Monday, June 18, 2012

Anders and his mother


"Mom: "He was so nice"
"Breivik looked down the table surface in front of him while the psychiatrist explained how her mother had gradually noticed that his son has changed from being a good boy."

"He was so kind, he always thought of me," said the mother of Breivik.

Then he began to change.

The mother was especially worried when Breivik virtually barricaded himself in his room and played video games all day long after he moved back in 2006.
The biggest transformation was according to his mother in 2010. While Breivik became more and more concerned with writing the manifesto, the mother did everything she could to avoid talking politics with him. When the son became the mother calls "uncomfortably intense."

Then one day in the spring of last year came out of his room wearing a "uniform jacket with lots of badges," her mother wondered if he had gone mad:
"I wondered whether the more he began to be completely crazy, and it became an uncomfortable, disgusting, and it felt unsafe. As if I did not know him anymore."

"He lied and cheated on me, she says, crying," Husby read from the conversation with his mother.

Breivik looked down the table surface in front of him and swallowed repeatedly.
The mother also said that Breivik did not know how much distance he had to her. He refused either to have something to do with her or sitting close to her on the couch and kissed her on the cheek."


"The mother of Norwegian mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik was already terrified of her son when he was just four years old, it has emerged.
The Oslo trial of the confessed 33-year-old killer of 77 heard how the 'hyperactive and aggressive' boy was incapable of feeling joy or pleasure.

She was still terrified 23 years later when, on moving back into her home in 2006, he would 'sit on top of her on the sofa' and attempt to kiss her face.
In a statement to police read out to the court, Wenche Breivik said: 'I felt like I was in prison with him. He was uncomfortably intense."

Child psychiatrists observed that the boy felt uncomfortable with contact, and would use techniques to avoid having to touch others."



Max Richter - Waltz with Bashir - 03. Haunted Ocean, Pt. 1

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