"DID [or Multiple Personality Disorder] is usually caused during childhood because of trauma that will prevent a central consciousness to form in order to help the protect the child they believe that the traumatic events happened to someone else. DID can be seen as a sort of coping mechanism. The psychiatrist speculates that Bates' could not deal with having committed matricide, and therefore Bates keeps his mother alive by "giving her half of his life" ("Disassociative Identity Disorder in Psycho")
Anthony Perkins may not have had the disease, but he had plenty experience. An only child of Janet Esselstyn and actor Osgood Perkins ("Scarface," "Gold Diggers of 1937"), Perkins experienced a plethora of negative experiences with both parents. With the absence of his father working both on stage and screen he "became abnormally close to my mother and whenever my father came home I was jealous. It was the Oedipal thing in a pronounced form, I loved
And like Norman Bates, a 5 year old Perkins watched his father die of a heart attack. "I was mortified," Tony says, "I assumed that my wanting him to be dead had actually killed him. A weight of guilt settled down on the boy's life. "I prayed and prayed for my father to come back. I remember long nights of crying in bed. For years I nursed the hope that he wasn't really dead. Because I'd see him on film, it was as if he were still alive. He became a mythic being
Tony's misappropriated guilt soon poisoned his life with his mother. "Because loving my mother was connected in my mind with killing my father, it became dangerous to love my mother." Unaware of what was happening in her son, Tony's mother unintentionally intensified his anguish. During her husband's lengthy absences, she had compulsively
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Inside Psycho |
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