9 Quotes & Sayings By Martha Stout

Martha Stout is the author of many books, including The Sociopath Next Door, The Sociopath Next Door Workbook, and The Sociopath Next Door for Teens. She has appeared on television, radio, and in print media as a consultant on sociopathy and sociopathic behavior. She is also the founder of the United Nations of Psychopaths International (UNPI) which offers training programs for professionals on sociopathic behavior.

1
A part of a healthy conscience is being able to confront consciencelessness. When you teach your daughter, explicitly or by passive rejection, that she must ignore her outrage, that she must be kind and accepting to the point of not defending herself or other people, that she must not rock the boat for any reason, you are NOT strengthening her prosocial sense, you are damaging it--and the first person she will stop protecting is herself. Martha Stout
2
In northwest Alaska, kunlangeta "might be applied to a man who, for example, repeatedly lies and cheats and steals things and does not go hunting, and, when the other men are out of the village, takes sexual advantage of many women." The Inuits tacitly assume that kunlangeta is irremediable. And so, according to Murphy, the traditional Inuit approach to such a man was to insist he go hunting, and then, in the absence of witnesses, push him off the edge of the ice. Martha Stout
3
We raise our children, especially girls, to ignore their spontaneious reactions-we teach them not to rock the societal boat... By the time she is thirty, the valient little girl's "Ick! "-her tendency to respond, to rock the boat, when someone's actions are really mean, may have been exciese from her behavior, and perhaps from her very mind. Martha Stout
4
As for the boys..."vulnerable fathers turn to time-honored defensive responses to maintain the function that father knows best' Parents, especially fathers, teach their sons to obey authority no matter what. Martha Stout
5
I am always impressed by the fact that even the tiniest amount of being listened to, the barest suggestion of the possibility of kind treatment, can bring such an immediate rush of emotion. I think this is because we are almost never really listened to. In my work as a psychologist, I am reminded every day of how infrequently we are heard, any of us, or our actions even marginally understood. And one of the ironies of my "listening profession" is its lesson that, in many ways, each of us ultimately remains a mystery to everyone else. . Martha Stout
6
-If I somehow possessed a set of videotapes that contained all the most significant events of your childhood, in their entirety, would you want to see them?- Absolutely. Right this very second.- But why? Don't you think some of the tapes would be very sad?- Most of them, yes. But if I could see them, then I could have them in my brain like regular memories-horrible memories, yes, but regular memories, not sinister little ghosts in my head that pop out of some part of me I don't even know, and take the rest of me away. Do you know what I mean?- I think so, If you have to remeber, you'd rather do it in the front of your brain than in the back. . Martha Stout
7
We feel that if someone is bad, he should be burdened with the knowledge that he is bad. It seems to us the ultimate injustice that a person could be evil, by our assessment , and still feel fine about himself. Martha Stout
8
Conscience- protects the privileges of intimacy, makes , friends keep their promises, prevents the angered spouse from striking back. Martha Stout