desertgal
Illuminator
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2008
- Messages
- 4,198
That aside, I agree that the first two are clearly 10s.
I dunno. This one:
a) I was really nervous and felt a lot of pressure being in front of skeptics and the well-respected Dr. Carlson. Even though what I sensed wasn't worth mentioning, I did anyway because I felt like I should say something.
To me, that would very likely be something that a delusional person would feel and do, even if they didn't acknowledge it to themselves or other people, if they were trying to convince others of an extraordinary claim. Remember, many delusional disorders CAN differentiate the difference between reality and delusional reality, even though they avoid doing so. This, to me, would be just that: an avoidance tactic, generated by nerves and fear of exposure, to perpetuate the delusional reality in the face of a confrontation with reality. Not rational, of course, but then delusional behavior rarely is.
Just another version of "It's not ME. It's YOU."
I'll agree that they probably wouldn't vocalize it as an excuse, though.
Maybe that one should be a 5?
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