Psychological Profile: Kath Five
Content Warning
Suicide, death of twin sibling, parent destroying child's property, accusation of medical sexual abuse, homophobia, vore kink, bug eating, urination
Code Name: Kath Five
Birth Chart: Sun in Capricorn, Ascendant in Leo, Moon in Pisces (January 9, 1916, 5:47 PM, Hartford, Connecticut)[1]
Height: 5’8”
Weight: 140
Hair Color: Auburn
Eye Color: Green
Psychological Profile Questions:
What is your earliest memory?
In the first interview, the subject said her earliest memory was when her twin brother dared her to eat an insect called a “rollie pollie”. The subject ate the insect; and it was disgusting but she was proud she took the bet.
In the second interview, the subject added to this incident by saying her mother saw her and got very angry at her.
How did you feel about your mother?
In the first interview, the subject said she was proud of her mother. The subject’s mother is a feminist and a political activist, working not just for women’s rights, but the needs of all the marginalized in society.[2] The subject’s mother homeschooled all her children, including the subject. The subject is proud to be named after her mother.
In the second interview, the subject said her mother always criticized her for being a “packrat” and “untidy”. The subject’s mother did not like the subject’s nature collection, telling her it was not in the Quaker spirit to collect so many unsanitary material objects. One time, while the subject was eight years old and at a sleepover, the subject’s mother threw away the collection. After that, the subject got into photography. Their relationship deteriorated further when the subject’s twin brother died and the subject’s mother said it was a suicide.
How did you feel about your father?
In the first interview, the subject said she was proud of her father. The subject’s father had invented a medical patent that had financially supported the family over the years. The subject’s father in his youth had traveled the world helping people and he occasionally went on missions as an older adult. The subject said her father was an inspiration to her.
In the second interview, the subject said she wished the subject’s father saw her the same way he saw her brothers. The subject said the subject’s father would let her join in with sailing or with golf games, but the subject’s father still did not treat her exactly the same.
When did you realize you were a little girl?
In the first interview, the subject said she always knew she was a little girl and she knew little girls could be as good as little boys.
In the second interview, the subject said she was having a bath with her twin brother and she noticed their genitals were different. Her twin brother mocked the subject for not having a penis and urinated on her until the subject’s mother broke up the argument.
What did you think of boys growing up?
In the first interview, the subject said as a child, she enjoyed playing with her brothers and the neighborhood boys. The subject was very good at their games.
In the second interview, the subject said her mother criticized her for not having any female friends outside the subject’s sisters until the subject went to Bryn Mawr.
What is your earliest sexual memory?
In the first interview, the subject said when she was eleven, the subject’s twin brother showed her a book about how to summon incubi and succubi without involving the Satanist church. The subject said this proved that his death was an accident and not a suicide.
In the second interview, the subject said she was watching a snake eat a mouse and she felt a tingling feeling.
How did you learn about sex?
In the first interview, the subject said the subject’s mother taught all her children about sex, including contraception and abortion. The subject said that she personally has never needed to know about contraception and abortion, but the knowledge has been useful to her.
In the second interview, the subject confirmed this.
When did you first learn about homosexuality?
In the first interview, the subject said while she was in Brynr Mawr, she went to New York City with her roommate and saw the play “The Children’s Hour”. The subject described the plot of this play as “two schoolteachers in a small girls school are accused of having a lesbian affair by a resentful student”, which is an accurate description, unlike the other subjects in this experiment and their foundational plays. After the play, the subject sat on her bed with her roommate and discussed it with her. The subject said she told her roommate she felt sorry for Karen and Martha. At that moment, her roommate kissed the subject. The roommate apologized to the subject and they never discussed this again.
In the second interview, the subject said as an adolescent, she overheard a male patient of her father’s accuse him of being a homosexual who preyed upon his handsome young male patients. The subject went to her mother to ask what this meant. The subject’s mother said some people are sick, but they can lead normal lives if they put their heart into it. The subject’s mother, however, denied the accusation against the subject’s father.
What were your sexual fantasies as a teen-ager?
In the first interview, the subject said she knows that sexual fantasies are normal in teen-agers, but she could not recall any of them. All her fantasies of adventure were nonsexual and ultimately nonviolent.
In the second interview, the subject said she fantasized about a dragon with a large store of gold and treasure, and a knight who would try to fight the dragon but get swallowed whole by it. Sometimes she was the knight, but sometimes she was the dragon.
How did you lose your virginity?
In the first interview, the subject said that her and her future husband were stuck together in an abandoned hut in Papua New Guinea in the pouring rain with Japanese soldiers outside. They had met various times during World War II and had vowed to marry if they survived the “whole mess”, but only now did they discuss sex. The subject confessed to being a virgin and the future husband said he was a virgin as well. They did not plan on losing their virginity with each other, yet they wanted to experiment. They got undressed and explored each other’s bodies. The future husband performed oral sex on the subject, bringing her to orgasm. The subject tried to perform oral sex on her future husband, but she was not good at it. They had sexual intercourse instead. After that, they again vowed to marry if they survived the war.
In the second interview, the subject confirmed that this actually happened. Both the subject and her popular, handsome, charismatic husband were complete virgins until this moment.
What do you think about when you touch yourself?
In the first interview, the subject said a few years ago, she had read a defense of masturbation and tried it, but she did not like it. The subject did not like the sensation of touching her genitals. The subject did not mind having sex with her husband, but she said they both saw it as a wrestling match, and you cannot wrestle alone. The subject said more women should masturbate.
In the second interview, the subject said she wished she could enjoy masturbation like she has seen men do, like her husband.
How do you feel about your parents now?
In the first interview, the subject said she still has a good relationship with her mother and father. The subject said she regularly writes her father a letter telling him everything she does and her father reads it to the subject’s mother. The subject is happy that she made her parents grandparents, though the subject’s siblings got there first.
In the second interview, the subject said she has not talked to her mother alone every since her twin brother died. The subject wishes her mother would die. The subject has a better relationship with her father., But the subject is troubled and puzzled that her father does not seem to like her husband.
Do you feel you married the right person?
In the first interview, the subject said her husband is her best friend and she truly means it. The subject’s husband shares her worldview, her interests, her likes and dislikes. The only thing the subject and her husband disagree on is their parrot, which the subject loves and the husband hates. The subject and her husband have been soulmates ever since they met in Egypt. If the subject had not met her husband, she would be a spinster now.
In the second interview, the subject confirmed she felt that she and her husband were well-matched. There seems to be nothing that would bring them apart. The interviewer did find that the husband is an emotionally neglectful father.
Do you ever wish you were the husband?
In the first interview, the subject said that switching bodies with her husband would be a great adventure. The subject said that would be like something out of a movie. The subject thinks she could learn a great deal from that and understand each other better. The subject suggested that perhaps all the political opponents should switch bodies, so the world could achieve peace. The subject then added the switch should not be permanent.
In the second interview, the subject said that she wishes she could be her husband. She once went hunting with her husband and she enjoyed it immensely, though she convinced him to take up wildlife photography instead. Her husband now only hunts when he is entertaining dignitaries and he does not hunt with her anymore. The subject wants to be a Great White Hunter. She thinks of it often and she is wistful.
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