Give Me a Reaction
HG Tudor provides you with more of his worldview by explaining why he needs a reaction from those around him. Part of this you will know because of his narcissism, but what part does his psychopathy play in this? Find out.
HG Tudor provides you with more of his worldview by explaining why he needs a reaction from those around him. Part of this you will know because of his narcissism, but what part does his psychopathy play in this? Find out.
“What are you having for dinner?” – “A person.” You know, of course, the magic words any seasoned housewife will say next: Can you give me the recipe? How long do you cook it for? Do you have a special secret ingredient? And then you might have to do a demonstration. Very messy in an office environment, and probably not a single decent carving knife to be found.
Dear Mr Tudor,
I saw an interview by a lovely lass from Inside Edition with Pastor Kenneth Copeland about his insane wealth (more like profiteering from the gullible) and his private jet use. He couldn’t resist the urge to control the interviewer and made total mince meat out of her….he totally got his rocks off on it!
Pure evil right there, his eyes said it all.
Well worth a watch for the narcissism and manipulation in full swing.
Luv Bubbles xx 😘
You mean the video I did a couple of weeks ago?
Dear Mr Tudor,
Thank you, yes, that’s the interview that randomly came across my newsfeed and I didn’t realise you had done one on him. I just found yours and watched it. Your video was extremely informative. How could anyone trust him, he’s absolutely vile. Self righteous nauseating person to the extreme with the most evil piercing eyes.
No flies on you, you are so up-to-date and with it. I need a faster treadmill to keep up with you hehe
Note to self, check your videos first 🤣
Cheers
Luv Bubbles xx 😘
..Just when you thought it couldn’t get any darker, somebody knocked from below.
HG, I’d think that much of the time you’d correctly predict exactly what kind of reaction you’d get from those you interact with, based on years of experience and understanding of people and also because you must wield the control in all situations which involves orchestrating the reactions. But now and then are you met with reactions that you didn’t expect? Even if just a small percentage of the time? Would it be true that the more unusual reaction (even if it was not an ideal reaction and perhaps even a frustrating one) would be more capable of driving the boredom down, and would create a spark of interest, at least temporarily while you quickly recalibrated your approach to ensure you were back in control and directing events.
This reminds me of the element of sadism in your character, and how just any reaction is not likely to do. The most severe reaction is likely to be the most satisfying. Of course, it has to be calculated to the circumstances, so telling the ladies in the tea room you’re going to roast a minion or two for dinner is likely to be passed off as a joke before you slide into your three course meal delight. A little peek behind the mask, but not enough to convince them about what lies beneath :O It doesn’t sound like they got much of a peek, and we are exposed to much more.
Jordan Peterson recently put up a video where he interviewed another academic who has done studies into the darker side of our natures (i.e. Dark Triad/Tetrad), and they only lightly touched on the topic of sadism. In all honesty, they couldn’t seem to work it out in terms of trying to trace it back to Darwinian origins. Psychopathy potentially made sense in terms of survival. Sadism, they were reaching. I never felt they quite got there, except to acknowledge it is a factor in some people and how it might be discerned via experimentation, as well as have some predictive value. I must watch it again to see what more I can gain in terms of understanding. The video itself was titled: The Dark Side of Psychology – Women, Pornography and Sadism.
The Tetrad is Machiavellianism, Narcissism and Psychopathy with Sadism added.
Watched a very interesting video today (another one) featuring former SAS soldier, Andy McNab. He was being interviewed on a program called “Crisis What Crisis?” and was very forthright about his experiences and his diagnosed Psychopathy.
One of the most interesting things he shared, and something memorable he had brought with him from his training days, was hearing the experience of a pilot captured behind enemy lines forced into solitary confinement for six years. In the context of that experience, the once captured pilot shared some valuable insight. The only thing a captive has control of in that situation is their mind. It’s also the only thing the captor can’t take hold of unless you allow it. The pilot was badly beaten and tortured, but in his mind he built a home, painted it, turned his thoughts to imaginary practicalities. The host of the program called it “the integrity of the mind” and I thought that was a really valuable insight.
Of course, more valuable insights were shared which I’ve no doubt you could appreciate, too, HG. Just in the sense of him giving the perspective of a diagnosed psychopath, and what that has meant in terms of his experiences – how he can confront the enemy, how he lacks fear and also empathy, what drives him (he describes it like a game) and the criteria he uses to make decisions. Really fascinating stuff.
Oh.
Reaction?
Ok……….
Lurve? You got it
Love? You got it
Hate? Nah, no can do
Aahh! My god, the date, it’s……… err…….. V Day!
films….. V for Vendetta…….Venom…….Valkyrie…..
Victory
Have a satisfactory V day, HG xxx