Found Deceased Eliza & Henrietta Huszti, sisters both 32, CCTV captures them near a river at 2am, Aberdeen, 7 Jan 2025 #3

Define social life? Not you personally, us in general.

To some, a social life is partying until all hours, with lots of friends, catching up for drinks every weekend with them etc. You could also argue that a social life could be the two of them going out for dinner with only each other, catching a movie together or alone, shopping in a mall/shopping centre together etc. Activities in the world, but not necessarily what I'd call social. Does social have to involve anyone else?


Yes, there was 1 mention of him in an article.
Yep, I made a similar point previously. It could even involve online activities as well. Don't think here's much in the way of specific information relating to the sisters.
 
Define social life? Not you personally, us in general.

To some, a social life is partying until all hours, with lots of friends, catching up for drinks every weekend with them etc. You could also argue that a social life could be the two of them going out for dinner with only each other, catching a movie together or alone, shopping in a mall/shopping centre together etc. Activities in the world, but not necessarily what I'd call social. Does social have to involve anyone else?
Yes, it does. Socialising means mixing with other people.
I doubt that they were able to afford going out to pubs or clubs every night, not many of us can now, but that doesn't rule out visiting friends and having visitors. It was said that one of them enjoyed cooking, so perhaps they used to have friends round for dinner. It could also be something as simple as going for walks together or sharing a hobby.
 
Yep, I made a similar point previously. It could even involve online activities as well. Don't think here's much in the way of specific information relating to the sisters.
I think a social life means that you have friends or family who you get together with inside/outside the home whether it's attending a concert or going out for a drink or meal, or taking a walk with a friend, maybe meeting friends for coffee or being part of group activities like a book club, or meeting up with other expats.

I sense that they might have been somewhat isolated outside of their work life.

JMO
 
Yep, I made a similar point previously. It could even involve online activities as well. Don't think here's much in the way of specific information relating to the sisters.
People have been discreet. They have obviously spoken to the police but so far not many have talked to media reporters. I think this has a lot to do with the impression that the sisters were isolated.
 
Granted,
I haven't followed this thread closely,
but I remember a poster comparing Hungarian sisters to Saudi sisters who died in Australia (deemed suicide).

And I had the same impression.

Always together, living together, dying together.

Distancing from others.

At the age (over 30) when a sibling usually cuts ties with another
to lead a separate life with her/his own family (husband/wife/partner/kids).

RIP to sisters :(
Condolences to family.

JMO
 
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Living on a budget, not a whole lot of social life - it just doesn't seem enough reason for suicide, does it. At least not to me.
For some people financial reasons would be enough. But I think illness is a more likely reason in this case.

Whatever the reason, it was a good enough reason for them.
 
There's also the possibility that they have entered the water voluntarily, not to die, but for some other reason that made sense to them at the time. I'm thinking of folie à deux, or some kind of shared delusion. Unlikely, but then all theories in this case sound unlikely.
 
There's also the possibility that they have entered the water voluntarily, not to die, but for some other reason that made sense to them at the time. I'm thinking of folie à deux, or some kind of shared delusion. Unlikely, but then all theories in this case sound unlikely.
Now we know they have been found I think the message saying they wouldn’t be going back to their flat and leaving possessions all points to premeditated. I had thought from the outset they had chosen to disappear, not die so my judgement obviously not sound!
 
Sorry if this has been asked before. Would a postmortem yield any useful info after so long in the water? Injuries, desease, drugs, alcohol, etc.
I think that they would be able to test for all of those things. From other cases where a body had been in the water much longer the post mortem was able to yield much information.
 
<modsnip: Quoted post was removed>

Living on a budget, not a whole lot of social life - it just doesn't seem enough reason for suicide, does it. At least not to me.

That’s not something that can be judged by anyone else but them.

There is zero point trying to look at it logically, you can’t, you don’t know their life.

It was their lived experience, it was enough for them to decide it was enough.
 
There was a twin suicide in back in 2007 in a city in Romania where I was studying at the time. The twins in that case were also Hungarian. As soon as I heard of the Aberdeen case I thought of this tragic older case which has haunted me for years.
Basically what happened was that two 24-year-old twin girls walked out of their apartment one night carrying ropes and two chairs. They went to a nearby park where they proceeded to end their lives. Even though there was no mystery in this case as to what happened to the girls, police couldn't find a motive and there was no history of mental illness. The girls came from a so-called "good" family - The mother was a doctor, the father a teacher and they had no financial problems. The girls were very intelligent, excelled in high school and at university (they went to the same university and studied the same course) and at the time of this tragedy they were both working for the same company as translators. They shared an apartment, which according some reports was bought for them by their parents. However, neighbours reported that the girls kept to themselves and that the only visitors they ever had were their parents. The only thing police found in their apartment that could've hinted at a motive were some philosophical quotes about freedom. An incredibly tragic case, but just wanted to share it as it has some parallels with the Eliza/Henrietta case. If anyone's interested I can link a Romanian or Hungarian news article.
 

'Father of sisters who went missing in freezing conditions speaks of his grief

after bodies found in search for them."


1738671502140.jpeg


 
I wonder if estranged dad has been paid to give these interviews.
I hope the media leaves the rest of their family alone.

DM article seems to be the copy of the Hungarian one I sent the link earlier.
It is literally word for word.

Although DM left the fragment about "it not being a suicide" (according to father) out.

JMO
 
There was a twin suicide in back in 2007 in a city in Romania where I was studying at the time. The twins in that case were also Hungarian. As soon as I heard of the Aberdeen case I thought of this tragic older case which has haunted me for years.
Basically what happened was that two 24-year-old twin girls walked out of their apartment one night carrying ropes and two chairs. They went to a nearby park where they proceeded to end their lives. Even though there was no mystery in this case as to what happened to the girls, police couldn't find a motive and there was no history of mental illness. The girls came from a so-called "good" family - The mother was a doctor, the father a teacher and they had no financial problems. The girls were very intelligent, excelled in high school and at university (they went to the same university and studied the same course) and at the time of this tragedy they were both working for the same company as translators. They shared an apartment, which according some reports was bought for them by their parents. However, neighbours reported that the girls kept to themselves and that the only visitors they ever had were their parents. The only thing police found in their apartment that could've hinted at a motive were some philosophical quotes about freedom. An incredibly tragic case, but just wanted to share it as it has some parallels with the Eliza/Henrietta case. If anyone's interested I can link a Romanian or Hungarian news article.

I would appreciate reading it.
I am perplexed as why the media has not seen the parallels and posted such.....

who found them....
had to have been grizzly...
 

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