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Did a traumatic childhood make Putin heartless? [MindSiteNews.org]

 

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The world may not be ready to empathize with Vladimir Putin as he inflicts unprovoked carnage on the Ukrainian people, but Jane Stevens has an explanation for his callous indifference. Stevens is the founder and editor of ACEsTooHigh, a news site that reports on the impact of adverse childhood experiences.

Stevens says Putin’s childhood was laden with ACEs – “lack of food, inadequate housing, bullying, neglect, parental depression, etc. And he obviously inherited a bunch of ACEs from his parents, including wartime trauma personified by Nazi forces that threatened their existence and their homeland,” she writes. “But what’s also evident is what he didn’t seem to get: appropriate attachment – the strong and requisite bond between a parent and a child that leads to a healthy life and without which children can die or be damaged… Kindness and affection didn’t seem to be part of Putin’s world.”

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Hello!

I am worried about this blog, with all my respect to your attempts to understand Putin's personality. My worries are two-fold. One is an attempt to apply causality to one's personality development. Stating that someone's traumatic childhood experience can make one heartless is quite a deterministic stretch, in my view. Does that also mean that someone with no trauma (whatever is a definition of trauma and even if we accept your definition) is immune against heartlessness?

I understand that the ACE ideas are very deterministic, but it feels strange to read the blog transmitting so much certainty about the phenomenon to which alternative explanations may exist.

More concerning is a lack of cultural context in deciding that Putin's childhood was "laden with ACEs". How was the housing decided to be "inadequate"? Inadequate by whose/what standards? Who diagnosed his parents with depression?

By establishing such a questionable and unsupported, in my opinion, causality, we basically free Putin from any responsibility for his actions and assign the responsibility to circumstances in his childhood. We also suggest that the millions of children born to Soviet parents in 1940s, 1950s, 1960s - those who had comparable to Putin's childhood (living in communal apartments with no bathtubs and hot water (referring to your previous blog), not having much money, with parents working long hours, with neighbors feeding and watching each other children - are bound to be heartless. Is that what the blog is saying?

Respectfully,

Marina Bluvshtein, PhD

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