Bear in mind that many out of character murders and suicides are caused by antidepressants. (There was even a BBC Panarama program warning on this, also there are movements in the USA to sue for such events.)
An experience can fix people in a violent framework. Stan Grof describes these and how by allowing their expression in a supportive enviroinment they can be defused in what can be a liberating experience. Unresolved Death/rebirth experiences brought up by severe trauma is one model that may help as explanation.. As early as the 1950's, and later in the 60's before its illegalization, lSD was used in catharsis for war veterans with great success. The model that worked the best was the non-patholkogical model, where experiences were encouraged. It is their suppression that leads to sudden violence.
So if a spouse or child is killed by a traumatized soldier, it is the fault of the spouse or child for not just allowing the soldier to beat them, and not being supportive of the abusive behavior. They would just work it out of their system rather than the violence escalating to murder.
If they had just told them how wonderful it was to be abused and allowed them to express their anger by beating them, and didn't suppress their violent rage, that would fix everything!
Wow. Just, wow. I am starting to agree with others that your goal in this thread is simply to be as offensive as humanly possible.
It's also liberating to divorce oneslef entirely from the pathology model whose teachings and drugs forces onto us a picture of the human psyche as fundamentally flawed.
I suffered from OCD and anorexia for over a decade, though I did not suffer from depression. I went to many therapists and therapies, both traditional and more alternative ones. I was very wary of psychiatric drugs. Finally, while in rehab and at the end of my rope, completely desperate, I agreed to go on Zoloft at a doctor's urging, though I really had no belief that it would do anything. I was just being compliant.
I had always believed that being "cured" from anorexia was impossible, it would never happen. The most I could ever hope to accomplish was to make it manageable. But within months of going on Zoloft, the obsessive thoughts regarding my weight, food, numbers, exercizing, etc simply disappeared. They just went away. Before the year was out, I was completely symptom free. It's now been several years and I've never suffered a relapse. I've never been happier. It's hard for me, looking back now, to even imagine the way I used to be and think.
Zoloft saved me. My psyche was flawed, and Zoloft fixed it. I'm not saying it's right for everyone, but going on Zoloft was the single best decision I ever made and improved my quality of life immeasurably, not to mention the positive impact it had on my family, which had been burdened both emotionally and financially due to my anorexia. I waited so long to go on it in the first place, mostly because I unfortunately bought into woo peddled by people like yourself who told me how awful psychiatric drugs were and that they were just a dangerous sham. My belief in this woo caused me and my family years of unnecessary suffering (not to mention the large amounts of money spent on various other therapies) that could have been avoided simply by swallowing 50mg a day as my doctors had suggested for years. It is the biggest regret of my life.
Listening to people like you was the dumbest and most dangerous decision I ever made in my life, and it shames me to this day what I put my family through for my foolishness.
I can just see your prescription for anorexia treatment. "Oh no, you're right. I completely validate your thoughts. You ARE monstrously fat and disgusting even though you weigh 75 pounds. Exercizing for 6 hours after eating a cashew for lunch is a completely normal thing to do. Your thinking isn't flawed at all! It's just those doctors trying to put you down by telling you that it's not normal or healthy to starve yourself."