a person in a place where that person requests not to be touched if they think that they can escape being punished for it, though they may not be promiscuous or display their lust openly out of fear of being rejected for their inability to please another sexually and not having adequate sexually-pleasing physical characteristics);

17) very resistant to accept that they have done wrong if it wasn’t intentional

18) sadistic (for example will intentionally do wrong and laugh at seeing it greatly upset a person)

As a consequence of these things psychopaths may have many short-term relationships (depending on how high the population is where they live) and due to their relentless disrespectfulness, unthankfulness, lack of appropriate emotional responses becoming unbearable and because the psychopath desires and seeks out new experiences to keep from feeling boredom.

19) When unable to find people to take advantage of to keep away their boredom, psychopaths will become delusional, imagining people that don’t exist to converse with and may even create false evidence so that these imaginary people appear real (for example imaginary email accounts supposedly used by these imaginary people and sending email to themselves from these accounts).

A psychopath, like any sinner, can only be made to be increasingly logical and increasingly self-controlled and loving by God. Though punishment can help a psychopath to stop doing wrong outwardly, it is only temporary, and the punishment provokes them to become more bitter and will whether intentionally or not will tempt others to do wrong by at least their behavior, disturbing the peace of those who love God, which is why psychopaths also will be sent away, hidden within the darkness of Hell.

[Via http://eternian.wordpress.com]

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