Silver Tongue
As someone who saw their sibling die (they managed to resuscitate him but still) she would not be acting like that. She'd likely be crying and not online. Especially since she said that she helped raise her sister, that would make it even more traumatic. Unless her form of grief is apathy.

jestre:

auror-army:

jestre:

Potentially it may.

I’ve studied criminal psychology, and planned on being a criminal psychologist once I graduated (that didn’t work out). But there’s actually this list of things that they look for in grieving people. Tick marks if you will, and it’s a fairly extensive list. You aren’t expected to hit all marks, but you have to hit a certain percentage. Anyone who doesn’t it makes detectives look very closely into them. It’s not something easily faked.

But the list is a mix of emotions and activity. What you do after the death of a person. A person going around posting memes and arguing with people on the Internet right after the death is going to raise eyebrows. It’s a mark of a liar.

-Bella

Thank you for the educated response. <3 (I know Jitty would love to chat with you since he plans to be a criminal psychologist.)

Sorry, staff, and everyone else for putting you through this, but people are still getting headaches from the logo. That is my only other concern.

even so, the update is the most user unfriendly one yet

  1. alto-crescent reblogged this from jestre
  2. silver-tongues-blog reblogged this from jestre and added:
    even so, the update is the most user unfriendly one yet
  3. drmohindersuresh said: people grieve in different ways, some by trying to gain some normalcy in their lives and try to pretend things didnt happen