Sarah seemingly can't make up her mind whether her parents were wonderful or terrible.
Sarah Ferguson: 'My mother didn't beat me - it was just a joke' | Mail Online
I have previously suggested the possibility of histrionic personality disorder because IMO Sarah's behaviour exhibits many of the symptons associated with it. I was taken to task by one or two people who either disagreed with or disliked my viewpoint but whilst it was never my intention to do a putdown on Sarah, I did want to state that if there is a personality disorder here-and in the same way that I can't conceive that a sane person can deliberately carry out mass murder I can't believe that a person with a stable mindset can deliberately continue to act in a way that brings disgrace to herself and her family. However, I feel sure, that whilst her current team will allow her to be seen going through all manner of "trials" in order to find herself, I think they may hold back from talking about PDs because a "cure" may, IMO, take a lifetime to achieve.
Is Sarah possibly Borderline? I don't want ot get banned, but Diana was disgnosed with that by a couple authors and Sarah is certainly showing a lot of the behavioral patterns. Second, by 'joking' like that, she did a lot of damage. She can't seem to stop doing damage to herself.
When I read the quotes from the 'Hello!' article, I couldn't believe it. Who 'jokes' about that kind of thing? On a series that's going to be televised nationally, potentially internationally? Though if it does air in the UK that's a change because I initially heard it was only for US distribution. This is an assembled show - a person has tons of time and plenty of opportunities to re-think what's going to get put into the final cut - especially a 'joke' in poor taste.
When I saw those quotes I did another about face - I have been so willing to give her slack - but something's not right. You could feel it in 'Finding Sarah' - or I could - I think most people could. Somethings not right. There really does need to be a Family Intervention.
I don't think she has a 'team' around her. That was for the series - Dr Phil even states that to her. As I mentioned before - when Dr Phil does his 'therapy' sessions on-air he always supplies the person with on-going counseling after the show is over. It does not appear that that took place here. In fact, I think she backed off from the therapy - with the Dr anyway - when she realized it was going to be serious (my speculation based on what I saw was her response to his hard-hitting questions early on). There was a point - after that moment - where the Dr began
playing the role but was not engaging in therapy anymore, or that's how I saw it. That's my take.
I agree about being shuttered if one brings up these issues - like with Diana - but I feel these two women's stories are spookily similar. When people like this put themselves forward in a certain kind of way in the public eye - they lose a certain 'right' to hands-off treatment. Like Charlie Sheen - he's going to be publicly analyzed - and rightly so - though in his case its the addiction that is driving the behavior - but we need to name it, talk about it - else impressionable young people draw shallow conclusions - often considering certain behaviors and statements of sentiment as legitimate and a norm - when in fact they aren't.
What drives me to distraction is that the people around such dysfunctional folks do not step forward and surround the troubled one. In Charlie Sheen's case he has so much money he can pretty much sail along - but I think he's been somewhat reeled in by his family (can't be sure on that but hasn't he gone to ground?). In Sarah's case she doesn't have the money - nor a close family except for her in-laws. Andrew needs to have a sit-down talk, that includes her adult daughters. It has to be contained - they have to start stepping up to the plate.
In fairness to them - to Andrew - its hard to come to that place with someone - to take the step - especially when you have your own stuff to deal with. Only those who have had to face the tragedy of a family member going strange can really appreciate the dilemma - and its hard to tell sometimes when the line has been crossed. I think Beatrice knows - that''s what I saw. And if Andrew is as well a problem - then the two young women need an aunt or uncle to step forward - and then that becomes potentially problematical.
I deal with a lot of this celebrity/personality interface. Its a mistake we are making when we don't fully discuss cautionary tales - when we don't accept the dysfunction and instead wall-paper over the evidence - make it a question of 'rudeness', lack of professional credentials to make a diagnosis or justify it for the person or some such. These situations are painful to deal with when you have to watch it up-close-and-personal - its agony when strangers enable the dysfunction.
Anyway, I agree with you both on the essential points - and wish there were a more open willingness to have these things discussed. There are sociological ramifications to the 'images' we honor, the 'images' we believe are 'true'.