angelevie
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I want to start the thread saying that as long as I have been fully educated on the details of JonBenét's case, I have always, always 100% believed Burke Ramsey is responsible for the head trauma that would have ultimately caused JonBenét's death. to understand this, we have to understand the dynamics of the Ramsey household. I wanted to share my thoughts and experiences with all of you! forgive me for any inconsistencies or confusing writing, this was mostly a stream of consciousness with some revision here and there!
first of all, the Ramsey family was rich and they lived in a well-off neighborhood in what is akin to a mini-mansion and the children attended private schools. boulder, co is a quaint community of upper-class white families with perfect homes, perfect couples, and perfect kids. the Ramsey family fits this narrative to a T, save for Burke, and let me tell you why.
I grew up very similarly to JonBenét. pretty, wealthy, a ballet dancer for a prestigious company, living in a cookie-cutter gated community where people are all goody-goody on the outside, but judgmental and uppity. this sounds really fake, but it's a real phenomenon and it can be very debilitating for a family to "keep up" in these types of neighborhoods, even when they've got the "right stuff". my parents were fortunately not concerned with keeping up with our community, even if we were loners. I never entered the pageant circuit despite a push from others as my mom didn't agree with placing such adult expectations and ideals on children. but that's another conversation!
I once babysat for a mother who was a lot like Patsy — high-maintenance, image-focused, southern belle. she passed off her kids to me for weeks because when they weren’t showing off, she couldn’t handle the stress of them. she treated them like her dolls to display for her friends and then when the parties were over and the camera wasn’t rolling, she wished she could just take out the batteries and not have to deal with the other 90% of parenting… I have absolutely n0 clue what Patsy was like as a mother beyond what media has captured. I'm sure she loved her children very much, but loving your children doesn’t equal always doing what’s right for them or putting them above yourself. I think there were absolutely times when Patsy found her kids annoying when they were just being kids and not extensions of her success. she was a narcissistic woman and cared greatly about being a revered presence within her circle.
JonBenét suits the "perfect" image well. she was a sweet and beautiful little girl, following in her mother's footsteps with pageantry, she was naturally gifted at performing, precocious, outgoing, and effortlessly charming when interacting with adults. she was fun for Patsy to dress up and makeover, and she was a pleaser. she wanted to make her parents happy.
now back to Burke. a lot more like his father in that he is quiet and seems distant. Burke also shows signs of someone who has Asperger's Syndrome, which displays social awkwardness and hyper fixation on certain behaviors/interests that others might find odd. my nephew has Asperger's, and his very image-concerned mother finds him difficult and embarrassing at times. he is talked about by others as being unusual, which his mother views as a criticism of her. he's lanky and doesn't play sports like other boys his age, he only talks about his special interests and is often very isolated from his peers. none of this bothers him, but it does bother his mom, and he knows that. Burke has been described as "shy", not very talkative, someone who kept to himself and certainly wasn't a child Patsy could show off to her friends as a poster child.
then my nephew's little brother comes along. he doesn't have Asperger's, is sweet, gives hugs, loves to sing, charms every adult he meets. this is what JonBenét is and what shallow mothers want. they favor their child who isn't "problematic". the older child notices and it makes them angry. let's get one thing clear — a child does not need to be evil to be a bully. sociopathic behavior is learned out of anger, struggles with socialization, and feeling inferior, primarily as a defense mechanism. seeing Burke in home videos, hearing about him from people who knew him, I believe he was a kid who developed sociopathy. however, even accidentally hitting his 6-year-old sister hard enough on the head to fatally injure her at 9-years-old is certainly possible. average 9-year-old boys are bigger and stronger than average 6-year-old girls.
siblings naturally like to pick at each other and fight for attention, especially kids from privileged households like the Ramsey's where there isn't a precedent of responsibility set up as there might be in a low-income household where everyone is required to pull their weight, so to speak. with JonBenét being the star, Burke would be resentful and mean, and this would add on to their rivalry as siblings and be compounded by his lack of connection to other people. this happened between my nephews. additionally, 9-year-olds typically have a very limited concept of death + the idea that all injuries can be healed. I have always pictured this kind of scenario —
the Ramseys return home late at night. JonBenét is taken to bed as soon as they return home after falling asleep in the car. Burke asks for a snack and Patsy agrees to get him some pineapple before bed. (keep in mind that is an interaction solely between mother and son without sister stealing any attention, Burke might find this very special and covet it.) Patsy goes upstairs to the master bedroom to pack, leaving him downstairs to eat. JonBenét wakes up, sees lights on, and goes downstairs — as many young children would — to find out what she's missing out on. she finds Burke eating her favorite food, and as a mischievous child who enjoys teasing her brother, she ran past and picked out some pineapple with her fingers and ran off with it (only Burke and Patsy's prints were found on the bowl and spoon, so how else would JonBenét have ingested pineapple without either of them recalling feeding it to her?) Burke was angered by this, as he viewed the pineapple as his. he chases her, grabs the first thing he can (likely, the flashlight matching the indentation in JonBenét's skull), and hits her. Burke allegedly had a history of physically harming his sister that was gossiped about in the community. JonBenét suffers a head injury that causes brain damage and she is unconscious. Burke sees that she doesn't get up as she usually would. being naive and not fully understanding the extent of her injury, he doesn't want to get in trouble for hitting her, so he leaves her there and goes to bed. Patsy discovers JonBenét unresponsive later, calls for John and eventually they talk to Burke and he tells what happened.
remember Patsy is a narcissistic and image-focused woman. one of the first things she would think of is how this all will affect her. she looks at JonBenét, figures there is nothing more they can do for her. letting Burke be responsible for the injury that causes his sister's death would only confirm all of the gossips about how he was different and wasn't a loving brother or perfect son. that would reflect on Patsy and John negatively. given the situation, someone like Patsy would absolutely never allow being viewed as anything other than a victim. she chooses to make her daughter a martyr, famous for her beauty, crowns, and her tragic murder that her loving family must deal with.
I want to clarify I don't think Patsy is a bad person. I think good people can do bad things. someone who was raised from a young age under idealistic expectations like Patsy would be even more susceptible to making selfish decisions. she is headstrong and once she made up her mind there was no going back.
John Ramsey is the opposite of Patsy. she is the driving force of that household, he simply pays for it. John Ramsey is passive; he bends to his wife (it's obvious especially in the interviews they do together where Patsy will direct the conversation, and he is left kind of speechless.) he doesn't have the conviction to stand up against her. they stage the asphyxiation, as it is a very erotic concept supporting assault as well as a mode that doesn't shed blood or deform someone. the garrote would be physical proof to others of pre-meditation and sexual motive. as the autopsy determined, they do end up actually killing JonBenét with this, but understand: she would have been in a vegetative state by that point with the cranial bleeding she suffered. most deaths aren't instant. often, brain activity will stop before the nerves supporting lung/heart activity die. for JonBenét, the brain stem likely continued facilitating respiration and a faint heartbeat, but that too would have ended with time as her injury went untreated. even she'd been brought to the hospital when they found her, only her breathing and heartbeat could have potentially been maintained with machinery, but that is not life. she was truly already dead before the staging.
to further bolster the intruder narrative, Patsy writes the note — theatrical and scary, something sensational that she believes will sell the story.
Burke sits aside and isn't spoken to. Patsy makes the 911 call, once again dramatic — but she can't say her daughter's name. she just says "my daughter" or "that child", which I believe is a sign of feeling guilty and wanting to deny that JonBenét had her own life separate from her family that is now gone. the crime scene is botched by the Ramseys. friends are invited to bring forensic evidence into the home and be witnesses to the distress of John and Patsy. Burke is sent away to family so that he can't slip up, the media is spoken to by John and Patsy before police are, Burke comes back to Boulder completely aware of and unfazed by his sister being dead — as if she was never there, she never meant much to him, and he already understood why she was never coming back. typically kids don't get the permanence of death until much later.
Boulder law enforcement got behind the Ramseys because this is a town that cares greatly about being seen a certain way, and being home to a killer brother isn't part of that. they wanted to believe it was an outsider and they kept the investigation private in order to protect their own. in wealthy + cookie-cutter communities like Boulder and the one I grew up in, people do drastic things to look idealistic, even stuff like this.
I don't believe the Ramseys are bad, or that Burke is evil, or that Patsy didn't care about her daughter. I don't believe JonBenét was being serially abused — I think the bedwetting was a result of stress from pageants, pageant practice, excessive bullying from her brother, and a bit of emotional neglect from her parents. bedwetting isn't a concrete sign of CSA and kids being abused usually exhibit very different behaviors than JonBenét had. her mother was narcissistic but doting when JonBenét did what she wanted, her father was busy but when he was home he was kind and goofy. she was surrounded by love. any trauma resulting from the stress + minor neglect wouldn't have shown up until later in life.
sorry for such a long read! but, I do hope you enjoyed it and were able to see a new perspective based on my personal experiences with this stuff. IMO, the family should never have spread this lie, for any reason. it was a betrayal of JonBenét. JonBenét was pretty and charming but above all else, she was a 6-year-old child full of life and promise, a baby with friends who drew hearts on her hands in her kindergarten class, who got barbies and bikes for Christmas, who played pretend as Rapunzel from her balcony, who believed in fairies and Santa... she deserved to become an adult. and I'm so sad for her that the thing attached to her name will always be her sordid death and what I believe is a lie.
feel free to reply and let me know what you all think! please be respectful, as always ~
first of all, the Ramsey family was rich and they lived in a well-off neighborhood in what is akin to a mini-mansion and the children attended private schools. boulder, co is a quaint community of upper-class white families with perfect homes, perfect couples, and perfect kids. the Ramsey family fits this narrative to a T, save for Burke, and let me tell you why.
I grew up very similarly to JonBenét. pretty, wealthy, a ballet dancer for a prestigious company, living in a cookie-cutter gated community where people are all goody-goody on the outside, but judgmental and uppity. this sounds really fake, but it's a real phenomenon and it can be very debilitating for a family to "keep up" in these types of neighborhoods, even when they've got the "right stuff". my parents were fortunately not concerned with keeping up with our community, even if we were loners. I never entered the pageant circuit despite a push from others as my mom didn't agree with placing such adult expectations and ideals on children. but that's another conversation!
I once babysat for a mother who was a lot like Patsy — high-maintenance, image-focused, southern belle. she passed off her kids to me for weeks because when they weren’t showing off, she couldn’t handle the stress of them. she treated them like her dolls to display for her friends and then when the parties were over and the camera wasn’t rolling, she wished she could just take out the batteries and not have to deal with the other 90% of parenting… I have absolutely n0 clue what Patsy was like as a mother beyond what media has captured. I'm sure she loved her children very much, but loving your children doesn’t equal always doing what’s right for them or putting them above yourself. I think there were absolutely times when Patsy found her kids annoying when they were just being kids and not extensions of her success. she was a narcissistic woman and cared greatly about being a revered presence within her circle.
JonBenét suits the "perfect" image well. she was a sweet and beautiful little girl, following in her mother's footsteps with pageantry, she was naturally gifted at performing, precocious, outgoing, and effortlessly charming when interacting with adults. she was fun for Patsy to dress up and makeover, and she was a pleaser. she wanted to make her parents happy.
now back to Burke. a lot more like his father in that he is quiet and seems distant. Burke also shows signs of someone who has Asperger's Syndrome, which displays social awkwardness and hyper fixation on certain behaviors/interests that others might find odd. my nephew has Asperger's, and his very image-concerned mother finds him difficult and embarrassing at times. he is talked about by others as being unusual, which his mother views as a criticism of her. he's lanky and doesn't play sports like other boys his age, he only talks about his special interests and is often very isolated from his peers. none of this bothers him, but it does bother his mom, and he knows that. Burke has been described as "shy", not very talkative, someone who kept to himself and certainly wasn't a child Patsy could show off to her friends as a poster child.
then my nephew's little brother comes along. he doesn't have Asperger's, is sweet, gives hugs, loves to sing, charms every adult he meets. this is what JonBenét is and what shallow mothers want. they favor their child who isn't "problematic". the older child notices and it makes them angry. let's get one thing clear — a child does not need to be evil to be a bully. sociopathic behavior is learned out of anger, struggles with socialization, and feeling inferior, primarily as a defense mechanism. seeing Burke in home videos, hearing about him from people who knew him, I believe he was a kid who developed sociopathy. however, even accidentally hitting his 6-year-old sister hard enough on the head to fatally injure her at 9-years-old is certainly possible. average 9-year-old boys are bigger and stronger than average 6-year-old girls.
siblings naturally like to pick at each other and fight for attention, especially kids from privileged households like the Ramsey's where there isn't a precedent of responsibility set up as there might be in a low-income household where everyone is required to pull their weight, so to speak. with JonBenét being the star, Burke would be resentful and mean, and this would add on to their rivalry as siblings and be compounded by his lack of connection to other people. this happened between my nephews. additionally, 9-year-olds typically have a very limited concept of death + the idea that all injuries can be healed. I have always pictured this kind of scenario —
the Ramseys return home late at night. JonBenét is taken to bed as soon as they return home after falling asleep in the car. Burke asks for a snack and Patsy agrees to get him some pineapple before bed. (keep in mind that is an interaction solely between mother and son without sister stealing any attention, Burke might find this very special and covet it.) Patsy goes upstairs to the master bedroom to pack, leaving him downstairs to eat. JonBenét wakes up, sees lights on, and goes downstairs — as many young children would — to find out what she's missing out on. she finds Burke eating her favorite food, and as a mischievous child who enjoys teasing her brother, she ran past and picked out some pineapple with her fingers and ran off with it (only Burke and Patsy's prints were found on the bowl and spoon, so how else would JonBenét have ingested pineapple without either of them recalling feeding it to her?) Burke was angered by this, as he viewed the pineapple as his. he chases her, grabs the first thing he can (likely, the flashlight matching the indentation in JonBenét's skull), and hits her. Burke allegedly had a history of physically harming his sister that was gossiped about in the community. JonBenét suffers a head injury that causes brain damage and she is unconscious. Burke sees that she doesn't get up as she usually would. being naive and not fully understanding the extent of her injury, he doesn't want to get in trouble for hitting her, so he leaves her there and goes to bed. Patsy discovers JonBenét unresponsive later, calls for John and eventually they talk to Burke and he tells what happened.
remember Patsy is a narcissistic and image-focused woman. one of the first things she would think of is how this all will affect her. she looks at JonBenét, figures there is nothing more they can do for her. letting Burke be responsible for the injury that causes his sister's death would only confirm all of the gossips about how he was different and wasn't a loving brother or perfect son. that would reflect on Patsy and John negatively. given the situation, someone like Patsy would absolutely never allow being viewed as anything other than a victim. she chooses to make her daughter a martyr, famous for her beauty, crowns, and her tragic murder that her loving family must deal with.
I want to clarify I don't think Patsy is a bad person. I think good people can do bad things. someone who was raised from a young age under idealistic expectations like Patsy would be even more susceptible to making selfish decisions. she is headstrong and once she made up her mind there was no going back.
John Ramsey is the opposite of Patsy. she is the driving force of that household, he simply pays for it. John Ramsey is passive; he bends to his wife (it's obvious especially in the interviews they do together where Patsy will direct the conversation, and he is left kind of speechless.) he doesn't have the conviction to stand up against her. they stage the asphyxiation, as it is a very erotic concept supporting assault as well as a mode that doesn't shed blood or deform someone. the garrote would be physical proof to others of pre-meditation and sexual motive. as the autopsy determined, they do end up actually killing JonBenét with this, but understand: she would have been in a vegetative state by that point with the cranial bleeding she suffered. most deaths aren't instant. often, brain activity will stop before the nerves supporting lung/heart activity die. for JonBenét, the brain stem likely continued facilitating respiration and a faint heartbeat, but that too would have ended with time as her injury went untreated. even she'd been brought to the hospital when they found her, only her breathing and heartbeat could have potentially been maintained with machinery, but that is not life. she was truly already dead before the staging.
to further bolster the intruder narrative, Patsy writes the note — theatrical and scary, something sensational that she believes will sell the story.
Burke sits aside and isn't spoken to. Patsy makes the 911 call, once again dramatic — but she can't say her daughter's name. she just says "my daughter" or "that child", which I believe is a sign of feeling guilty and wanting to deny that JonBenét had her own life separate from her family that is now gone. the crime scene is botched by the Ramseys. friends are invited to bring forensic evidence into the home and be witnesses to the distress of John and Patsy. Burke is sent away to family so that he can't slip up, the media is spoken to by John and Patsy before police are, Burke comes back to Boulder completely aware of and unfazed by his sister being dead — as if she was never there, she never meant much to him, and he already understood why she was never coming back. typically kids don't get the permanence of death until much later.
Boulder law enforcement got behind the Ramseys because this is a town that cares greatly about being seen a certain way, and being home to a killer brother isn't part of that. they wanted to believe it was an outsider and they kept the investigation private in order to protect their own. in wealthy + cookie-cutter communities like Boulder and the one I grew up in, people do drastic things to look idealistic, even stuff like this.
I don't believe the Ramseys are bad, or that Burke is evil, or that Patsy didn't care about her daughter. I don't believe JonBenét was being serially abused — I think the bedwetting was a result of stress from pageants, pageant practice, excessive bullying from her brother, and a bit of emotional neglect from her parents. bedwetting isn't a concrete sign of CSA and kids being abused usually exhibit very different behaviors than JonBenét had. her mother was narcissistic but doting when JonBenét did what she wanted, her father was busy but when he was home he was kind and goofy. she was surrounded by love. any trauma resulting from the stress + minor neglect wouldn't have shown up until later in life.
sorry for such a long read! but, I do hope you enjoyed it and were able to see a new perspective based on my personal experiences with this stuff. IMO, the family should never have spread this lie, for any reason. it was a betrayal of JonBenét. JonBenét was pretty and charming but above all else, she was a 6-year-old child full of life and promise, a baby with friends who drew hearts on her hands in her kindergarten class, who got barbies and bikes for Christmas, who played pretend as Rapunzel from her balcony, who believed in fairies and Santa... she deserved to become an adult. and I'm so sad for her that the thing attached to her name will always be her sordid death and what I believe is a lie.
feel free to reply and let me know what you all think! please be respectful, as always ~
