Something to ponder
Question:
- Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -Ted Bundy wrote: > As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of > pranks by bullies in his junior high school. Regardless of the sometimes > humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade > average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. > Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular > figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was thought > of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one > recalled him dating anyone during that period. > – Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so. > She was not asleep, as her roommates had thought when they approached the > bed of Joni Lenz on the afternoon of January 4, 1974. They found her lying > in a pool of blood that was seeping from her head and face. Terrified, her > roommates removed the covers from Joni Lenz’s body only to find an even more > horrible sight. A bed rod had been torn away from the bed and savagely > rammed into her vagina. > – Payback’s a bitch, isn’t it ladies?
> — > Ted Bundy, the greatest hero the world has ever seen.
Oh. I just now realized who you are. Rock on. ——- Life is mundane, and no matter how hard you work or how much ass you kiss, there’s a really good chance that all you’re ever going to be is what you are now.
Response:
"Ted Bundy" <ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au> schreef in bericht news:3ae317dc$0$25464$7f31c96c@news01.syd.optusnet.com.au… > "mephistopheles" <serp…@forbiddenfruit.com> wrote in message > news:3ADE7544.7C716D75@forbiddenfruit.com… > > Did you send this for shock value? If not, what was the point? > The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy.
Why??? I was rejected even by flirting girls, when I showed interest… but I am still not a monster, but I was a milder variant of Darkfalz. Now I have some criticism towards him, and lend to the majority of this group’s subscribers that has the same criticism. <story snipped> I would not retaliate like Ted did, but I think that if a women rejected me after a short relation, I would get very bitter, and get unavailable for a new relation for some years. Say, when I would get a relation now which wouldn’t be long, I would be 40 or so, when I am ready for a second woman. Hans Kamp.
Response:
"Jim" <jrv…@thedoor.net> schreef in bericht news:3AE338FC.BB6C8CB6@thedoor.net… > This guy is really Darkfalz, who in an earler posting said that Ted Bundy was > one of his heroes.
There could be some parts of Ted Bundy in me, but the last part of the story he made the women pay back for what she did to him before. I would have problems when the romance was over for a while. I wouldn’t want to re-establish the relationship… Hans Kamp.
Response:
I’ve had quite enough of this fuckwit <PLONK> "Ted Bundy" <ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au> wrote in message
news:3ae30282$0$25472$7f31c96c@news01.syd.optusnet.com.au… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of > pranks by bullies in his junior high school. Regardless of the sometimes > humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade > average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. > Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular > figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was thought > of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one > recalled him dating anyone during that period. > – Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so. … > — > Ted Bundy, the greatest hero the world has ever seen.
Response:
"Azurebarred" <rnath…@uswest.net> writes: > > The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy. > I thought Bundy blamed his murderous predilections on porno in the > last filmed interview he granted the media before he was executed. > Course I also thought this was self serving bullshit and perfectly > understandable considering Bundy was raised in a church (Mormon) > which taught him to believe porno would turn him into a monster. > Women, men, and rejection have been around a long time. Why hasn’t > this potent mix produced more sociopathic killers like Ted Bundy?
Well, there’s no shortage of serial rapists… — I will play tetherball with your spleen.
Response:
"Nicholas Temple" <nltem…@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:cWJE6.439$mF.58750@newsread2.prod.itd.earthlink.net… > Excellent observation, Azurebarred! > I have spent enough time doing counseling of offenders to have heard the > rationalization "The devil made me do it" in a hundred variations. > Nick
Thanks Nick
I can hardly wait for Ashcroft and the other guardians of virtue to begin their tax dollar funded witch hunt (echoes of the Meese Commission) for pornographers. The National Research Council’s Panel on Understanding and Preventing Violence concluded, in 1993: "Demonstrated empirical links between pornography and sex crimes in general are weak or absent." Albert J. Reiss, Jr. and Jeffrey A. Roth, eds., Understanding and Preventing Violence (Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1993), p. 111. (A project for the National Research Council.) – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> "Azurebarred" <rnath…@uswest.net> wrote in message > news:zpJE6.1316$6b1.277293@news.uswest.net… > > > The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy. > > I thought Bundy blamed his murderous predilections on porno in the last > > filmed interview he granted the media before he was executed. Course I > also > > thought this was self serving bullshit and perfectly understandable > > considering Bundy was raised in a church (Mormon) which taught him to > > believe porno would turn him into a monster. > > Women, men, and rejection have been around a long time. Why hasn’t this > > potent mix produced more sociopathic killers like Ted Bundy?
Response:
On Sun, 22 Apr 2001 16:28:02 -0500, "The Canadian Cowboy" <omgloveuRem…@albedo.net> wrote: > Abuse report sent to ab…@dingoblue.net.au
Me too. I’d advise others to do the same if you think this has gone too far. – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text ->Bill >"Ted Bundy" <ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au> wrote in message >news:3ae30282$0$25472$7f31c96c@news01.syd.optusnet.com.au… >> As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of >> pranks by bullies in his junior high school. Regardless of the sometimes >> humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade >> average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. >> Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular >> figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was >thought >> of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one >> recalled him dating anyone during that period. >> – Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so. >> She was not asleep, as her roommates had thought when they approached the >> bed of Joni Lenz on the afternoon of January 4, 1974. They found her lying >> in a pool of blood that was seeping from her head and face. Terrified, her >> roommates removed the covers from Joni Lenz’s body only to find an even >more >> horrible sight. A bed rod had been torn away from the bed and savagely >> rammed into her vagina. >> – Payback’s a bitch, isn’t it ladies?
>> — >> Ted Bundy, the greatest hero the world has ever seen.
Response:
"Ted Bundy" <ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au> schreef in bericht news:3ae30282$0$25472$7f31c96c@news01.syd.optusnet.com.au… > As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of > pranks by bullies in his junior high school.
Is this Ted in this story, you? > Regardless of the sometimes > humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade > average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. > Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular > figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was thought > of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one > recalled him dating anyone during that period.
This Ted could also be me, but while many girls greeted me, and each day I biked from school with another girl, I still thought that I wasn’t popular. Many things I have in common with Ted in this story. > – Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so.
No, I don’t find it surprising. I can a whole story about me and the girls in the past, and the young women when I grew up. I prefer to put details of my story in several messages when it becomes related to their subjects. I never dated a girl or a woman, partly because I am autistic, and therefore I didn’t know how this works, partly I am shy, and therefore I didn’t know whether the woman would accept me as I am. What did the girls exactly think about Ted in this story? Did they like him? And when they show interest, did Ted think, that they are bullying him? The other story I snipped, because I don’t know the relation between the shyness or loneliness and the second terror story. Hans Kamp.
Response:
Not really. If he wanted defenseless targets, he’d have killed old grannies. His target was pretty young bimbos, often at great risk (into the sorority house, how awesome!) "Henrik Olesen" <henri…@mail.tele.dk> wrote in message
news:gHLE6.54227$o4.4601537@news010.worldonline.dk… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> Ted Bundy killed women, because he was a coward. If he had tried to kill > men, he would have had his ass kicked. > Henrik > — > "Ted Bundy" <ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au> skrev i en meddelelse > news:3ae30282$0$25472$7f31c96c@news01.syd.optusnet.com.au… > > As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of > > pranks by bullies in his junior high school. Regardless of the sometimes > > humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade > > average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. > > Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular > > figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was > thought > > of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one > > recalled him dating anyone during that period. > > – Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so. > > She was not asleep, as her roommates had thought when they approached the > > bed of Joni Lenz on the afternoon of January 4, 1974. They found her lying > > in a pool of blood that was seeping from her head and face. Terrified, her > > roommates removed the covers from Joni Lenz’s body only to find an even > more > > horrible sight. A bed rod had been torn away from the bed and savagely > > rammed into her vagina. > > – Payback’s a bitch, isn’t it ladies?
> > — > > Ted Bundy, the greatest hero the world has ever seen.
Response:
> The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy.
I thought Bundy blamed his murderous predilections on porno in the last filmed interview he granted the media before he was executed. Course I also thought this was self serving bullshit and perfectly understandable considering Bundy was raised in a church (Mormon) which taught him to believe porno would turn him into a monster. Women, men, and rejection have been around a long time. Why hasn’t this potent mix produced more sociopathic killers like Ted Bundy?
Response:
Excellent observation, Azurebarred! I have spent enough time doing counseling of offenders to have heard the rationalization "The devil made me do it" in a hundred variations. Nick "Azurebarred" <rnath…@uswest.net> wrote in message
news:zpJE6.1316$6b1.277293@news.uswest.net… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> > The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy. > I thought Bundy blamed his murderous predilections on porno in the last > filmed interview he granted the media before he was executed. Course I also > thought this was self serving bullshit and perfectly understandable > considering Bundy was raised in a church (Mormon) which taught him to > believe porno would turn him into a monster. > Women, men, and rejection have been around a long time. Why hasn’t this > potent mix produced more sociopathic killers like Ted Bundy?
Response:
There is nothing to ponder here. Recognise evil for evil, and those who glorify it. There was a documentary series which details the life and crimes of the likes of Ted Bundy, etc… What was that series called? Which covers their upbringing… "Crimes of the 20th Century" ? They are simply mad and demented – such people exist everywhere, and those who glorify such people, praise them, show their true colours. This is not the right Newsgroup to bring this subject up, in this light. Sure, they must have been lonely, etc — but they were also quite mad, sadistic, etc… Serial killers is not a topic of this newsgroup. Harvey In article <3ae30282$0$25472$7f31c…@news01.syd.optusnet.com.au>, ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au says… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text ->As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of >pranks by bullies in his junior high school. Regardless of the sometimes >humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade >average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. >Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular >figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was thought >of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one >recalled him dating anyone during that period. >- Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so. >She was not asleep, as her roommates had thought when they approached the >bed of Joni Lenz on the afternoon of January 4, 1974. They found her lying >in a pool of blood that was seeping from her head and face. Terrified, her >roommates removed the covers from Joni Lenz’s body only to find an even more >horrible sight. A bed rod had been torn away from the bed and savagely >rammed into her vagina. >- Payback’s a bitch, isn’t it ladies?
>– >Ted Bundy, the greatest hero the world has ever seen.
Response:
Ted Bundy killed women, because he was a coward. If he had tried to kill men, he would have had his ass kicked. Henrik — "Ted Bundy" <ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au> skrev i en meddelelse news:3ae30282$0$25472$7f31c96c@news01.syd.optusnet.com.au… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of > pranks by bullies in his junior high school. Regardless of the sometimes > humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade > average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. > Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular > figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was thought > of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one > recalled him dating anyone during that period. > – Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so. > She was not asleep, as her roommates had thought when they approached the > bed of Joni Lenz on the afternoon of January 4, 1974. They found her lying > in a pool of blood that was seeping from her head and face. Terrified, her > roommates removed the covers from Joni Lenz’s body only to find an even more > horrible sight. A bed rod had been torn away from the bed and savagely > rammed into her vagina. > – Payback’s a bitch, isn’t it ladies?
> — > Ted Bundy, the greatest hero the world has ever seen.
Response:
Abuse report sent to ab…@dingoblue.net.au Bill "Ted Bundy" <ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au> wrote in message
news:3ae30282$0$25472$7f31c96c@news01.syd.optusnet.com.au… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of > pranks by bullies in his junior high school. Regardless of the sometimes > humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade > average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. > Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular > figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was thought > of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one > recalled him dating anyone during that period. > – Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so. > She was not asleep, as her roommates had thought when they approached the > bed of Joni Lenz on the afternoon of January 4, 1974. They found her lying > in a pool of blood that was seeping from her head and face. Terrified, her > roommates removed the covers from Joni Lenz’s body only to find an even more > horrible sight. A bed rod had been torn away from the bed and savagely > rammed into her vagina. > – Payback’s a bitch, isn’t it ladies?
> — > Ted Bundy, the greatest hero the world has ever seen.
Response:
Whoa, you’re a genius. Not only did I not deny it, change my tone or client, but I followed up messages posted under my old name as the same person. How you managed to figure out we were the same person was brilliant! "Jim" <jrv…@thedoor.net> wrote in message
news:3AE338FC.BB6C8CB6@thedoor.net… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> This guy is really Darkfalz, who in an earler posting said that Ted Bundy was > one of his heroes. > Ted Bundy wrote: > > "mephistopheles" <serp…@forbiddenfruit.com> wrote in message > > news:3ADE7544.7C716D75@forbiddenfruit.com… > > > Did you send this for shock value? If not, what was the point? > > The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy. > > More excerpts: > > Stephanie was Ted’s first love and she was the first woman with whom he > > became involved with sexually. Ted and Stephanie spent a lot of time > > together doing things that most young couples in love did, such as romantic > > ski trips, long walks and intimate dinners. However, Stephanie was not as > > infatuated with Ted as he was with her. In fact, she liked Ted a lot but > > believed he had no real direction or future goals. Stephanie wanted someone > > who would fit in with her lifestyle and she didn’t believe Ted was that > > person. Ted tried too hard to impress her, even if that meant lying, > > something that she didn’t like at all. > > In 1968, after graduating from the University of Washington, Stephanie broke > > off relations with Ted. Ted never recovered from the break-up. Nothing, > > including school, seemed to hold any interest for him and he eventually > > dropped out, dumb-founded and depressed over the break-up. His one true love > > had left him and his world seemed to befalling apart. > > In 1973, during a business trip to California for the Washington Republican > > Party, Ted met up with his old flame Stephanie Brooks for a night out. > > Stephanie was amazed at the transformation in Ted. He was much more > > confident and mature, not as aimless as he was when they last dated. They > > met several other times afterwards, unknown to Meg. During Ted’s business > > trips he romantically courted Stephanie and she once again fell in love with > > him. > > Marriage was a topic brought up more than once by Ted over their many > > intimate rendezvous together during that fall and winter. Yet, just as > > suddenly as their romance began, it changed radically. Where once Ted > > lavished affection upon Stephanie, he was suddenly cold and despondent. It > > seemed as if Ted had lost all interest in her over the period of just a few > > weeks. Stephanie was undoubtedly confused as to the sudden change in Ted. In > > February 1974, with no warning or explanation Ted ended all contact with > > Stephanie. His plan of revenge worked. He rejected Stephanie as she had once > > rejected him. Stephanie was never to see or hear from Ted again.
Response:
This guy is really Darkfalz, who in an earler posting said that Ted Bundy was one of his heroes. – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -Ted Bundy wrote: > "mephistopheles" <serp…@forbiddenfruit.com> wrote in message > news:3ADE7544.7C716D75@forbiddenfruit.com… > > Did you send this for shock value? If not, what was the point? > The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy. > More excerpts: > Stephanie was Ted’s first love and she was the first woman with whom he > became involved with sexually. Ted and Stephanie spent a lot of time > together doing things that most young couples in love did, such as romantic > ski trips, long walks and intimate dinners. However, Stephanie was not as > infatuated with Ted as he was with her. In fact, she liked Ted a lot but > believed he had no real direction or future goals. Stephanie wanted someone > who would fit in with her lifestyle and she didn’t believe Ted was that > person. Ted tried too hard to impress her, even if that meant lying, > something that she didn’t like at all. > In 1968, after graduating from the University of Washington, Stephanie broke > off relations with Ted. Ted never recovered from the break-up. Nothing, > including school, seemed to hold any interest for him and he eventually > dropped out, dumb-founded and depressed over the break-up. His one true love > had left him and his world seemed to befalling apart. > In 1973, during a business trip to California for the Washington Republican > Party, Ted met up with his old flame Stephanie Brooks for a night out. > Stephanie was amazed at the transformation in Ted. He was much more > confident and mature, not as aimless as he was when they last dated. They > met several other times afterwards, unknown to Meg. During Ted’s business > trips he romantically courted Stephanie and she once again fell in love with > him. > Marriage was a topic brought up more than once by Ted over their many > intimate rendezvous together during that fall and winter. Yet, just as > suddenly as their romance began, it changed radically. Where once Ted > lavished affection upon Stephanie, he was suddenly cold and despondent. It > seemed as if Ted had lost all interest in her over the period of just a few > weeks. Stephanie was undoubtedly confused as to the sudden change in Ted. In > February 1974, with no warning or explanation Ted ended all contact with > Stephanie. His plan of revenge worked. He rejected Stephanie as she had once > rejected him. Stephanie was never to see or hear from Ted again.
Response:
"Alan Ferris" <xa…@mistral.co.uk> wrote in message
news:2696etcpk1ok9p09nl3hj869kpib2nonqp@4ax.com… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> "Ted Bundy" <ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au> wrote … > >"mephistopheles" <serp…@forbiddenfruit.com> wrote in message > >news:3ADE7544.7C716D75@forbiddenfruit.com… > >> Did you send this for shock value? If not, what was the point? > >The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy. > >More excerpts: > >Stephanie was Ted’s first love and she was the first woman with whom he > >became involved with sexually. Ted and Stephanie spent a lot of time > >together doing things that most young couples in love did, such as romantic > >ski trips, long walks and intimate dinners. However, Stephanie was not as > >infatuated with Ted as he was with her. In fact, she liked Ted a lot but > >believed he had no real direction or future goals. Stephanie wanted someone > >who would fit in with her lifestyle and she didn’t believe Ted was that > >person. Ted tried too hard to impress her, even if that meant lying, > >something that she didn’t like at all. > >In 1968, after graduating from the University of Washington, Stephanie broke > >off relations with Ted. Ted never recovered from the break-up. Nothing, > >including school, seemed to hold any interest for him and he eventually > >dropped out, dumb-founded and depressed over the break-up. His one true love > >had left him and his world seemed to befalling apart. > >In 1973, during a business trip to California for the Washington Republican > >Party, Ted met up with his old flame Stephanie Brooks for a night out. > >Stephanie was amazed at the transformation in Ted. He was much more > >confident and mature, not as aimless as he was when they last dated. They > >met several other times afterwards, unknown to Meg. During Ted’s business > >trips he romantically courted Stephanie and she once again fell in love with > >him. > >Marriage was a topic brought up more than once by Ted over their many > >intimate rendezvous together during that fall and winter. Yet, just as > >suddenly as their romance began, it changed radically. Where once Ted > >lavished affection upon Stephanie, he was suddenly cold and despondent. It > >seemed as if Ted had lost all interest in her over the period of just a few > >weeks. Stephanie was undoubtedly confused as to the sudden change in Ted. In > >February 1974, with no warning or explanation Ted ended all contact with > >Stephanie. His plan of revenge worked. He rejected Stephanie as she had once > >rejected him. Stephanie was never to see or hear from Ted again. > Ted Bundy was not created by being dumped by a women! > Get real.
Sure he was. Here’s a quote about Son of Sam, who killed for many of the same reasons. ‘He (Berkowitz) admitted to Ressler "that his real reason for shooting women was out of resentment toward his own mother, and because of his inability to establish good relationships with women."’
Response:
As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of pranks by bullies in his junior high school. Regardless of the sometimes humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was thought of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one recalled him dating anyone during that period. – Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so. She was not asleep, as her roommates had thought when they approached the bed of Joni Lenz on the afternoon of January 4, 1974. They found her lying in a pool of blood that was seeping from her head and face. Terrified, her roommates removed the covers from Joni Lenz’s body only to find an even more horrible sight. A bed rod had been torn away from the bed and savagely rammed into her vagina. – Payback’s a bitch, isn’t it ladies?
— Ted Bundy, the greatest hero the world has ever seen.
Response:
Did you send this for shock value? If not, what was the point? Meph BTW: Perhaps the anger keeps people at a distance. Of course, almost all people fail to fully appreciate their impact on others and thus the abrogation of personal responsibility. The someone who pisses you off is not necessarily, or better yet, IS NOT representative of the class to which that someone belongs. It is hard to hate an entire class group one person at a time. – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -Ted Bundy wrote: > As a youth, Ted was terribly shy and was often teased and made the butt of > pranks by bullies in his junior high school. Regardless of the sometimes > humiliating experiences he suffered, he was able to maintain a high grade > average that would continue throughout high school and later into college. > Friends from high school would later remember Ted as being a more popular > figure than he was in junior high. Although he was very shy, Ted was thought > of as being "well dressed and exceptionally well mannered." Yet no one > recalled him dating anyone during that period. > – Anyone find this surprising? I didn’t think so. > She was not asleep, as her roommates had thought when they approached the > bed of Joni Lenz on the afternoon of January 4, 1974. They found her lying > in a pool of blood that was seeping from her head and face. Terrified, her > roommates removed the covers from Joni Lenz’s body only to find an even more > horrible sight. A bed rod had been torn away from the bed and savagely > rammed into her vagina. > – Payback’s a bitch, isn’t it ladies?
> — > Ted Bundy, the greatest hero the world has ever seen.
Response:
"mephistopheles" <serp…@forbiddenfruit.com> wrote in message
news:3ADE7544.7C716D75@forbiddenfruit.com… > Did you send this for shock value? If not, what was the point?
The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy. More excerpts: Stephanie was Ted’s first love and she was the first woman with whom he became involved with sexually. Ted and Stephanie spent a lot of time together doing things that most young couples in love did, such as romantic ski trips, long walks and intimate dinners. However, Stephanie was not as infatuated with Ted as he was with her. In fact, she liked Ted a lot but believed he had no real direction or future goals. Stephanie wanted someone who would fit in with her lifestyle and she didn’t believe Ted was that person. Ted tried too hard to impress her, even if that meant lying, something that she didn’t like at all. In 1968, after graduating from the University of Washington, Stephanie broke off relations with Ted. Ted never recovered from the break-up. Nothing, including school, seemed to hold any interest for him and he eventually dropped out, dumb-founded and depressed over the break-up. His one true love had left him and his world seemed to befalling apart. In 1973, during a business trip to California for the Washington Republican Party, Ted met up with his old flame Stephanie Brooks for a night out. Stephanie was amazed at the transformation in Ted. He was much more confident and mature, not as aimless as he was when they last dated. They met several other times afterwards, unknown to Meg. During Ted’s business trips he romantically courted Stephanie and she once again fell in love with him. Marriage was a topic brought up more than once by Ted over their many intimate rendezvous together during that fall and winter. Yet, just as suddenly as their romance began, it changed radically. Where once Ted lavished affection upon Stephanie, he was suddenly cold and despondent. It seemed as if Ted had lost all interest in her over the period of just a few weeks. Stephanie was undoubtedly confused as to the sudden change in Ted. In February 1974, with no warning or explanation Ted ended all contact with Stephanie. His plan of revenge worked. He rejected Stephanie as she had once rejected him. Stephanie was never to see or hear from Ted again.
Response:
"Ted Bundy" <ted_bu…@removeme.dingoblue.net.au> wrote … – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text ->"mephistopheles" <serp…@forbiddenfruit.com> wrote in message >news:3ADE7544.7C716D75@forbiddenfruit.com… >> Did you send this for shock value? If not, what was the point? >The point is women and rejection create "monsters" like Ted Bundy. >More excerpts: >Stephanie was Ted’s first love and she was the first woman with whom he >became involved with sexually. Ted and Stephanie spent a lot of time >together doing things that most young couples in love did, such as romantic >ski trips, long walks and intimate dinners. However, Stephanie was not as >infatuated with Ted as he was with her. In fact, she liked Ted a lot but >believed he had no real direction or future goals. Stephanie wanted someone >who would fit in with her lifestyle and she didn’t believe Ted was that >person. Ted tried too hard to impress her, even if that meant lying, >something that she didn’t like at all. >In 1968, after graduating from the University of Washington, Stephanie broke >off relations with Ted. Ted never recovered from the break-up. Nothing, >including school, seemed to hold any interest for him and he eventually >dropped out, dumb-founded and depressed over the break-up. His one true love >had left him and his world seemed to befalling apart. >In 1973, during a business trip to California for the Washington Republican >Party, Ted met up with his old flame Stephanie Brooks for a night out. >Stephanie was amazed at the transformation in Ted. He was much more >confident and mature, not as aimless as he was when they last dated. They >met several other times afterwards, unknown to Meg. During Ted’s business >trips he romantically courted Stephanie and she once again fell in love with >him. >Marriage was a topic brought up more than once by Ted over their many >intimate rendezvous together during that fall and winter. Yet, just as >suddenly as their romance began, it changed radically. Where once Ted >lavished affection upon Stephanie, he was suddenly cold and despondent. It >seemed as if Ted had lost all interest in her over the period of just a few >weeks. Stephanie was undoubtedly confused as to the sudden change in Ted. In >February 1974, with no warning or explanation Ted ended all contact with >Stephanie. His plan of revenge worked. He rejected Stephanie as she had once >rejected him. Stephanie was never to see or hear from Ted again.
Ted Bundy was not created by being dumped by a women! Get real. Alan Ferris. ——————– Learning day by day, Growing day by day. ——————– ICQ UIN: 12811297
Response:
Filed under: Loneliness
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