Natascha Kampusch - 8 Years In Captivity (Hover)
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The article mentions Stockholm Syndrome but not that the girl actually made the kidnapper her friend. I'm sure that it did happen though, especially after all that time. The study of Stockholm Syndrome itself is very unique and its interesting that in many cases, it develops very quickly in a situation like this. It sometimes to develop to a point in which the girl probably helped him not get caught within the first six months of the kidnapping.
I am interested to find out the remaining tests results for her. I am curious to know what type of abuse outside the obvious imprisonment in a small area. I also want to know how she escaped. Was the door left open when he went to kill himself or did she escape some other way?
The part I mentioned about her becoming a friend to him was reported by the BBC and they said it is a natural survival tool inbuilt into humans. You can see evidence of this in animals… if a creature cannot defend itself then it will either fight to the death or become docile / subordinate to the superior beast.
You have to think that this was just a little girl when she was taken, and may have been the victim of rape and other forms of torture which for her may now be 'normal'. How does one recover from a missing eight years?
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That's the problem in my view: He taught her through however he treated her that she had to submit to whatever he wanted. How long will it take her to recover from that and have normal relationships with people? Not just men, but anyone? It's telling that the first thing she asked her father was whether or not he still had a particular toy she liked. She's still a very little girl "inside."
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He also forced her to call him "master" so you can well imagine the kind of torture this girl went through, treated worst than a slave.
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It is cases like these that make me a strong advocate of the death penalty, I cannot see much use in having a monster like this alive - isn't it better for him to meet his Maker a little bit faster so he can feel the torment of the afterlife? Or, even if you believe in no afterlife, isn't it better that such beings be destroyed rather than live among us? Consider that they put a dog to sleep just for biting someone, and we keep alive and feed someone who assaults, rapes, kidnaps, tortures, etc.
With regards to the actual terminology, does anyone know the name of this survival mechanism?
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With regards to the actual terminology, does anyone know the name of this survival mechanism? |
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The syndrome is named after the Norrmalmstorg robbery of Kreditbanken at Norrmalmstorg, Stockholm, Sweden in which the bank robbers held bank employees hostage from August 23 to August 28, 1973. In this case, the victims became emotionally attached to their victimizers, and even defended their captors after they were freed from their six-day ordeal. The Stockholm syndrome is a psychological response sometimes seen in a hostage, in which the hostage exhibits loyalty to the hostage-taker, in spite of the danger (or at least risk) in which the hostage has been placed. |
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First of all I want to let you know that I don't want and will not answer any questions about personal or intimate details. I will act against those who overstep personal boundaries towards voyeurism. Whoever tries to do so will have to watch out. I have grown into a young woman interested in education and with human needs. My living space: My room was well enough furnished. It was my room and not meant to be shown in public. My daily life: This was very regulated. Most of the time we had breakfast together - he didn't work most of the time - household chores, reading, watching television, talking, cooking. That's what it was like for years. Everything connected with the fear of loneliness. The relationship: He was not my master. I was just as strong. But - to give you a metaphor - he carried me in his arms but also trampled me underfoot. But he took on the wrong one [person] - and he and I both knew that. He carried out the kidnapping on his own, everything was already prepared. |
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Stockholm syndrome - that is it, I wonder how they claim the same here, has she defended this guy? Regardless, her words do show the psychological damage, but at least she can distinguish reality from her ordeal.
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