Part 2
SIDEBAR #15 (5:05-5:12)
JURY GOING OUT 5:12
JURY COMING BACK AT 5:22
CROSS EXAM OF DR. SALLY KARIOTH BY JA - continued
Denial is a coping mechanism for things other than grief? Yes. It is common coping mechanism for guilt? It can be.
OBJECTION - OVERRULED
OBJECTION - this witness has not been tendered in guilt - OVERRULED
In fact, it is document in literature that many people use supression and denial as coping mechanism of guilt and shame? Yes. Those who feel they have not done the right thing or lived up to expectations. When that happens, those people put that event in a box and compartmentalize and they can go on as if it didn't happen?
OBJECTION -OVERRULED
The only problem is, that often they didn't do the thing, but feel guilt and shame for another event.
Secondary PTSD symptoms can be seen.
Yes, you can compartmentalize an unspeakable act.
OBJECTION - OVERRULED
That calls more under the purview of making a psychiatric diagnosis.
If it doesn't involve grief, trauma and loss - it would be outside of her purview.
Guilt can come from a truly horrible act or a relatively minor act? Yes.
In an attempt to stay afloat, a person may create an environment that works for them because to look at their past life or think about how they have been raised, they may very well come up with an almost merry discussion.
She agreed that people have a remarkable way to compartmentalize.
If you are evolved and insightful enough to actually evaluate at that level, those people may very well know that it is not good for everyone.
Magical thinking is not delusions. She gave an example of a woman whose child had died and called her when it was raining and said that he had never been in the rain before so she went there with a blanket an an umbrella and they sat outside. Intellectually the mother knew the child was dead.
The bond between mother and child never breaks.
Doctor is excused at 5:31