b5media.com

Advertise with us

Enjoying this blog? Check out the rest of the Health & Wellness Channel Subscribe to this Feed

Healthbolt

The Most Dangerous Personality Type in Trying Times

by Sara Ost on October 23rd, 2007

thescream

The Most Dangerous Personality Type on an Expedition, and How to Avoid It

I was aboard a wooden raft with an unstable man once, just a few years ago, and as we drifted and sailed on the open sea this strange man began to radiate a mania, a dark, venal paranoia, a malaise that today terrorizes me sometimes, in my nightmares. There were five men on this expedition, living in a little bamboo house on top of the raft, and as the days passed this hideous man, whom I will here call “Frederick,” began to obsess over what he called a “rare tropical disease.” He believed that something unseen — some aggressive microbe — had crawled under his skin and was now eating his flesh. Each day, during this time, he would try to eradicate this crawling thing by tearing his own tissues out with a pair of surgical pliers (hemostats). For example, if he got a cut or a scrape on the back of his hand he would declare that the disease had made “a hole” in him, and then spend hours picking and pulling and jerking little bits of his own flesh out, slowly extracting the phantom microbe from his own meat until there was, indeed, a gaping hole. These holes were horrific, roughly the size of a coin — like, say, a quarter — and sometimes half an inch deep.

All things threatened Frederick. He believed that any course we sailed on was the course of doom, and so he felt his duty to always change it …without telling us. Each night when we’d put this frenetic man on watch, he would change the course of the raft, so that in the morning when we looked at the GPS we would find ourselves in a completely unexpected part of the Pacific Ocean. As the weeks passed on the barren sea Frederick’s mania incubated and mutated. Anything, no matter how small, could send him into raging fits of blood-faced, vein-bulging chaos. He would sometimes scream and shriek and appear to be trying to claw his own face off. And the very smallest of things were the very greatest threats. When he became obsessed with our little rubber dinghy, which we towed behind our raft, and when that obsession could not be satisfied, he simply cut the dinghy free and let it drift away in a rainstorm, an act of sabotage.

Broadly speaking, these are the effects isolation and confinement on an unstable personality. The term Isolation and Confinement applies to the types of environments found inside submarines, remote polar stations, and spacecraft. The data on this dangerous psychological phenomenon is still scanty, and mainly anecdotal, but after a good deal of study most scientists agree on one basic idea: if the person is not unstable before they go out there, then being out there probably won’t destabilize him or her. I believe this to be true. I have made other long voyages aboard rafts, like the horrific one that I was just describing, where I drifted on the open sea for months sometimes, and recently a friend of mine asked me, “Wouldn’t you go mad out there?”

No. You wouldn’t.

There’s nothing out there to make you go mad. Yes, people will decline emotionally — their morale will go down — but that is not instability. Isolation and confinement alone should not cause a person to destabilize or to adopt abnormal, pathological behavior.

The best way to avoid this catastrophe is to trust your intuition during the selection process. We often second-guess ourselves; don’t, because in trying times, it may cost you. This was the genius of the legendary English explorer, Sir Ernest Shackleton. Shackleton selected his expedition team by considering the type of person they were first, much more than worrying about their credentials, and he never took anyone with him that violated his intuition. Trust your intuition completely. The moment I met Frederick I felt that despite his qualifications there was something wrong with him, but I ignored my conscience. This was the beginning of disaster: you simply cannot go on an expedition with someone who violates your intuition. Many people can have friends of that sort for years, perhaps even live with them and sleep with them — and that’s fine — but don’t ever take them with you on an expedition.

- This is a guest post from professional expeditioner and author John Haslett. Last week, John wrote about the four things you must know if you’re stranded on a life raft in the middle of the ocean. Next week, we’ll be learning about whether or not you can drink salt water, why your own urine might save your life, and other pleasantries of survival. Stay tuned!

(Haslett’s kick-ass memoir of survival on the open sea aboard a wooden raft is calledVoyage of the Manteño: The Education of a Modern Day Expeditioner”.)

POSTED IN: Adventure, Psychology

4 opinions for The Most Dangerous Personality Type in Trying Times

  • Ross
    Oct 23, 2007 at 2:57 pm

    Wow, I really thank Mr. Haslett for that post. Very enlightening, and I must say it explains the behavior of one of my coworkers.

  • Brian
    Oct 23, 2007 at 3:09 pm

    Wow… another great post very enlightening… can’t wait for that book to arrive.

    Personally, I hire and sit in on a fair number of interviews, and I will always note what my first impression is, and many times for me it has been the deciding factor in not hiring an otherwise qualified person.

  • Link Robertson
    Feb 15, 2008 at 5:33 pm

    Hello supporters of a mother’s wisdom,

    I started a new website that showcases a mother’s wit and wisdom for the ages.

    The address is: http://wisdomfrommother.blogspot.com

    Please forward this website to organizations in your area of influence. Thank you for your support.

  • Dan
    Mar 9, 2008 at 4:08 pm

    Gotta steal your thunder again with odd personality types. Two things: Based on research-

    Those in a sales profession have some degree of borderline personality disorder.

    Those who reach upper management, VPs or even a CEO, with corporations, have psychopathic tendencies than your average person, which I believe means that they act well and don’t care. Also can be quite dangerous in somehow harming others.

Have an opinion? Leave a comment: