FORENSIC SHRINK: PARANOID PISTORIUS “TRAUMATIZED” BY DOUBLE AMPUTATION

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Anxiety disorder stemming from double amputation and boozy mom's death at root of BLADE RUNNER shooting of Reeva Steenkamp, claims courtroom psychiatrist.

A forensic psychiatrist taking the stand in the Oscar Pistorius  murder trial Monday, said that the paralympian suffered from an intense anxiety disorder tracing back to his childhood, testimony that favorably dovetails with the defense’s argument that the runner was a victim of his own paranoia in the shooting of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp.

Dr. Meryl Vorster, testifying at South Africa's Pretoria court Monday, said that the 27-year-old runner and his siblings were conditioned “to see their external environment as threatening” by his mother, which “added to the anxiety” he already carried around trying to appear as normal as possible at his parents’ urging, RadarOnline reported.

Of his mother, Sheila — who the sprinter said in testimony, “Everything I learnt in life, I learned from her” — Vorster said that she’d taken to drinking following her divorce from his father, Henke.

Vorster said that Pistorius’ double amputation as a baby would have been felt as a “traumatic assault” he might have carried with him into his later years, as he was unable to speak or process the events.

“He was too young to understand why: his mother could not have comforted him because he was pre-language phase,” she said. “It would been perceived as traumatic assault.”

She added that Pistorius — “who was devastated that he killed his girlfriend” — likely harbored paranoia all the time, regardless of whether there was a sense of danger.

Vorster, echoing what the defense had been arguing,  said that the athlete’s predilection of fight over flight was attributable to his disability.

 

During cross-examination by the prosecutor, Vorster said she didn’t think was Pistorius suffered from mental illness, and that he could tell right from wrong, regardless of his anxiety, as the situation doesn’t necessarily alter one’s sense of reality.

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