Was Jeffrey Dahmer Borderline, Psychopathic, & Psychotic at the same time?

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Dr. Todd Grande

Dr. Todd Grande

Күн бұрын

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@xforeverbubbly
@xforeverbubbly 2 жыл бұрын
The saddest part about the entire situation is it could have been prevented. He was very self aware. He asked for help. He tried speaking to his dad. Both his parents were extremely toxic and dysfunctional. Never fight in front of your children and bring your problems to them. That in itself is second hand trauma. They were so self-consumed that they completely ignored him.
@Justin-st6og
@Justin-st6og 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder how much of that is true. He claimed his childhood wasn’t that bad, though the Netflix series makes it seem like it was horrible.
@xforeverbubbly
@xforeverbubbly 2 жыл бұрын
@@Justin-st6og true but he could also be invalidating himself bc abusive people tend to invalidate and minimize the abuse they inflict on their victims. His parents could have minimized it to the point where he’s just numb to it.
@michaelmashburn6068
@michaelmashburn6068 2 жыл бұрын
Yep, they had no idea what was going on with him, nor did they care. How is a teenager allowed to live alone and become an alcoholic? His parents were absent
@SaffrnE
@SaffrnE 2 жыл бұрын
Many peoples parents fight and argue in front of them and they don't become murderers. I dont think he had an awful childhood, there were just too many contributing factors all at once. His dad clearly loved and cared about him even after it all came out. He wasn't a perfect dad, not by a long shot, but we all make mistakes. I think Jeffrey was born predisposed to mental health issues and his mom taking so many medications, plus his early operation, messed up his brain more than his parents divorcing. Something in his brain wiring definitely went very wrong
@michaelmashburn6068
@michaelmashburn6068 2 жыл бұрын
@@SaffrnE his parents left him to his own devices, never questioned him, and allowed him to be a teenage alcoholic. Clearly that didn't help.
@juliemcneely-kirwan9314
@juliemcneely-kirwan9314 5 жыл бұрын
I have always thought the profound early onset alcoholism was a sign that Dahmer was trying to self medicate, to basically drown his impulses in booze. I think, in the beginning, there he was conflicted.
@Bigbrotherthunder
@Bigbrotherthunder 5 жыл бұрын
Could have been ashamed from his sexuality too not just the abnormal sexual fantasies
@buzzardbeatniks
@buzzardbeatniks 5 жыл бұрын
@My Time Alcohol can be an escape or if you're an alcoholic it can just make you feel normal when you feel disjointed from the world around you, but alcohol also destroys your reasoning and impulse control, the damage it does to your brain builds over time and doesn't go away just because you sobered up the next day. For me, it took about 6 months of 100% sobriety, not one drink, for my brain and emotions to start to work right again. In Dahmer's case he just kept drinking every day for years, this is a lot of psychological damage he's doing to himself. It was about a decade between his first two kills and during that time I think he was trying to keep his desires at bay by staying semi-incapacitated with alcohol, but after killing his second victim in a drunken blackout his old urges seemed to come back full force, I believe he said that he decided then to just give in and do what he wanted.
@sigrunoddgeirsdottir2097
@sigrunoddgeirsdottir2097 4 жыл бұрын
Dahmer said himself that he drank to loosen up inhibitions to be able to act on his fantasies.
@theresag1969
@theresag1969 4 жыл бұрын
I think he drank because he couldn't connect with humans like most people and he was profoundly lonely. He was awkward around men in the unit. I thought that when I knew him in the military. I always thought about Jeffrey after he transferred to Germany because I was disturbed but his loneliness.
@juliemcneely-kirwan9314
@juliemcneely-kirwan9314 4 жыл бұрын
@@theresag1969 So you knew him? It must feel strange to look back on that. Of all the serial killers I have heard about, he's the only one who seems to have had some sense that what he was doing was terrible. The rest simply seem to view most other human beings as objects.
@_RobBanks
@_RobBanks 4 жыл бұрын
The story of the cops assisting that one victim Back to his house blows my mind.
@thevirus7368
@thevirus7368 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah it was insane.
@cavemanlovesmoke4394
@cavemanlovesmoke4394 3 жыл бұрын
Seriously!@
@eiffelviolet
@eiffelviolet 3 жыл бұрын
:(
@8luvbug
@8luvbug 3 жыл бұрын
No repercussions for their shitty actions either.
@ecas4315
@ecas4315 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah that was bad
@elisamastromarino7123
@elisamastromarino7123 5 жыл бұрын
Jeff Dahmer is an interesting study. I read two different books about him for an advanced criminology class and I can't help but wonder if he didn't have an organic mental problem. His mother was sick during her pregnancy with him and took a lot of different medications that wouldn't be allowed for a pregnant woman today. She also had her share of mental issues as well, including bouts of anger and seizures. Her second pregnancy with his brother David was normal and she didn't take medication. David turned out, by all accounts, normal. If it wasn't organic, how are these people created to have zero conscience regarding humans and animals? Very bizarre. Thank you, doctor. Your take on these people is more than interesting to me. 👍🌹
@fumbles1294
@fumbles1294 5 жыл бұрын
And his dad once said he used to have weird thoughts as a child.. He was doomed the day he was conceived
@jenk6895
@jenk6895 5 жыл бұрын
Clearly he had a mental problem lol. Unfortunately though, the brain is so complex and there’s just a whole lot of things we’ll probably never know about it so all we can really do is speculate as to the why’s.
@AdreamlyfeByMichelle
@AdreamlyfeByMichelle 5 жыл бұрын
Elisa Mastromarino Good thoughts Elisa. When you say “organic” it scares the crap out of me, because all that really means to me is “he was born evil.” And since my own father was too, I believe they are demonic & choose to be this way - destroyers & killers of life. It is bizarre to a balanced mind, embedded in empathy, conscience & compassion for other living things. Ugh.... mind boggling.
@babblingalong7689
@babblingalong7689 5 жыл бұрын
Yeah. I think Dahmers brain was damaged while he was a futus. Damaged by the medicines his mom took.......the medicines altered the course of his brain development, essentially damaging it.
@catherinejared9384
@catherinejared9384 5 жыл бұрын
Just to be clear concerning animals Jeffrey was not a killer of animals , he never kills animals only taking body of animals already dead .. in opposit for example with a lot of other serial killer ..
@ritagoforth2317
@ritagoforth2317 4 жыл бұрын
His parents really missed the mark with Jeffrey. So consumed with their own problems, he was basically ignored and left to his own devices.
@thehighpriestess8431
@thehighpriestess8431 3 жыл бұрын
precisely right.
@Abruzzo333
@Abruzzo333 3 жыл бұрын
That's nothing special, most parents "miss the mark" and do a generally terrible job with parenting. Most people grow up with divorced parents and fall into this category and go through life with many psychological problems as a result.
@christianc.christian5025
@christianc.christian5025 3 жыл бұрын
@@Abruzzo333 No, the “special” part is usually either the genetic factors determined before birth and then to what degree the parents “miss the mark.” In Dahmer’s case, bad parenting likely gave way to *exceedingly* bad parenting on top of being born a certain way.
@darthbigred22
@darthbigred22 3 жыл бұрын
@@christianc.christian5025 Excuses how many serial killers kids are serial killers? Exactly It's the parenting There's a whole study on this triplets from the 80s and they were all put with different families. It's a huge scandal there is some parts that are genetic but some are clearly parent related. Go look it up it's interesting and disgusting all at once.
@anniegaffney8378
@anniegaffney8378 3 жыл бұрын
@@darthbigred22 There are
@user-ge6uo2ry2b
@user-ge6uo2ry2b 2 жыл бұрын
Kids don’t just start drinking. Years ago, I read a few of the books including the one by his father. It seems both parents were severe in their emotional neglect. He was alone with his thoughts and wanted connection.
@Nunya_Bidness_53
@Nunya_Bidness_53 2 жыл бұрын
He might have been okay with an intellectual, introverted father and an empathetic, involved mother; there would have been sone kind of balance. But he got hit with the double whammy, and retreated into him-self and it's darkest parts.
@Heartofitall9691
@Heartofitall9691 2 жыл бұрын
I dunno about that. I grew up in the general area he did, and in the 70's and 80's, I would say one of every two young people were dappling with pre teen and teenage drinking. You could enter many corner stores who would just sell it without checking id, and then then cops started to crack down bc of the MADD group, one could literally stand in a parking lot with an extra buck and get strangers to grab a few 12 packs, some 2 liters of Sun Country wine coolers or some Wild Irish Rose. It was a rite of passage-in my private, religious high school most students from all walks of life drank, as did my husband's. He attended a public high school. It was a different time back then. We grew up watching Grease, Outsiders, Footloose and other movies glorifying teenage rebellion. A slap on the wrist was the most that happened if you got caught with alcohol or drinking and driving. So I do disagree with your comment based on my life experience and knowing so many friends and acquaintances who really partied down.
@earld158
@earld158 2 жыл бұрын
sometimes they do. Sometimes they have excellent parents and still have issues. His parents had issues though
@tracyb5277
@tracyb5277 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, and maybe his dad did do his best. But did he ever take accountability? He went on writing a book as if he was always the victim. No real input on his horrible character/parenting and putting Jeffrey’s mom on even more of a smear campaign - labeling her as mentally unstable. Does he not realize if she was mentally unstable as he claims that even more accountability falls on him? What a mess.
@earld158
@earld158 2 жыл бұрын
@@tracyb5277 his dad has many times. He has repeatedly spoke on how he wish he would've talked with him more because he knew "something was off" and has also spoke on how wrong it was to encourage much of the stuff he did. He wasn't going top make anything on the book, but what deal that was there fell through anyway. His Dad has absolutey taken accountability- not his mother so mucn but his father is a good man
@JasonX00
@JasonX00 4 жыл бұрын
Dahmer was self aware. His prison interviews are intriguing and down right scary.
@ibanez33150
@ibanez33150 4 жыл бұрын
White people making excuses
@BLUEGENE13
@BLUEGENE13 4 жыл бұрын
@@ibanez33150 lol what excuse? Being self aware is worse what are you saying lol
@BLUEGENE13
@BLUEGENE13 4 жыл бұрын
@@ibanez33150 he's one of those people guys, lets just not
@Jayyy667
@Jayyy667 4 жыл бұрын
@@ibanez33150 sub saharan iq acting up
@kevin6293
@kevin6293 4 жыл бұрын
How do you know he’s “self aware”? How do you know he isn’t just saying what you expect to hear? Are you aware of a condition called “psychopathy”? You got fooled by a psychopath. Was it fun?
@reneerico866
@reneerico866 5 жыл бұрын
It's as though there are humans who feel nothing & humans who feel everything
@furiousape7717
@furiousape7717 4 жыл бұрын
That’s an incredibly oversimplified way of looking at human emotion.
@geminisundone
@geminisundone 4 жыл бұрын
@@furiousape7717 Don't be envious of their comment n likes. Feed that dog sat on your head as well its starving. Pathetic moron.
@bafbaas1210
@bafbaas1210 4 жыл бұрын
@@geminisundone you're on a mental health channel, this is absolutely the worst place to be like that.
@bigcarlinblick904
@bigcarlinblick904 4 жыл бұрын
There are their called narcissists and empaths
@Tara-id3rk
@Tara-id3rk 4 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately I’m an empath who’s married to a vulnerable narcissist/antisocial or borderline (he’s had both diagnoses) personality disorder. It’s odd, my husband is VERY sensitive to any type of criticism (which would suggest sensitive feelings) and he can cry from movies. But he has absolute zero feelings about how he treats people or animals. So in our home we have me, a therapist, who feels everything. And him, someone who hides that he has feelings and behaves very callously. It’s a dynamic, that’s for sure.
@DustyMayT
@DustyMayT 2 жыл бұрын
These videos make me realize the importance of intervention in the mental health of children when they present with concerning symptoms.
@Saturnine1024
@Saturnine1024 2 жыл бұрын
a horribly sadly lacking process- I have working in children's mental health facilities and encountered several kids with the beginning of this behavior and similar issues , mental health systems are organized such that there is little that can be done- you KNOW a child is psychopathic and even potentially dangerous, but what can you do beyond containment? You can't lock them up because they "seem" like they might become killers .. or even if they are violent they are kids.. they are contained with psychotropic meds or restraint, but there is no "therapy" for kids like this. If they don't act out as they age, despite warnings they are out in the public by age 18.. such a dismal prognosis for them - and the public!
@sarah2.017
@sarah2.017 2 жыл бұрын
@@Saturnine1024 They're dealing with that in Florida right now, with Nikolas Cruz, a person who I believe belongs in a mental institution and probably has from early childhood.
@magicstardust
@magicstardust 2 жыл бұрын
Psychologists don't help that much, I think that family members are the ones who can make miracles. I've seen a drug addict spending 100 bucks on each session (the daughter of a rich woman in my neighborhood) and the youngster seemed nice and grateful to her mother and to the doctor, but continued asking for more drugs to other guys until she was 35. Her mother didn't want to help her pursue the career she wanted. I don't know more about that girl, now a woman, only that she is still single, I can see that in her FB.
@8luvbug
@8luvbug 2 жыл бұрын
This was the 60s and 70s when mental health wasn't taken seriously
@ahsan221
@ahsan221 2 жыл бұрын
this is one case and there are millions..exemption does not define the rule..
@danataylor9507
@danataylor9507 4 жыл бұрын
Dahmer was abandoned by both parents. He was left alone in his home when he committed his first murder. He said he didn't want the man to leave. In the way he treated all of his victims shows a deep desire to not be left alone. The necrophile shows how badly he wanted someone to stay, but also not have the ability to say no and not be able to engage with him. He wanted complete power.
@rebbouhhind2580
@rebbouhhind2580 2 жыл бұрын
@@ekonamare7219 ?????
@MJ31579
@MJ31579 2 жыл бұрын
He also said he wanted to posses and control them. There's a difference between the feeling of wanting someone to be with you and the feeling of wanting to posses and control someone forever.
@MC-qb1jg
@MC-qb1jg Ай бұрын
I was abandoned by my parents and would never harm another person ever. Jeffrey Dahmer was a monster in his own right.
@MasterMalrubius
@MasterMalrubius 5 жыл бұрын
"Chainsaws and rotting flesh. Not seeing a connection here." - Jeffrey Dahmer's neighbors
@scarletta.w8721
@scarletta.w8721 5 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@Galantski
@Galantski 5 жыл бұрын
And don't forget the vat of acid.
@heathervogt3409
@heathervogt3409 5 жыл бұрын
Noone would even investigate their concerns thats a crime in itself
@Therapistinthewhitehouse
@Therapistinthewhitehouse 5 жыл бұрын
heather vogt No one not noone. Unless your referring to the lead singer of Herman’s Hermits.
@JohnWayne-86ed
@JohnWayne-86ed 5 жыл бұрын
And he lived in a apartment ffs!... I've lived in a similar layout before and felt like I was living with roommates, no privacy what so ever, I had a cold and my neighbor brought me medicine... I hadn't told her I was sick....😐
@sagebias2251
@sagebias2251 3 жыл бұрын
I find it interesting how honest he was during his confession.
@Christina-nb6ds
@Christina-nb6ds 2 жыл бұрын
and so calm
@everythingwillbe6904
@everythingwillbe6904 2 жыл бұрын
He was already caught so he probably thought there was no point in lying. He also has high functioning autism traits, people with autism have a harder time with lying
@javayna2353
@javayna2353 2 жыл бұрын
Not honest. Enjoys reliving his gruesome memories and pulling the interviewer into that gory moment. He’s a highly intelligent and manipulative individual. He enjoyed taunting other prisoners by arranging his food like body parts and putting ketchup on it. He’s a cruel and hateful person who actually thinks it’s funny to torture others any way he can. No remorse whatsoever!
@everythingwillbe6904
@everythingwillbe6904 2 жыл бұрын
@@javayna2353 the only inmate that said that was scarver, no one else. There's actually no 100% evidence to confirm if that was true
@melgallardo2012
@melgallardo2012 2 жыл бұрын
The interviewer said that she felt like he's wearing a mask. It was a show and he was pulling the strings
@bobbydeuce6486
@bobbydeuce6486 4 жыл бұрын
-“so what disorders did Jeffrey Dahmer have? All of them, he had all of the disorders.”
@ThisEvilBunny
@ThisEvilBunny 4 жыл бұрын
Us: Which disorder did he have? Dr. Grande: Yes
@alenapantlova5997
@alenapantlova5997 4 жыл бұрын
@@ThisEvilBunny 🤣
@rubyslippers6716
@rubyslippers6716 4 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@paperroutedave7048
@paperroutedave7048 4 жыл бұрын
@@ThisEvilBunny said the UT uuu u u up u u u
@CuriousConnoisseurs
@CuriousConnoisseurs 4 жыл бұрын
I dont know which one he has, but i guess his favourite Shampoo is Head & Shoulders.
@heresjohnny5307
@heresjohnny5307 4 жыл бұрын
It's ironic that dahmers first victim was killed using a gym weight barbell and then while dahmer was in prison he was killed by an inmate with a metal bar from gym equipment.
@heresjohnny5307
@heresjohnny5307 3 жыл бұрын
@J. Pročka I kept reading metal bar from weight room🤷‍♂️
@Facemelter5000
@Facemelter5000 3 жыл бұрын
@@heresjohnny5307 You don't have free weights in prison.
@raiden6156
@raiden6156 3 жыл бұрын
@@Facemelter5000 not anymore - they may have still had them in the early 90s
@Facemelter5000
@Facemelter5000 3 жыл бұрын
@@raiden6156 nope.
@Justan2G7
@Justan2G7 3 жыл бұрын
@@Facemelter5000 yep, they did. & some prisons still do, but the weights are now welded to the bars
@madmaninabox3638
@madmaninabox3638 2 жыл бұрын
Something I find strange or perhaps just unique to him, was his honesty & compliance after being caught, to the point where he genuinely appears to be relieved. He did say he had no one to talk to about his thoughts & impulses so perhaps he truly was relieved to finally be able to share his troubled thoughts with others.
@Zarathustran
@Zarathustran 4 ай бұрын
ASD
@Galantski
@Galantski 5 жыл бұрын
Dr. Grande, have you ever compared the legal versus clinical definitions of what constitutes sanity/insanity? If not, that might make for an interesting upload.
@doreenplischke7645
@doreenplischke7645 5 жыл бұрын
Galantski that is a great remark...
@Galantski
@Galantski 5 жыл бұрын
@@doreenplischke7645 Thanks!
@bipedalbob
@bipedalbob 4 жыл бұрын
It's often subjective, as in this video points out, mental health professionals, experts? Often disagree with each other, they have different agendas. Some, like the proverbial ' bat shit crazy ' Ain't no doubt about it . I sincerely doubt that you could find 20 of these experts that would agree on a diagnosis other than in the extreme cases. Really the label of insanity is some what irrelevant, the important concideration should first be are they dangerous to other's. The rest of the psychobabble is of little importance.
@shibaimtiaz7695
@shibaimtiaz7695 4 жыл бұрын
Excellent suggestion
@annamc6367
@annamc6367 4 жыл бұрын
Insanity ONLY applies to Legal Issues. It is not a clinical dx. ( Law School graduate).
@GaijinMom
@GaijinMom 4 жыл бұрын
I’ve always gotten the feeling from Jeffrey that he was so disappointed in himself for behaving this way.
@declankelly9829
@declankelly9829 4 жыл бұрын
Yes. Good insight. He was essentially a christian. Unfortunately his father was a fundamentalist christian (in otherwords, not a christian at all) who could not support his son's sexual orientation. So Jeffrey hated his identity from puberty. And where was his mother? She was not there to protect him from his father. Jeffrey was damaged goods... courtesy of both father AND mother. Freud supposedly said:... if its not one thing its the mother. So I suggest we start with her?
@DonnaBrooks
@DonnaBrooks 4 жыл бұрын
​@@declankelly9829 I don't agree with this, "Blame it all on mommy," attitude. Sounds sexist to me. Why didn't Freud say, "Blame it all on daddy?" Because it's simplistic & unfair? Yeah, that. Freud had some weird ideas about children & parents.
@jviarruel
@jviarruel 4 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Get real. Psychopaths have no....... Feelings.....
@GaijinMom
@GaijinMom 4 жыл бұрын
Mothers are very important. They play a very complex role. Psychopaths have feelings, they just don’t feel empathy towards others. That’s a very different things. They have a lot of feelings.
@kevin6293
@kevin6293 4 жыл бұрын
I don’t think it’s disappointment, I think it’s embarrassment. Wouldn’t you be embarrassed if the world found out you’re a cannibal serial killer?
@autopsyjuice6648
@autopsyjuice6648 2 жыл бұрын
As someone with borderline, I would describe Dahmer as a borderline personality. It was clear to see the reasoning for his actions and the way he was in interviews, growing up, etc. (I’m not condoning the horrible things he’s done.) Criterium in the DSM V Chronic feelings of emptiness ✔️ Emotional instability in reaction to day-to-day events (e.g., intense episodic sadness, irritability, or anxiety usually lasting a few hours and only rarely more than a few days) Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment ✔️ Identity disturbance with markedly or persistently unstable self-image or sense of self ✔️ Impulsive behavior in at least two areas that are potentially self-damaging (e.g., spending, sex, substance abuse, reckless driving, binge eating) ✔️ Inappropriate, intense anger or difficulty controlling anger (e.g., frequent displays of temper, constant anger, recurrent physical fights) ✔️ Pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal relationships characterized by extremes between idealization and devaluation (also known as "splitting") ✔️ Recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures, or threats, or self-harming behaviour Transient, stress-related paranoid ideation or severe dissociative symptoms. ✔️ In my opinion, Dahmer meets 7 of the 9 symptoms. As we know, only 4 are needed, minimum. I also feel like he could have had Aspergers as well.
@benni8057
@benni8057 2 жыл бұрын
but keep in mind that many features of BPD overlap with ASPD. Also most men with BPD very often also have ASPD or at least some symptoms of it. So in my opinion I think he might have both which can be a very dangerous cocktail. But take what I'm saying with a grain of salt because I'm not a licensed therapist.
@zakattack0075
@zakattack0075 2 жыл бұрын
Your mentioned personality traits almost matches to the t 💯 Makes sense to me 🙂!
@tb4544
@tb4544 11 ай бұрын
@@benni8057 Cluster-B personality disorders all blur together. You'll see some doctors give a provisional diagnosis of "Cluster-B traits" when they're unable to specify on first meeting a patient. They can be very hard to differentiate.
@user-od3be8ny4o
@user-od3be8ny4o 10 ай бұрын
Have you confirmed a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder? I was diagnosed with it in my 20s, but at the age of 39, my diagnosis was changed to ADHD. This change has been significant. Women, in particular, are often misdiagnosed with borderline personality disorder. It was confusing to me how I could outgrow a personality disorder, as it is not typically thought of as something that can be outgrown. However, I have come to realize that I may not have had borderline personality disorder at all. In addition to my previous diagnoses, I also struggle with relationship obsessive-compulsive disorder (ROCD). This condition can sometimes present similarly to borderline personality disorder.
@XeroxAndInfinity
@XeroxAndInfinity 5 ай бұрын
@@user-od3be8ny4oadhd and borderline disorder are very comorbid. I mean, if child with adhd was abused and neglected it can lead to bpd.
@epicmercury333
@epicmercury333 5 жыл бұрын
Too bad he was killed in prison, preventing further study of him. I never realized he was 'atypical' as a serial killer. As odd as it sounds, I thought he was a 'run of the mill' serial killer. This has been a very interesting and grimly fascinating video, Doctor. Thank you.
@kathrinjohnson2582
@kathrinjohnson2582 5 жыл бұрын
He is the only one I ever heard of that seemed to wish he could stop and showed genuine remorse. So fascinating to think a condition drive some one to do this without them entirely wanting to. Most just seem like monsters that are sorry they got caught.
@iamlight1
@iamlight1 5 жыл бұрын
Atypical: pedophilia, necrophilia, cannibalism, kept body parts in refrigerators. No other known serial killer had so many of these aberrant behaviors. I think that's why he is highly unusual and I would say without it looking like I am demonizing people with mental health disorders, so diabolical as he did. Had he stopped earlier, he may have never been caught. I don't think he had an ounce or remorse or he would had stopped with the first one.
@blorkpovud1576
@blorkpovud1576 5 жыл бұрын
He seemed "atypical" to me in the sense that there was a big part of him that didn't want to do it, but in a sense he had maybe a "learned helplessness" mentality where he felt like possibly the effort to stop was too much?
@concernedparty1148
@concernedparty1148 5 жыл бұрын
He had no desire to inflict pain or torture his victims which is VERY unusual
@hellgirlheleena
@hellgirlheleena 5 жыл бұрын
I am not so sure he is any different if you dig down. Just like with narcissism, most people imagine the grandiose individual vs the covert, but both are still ultimately concerned with getting their selfish needs met. Dahmer was arrogant enough to leave his handiwork all over his apartment for management or law enforcement to find and he had no regard for his victims whatsoever including when he attempted lobotomies on them. He also sweet talked victims just like bundy knowing what the likely outcome would be when they entered his apartment. And he tricked them with spiked drinks to overpower them, same as Gary used the handcuff game.
@laevan2053
@laevan2053 4 жыл бұрын
Raising two young sons in Milwaukee at that time, I will never forget JD and his trial. Made me learn things I wish I never knew. My downstairs neighbor at the time was one of the first LEOs on the scene, and needed therapy after finding a head in the freezer. Back then, they broke in with the news of him on TV with NO warnings. It was summertime, and my sons were watching cartoons when they broke in with this. Never have I run to turn off an appliance faster, but it was all anyone spoke of for months. He negatively effected MANY lives, mine included. RIP to his victims, sympathy for their loved ones, and I, for one, am glad he is dead. PS~ Konerack Synthasymphon (?sp) was the name of the young man who almost got away, but the police let Dahmer take him back, over the protests of bystanders. Horrible.
2 жыл бұрын
Jesus.
@Alfakkin
@Alfakkin 2 жыл бұрын
Hideous...really scary...this disturbing man was pure evil
@marigoldpluss
@marigoldpluss 2 жыл бұрын
Thats awful.
@FREEDOM-qb8db
@FREEDOM-qb8db 2 жыл бұрын
Dahmer always seemed to me to be a man not only disappointed in himself but also disgusted with himself. I doubt anyone on the planet was more in need to understand what went wrong with him than him, himself. He seemed sad with his entire life and with what he was. I read that when he was beaten to death in prison, there were no defensive wounds on Dahmer. Maybe he wanted it all to end and that he felt he deserved what was being done to him in those last few minutes.
@linanicolia1363
@linanicolia1363 2 жыл бұрын
He was beaten to death. He probably tolerated it better than most people would have. He would have been OK with it......I think. I don't think his life in prison was tolerable for him. Better be dead.
@secreteobsession3584
@secreteobsession3584 2 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@Slambam73
@Slambam73 2 жыл бұрын
Yes; I think he wanted to be killed I prison since he couldn't get the death penalty in WI.
@stephanieschoen6330
@stephanieschoen6330 2 жыл бұрын
He wanted to die
@if-not-now
@if-not-now 5 жыл бұрын
What a timely release, I was literally just reading about Jeffrey Dahmer yesterday. Great analysis Dr Grande. I find the BPD diagnosis to be a stretch too, his reactions in many of the situations weren’t rooted in a fear of abandonment, but a desire to dominate and control
@badcornflakes6374
@badcornflakes6374 3 жыл бұрын
@Kelly M I think there is a rhyme or reason and everyday we get closer to understanding what it is.
@paulvoorhies8821
@paulvoorhies8821 3 жыл бұрын
Well, domination and control, and killing and dismembering and having sex with corpses may just be the most extreme form of fear of abandonment, sooo….
@glitter7777
@glitter7777 2 жыл бұрын
I feel he had antisocial but that’s just me
@NickyM_0
@NickyM_0 2 жыл бұрын
@@paulvoorhies8821 I think it was layers operating at different times of the process. The sexual compulsion driven by the thrill of the chase, Hunter. Then the way he drugged the guys was about domination, control and submission. After enjoying their company or when they wanted to leave it triggered rejection and abandonrment and control again resulted in the kill which also gave high sexual gratification. As well as the feeling after the kill that he had got away with it again and therefore he was really good at it (narcissism).
@meredithheath5272
@meredithheath5272 2 жыл бұрын
@@paulvoorhies8821 💯💯💯💯👏👏
@OnsceneDC
@OnsceneDC 5 жыл бұрын
Great topic! You've always impressed me, but lately you've been wowing!
@marigoldpluss
@marigoldpluss 2 жыл бұрын
The book by his father Lionel Dahmer was extremely sad in many ways. He confessed to having many of the same traits as his son Jeffrey. Despite demonstrating a very intimate intelligence about his son and knowledge of his prenatal trauma, he didnt seek outside help for him which may have resulted in a less severe outcome.
@almakehlerbrown3935
@almakehlerbrown3935 5 жыл бұрын
Excellent video. It must be tough trying to figure out what went on in Jeffrey's mind.
@ediesongbird3163
@ediesongbird3163 5 жыл бұрын
Alma Kehler Brown I love your profile picture who is it?
@almakehlerbrown3935
@almakehlerbrown3935 5 жыл бұрын
@@ediesongbird3163 ty😊. I can't remember where I got it, and I don't know who it is.
@kathrinjohnson2582
@kathrinjohnson2582 5 жыл бұрын
I noticed it to. It is very beautiful.
@diogopinto9462
@diogopinto9462 5 жыл бұрын
@@ediesongbird3163 its my grandma
@wastedtalent666
@wastedtalent666 3 жыл бұрын
@@diogopinto9462 sike
@AdaptiveApeHybrid
@AdaptiveApeHybrid 5 жыл бұрын
Doctor more of these videos please. I love these videos so much. Do Edmund Kemper!!
@AdaptiveApeHybrid
@AdaptiveApeHybrid 5 жыл бұрын
@My Time humans are monsters sometimes and that is interesting
@AdaptiveApeHybrid
@AdaptiveApeHybrid 5 жыл бұрын
@My Time life is so intricate and multifaceted and nuanced isn't it?
@carewser
@carewser 5 жыл бұрын
I haven't seen him doctoring any videos, they all look pretty legit to me
@AdaptiveApeHybrid
@AdaptiveApeHybrid 5 жыл бұрын
@@carewser ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
@dalegribble5661
@dalegribble5661 5 жыл бұрын
Hear Hear
@robkislinsky2472
@robkislinsky2472 4 жыл бұрын
His father taught him how to bleach animal bones. His father, a scientist, thought it was a healthy scientific interest and initially encouraged it as a hobby.
@eily_b
@eily_b 3 жыл бұрын
As anyone would, I guess. No one thinks he is raising a future serial killer...
@Grammapama
@Grammapama 3 жыл бұрын
Wow
@reylime2991
@reylime2991 3 жыл бұрын
@@eily_b doesn’t sound normal to mutilate animals without good reason imo. What’s exactly is scientific about it? Not necessarily the whitening of bones. But why of random animals?
@radioactivegum2298
@radioactivegum2298 3 жыл бұрын
@@reylime2991 it was road kill
@reylime2991
@reylime2991 3 жыл бұрын
@@radioactivegum2298 ahhh fair. i heard a fox is a ten pointer.
@katiess9708
@katiess9708 5 жыл бұрын
I have no idea how long it takes to research a topic, pull together a presentation, film yourself and edit the video. I assume hours and hours. So, thank you!!!!!! I really enjoy your content. I like that you explain psychological constructs and concepts. I always like to hear a knowledge professional mull over and ponder a topic and then offer their best analysis of any given situation. Based on what facts you can discover combined with your education and experience, I like that you offer your interpretation and why. It is like going to the doctor. Sometimes they are very cagey and vague. So, I'll just say to them, based on your experience, education, research and knowledge, when you see X and Y, what is the most likely the diagnosis? I guess I want to know what they really think, I don't want them to temporize. Long winded way to say, I appreciate your analysis and thank you for the hard work. We are spoiled now, if you slow down, we might complain!
@pocoeagle2
@pocoeagle2 5 жыл бұрын
This is a great comment. I agree with everything you said. Yes.....we are spoiled 😃
@robinandrew1223
@robinandrew1223 4 жыл бұрын
"He was NOT killing out of violence; he was killing out of a hunger for affection & physical contact". Dr. Faye Snyder ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ Jeff's favorite song written by Pete Townsend from The Who (Pinball Wizard): "See me Feel me Touch me Heal me".
@norbertomoran4575
@norbertomoran4575 2 жыл бұрын
This kid went through some excruciatingly cruel emotional trauma. Sometimes the scars that affect people the most are the ones that are unseen. Unfortunately trying to explain why a person is the way they are almost always sounds like a defense or an excuse. Here are some things I see: 1. Was he medicated in the womb with numerous drugs via his mother ingesting them? 2. Did she suffer from Postpartum Depression? 3. Did she never hug him? 4. Did his parents fight and bicker constantly? 5. Did his father work long hours? 6. Who actually raised him? Talked to him? Taught him about life? Helped him deal with normal kid stuff? Was he nurtured and cared for such that he had a healthy sense of himself. That he was loved and worthy? 7. Was he actually sexually assaulted? 8. Did his father encourage his fascination with the macabre? Any one or two of these in isolation may not make a person into a Dahmer. But taken together all of these likely contributed to at least the pressure and inclinations he felt to be the way he was. Remember many people might struggle with some of the temptations he faced at some point but don’t act on them. He just happened to be susceptible to following his impulses. So many factors went into it. The timing of it all, the culture around raising kids, the culture around mental health, the desire for his father to ignore the signs of schizophrenia or some other mental defect being present. And just because people don’t go down that path having even one or two of these factors present let alone a number of them can make life very difficult for an otherwise ‘normal’ individual.
@linanicolia1363
@linanicolia1363 2 жыл бұрын
all good possibilities......
@pamelapamper
@pamelapamper 2 жыл бұрын
Don't forget alcoholism while he was still a teenager
2 жыл бұрын
Also the fact that he was white and got away with so much for it.
@Mang-ej5ul
@Mang-ej5ul 2 жыл бұрын
And at one point was completely abandoned alone in his house to fend for himself.
2 жыл бұрын
@@Mang-ej5ul imagine what that does with a person
@ClandestineGirl16X
@ClandestineGirl16X 5 жыл бұрын
Dr. Grande, your videos are phenominal! I love when you talk about criminals and crime related topics. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@derekboyt3383
@derekboyt3383 5 жыл бұрын
Really? What exactly do you love about it?
@gypsyqueen411
@gypsyqueen411 4 жыл бұрын
This is the one case that disgusts me beyond belief. I can not rationalize how a person can do what he did and still function as a human being.
@areyoukirringme7679
@areyoukirringme7679 2 жыл бұрын
@UFC news and Lori Vallow Daybell Dingbell dumbell what's the point of this lol ?
@areyoukirringme7679
@areyoukirringme7679 2 жыл бұрын
@UFC news and Lori Vallow Daybell Dingbell dumbell you? sound? insane? 🗿
@MariGolds2
@MariGolds2 2 жыл бұрын
Possessed by a demon.
@MariGolds2
@MariGolds2 2 жыл бұрын
@UFC news and Lori Vallow Daybell Dingbell dumbell you are so sure that nothing exists outside your reality. We are spiritual beings. This cannot be figured out with logic.
@Sameoldfitup
@Sameoldfitup 3 жыл бұрын
“Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams.
@rudeanne
@rudeanne 5 жыл бұрын
I’ve heard from a few sources that while he appeared somewhat “disappointed” about having to murder the victims in his quest to fully “incapacitate” them publicly, his inmate life suggests a different side. I’ve read he often would taunt other inmates with his recounts if the crimes, mimicking the sounds or looks with his food, and gloated in the disgust many had towards him. Seems like that would tie in well with his penchant for “pranks” and disruptive behavior in rigid environments (class, the army, etc). However, there seems to be very dichotic evidence. Either he wholeheartedly regarded the murders as an unfortunate result of his failed experiments; or, he was in the chow hall spreading ketchup on everything to simulate the gore and revel in the cannibalism. This was cited as a possible reason for his ultimate death, though I’ve also heard his killer was related to a victim (haven’t seen this 100% proven anywhere). I often wonder if thus supposedly taunting and expressed disgust was a way to relive certain aspects to provide himself some sort of mental or erotic stimulation, whether it was in the hopes of wanting others to lash out in extreme emotion (anger, disgust, probable violence) due to an inability to recognize more subtle emotions in others, was it a want of recognition and hoping for physical contact, was it done to try and cause assisted suicide similar to “death by cop.” I do believe he rather liked the gore and extremity of his actions more so than he let on in his interviews and interrogations. He became very good at hiding his true motives/thoughts/actions from authority figures. Between covering up his home life, his drinking, the lust developing between himself and his “hobby” to teachers, parents, or cops while the more telling behaviors were expressed more so by his peers. Normally this happens with many adolescents, the severity of his years long alcoholism wasn’t even detected by the army till much later. The cops, his bosses, even his landlord all seemed to be under his spell though he showed so many antisocial traits (numerous run ins with the law, his dishonorable discharge, inability to hold meaningful relationships, his numerous, unsuccessful short lived work history). It seems it took years or a much more intimate interaction(still over a decent length of time) to fully flesh out his “eccentric” behavior. There are numerous accounts from those he considered on the same social level as himself that really allude to his mental health more so than anything anyone who he perceived as an authority or higher rank has ever noted. It’s from them that we really know how severe his alcoholism was, how extreme and odd his “pranks” were, how predatory and aggressive his behavior was towards “objects of desire” (he didn’t only target gay men, he didn’t only lure them in with sex or money, and he for sure was able to pull himself together enough to convince a police officer that his first escaped underage victim in obvious distress with injuries was a consensual lover and they were just having a lover’s spat, to then finish the job -rules out the trance like, non sadistic, “death was an unfortunate accident” argument). The men he let go were an indicator that he had a choice and some control over his supposed “compulsion.” The more you look into the varying accounts and the huge differences based on what form of relationship he had with said person, the more you’ll see he was much better at manipulation than many other killers. That pride and I believe need to up the ante was his downfall. It took more and more to excite and satiate him, and I believe after that underage victim almost escaped but he was able to manipulate his way back into control, that was it! The cat and mouse aspect got upped. That sadistic need to be in so much control that he would start attacking larger, more muscular men, who had a chance of escaping, but then he’d have the final say and take that chance away was a bit too intoxicating. I suggest looking at his victim list from early on towards his capture. The first was a slender, easily swayed, and vulnerable person with little to no likelihood of being missed, all the way up to men who had more ties to the community, weren’t so vulnerable (were not gay hence their disappearances were much more likely to be taken seriously unfortunately, they weren’t hitchhiking, more witnesses) and much better physiques in terms of possibly being able to subdue him. Even his two underage victims (only one was murdered) were brothers. While some would argue that was just a coincidence, I’m not so certain. I could be extremely wrong here, however with time, I think he’d be less likely to be atypical and more inline with the pattern we see with relatively intelligent psychopathic killers vs a Gary ridgeway. We’ll never really know.
@kragary
@kragary 4 жыл бұрын
This. Don't be naive, people. When someone's demeanor and words seem to contradict their actions, believe the actions. I too believe Dahmer was extremely good at manipulating. The kind, sensitive and gentle person you see in his interviews is an act, a mask he put on to fool people. Look at what he did and how his life generally went, and you'll see him for what he was: a sadistic sociopathic narcissist. He was a rapist, raging alcoholic, attention seeker among his peers to the point of being a troll, impulsive, couldn't stand anyone having power over him, was obsessed with making other people subservient slaves, couldn't hold down a job for long etc. It's not unusual for a serial killer to let a victim go occasionally, others have done it too for various reasons. Dahmer only seems exceptional and contradictory if you believe his mask.
@ReturnOfTheJ.D.
@ReturnOfTheJ.D. 4 жыл бұрын
@@kragary You have to consider also how successful he would have been at luring in so many victims without that mask? I think he would have had almost no success at carrying out his sadistic fantasies without that mask. So he is simply someone who had the personality or affect to lure people in, and then the ruthlessness to carry out the internal sadistic fantasies once he had them. He had both necessary parts to the equation. In this era also (80s, early 90s), white men who were not dropouts (i.e. ex-military, well-to-do family background) were given a lot more leeway and trust by people in authoritative positions around them than they are today. People would take Dahmer at his word then, whereas today they would trust but verify - search the bags in his car, search all his rooms etc. In fact, they might just verify, and not even trust, in today's world. Dahmer simply leveraged on that trust in a way that would have been impossible in later decades. It reminds me of a woman who marries a divorced man with wealth, then after a few years uses her power as his wife to leverage the house off him - as in, get his kids kicked out of his will and have all the wealth diverted to her. On the inside, she's a conniving thief, a manipulator, abuser, emotional blackmailer, greedy but she uses the cloak of being someone's wife to afford her a legitimacy in the eyes of the public (except for the victims she stole from obviously). It's only a veneer of respectability they have, by virtue of being married or being a normal white man in Dahmer's time, but it's more than what they need to disguise who they really are, allowing them to carry out their underhanded acts without scrutiny or rebuke. Their status is their shield against an examination of their true character and nefarious actions.
@kynathomas4809
@kynathomas4809 4 жыл бұрын
@@kragary I was thinking the same thing. It was a manipulation tactic to make it look like he was remorseful.
@libertatemadvocatus1797
@libertatemadvocatus1797 4 жыл бұрын
I agree. Although Jeffrey Dahmer didn't meet the criteria for Psychopathy according to the Hare Psychopathy Checklist (he scored something like a 23 when you need a score of 30 to be classified as a Psychopath), he was a lot closer to a Psychopath than most people are. Basically where he failed to meet the criteria were in categories like Grandiosity and believing he was inherently superior to others. He was still was very manipulative and had low empathy and not much in the way of conscience.
@ReturnOfTheJ.D.
@ReturnOfTheJ.D. 4 жыл бұрын
@rudeanne, @IAmSomsakSinthasomphone: It's interesting how the stories about Dahmer don't gel with reality at all. The media has all kinds of biases. For example: 1) He killed gays: Steven Hicks, Konerak Sinthasomphone, Errol Lindsey, James Doxtator and Curtis Straughter were not homosexual. 2) He killed adults only: James Doxtator and Konerak Sinthasomphone were aged 14, and Curtis Straughter was 17. 3) He killed blacks mainly: Steven Hicks, Steven Tuomi and Joseph Bradehoft were white, Jeremiah Weinberger was Puerto Rican/Jewish, Richard Guerroro and Anthony Sears were Hispanic, James Doxtator was Native American and Konerak Sinthasomphone was Laotian. They're probably the main delusions the media propagates but the media often fall back on the old trope that his family were very normal (even highly-educated and well-off) and they cannot for the life of them understand why he did this (it was actually a highly fractious marriage fraught with many problems almost from the beginning), that from the age of 14 he drank morning, noon and night but that level of severe alcoholism doesn't explain any of his mental abnormalities even though alcohol is known to kill brain cells especially during brain development (13-25 for males), and that Dahmer only targeted poor, ethnic itinerants who wouldn't be missed when it's clear he favoured certain looks and body types primarily - there may have been a combination he sought to reduce the chances of getting caught, but he factored in both sides of the equation during victim selection - perhaps why 7 victims ended up being black and gay (better looking but in those times often poorer, less important to the community, more ostracized).
@TheAshMcG
@TheAshMcG 5 жыл бұрын
Dahmer was repressed homosexual necrophiliac with sadist tendencies. It was the midwest in th 80s, I grew up in that region at that time...many guys were introverted and weird. His parents were too self involved to get him help. His dad was aware he had serious issues but thought they were only based on his heavy drinking. I think he may have been blacked out mainly when he killed his victims.....I don't think he had superficial charm, he was very attractive at one point so would only need to walk into a 80s gay bath house and be considered a catch. Thank you Dr. Grande, your take is interesting.....Too bad they did not get him serious help for any of his issues, could have saved lives.
@chunkyMunky329
@chunkyMunky329 5 жыл бұрын
Ashley McGovern Your analysis is very shallow and obvious. No depth of thought 😩
@TheAshMcG
@TheAshMcG 5 жыл бұрын
@@chunkyMunky329 An opinion is not an analysis.
@chunkyMunky329
@chunkyMunky329 5 жыл бұрын
Ashley McGovern now you’re being pedantic. Either way... your opinion is very obvious
@TheAshMcG
@TheAshMcG 5 жыл бұрын
@@chunkyMunky329 Thank you for your unsolicited YT criticism. I hope your day is as pleasant as you are!😖
@chunkyMunky329
@chunkyMunky329 5 жыл бұрын
Ashley McGovern You’re welcome 😇
@erichickman2440
@erichickman2440 3 жыл бұрын
I think Jeffery Dahmer was so good at acting like a good and well mannered individual that he even fooled the psychiatrists and psychologists. He didn’t think he deserved any special treatment after being caught and he made it very clear to the court that he wanted the maximum punishment during his trial. But according to Christopher Scarver that changed in prison, Dahmer would purposely make his food look like human body parts covered in ketchup, laugh about it, and would do certain things to taught people in a way.
@bebe553
@bebe553 2 жыл бұрын
He showed no REMORSE.
@bebe553
@bebe553 2 жыл бұрын
@UFC news and Lori Vallow Daybell Dingbell dumbell My opinion.
@carltonbanks5470
@carltonbanks5470 2 жыл бұрын
He acted like an asshole when he wanted to. Afterall you kinda have to be one to kill that many people. Nicole Childress was the 17 year old girl that found the 14 year old boy on the street, tried to defend him from Dahmer, and alerted police. When the cops showed up, Dahmer got angry with her and called her a "black bitch." She says.
@everythingwillbe6904
@everythingwillbe6904 2 жыл бұрын
Scarver was the only person that said that, no other inmate said anything like that about jeffry. He said that so it would make him look better for killing him. I'm not trying to defend jeffry but facts are necessary
@carltonbanks5470
@carltonbanks5470 2 жыл бұрын
@@everythingwillbe6904 Why would Scarver lie when nobody was mad at him for killing this scumbag in the first place? Scarver didn't need to "make himself look good" to anybody.
@ΑθανάσιοςΚΥΡΙΑΚΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ-θ7γ
@ΑθανάσιοςΚΥΡΙΑΚΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ-θ7γ 4 жыл бұрын
What I felt weird when I saw a documentary on Jeffrey Dahmer was how Americans are used to isolation and absence of family as normal. The house he committed his first crime in was in the woods, so he must have lived without neighbours. No kids to play with, and your only interaction is your psychotic mother and your indifferent father, what a childhood! And the best part is that when he took this man home, both his parents had left him alone! And this was mentioned by the journalist as something common. If both parents leave home they should send the child to a friend or a relative, especially if there are no neighbours around!!! So instead of searching for the monster, Americans should really do some serious self criticism about their total lack of social and family bonds.
@ndschau
@ndschau 2 жыл бұрын
It’s true. I think there’s a lot of warped things that we take for granted here in the states. We wonder why someone did something fucked up, again and again and again, and we never bother to take a step back and see all the variables. Just chalk it up to another lone wolf. Move on. Forget.
@craigsmith5039
@craigsmith5039 4 жыл бұрын
I have often thought that his killing was simply another addiction, just like his alcoholism. He has also stated that he wanted to be close to people, and he was so afraid of them leaving him that he would try to turn them into living zombies (by drilling into their forheads and pouring acid into the holes. He was annoyed that these experiments didn't work). The cannibalism was a way to ensure they stayed with him and became a part of him. What is clear is that he had overwhelming compulsions that he was unable to control, and did not have the skills or trust to form healthy relationships.
@barbaraolsem8377
@barbaraolsem8377 3 жыл бұрын
You know how when serial killers are interviewed it's really easy to despise them even hate them? I didn't find Dahmer easy to hate even though his crimes were gruesome and despicable. His demeanor was soft spoken. He said he knew what he was doing was horrible and he couldn't understand himself what was going on. It was like a monster took over his body. He was very cooperative and honest which makes it sad that he was murdered as the mental health field probably could have gained much information about the mentality of killers.
@samanthajames6857
@samanthajames6857 5 жыл бұрын
Dr. Grande: “..... and he used to fake seizures.” Me (a former teacher): “ahhhhhh middle school.” 😂😂😂
@jacquelyngostas778
@jacquelyngostas778 4 жыл бұрын
I too found this inexplicably hilarious. I can imagine my middle school son pulling this stunt. Then I wondered if I need to worry more about him!
@bentramer682
@bentramer682 4 жыл бұрын
Oh i loved doing this once or twice, i spazed in my seat and rolled my eyes back in my head, i never went on the floor and the people knew I was faking.
@michaelb.42112
@michaelb.42112 3 жыл бұрын
His classmates called it "Doing a Dahmer". He had friends and he was very smart. On his high school trip to DC, he convinced the White House to allow them to meet Rosalynn Carter, the 1st lady at the time.
@mackenzietaylor6731
@mackenzietaylor6731 3 жыл бұрын
I had an ex who was put in a rehab type of thing when we were 15 and he had faked a seizure and apparently been pretty convincing because they took him to the hospital and he of course ran away from the hospital .. 😂 so that comment about faking seizures was pretty funny
@cavemanlovesmoke4394
@cavemanlovesmoke4394 3 жыл бұрын
Bruh I felt attacked cuz I did that same shit once ooph 🤦‍♂️😅 I feel like an ass for that now but my friebd thought it was hilarious. Ironically I actually had a real seizure later on in life . Karma? Probably!
@Theinsomniac826
@Theinsomniac826 5 жыл бұрын
I have the Chicago Sun-Times Jeffrey Dahmer newspaper articles from when I was a kid. I kept all his articles because he looked so calm on all his pictures, like he didn't care that he was caught. The world was watching him and he sat there like a piece of furniture. Also it's interesting that for his first kill he beat someone to death with a barbell and when Jeffrey Dahmer died he was also beaten to death. The violence had come back around full circle. Lastly I know one of the victims sister who used to only date men named Jeff which was very strange.
@proffesordick4589
@proffesordick4589 4 жыл бұрын
that's trippy!!!
@Theinsomniac826
@Theinsomniac826 4 жыл бұрын
@@proffesordick4589 I agree.
@eily_b
@eily_b 3 жыл бұрын
I listened to the interviews of the police officer ((Patrick Kennedy) who was there after two officers arrested him in his apartment. Dahmer did fight back and the two officers had quite a hard time to wrestle him down. I recommend listening to all of his interviews, he was an avid storyteller.
@KarMicFox11
@KarMicFox11 2 жыл бұрын
Being calm like that is a trait of a psychopath.
@giusepperesponte8077
@giusepperesponte8077 4 жыл бұрын
That feeling when Jeffrey dahmer’s school life sounds very similar to your own.
@ncsynthex2478
@ncsynthex2478 2 жыл бұрын
Pretty common nowadays
@TheRubberStudiosASMR
@TheRubberStudiosASMR 2 жыл бұрын
That feeling when his adult life sounds like your own. Nah, joking 🙃
@rightnow5839
@rightnow5839 5 жыл бұрын
🙏 Dr. Grande. 👍🏻 You covered a lot of possibilities. It’s mind baffling when someone commits such horrible crimes. I’m enjoying all the new videos.. 💗
@gregwilvert
@gregwilvert 3 жыл бұрын
I remember when this hit the news I told my dad that they found 17 dead dismembered bodies in a guy’s apartment. He said, “70 bodies?” I said, “no, ONLY 17!”
@AnthonyD1986
@AnthonyD1986 2 жыл бұрын
A lot of people don’t mention that in the Army two soldiers say he was sexually abusing them.
@NO0MMM
@NO0MMM 2 жыл бұрын
When I hear about his life and how he became attached to people but couldn’t stand them leaving, I just feel he must’ve been so fucking lonely. No excuse for what he did, but I do believe his life was probably the loneliest life possible. It seems he could grow feelings for people, and wanted to be close to them but his disorders never let him experience it. He killed to keep people but actually lost them forever doing that. The situation was really heartbreaking for everyone involved. Everyone.
@TheSmokeweeda
@TheSmokeweeda 2 жыл бұрын
People keep making excuses for him. His neighbors invited him to outings. He refused and rejected them. He was a predator point blank. He was not lonely. Sociopaths are manipulative and he’s been doing it his entire life. Fooled everyone and is still doing it posthumously.
@NO0MMM
@NO0MMM 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheSmokeweeda I said there are no excuses for him. It is possible to humanize him and at the same time see his crimes as what they were; horrific, unnecessary, cruel, heartbreaking, etc. I feel for the victims and I cannot imagine what they and their families went through. I also feel disgusted not only by his crimes but also by the police, the homophobia, and racism. However it is still possible to look at his life with sadness at the same time. Remember: what we know about him is not only through his own words but through other’s words too. Also remember that he himself didn’t paint himself as the victim in the way true psychopaths do, like Ted Bundy. By looking at murderers for the human they are, instead of a monster lurking in the shadows, we actually do ourselves a favor as we can examine what went wrong in their brain and in their life, and what lead them to do it. We can see them for the children they once were, to the murderers they became. What went wrong? By simple marking them as evil we do not learn as a society to protect and treat these men that are at risk of developing these urges (and acting on them). Remember, it is possible for multiple facts to be true at the same time. Humanizing Dahmer does not take away what he did and the severity of it.
@BodyLanguageAnalysisInterrogat
@BodyLanguageAnalysisInterrogat 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheSmokeweeda Thank you, I wasn't aware of that.
@allinix7
@allinix7 Жыл бұрын
​​@@TheSmokeweedaWhat excuses ? Dumba$$
@patriciahalvorson20
@patriciahalvorson20 3 жыл бұрын
Dahmer’s parents moved away and didn’t tell him they were leaving. They left him in the house with nothing.
@kathyclark8274
@kathyclark8274 3 жыл бұрын
Oh wow, that's harsh!
@sammygirl6910
@sammygirl6910 3 жыл бұрын
That's not exactly true. He was nearly 18 and his parents were divorced and living apart. The house had furniture, electricity etc. His dad and grandma checked on him regularly. His brother did move with the mother, but was still in high school at the time. He wasn't squatting by any means.
@jeanie8831
@jeanie8831 2 жыл бұрын
I didn't realize this. Wow, how cruel. I'll assume he was an adult by then. Even then, wow.
@maryfuller8598
@maryfuller8598 3 жыл бұрын
I read (or heard) somewhere that Jeffrey's father admitted to having thoughts of eating people himself. What is mind blowing is how calm and thoughtful Jeffery seemed. Dr Grande is the best!
@brendashacks7407
@brendashacks7407 2 жыл бұрын
His Dad NEVER said he wanted to "eat" people, he said he thought of killing people, he admitted to attempting to hypnotize a girl in the neighborhood as a youth & taking a homemade bomb to school, which he tossed out the window.
@Ionagallagher81517
@Ionagallagher81517 5 жыл бұрын
Dr Todd, could you please do a vid on Adolf Hitler? Your vids are incredibly helpful. Stay awesome. ❤️
@fromeveryting29
@fromeveryting29 5 жыл бұрын
@My Time yeah, he was obviously quite charismatic, but he also reflected back to his audience what they responded to. The people made him. Germans had a lot of the attitudes he embodied and cheered him on in the speaches where he said what they wanted to hear. He also cared deeply about animals. I'd say that is a fascinating fenomenah - empathy for animals, but not for human. As an ethical vegan, I think we should care deeply for all, but what happens psychologically when someone has empathy for only animals? Either way, he displayed a deeply unexamined disordered psyche that ended up having horrific consequenses for the world.
@jmchez
@jmchez 4 жыл бұрын
Might as well do Stalin while he's at it.
@ΑθανάσιοςΚΥΡΙΑΚΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ-θ7γ
@ΑθανάσιοςΚΥΡΙΑΚΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ-θ7γ 4 жыл бұрын
Or Winston Churchill... Oh sorry, this one's Anglo-Saxon!!!
@northerngirl1637
@northerngirl1637 4 жыл бұрын
@@jmchez we're so spoiled.
@vice2versa
@vice2versa 4 жыл бұрын
@@fromeveryting29 I have deep empathy for animals and those who are capable of empathy and remorse and are not toxic people. But on the flip side I have a Deep Hatred for those who tend to lack empathy and I don't understand why society tolerates people with Cluster b personality disorder.
@h.borter5367
@h.borter5367 4 жыл бұрын
I was just out of HS when this case broke. I'm from Wisconsin and I was working at a nursing home at the time as Assistant Activities Director. I was allowed to read the newspaper to the patients. My boss told me to avoid this story at all costs. The patients wanted to hear about it. So, I read the article. Many interesting opinions from these people. Some compared Dahmer to Ed Gein, another notorious criminal from Wisconsin. These patients impressed me with their intelligent viewpoints. I secretly shamed my higher ups for making me sanitize the news for them. I loved working with those people. Thank you for your analysis, Dr. Grande.
@mimismithson5372
@mimismithson5372 2 жыл бұрын
How on earth they didn’t classify him as a psychopath is beyond me. I actually laughed out loud when you said how clear it is that he is in fact, a psychopath.
@msdecleir6389
@msdecleir6389 2 жыл бұрын
I dont think he was actually a psychopath. Many many other things, but does not fit into the category of an actual psychopath. Strange but true
@Aziz0938
@Aziz0938 2 жыл бұрын
I don't think he was a psychopath
@Serena-so1qh
@Serena-so1qh 2 жыл бұрын
he was not a psychopath though
@francoisgouws7288
@francoisgouws7288 2 жыл бұрын
A different kind of psychopath and one of the most lethal!
@boxcutter4
@boxcutter4 2 жыл бұрын
Psychopath is an outdated term. The actual disorder is called ASPD.
@amadeusradio9608
@amadeusradio9608 4 жыл бұрын
Totally recommend the film "My Friend Dahmer", about his life as a teenager. The kid playing him did a fantastic job. The movie is not gruesome, it's actually hillarious when he does the pranks, the dark side is very occasional.
@FB-cx4sp
@FB-cx4sp 4 жыл бұрын
Great movie
@jamallabarge2665
@jamallabarge2665 3 жыл бұрын
There is a book with the same title. Very good.
@rainbowrotcod
@rainbowrotcod 2 жыл бұрын
I'm iffy about that movie, morally speaking. Sure, I liked it, but it portrayed him in a much too ... empathetic light, imo. It made me *like* the character of jeff rather than feel disgust . Surely I can't be alone in that interpretation
@jeanie8831
@jeanie8831 2 жыл бұрын
@@rainbowrotcod We can like mentally disturbed people which he was, nothing wrong with that.
@TheOldstufffan
@TheOldstufffan 2 жыл бұрын
@@rainbowrotcod I know what you mean, however he was troubled and it was good at showing the signs his friends shrugged off and him fighting his impulses. Keep in mind the graphic novel was written by one of the friends portrayed in the movie. So, these were his memories.
@magalimarchi4468
@magalimarchi4468 4 жыл бұрын
I just recently found your channel, so I don't know if you do or are interested in analyzing portrait's of mental health in media. But hearing you talk about the possibility of Dahmer having schizotipical personality because of how he disposed of the bodie parts make me remember the movie "The voices", which has a very interesting plot, where the main's character, who is diagnosed with schizophrenia, struggles with his mental illness are represented instead of him being portrait as the crazy dude who commites murders. Anyway, I really enjoy the video, it's so nice to see that you actually take the time to investigate and don't throw around diagnosis and actually take the different possible condisions into consideration
@jmalik6191
@jmalik6191 2 жыл бұрын
Good point. He did mention in his interviews that he just desensitize and depersonalized the victims
@pointblack808
@pointblack808 2 жыл бұрын
As a BPD individual fitting all 9 symptom ceiteria, I have to notice Jeffrey brings the "frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment" to a whole new level. Hell, this is the core of BPD, wouldn't you say? At least it is for me, I feel. He might have had other symptoms, certaintly impulsivity, substance abuse, unstable self-image and feeling of emptiness, but I'll give him all of the BPD points just for the former. As for comorbidities, to my untrained eye, it seems he had full blown APD and maybe was a tad schizotypal with his nifty skull altars but that might have just been him being psychotically playful, in accordance with his psychopathic nature that allowed the emotional distress that BPD brings to go rampant. As was also the case with the whole mythos he built around preserving bodies and cannibalism imo. So, I think you got it exactly right in the thumbnail - a "pyschopatic borderline".
@leo0986
@leo0986 2 жыл бұрын
10000% - APD + borderline - I don’t see any real true psychopathic traits in Dahmer. I think he can feel a range of emotions he just didn’t have the inclination to moderate his behaviour that “normal” people have
@96s40
@96s40 2 жыл бұрын
@@leo0986 Dahmer was always morbidly obsessed with death and corpses, but not about inflicting suffering. In the way he collected roadkill, preserved, mounted, dissected etc- but he didn’t torture or abuse animals like many other psychopathic killers. There was that quote by his mother that “he never meant to hurt anyone”. Not sure myself tbh; if you don’t have a small streak of sadism, it seems odd he would’ve told the (surviving) victim that he planned to eat his heart (being still conscious). Perhaps he didn’t enjoy the terror, but he was obviously immune to it. Imo a part of him must have enjoyed it to have prolonged nervous terror the way he did; a form of torture to his surviving victim He doesn’t fit as neatly in the borderline category as the OP makes the case for though, imo. Borderline sufferers often become desperate to not be abandoned by favourite person, or threaten self-harm, lash out, etc, but it’s clear for Dahmer that death was the immediate end route before even forming a relationship / attachment to any person. He was cruising for strangers with a plan, he manipulated police rather than panicking; not quite embodying impulsiveness? Borderlines often have chronically volatile and destructive relationships where they project fear of abandonment on to those they have bonded with (eg. Special person), but… total strangers? Fearing abandonment and fearing rejection aren’t the same, despite overlap. There’s also a lot of typical symptoms which aren’t displayed (fits or rage, ambivalence/ idealisation v devaluation, etc) and are reduced to a simple method of acquiring “zombies”. Idk tbh, he seems very emotionally flat for a Borderline sufferer; he has the internal emptiness but doesn’t exhibit the emotional volatility in the typical outward form of uncontrolled outburst. Was he often distressed or did he ever exhibit the typical “rage” symptom, stemming from fear? Not that I’ve seen reported. I’m not convinced his main motivations were the ‘fear of abandonment’, but rather; sexual pleasure. There’s quite a gulf between acting impulsively out of uncontrolled fear, and acting in a calculated way to acquire “zombies” to sexually dominate (and “feel powerful”, as he said) and ‘pleasure himself’ with. That is not a fear response; that is psychopathic🤕 After all, Dahmer would dig up corpses for men he never knew to have sex with them. The primary drive in those instances cannot be fear of abandonment, yet it fits his end-game with the live victims. I don’t get the sense he was out of control, and don’t see evidence of him experiencing a “range of emotions”; like someone psychopathic, he may be capable of mimicking emotion. But he is generally flat in his affect. He drilled into the skulls of men and boys, manipulated police into returning an escapée; exceptionally cold blooded in that respect. He did not panic or “act out” in ways which borderlines are typically portrayed. He was manipulative and calculating; his “remorse” (in speech) was not convincing. His empathy and guilt are clearly absent. An extremely telling moment was when asked in interview whether he felt his main motive in killing was fear of being abandoned. He said it was a part of it, but mostly it was a desire for “total control”. Says a lot. And it fits, eg. sexually degrading corpses. He wanted to feel dominance over someone, and gratify himself sexually.
@celinahuezo5518
@celinahuezo5518 2 жыл бұрын
@@leo0986 I understand. People like myself on the autism spectrum are said to be emotionless (that's changing now) , but I don't show them and at tough times I don't know how to respond to my emotions or the emotions of others. I feel them deep, just don't know to respond sometimes.
@leroyadler7756
@leroyadler7756 2 жыл бұрын
@@96s40 you sound like you know a lot about him what sources would you say are most reliable
@96s40
@96s40 2 жыл бұрын
@Peanut Fear of rejection and fear of abandonment aren’t quite the same though; one is built from relationships which a person believes to be jeopardised; whereas you can ‘fear’ rejection from society, etc. One is based upon a previous relationship and the other does not rely on that. Dahmer cruised for strangers, who he’d shared no bond nor previous relationship with, planning to kill them for “zombies”. You suggest it is because he feared he would be abandoned by them…. But if he was primarily or solely driven by a desperate attempt to “avoid abandonment” in his ‘zombie-making’, why did he resort to digging up and sexually abusing corpses when he was on a killing hiatus? He was never at any risk of being abandoned by those he dug up. When Dahmer was asked about this, he was very candid; was he primarily motivated by fear? Whether of abandonment, or other fears? He said, in part most likely, but it was his desire to dominate and “totally control” another person which he craved. He wanted to feel powerful. So desire to possess and not be ‘abandoned’ may form a part; but it’s not an adequate pathological explanation imo, not does it explain the sexual gratification. His planning and his manipulation of police is neither impulsive nor is it necessarily highly emotional. He didn’t exhibit any outward signs of distress to those police officers; there doesn’t seem to be strong evidence that he was, as a broad personality type, wrought by distress as a precursor or consequence of his actions I recall Dahmer’s surviving victim saying he seemed to be performing almost ritualistically (eg prolonged through forced watching of the Exorcist). He remained exceptionally calm given he was able to manipulate police; which is staggering given he had so much evidence behind his door. There are no examples in his history, that I’ve heard, of him raging or lashing out publicly, which would suggest he could not contain himself and was recklessly impulsive. The same person who dug up corpses to rape them, fantasised about building a shrine of skulls from his victims (as in his illustration). That is not all neatly explained by typical BPD pathology
@daleandrews9356
@daleandrews9356 4 жыл бұрын
I am so glad I found your channel, Dr. Grande. It's interesting how you break down these psychological and psychiatric cases and give your own take on them in a manner that most people can understand. Kudos to you and your channel!
@Jen-X333
@Jen-X333 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for doing this video on Jeffrey Dahmer. I found it to be extremely interesting, perhaps the most interesting topic you've done. It was also very informative because you mentioned a lot of things that I hadn't known. It really is a shame he was killed because we likely could have learned so much from him. Especially since he was so open to talk about it.
@barbarakirkham5687
@barbarakirkham5687 3 жыл бұрын
The prison system failed us so that we could have studied Jeffrey more. But I get that people feel an eye for an eye opinion. Thanks Dr. Grand for your analysis of this case. Keep up the good work.
@bellamymalleb
@bellamymalleb 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing your professional thoughts on Dahmer, I really enjoyed this vid. I did not know there were a good handful of diagnoses for him, and it's a little over my head to add much. Perhaps had he lived longer and been open to further study we could have had a better idea of what conditons/disorders he may have had. May the dear victims and their loved ones have peace.🌸 Also, thank you for teaching me that OCPD is different from OCD!
@Jackie-rc6cj
@Jackie-rc6cj 4 жыл бұрын
This was an excellent analysis and summary. I have just watched an interview with Jeffrey Dahmer and am no expert but the missing time he experiences before and after the murders could indicate some form of disassociative dissorder. A child can learn to disassociate through repeated trauma or painful and intense hospital procedures like he had on his double hernia when he was a child. Jeffrey Dahmer also stated that he lost several hours when the last victim escaped and the police got to his door. He simply did not know what happened in those hours.
@44sleek25
@44sleek25 4 жыл бұрын
That's definite possibility.
@claudiahemmings2080
@claudiahemmings2080 3 жыл бұрын
It's a real shame he was murdered in prison because he was an excellent interviewee to learn from about these kinds of rare psychological pathologies. He spoke quite openly and concisely about a lot of aspects.
@jackedkerouac4414
@jackedkerouac4414 2 жыл бұрын
Regarding his murder, it’s hard to believe he would taunt other prisoners by mocking his victims and cannibalism. During his prison interviews he seemed docile and very aware that he shouldn’t step on anyone’s toes
@sarikajoshi7156
@sarikajoshi7156 Жыл бұрын
​@@jackedkerouac4414 there is rumour that he actually wanted die that's why purposefully doing that to anger his fellow inmates .
@jackedkerouac4414
@jackedkerouac4414 Жыл бұрын
@@sarikajoshi7156 That kinda makes sense. His sudden conversion to Christianity and baptism while taunting homicidal convicts sounds like the actions of a suicidal man. Given his life sentence it’s very plausible. Plus he has said he’s too much of a coward to end his own life.
@jerrymarshall2095
@jerrymarshall2095 5 жыл бұрын
Figuring out the human mind has got to be the most mind boggling of the sciences,if science is the right word. Dalmers acts were so off the charts that calling him a psychopath is a compliment.I dont think anyone diagnosed him with an eating disorder,but he definitely had one. Sorry,had to throw that in there.
@declankelly9829
@declankelly9829 4 жыл бұрын
Yes... but he was watching the calories.
@Katastrop
@Katastrop 4 жыл бұрын
couldn't it be argued that most serial killers have a form of OCD? they obsess about murdering and have to compulse to murder in order to relieve the pressure temporarily until repeating the cycle.
@leo0986
@leo0986 2 жыл бұрын
Definitely but to me more like obsessive BPD
@TasteTestTitan
@TasteTestTitan 4 жыл бұрын
Dahmer’s mom : Jeff, I don’t like your friends. Dahmer: that’s ok, Mom. Just eat your vegetables.
@frankenz66
@frankenz66 5 жыл бұрын
I remember he seemed to be full of mixed signals for certain. Thanks.
@jaybee7892
@jaybee7892 4 жыл бұрын
I just love the line "and he did not appear to have high conscientiousness"
@Ynox54321
@Ynox54321 3 жыл бұрын
Conscientiousness =/= conscience He did have a conscience. He felt horrible about being evil.
@paulvoorhies8821
@paulvoorhies8821 3 жыл бұрын
@@Ynox54321 What? No, conscientiousness does not equal conscience. But, dude. He was a sociopath. He had no real conscience. Duh.
@Ynox54321
@Ynox54321 3 жыл бұрын
@@paulvoorhies8821 "conscientiousness does not equal conscience" That is exactly what "Conscientiousness =/= conscience" means, congrats
@paulvoorhies8821
@paulvoorhies8821 3 жыл бұрын
@@Ynox54321 I’ve seen it listed as /= to buy never =/= to.
@Ynox54321
@Ynox54321 3 жыл бұрын
@@paulvoorhies8821 Well, sorry for the misunderstanding 😅 Also, most serial killers are neurotypical and can experience guilt We like to pretend like all people like that are somehow alien or different than us, but most are not
@mefford67
@mefford67 4 жыл бұрын
*This man was such a tortured soul. The only time I ever felt sorry for a serial killer. However, I’m still relieved he can no longer harm another living person.* 🤦🏻‍♀️
@jeanie8831
@jeanie8831 2 жыл бұрын
We could prob. feel sorry for all of them. They ar not normal, as in people who don"t murder. However normal types do a lot of evil things too. Their brains are damaged, for whatever reason, imo. The different parts of the brain control different functions, movement, thoughts, kindness, aggression and make up our personalities. They are all damaged and carry out their behaviors according to their unique brain development and their level of brain function. We could almost compare them to frankenstein in a way, they were made that way. They do indeed need to be punished for their actions. tho. And, I would add they all understand what they do is wrong. Can they stop themselves?
@annalupton9284
@annalupton9284 2 жыл бұрын
I feel the same way. I don't have sympathy for him but I have empathy for him if that makes sense.
@kharakessler1390
@kharakessler1390 Жыл бұрын
Of course it’s ok to feel sorry for or have empathy for people of this nature. Because what has to happen to bring a person to this kind of mindset in the first place? We project what we feel inside, and no one can know what another person feels, we can only know what they tell us, and deduce from the things they do. And it’s apparent that they don’t and can’t feel “good”. All that shyt they have to do takes work. It has to be exhausting and stressful even for the person committing these kinds of crimes to some degree. It’s ok to care about another human being even though they’ve committed heinous crimes. It’s hard and sounds wierd BECAUSE of the nature of their crimes. But a person who lives with corpses in their home is not well. And nothing good happened to them to bring them there.
@lisal2092
@lisal2092 4 жыл бұрын
I was one day away from possibly being called to be on the Dahmer trial! I was called up for another trial instead. I ended up listening to the whole thing on headphones while drawing away on architectural drawings at work. I actually felt sorry for Dahmer, as he was clearly disturbed and could not stop his own behavior. So sad for all the victims and their families. Thanks for covering this.
@dextermoore278
@dextermoore278 2 жыл бұрын
Seriously? You feel sorry for Jeffrey Dahmer who killed more than 25 people and also ate them? WTF IS WRONG WITH YOU??? GET HELP.
@cuppycakey5013
@cuppycakey5013 3 жыл бұрын
I find it terrifying that someone could just kill people for the heck of it, not being angry, not having any reason, not feeling anything but a connection to them after they’re dead. 😳😧😲
@christopherg9806
@christopherg9806 3 жыл бұрын
Normally, I feel a grim satisfaction when a murderer gets their just desserts. With Dahmer, though, I feel a little bad, because he didn't make excuses for his behavior or promise that he could do better if he were released. Maybe I'm compassionate and gullible, but it seems like he would have liked to be a different sort of a person, had he the ability to change. When I saw the interview with his father, it was really heartbreaking. It seems like Dahmer could have been institutionalized, and I doubt he would have tried to escape.
@judyjudy51
@judyjudy51 2 жыл бұрын
Yes - his father was an interesting man..
@nickyblue4866
@nickyblue4866 2 жыл бұрын
You are gullible
@8luvbug
@8luvbug 2 жыл бұрын
Jeffrey rejected all of the help that was offered to him while he was free on a killing spree. Only claims he wanted help and wanted to know what was wrong with him after he gets caught. So yeah a lot of you guys are gullible.
@christopherg9806
@christopherg9806 2 жыл бұрын
@@8luvbug That's fair. Although in my defense, it only applies a bit of of sympathy. It's not like I would favor him EVER getting out of prison. I think parole boards are full of gullible people allowing heartless murderers to go free after just a few years.
@Breakfastststst
@Breakfastststst 2 жыл бұрын
Crazy how gullible and hypocritical people can be someone who done far less than jeff simple crime not even murder would be more demonized yet simple charm and saying the right words make you feel sympathy lol let’s see if you still think like that when you were the victim of dahamer lol
@brittaolson6550
@brittaolson6550 5 жыл бұрын
I am so excited about your take on this, as I have puzzled over it a long time. It absolutely makes sense! Thank you.
@spiromentos
@spiromentos 4 жыл бұрын
I met JD at a pot luck dinner. I told him I didn't like his neighbor. He said "just eat the noodles".
@Mandyinyourface
@Mandyinyourface 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for you perspective. I think working in health care along with different professions also gives you different observations of patients. Dahmer was diagnosed in the 90s. Imagine how DSM ( the manual of mental disorders) has developed from back then till now. I recently had a patient, who said he was curious about the anatomy therefore he started to collect dead animals, tear the feathers or fur away from them and the organs. He collected their skulls and pelt. He also stated he fantasised about doing it to humans now. Not anyone particular, but because he wanted to see the anatomy and collect. He described his idea of killing and how he would tear out the organs very detailed. He just knew it would have consequences, which was prison. This patient was diagnosed with schizophrenia and along with these fantasies, he experienced delusions and hallucinations. By medications it became better, but the fantasies were always around. I felt very conflicted by the doctor sending this person home, saying "he is not going to do anything, there's no personality disorder involved since he is not impulsive". To me I'd observe the person more and talk in more details about those fantasies and get to know how they experience the world, before making any conclusions. I thought of Dahmer when I met this patient, and the conflict of a diagnosis. I also got to know in this field.. We have to know them, their history and understand if they are manipulating us or actually are honest.
@guadalupecastruita6762
@guadalupecastruita6762 3 жыл бұрын
Omg this honestly is beyond what a normal mind could even imagine, gives me chills to think he was out free like a normal kid when he obviously started showing signs of a disturbed mind... where were his parents all this time?... like we know what’s up with our children 🥺
@boxcutter4
@boxcutter4 2 жыл бұрын
@Aishwarya Bro what
@laurenbray8314
@laurenbray8314 5 жыл бұрын
I've always thought Dahmer wasn't your typical evil serial killer like Bundy for example even though they had some similarities. There was some deep emotional problems going on with him. Also the reasons for his murders and actions are very different than most serial killers.
@dylanolson4600
@dylanolson4600 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, dahmer seems like a nice fella
@ndschau
@ndschau 2 жыл бұрын
He’s more candid than most, that’s for sure. Definitely had a lot of loneliness and acceptance issues going on. He knew what he was doing was wrong. He hated himself, and he seemed remorseful. I can’t help but feel a little sorry for him, but at the same time he murdered 17 people in gruesome fashion. He was tragic and totally loathsome at the same time.
@jewhisperer
@jewhisperer 2 жыл бұрын
Bundy was a sociopath. Dahmer was a psychopath. Right?
@evieblessed
@evieblessed 2 жыл бұрын
If you feel sorry for him, you've fallen prey to his fantastic ability to manipulate and garner sympathy, imo. Psychopaths will often feign remorse, some perfect the act, others just can't quite get there as it isn't something they genuinely feel to any degree that is comparable to a normal person. It amazes me that anyone can feel sorry for someone who murdered 17 men in cold blood, including 2 14-year-olds and who sexually assaulted a 13 year old, but that just shows the level of manipulation he was capable of-somehow Jeff is the victim in all this.
@m1amar1e
@m1amar1e 2 жыл бұрын
@@evieblessed Exactly, it's worrisome seeing all of these people 'feeling bad' for him. I understand he differs from typical serial killers, but I don't know why there are comments saying he felt genuine remorse. He drilled holes in his victims and ate them. When did he show remorse? After the tenth victim? The seventeenth? Only after his arrest. Few comments mention the terror his victims experienced. It's disappointing. Objective analysis is fine, but making conclusions about Dahmer's character or the root of his madness is not.
@d.k.6361
@d.k.6361 2 жыл бұрын
It troubles me that there can be so much disagreement on a diagnosis as you pointed out regarding Dahmer. It leads me to think that Psychiatry/Psychology is a very flawed area of study. People are being medicated and treated based upon a diagnosis when another psychiatrist might very well come up with a different diagnosis and treatment recommendation. We also saw this in the Depp vs Heard defamation case where two different professionals came up with two different conclusions, and couldn't even agree on how the results of the tests given should be interpreted.
@SeqZZ
@SeqZZ 2 жыл бұрын
Psychiatry is a pseudoscience
@jordanlennox5435
@jordanlennox5435 Жыл бұрын
I am an active Mental a health practitioner and, unfortunately, what you are proposing is really not possible and does not work this way. That’s like waiting for all 5150s to be written in exactly the same way and for the same reasons. It cannot happen. Human life is too diverse and despite testing, we all have our own perceptions and ways of interpreting information.
@leanne3767
@leanne3767 5 жыл бұрын
The Golden Child has said to me(the Scapegoat Child) that he thought that Dahmer reminded him of his brother the Forgotten Child our brother. Jeffrey was being largely ignored by his parents, he would of came across as shy. He was definitely not coping with the rape he went through as a child. Possibly he had a marked difference when he was about 15 to 19 the his personality was set in place. I think especially the fathers role modelling is completely detached. Whilst have no contact with none of them. I realized Davie has not coped in our shame based family whatsoever. His FB simply stopped having new posts and judging on what Mum said years ago(he was going to jail for the second time) After working through my mothers word salad it is clear to me he is in there right now and it was because he pulled the eyeball out and cut the optical cord and tortured his girlfriend. My brother has all the same diagnoses. You are spot on again, Dr. Grande interpreting him. Mum has a diagnosis of NPD Dad is diagnosed with BPD the forgotten brother frequented gay bars and I know he has been suicidal. I am not saying that because I studied psych that is why I am ok but it helped me to use my analytical mind to work out my real life experiences and family. I am the only one out of the three of us who came out 'ok'. Thank you Dr.Grande. You are exceptional here :)
@jackrobinson9403
@jackrobinson9403 4 жыл бұрын
Links to news articles ?
@jackrobinson9403
@jackrobinson9403 4 жыл бұрын
also you say he frequented gay bars, was he infact gay and pretending to be straight when torturing his girlfriend? As in it was all a ploy for the end result to happen?
@fairyqueen56
@fairyqueen56 4 жыл бұрын
This post is discombobulated !
@warfarinoverdose7221
@warfarinoverdose7221 2 жыл бұрын
I think you gave probably the most accurate approximation of what were the most likely disorders occuring inside Dahmer. I recently watched The Netflix show and the documentary and it really gave me the same impression as for you of ASPD and schizotypal PD traits dominating in Dahmer's case. Though not a psyhciatrist but a GP MD, It really got me interested in the topic and I've just studied some of the psyhciatric literature, including my med school books. While many videos from youtube focus on his ASPD, I think many of expert and non-experts forget his ritualistic behaviour, some elements suspicous of high degree of magical thinking, possible ideas of reference, even him possibly giving some irrational symbolism to some acts he has done. All being said highly contribute to schyzotypal PD, although I'm not trying to deny pretty much clear ASPD traits such as persistent rule breaking, manipulative behaviour, not clear sense of genuine remorse. Fear of abandonment issue might be more related to his expression of ASPD traits in a sense of loosing control of manipulating his victims to stay with him and therefore impulsively commiting killing, so I would not put it into part of borderline PD. While some people connect his flat affect to ASPD, from his interviews I got impression of flat affect occuring as part of SPD or even developing (or developed) psychotic disorder. Also many focus on his alcoholism as a trigger of his behaviour or even using argument that he used alcohol to disinhibit himself in order to commit criminal acts. While the latter might be true to some extent, many non-proffessionals don't know that substance abuse is often comorbidity in various mental health disorders and ilnesses. I'm not writing this as a debate or trying to give correct diagnosis to Dahmer or try to evaluate judicial aspect of the case, just trying to show how psychiatry is complex branch of medicine and science and sometimes it's hard to shoehorn some behaviour in ICD or DSM frames. Also, if not anything, cases like this should be a lesson why every country needs to have good synergy between judicial and healthcare system in order to treat and/or prevent such individuals from commiting crimes.
@AshleyLebedev
@AshleyLebedev 2 жыл бұрын
This diagnostic video is Sooooooo much better and more thorough than the latest videos and I miss this level of analysis on all your stuff. Brilliant video ✨🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
@vampirehunterd2561
@vampirehunterd2561 3 жыл бұрын
It's important to note the dichotomy between Bundy and Dahmer. Bundy refused to accept guilt until the end. He never once accepted responsibility for his actions. He was deceptive through and through. It's also important to note how sociable and likable Bundy was. He was able to lure pretty girls because he was handsome, he was well spoken, etc. All diametrically opposed attributes to Dahmer. The two individuals were as opposite characteristically as two people can get. Edit* I've always wondered what kind of personality dynamic would occur if Dahmer and Bundy became cell mates.
@linanicolia1363
@linanicolia1363 2 жыл бұрын
I think Bundy liked total control and also enjoyed the killing act, itself. He was creepy. Did not like him. I found his face threatening.
@DonnaBrooks
@DonnaBrooks 2 жыл бұрын
Ted Bundy also played on women's empathy. He would often fake an injury, by using crutches or some other ruse, to appear less threatening and in need of help. I find that particularly despicable.
@omairsh8
@omairsh8 4 жыл бұрын
I probably shouldn't have started watching this at dinner time
@etsingpreet605
@etsingpreet605 4 жыл бұрын
Could you imagine being one of the psychologist responsible for interviewing someone like Dahmer?
@bluevol1976
@bluevol1976 2 жыл бұрын
Do you think that one of the reasons that the experts had so much difficulty with diagnosing him was because he might have changed some of his story or answered their questions differently? Was he just trying to confuse them? How many experts evaluated him?
@judithcampbell3354
@judithcampbell3354 4 жыл бұрын
I get the feeling we will never run out of serial killers for you to analyze. Not that’d be a bad thing but it sure would be a loss for your fan base - me included! Jeffrey sure was interesting and I believe he had all the criteria for being a serial killer. Thank goodness he was finally caught! Thank you Dr Grande you sure did hit the nail on the head with this fascinating analysis!
@carmenbatchelor8044
@carmenbatchelor8044 4 жыл бұрын
I’ve been looking thru your videos for Tommy Lynn Sales..I’d LOVE to hear your insight on that fella too for sure! Thanks for all your great videos! 👍🏼👏🏼 all of these cases..so so interesting 🧐
@alextorres990
@alextorres990 5 жыл бұрын
Wow, I'm a teacher and I currently have a student that shows these types of behavior... Now I think I need to push harder to have him evaluated.
@SamSung-nf6tr
@SamSung-nf6tr 4 жыл бұрын
I can't kill a mouse if one is in my house & must call a friend for help. This guy ate people.
@Suleymanakaalp4787
@Suleymanakaalp4787 3 жыл бұрын
It's not the same you're not feel anything sexual to the mouse
@badcornflakes6374
@badcornflakes6374 3 жыл бұрын
It's a lot deeper than that
@leakycheese
@leakycheese 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr. Grande for another fascinating examination of an infamous individual. As I was listening to your presentation it occurred to me there are a number of similarities between Dahmer and serial killer Dennis Nilsen. If you haven’t already covered Nilsen I’d be fascinated to hear your assessment of his caes.
@kathrinjohnson2582
@kathrinjohnson2582 5 жыл бұрын
Wow! I was waiting for you to do one on Jeffrey Dahmer . He was such an intriguing case. Thank you! Thank you! 😃 Can you do one on the Ice Man?🤗
@jillshort9241
@jillshort9241 5 жыл бұрын
In the 90's, I read Lionel Dahmer's book in which he discusses why his son may have turned out as he did. In it, he tells that Jeffrey's mother took medication during her pregnancy with him for depression or bipolar (I forget). Have always wondered if that could have screwed up his brain development. Don't know what the current thinking is about such things. I felt sorry for Lionel, trying to figure out what he might have been able to do differently as a father to keep Jeffrey from turning into a cannibalistic murderer. Maybe nothing would have changed him.
@merricat3025
@merricat3025 4 жыл бұрын
I never read the book but I saw when he was interviewed by Stone Phillips. His father seemed to have a flat affect. I feel bad for his father. He seems like he really tried to figure out why Jeffrey turn out the way he is and still loved his son. I know his mother said she didn't take any medications and she just want to make it look like she did nothing wrong. I think his dad was willing to look at maybe he had a part of this too but not the mom. Made me think that mom probably had more to do with this in the father.
@bjoernschneider7762
@bjoernschneider7762 4 жыл бұрын
The father said it was a "possibility" (he's at least that reflecting) and that would be an easy and comforting explanation for him. I suspect the father added something to the story. The real cause is a messed up early childhood by parents who weren't emotional capable ..
@jeanie8831
@jeanie8831 2 жыл бұрын
All substances affect fetal development. We know a whole lot more about that today. Fetal alcohol syndrome for one. Babies of mothers who take brain altering substances, during pregnancy, have to be detoxed just like adults. The only thing I know is that these babies get the same percentage of the substance in their bodies, in their brains, which actually is a larger dose for them because their body mass is much smaller. The detox time likely would be longer is my guess.
@mcren6781
@mcren6781 2 жыл бұрын
That blank thousand mile stare on Dahmers face is textbook sign of szchizophrenia. Every person I've known that's had it has the same look. They just stare right into you like there's no joy or happiness in there and they're just going through the motions of human interaction.
@rebbouhhind2580
@rebbouhhind2580 2 жыл бұрын
This has nothing to do with schizophrenia please do your researches before spitting rabbich !
@lewisgiles8855
@lewisgiles8855 Жыл бұрын
Empty, it's terrifying to learn someone close to you is a complete monster when you are someone so loving. I know first hand. Absolutely horrifying.
@roserunnergar834
@roserunnergar834 5 жыл бұрын
I am doing a criminology degree and I have done many psych electives. I actually agreed with you everything ! Really well supported analysis on your thoughts about his diagnoses etc and I particularly agree with you that his cafe really did unveil some fundamental issues in the problem of diagnosis and disagreement in the area of law
@roserunnergar834
@roserunnergar834 5 жыл бұрын
*case* sorry not cafe !! Silly phone.
@eimiramirez2246
@eimiramirez2246 2 жыл бұрын
Him not getting caught by cops tells us more about institutional racism than it does about serial killers and mental illness.
@rebbouhhind2580
@rebbouhhind2580 2 жыл бұрын
Relaxe Karen !
@cheetofingersbum
@cheetofingersbum 7 ай бұрын
It's not cause they were black it's because they were gay
@michellefrate8615
@michellefrate8615 2 жыл бұрын
As I have continued higher education in psychology and worked in an acute psychiatric facility and now revisiting Dahmer’s case, my first thought is OCD. The way he describe the “impulses”, “desire” to commit these murders and other criminal acts, and the lack of control over these impulses. It is very interesting to hear this education hypothesis. I also was unaware of the adolescent behaviors that were reported. Jeff acting out for attention, faking seizures, that definitely a part of BPD but I am definitely thrown off by that dx. I think antisocial personality DO would be more accurate and potentially schizotypal/schizophrenia/schizoaffective DO are accurate. I also liked how it was clarified that not all of these diagnostic impressions correlate with crime or violence. I also think there was a lot more trauma or traumatic events that occurred than what was reported that played into the violent intrusive thoughts. Really great video, definitely got the wheels on my head spinning.
@vickils9571
@vickils9571 5 жыл бұрын
He had Psych testing including a MMPI. It would be interesting to know what his testing revealed.
@kathrinjohnson2582
@kathrinjohnson2582 5 жыл бұрын
To bad they didn't have pt scans back then like they do now. They could have learned so much.
@joanbaczek2575
@joanbaczek2575 5 жыл бұрын
Kathrin Johnson pt scans only pick up on glucose uptake to find cancerous tumors cus tumors absorb higher levels of glucose compared to regular cells except some organs will glow in images no matter what. I think you are thinking of ct scans
@salvandorum
@salvandorum 5 жыл бұрын
See my post for details
@maskedidentity2498
@maskedidentity2498 5 жыл бұрын
Could you make a video on Jodi Arias, about her personality to be more specific.
@Miche-
@Miche- 5 жыл бұрын
Narcissistic personality
@ecasey91
@ecasey91 5 жыл бұрын
She’s a special kind of crazy lol
@Khymeira
@Khymeira 4 жыл бұрын
@@Miche- Vulnerable narcissist, you think? Would love the Doc's take on this one!
@TasteTestTitan
@TasteTestTitan 4 жыл бұрын
That’s an easy one. She’s a narcissist. Blamed Travis for driving her to kill him. Claimed that he’d beat her and blah blah blah. She changed her story repeatedly so it was always blaming somebody else for the murder. Said some guy’s came in and miraculously allowed her to leave as they killed Travis then after that story failed she said Travis was to blame . Always blaming other’s when the fault is obviously yours and takes zero accountability for obviously being in the wrong. I know somebody like that, who blames everyone else but themselves when it’s obviously their own damn fault.
@maskedidentity2498
@maskedidentity2498 4 жыл бұрын
@@TasteTestTitan And where is this narcissistic? It's antisocial behavior. Not taking responsibility for your actions, blaming others or circumstances, lying without shame ore remorse. All you did was listing antisocial traits. She can very well be a narcissist, but those are not the traits of one.
@dragonfox2.058
@dragonfox2.058 3 жыл бұрын
The most dangerous time with a psychopath or malignant narcissist is when you try to leave. They feel like you are taking something that belongs to them...yourself. They are the ultimate slavers
@nerodiamante9441
@nerodiamante9441 5 жыл бұрын
Very insightful and unbiased analysis Dr Grande. I'm hoping to complete my final year as a psychology & criminology undergraduate. One of my modules is abnormal psychology..... I'm really looking forward to it.
@drhust1955
@drhust1955 5 жыл бұрын
Again, Thank you Doc for your thoughts on Dahmer. I think you have come the closest to a proper diagnosis for this man. Keep up the excellent work. We all appreciate it.
@catdeca
@catdeca 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr Grande for your excellent videos ! Dahmer is so interesting. I'm no expert, but he doesn't seem to be narcissist like other serial killers and seems to be able to talk about himself and his thoughts openly without lying. He gives the impression that he's honest. I watched an interview with him and his father and he spoke about his deviant behaviors in front of him. That must not be easy to do so but he did. I can't find a reason to be so open, especially for an introvert, if not for fame (?). Thanks for sharing your thoughts on KZbin !
@rebbouhhind2580
@rebbouhhind2580 2 жыл бұрын
Without lying 🤥? I wouldn't be sur If i were you!
@MystiDawn
@MystiDawn 4 жыл бұрын
I also really wish Dr. Grande would have discussed the cannibalism, because it seems like it was very relevant to his crimes.
@dr-two
@dr-two 4 жыл бұрын
Looking for recipes?
@MystiDawn
@MystiDawn 4 жыл бұрын
@@dr-two you got any?
@dr-two
@dr-two 4 жыл бұрын
@@MystiDawn fresh is best. I prefer not to degrade the meat too much cooking with heat, but a chimichurri rub is reccomend to bring out the flavours 😉
@MystiDawn
@MystiDawn 4 жыл бұрын
@@dr-two very good, thank you!
@arpitdas4263
@arpitdas4263 4 жыл бұрын
He viewed his victims as a part of him,so he may have consumed them to make them a part of himself
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