This week while reflecting on the writings that most influenced my thinking about psychopathy/sociopathy, I received a letter from a mother of a five year-old boy whose father shows many signs of the disorder. She wrote:
Do you believe that children can show signs of being psychopathic? If so do you teach them to suppress the way they really feel by masking the problems with fake feelings? Can feelings of love really be learned? Just because someone on the outside appears like they have feelings does that mean inside they have actually changed? As you know they are good actors. The skill is learned very quickly to lie to blend in with the others. I bought your book off Amazon I should be getting it today. And i am also reading Dr. Hares book. I will try to look at your book some more today.
Shortly after my son’s father was arrested, I sat on my bed, with our seven month old baby asleep beside me, with the psychiatry DSM manual open to the page containing the criteria for “antisocial personality disorder”. I asked myself “do any of these criteria relate to common themes discussed in the child development literature.” I had to answer that question to know how best to mother my own child.
Interestingly, all the criteria mapped onto three developmentally acquired abilities: Ability to Love, Impulse Control, and Moral Reasoning. I then vowed I would read everything there was to read about each of these.
I started with Ability to Love. In my opinion the most important book about Ability to Love is Learning to Love by Harry Harlow, Ph.D. He is the scientist who demonstrated that a baby monkey clings to his mother out of pleasure in affection and “contact comfort” not because mother is a source of food. Prior to Dr. Harlow, scientists believed that the child learned to relate to his mother because she was associated with food.
The profound conclusion reached by Dr. Harlow’s research team is that babies are born to “learn to love” just like babies are born to learn language. We don’t come into the world talking but as our brains develop and we are exposed to language we learn to talk. Similarly, we don’t come into the world loving, but as our brains develop and we receive the right input we learn to love.
There are other interesting parallels between talking and loving including the observation that both are disordered in autism and both are influenced by genetics.
My world completely changed when I read page 44 of learning to love. It is on this page that Dr. Harlow discusses a very important developmental sequence. Ability to Love starts to develop before pleasure in aggression and competition sets in:
“The primary basis of aggression control is the formation of strong generalized bonds of peer love or affection… All primates, monkeys and men alike are born with aggressive potential, but aggression is a rather later maturing variable. It is obvious that a one year old suffers from fear and is terrified by maternal separation, but the child neither knows nor can express aggression at this tender age…This lack of aggression targets accounts in part for the fact that “evil emotion” culminates during the age-mate stage, long after peer affection and love have developed. It is the antecedent age-mate love that holds the fury of aggression within acceptable bounds for in group associates.”
Love starts to develop before aggression does, and has a head start in the race for the brain connections that form the basis of our values.
Now back to our 5 year old boy. I am very disturbed by the recent trend of referring to children as “psychopathic” in the scientific literature. Not that she does not describe symptoms of psychopathy, but to call a 5 year old psychopathic, negates the importance of learning to love and acts like it is an inborn ability.
I would say that this boy is learning disabled and requires extra help when it comes to learning to love. Just like speech therapy would help him if he couldn’t speak, love therapy will help him if he can’t love. Studies of autistic children show that a mother’s love makes a big differences for many severely affected children. Why shouldn’t we at least give this 5 year old the benefit of the doubt and give him love therapy.
Many studies show that the parents of at-risk children struggle with loving them. It is hard to love an impulsive child who goes after the cat with sharp tools. These parents are also harmed by suggestions that psychopathy is entirely genetic and firmly in place by age 3.
The focus on “discipline” also hurts these families because children need to learn to love. How can they learn to love if the people who are supposed to teach them are constantly yelling at them and scolding them or spanking them?
What is the answer?
An at-risk child is a full time job! Parents have to love that child 24/7 and not leave him alone to go to the kitchen to pick up the knife and go after the cat. Preventive positive parenting means waking up before the child, being there when he opens his eyes and saying, “I love you”. It means giving him hugs and kisses, playing and having fun together.
LOL! I AM laughing, but that’s because you said -huh?
And i automatically assumed you were messing with me for being paranoid, but I can smell P a mile away. ROTFLAO.
🙂
Honest to god, falls under the same interpretation to me as….
Huh, What, I promise, and Really I will…..
If someone has to promise….or prove they are NOT lying….they are lying….thats what EB’s dictionary reads too…..
I think he may have meant…..I HOPE to god…she’s dead.
But you know what…..why are we putting time into a news article…..we could dissect it from here to the kindom come….and never have any difinitive answers….
Let’s redirect our energies back to something useful…..
LIKE JON AND KATE!
🙂
I hope you can laugh with me sweet…..I mean NO harm!
WHAT-
that’s ok, Erin, I’m just beating around the bush!
🙂
Everyone’s gone from LF but us. I think we bored everyone to death with our gray rock and they deserted us. maybe we should say g’nite.
sweet dreams EB.
Thanks for the chat Skylar…..
Have a good night….get some rest.
XXOO
Erin and Sky,
Yea, they come up with these STUPID plans that are fairly easy to see through, like my X-DIL and her P-BF deciding to kill her husband, son C, and make it look like SELF DEFENSE because he attacked her/them because he found out about the affair.
And WHO KNOWS they might have gotten away with it, the way the stupid courts today expect a “video taped” crime with DNA evidence thrown in to boot before they will convict someone on murder. (a little exaggeration there) but to me at least, I think it showed more than ANYTHING that SHE was the one who wanted C dead. To me the story was so LAME and so apparently contrived. I just thank God that it didn’t work the way they wanted and it worked to get both her AND him out of our lives and into jail/prison at least for a while.
I think, though, since their brains don’t work the same WAY ours does that is why the “logic” of their plans doesn’t “ring true” to us.
Hello, everyone ,interesting discussion. I am here to tell you in my own experience they CAN be born that way. I have 2 adult daughters (one bio, one a step daughter). They are in their 30’s now. My bio daughter was a very difficult child.The nurses in the hospital begged me to hurry and take her home. They kept telling me what a mean baby she was. This shocked me…I was 20 years old and this was my first baby. Although she was difficult, we survived…until……..puberty hit !! From the age of 13 on she has been nothing short of a nightmare. Total sociopath. Her life is a train wreck to say the least. She is an RN and job hops all over the place..has been fired several times, is on drugs, uses men for money and then tosses them aside. Has no regard for her children’s safety (she has 4 of them). Her house is a pig pen, literally. The dog craps in the kids beds, and she just leaves it there. She has NO use for me unless she has a sob story to tell me to try and get money. It doesnt’ work anymore. Now, enters the step daughter…we have his, mine, and ours…3 girls…my new husband had custody of his little sociopath because her Mom has abandoned her at one year old. Before you all start pitying her because of her mother situation just know that her grandparents and Daddy showered this little girl with more love than you can imagine and yet she was an animal.It reminds me of the horse story of the one that you cannot domesticate …it is a waste of time. She would literally hit her father in the face, pinch him and scream at him till she vomited. She would literally hyper ventilate if she even saw me sit next to her Daddy. I didn’t realize the extent of her problems until after we got married and we all moved in together. I freaked….but I stuck it out….Gosh, we women can be FOOLS when it comes to love….I tried so hard, I used to think maybe if I just spend more time with her she would be better……didn’t happen….she was such a scary little kid..she would go up to strange men and look longingly into their eyes and tell them she loved them….it was so embarrasing ! I couldn’t take her anywhere . she was so animalistic. I think she has always had high testosterone. At 33 she is exactly the same, except that she is way more cunning now.The older daughter’s sociopathy was adolescent on set (full blown) but the step daughter I believe (with all my heart) was born one…she has 2 kids and the oldest girl is a CLONE of her mother, but the younger daughter is NORMAL….what ever “it” is…….the little one escaped it….my heart so goes out to parents out there…you think if only I had done something different…..? It wasn’t until the last few years and a lot of research and reading that I know I didn’t do anything wrong…of course those 2 young women blame me literally for every bad decision they have ever made. I just let them blame me and go on with my life…I refuse to allow them to suck me into their demonic vortex, but we do need to vent and vent we do……!! I totally believe it is genetic!!! I’m not a Dr. but I’ve been between 2 female sociopaths for 30 years. At this point I can almost smell it on someone….Love you guys !!!
Dear Dr. Leedom and fellow responders,
Can you give me any suggestions of material I can read to help me in dealing with conduct-disordered youth in my fourth grade classroom? I explained the behaviors of one of my students to his mother and while she said she was shocked, she rebuffed all my suggestions for talking with the social worker, or anything further. She told me that he has relatives he is able to talk to, but she hasn’t heard of any problems. I am continuing to document, but until something over the top happens again, I am at a loss.
This ten year old teases and torments his classmates as if he was conducting cruel experiments. He takes absolutely no responsibility for his actions, unless he is sitting with his two parents. I have to repeatedly say, “I’m not asking you whether or not you did it, I’m asking you why,” to bring him to the point where he, with apparent delight, finally smiles and says he doesn’t know why or blames another student for looking at him. All the while, he very convincingly begs that he hasn’t done anything.
I’m a first year teacher, so I wasn’t as stringent with my classroom rules at the beginning of the year. Now, you could bounce a pin off my rule structure, it is so tight.
I’d just like to know what I can do as a teacher to promote the right behavior, not just assume the worst.
Thanks!
Why do you care WHY he did whatever he does?
They learn by Action = Reaction. Unacceptable action should cause disciplinary response. With teachers not being allowed to discipline, things are starting to get really out of hand at schools. A teacher complained to me of my son, while being a Straight A student, talking in the classroom. I asked how did he discipline my son and the teacher was rather confused. I offered to him to remove my son, give him extra work, send him to the principle, etc. It is natural for smart kids to finish their work and feel compelled to talk or find other things to do. But, my son needs to be disciplined for the behavior that was not socially acceptable in that setting at that time. I don’t care if it was because he asked for a pen, or if another kid talked to him first. I don’t ask why because there will always be a reason. I ask did you know this was not acceptable? if he says no, I go into a long lecture, also mentioning consequences. It’s easier to say YES, admit he was wrong and deal with the consequences.
I am not the best parent and have never taught in school. Just wanted to share