5 min read

Psychological Profile: Marge Six

Dr. Levi Levi's interview with Marge Six
Psychological Profile: Marge Six
Marge Six

Content Warning

Adultery, forced underage marriage, marital rape, homophobia/lesbophobia, anti-Japanese racism

Code Name: Marge Six
Birth Chart: Sun in Aquarius, Ascendant in Gemini, Moon in Gemini (February 14, 1913, 12:00pm, Thornton, Colorado)[1]
Height: 5’4”
Weight: 180
Hair Color: Salt and pepper
Eye Color: Brown

Psychological Profile Questions:

What is your earliest memory?

In the first interview, the subject said her earliest memory was pulling out the carrots at her family farm, which made her father yell at her.

In the second interview, the subject said she was pulling out carrots with her friend, a little Japanese girl, but the Japanese girl ran away before the subject’s father came.

How did you feel about your mother?

In the first interview, the subject said her mother was always jealous over the subject’s father’s philandering ways and would talk often about how Brigham Young’s church was the rightful successor to Joseph Smith.[2]

In the second interview, the subject said she felt her mother loved her older sisters more than her. The subject blamed her mother for not protecting her from the subject’s father.

How do you feel about your father?

In the first interview, the subject said her father was a real man’s man and ladies’ man. The subject’s father was an excellent horseman who often competed in the local rodeo when not growing carrots. Women all found the subject’s father to be very handsome and charming, and the men felt they could trust him.

In the second interview, the subject said her father was disappointed that, after six daughters, he did not have a son. The subject said for a time the subject’s father loved the subject for how well she handled horses. When the subject reached puberty, the subject’s father became disappointed with in her tomboy ways. At age fifteen, the subject’s father married her off to a family friend.

When did you realize you were a little girl?

In the first interview, the subject said she was an intelligent girl who always knew she was a little girl. The subject said there was no time when she did not know she was a little girl.

In the second interview, the subject said she noticed that the subject did not have a “thingy” like the horses and dogs on the farm.

What did you think of boys growing up?

In the first interview, the subject said she did not socialize with boys growing up. All her siblings were girls. And when she went to school, she befriended only the girls.

In the second interview, the subject said she only befriended girls and not boys because boys were competition. The subject said she felt like the only boy in her friend group. The subject said she only befriended girls who were pretty.

What is your earliest sexual memory?

In the first interview, the subject said her earliest sexual memory was kissing a boy in a game of “Spin the Bottle,” played in the carrot barn.

In the second interview, the subject said she was actually kissed a girl at in this moment.

How did you learn about sex?

In the first interview, the subject said her father let her watch a horse breeding session, then explained that a similar thing happened with human beings, though in a different position and at a smaller scale.

In the second interview, the subject said that during this lecture, the subject’s father explained that in nature, one male breeds with multiple females, and if mankind was better, we would do the same thing.

When did you first learn about homosexuality?

In the first interview, the subject said she first learned about homosexuality when she joined the Women’s Auxiliary Corp. The subject met a member of the Homintern and she was disgusted with that organization.

In the second interview, the subject said she learned about homosexuality in the same lecture she learned about sex. The subject’s father explained that a stallion who mated with stallions instead of mares and mares that mate with mares instead of stallions got culled, and then he gave her a pointed look. The subject did repeat her disgust with the Homintern, saying she and her husband would never become a “friend of Dorothy”.[3]

What were your sexual fantasies as a teen-ager?

In the first interview, the subject said she fantasized about going horseback riding with a handsome young cowboy and then making love to him by a hot spring.

In the second interview, the subject said she fantasized about being an anthropomorphic horse with a harem of anthropomorphic horse girls.

How did you lose your virginity?

In the first interview, the subject said on her wedding night she was brutally raped by her husband. The subject said she does not care what the law says;, it was rape. The subject’s first marriage did not result in any children and she is glad of that. The subject did want to have children, just with someone else. Years later, the subject met her second husband at Los Alamos and proposed to him. The subject was surprised to find her husband has a large penis, since: “it didn’t look like he had it in him from the way his pants hang.” But she has found she enjoys having sex with him.

In the second interview, the subject said she did not feel she really had sex until after her divorce. Her masculine lesbian friend took her on a double date where her date was a New England spinster. The subject and this woman fell in love and were like boyfriend and girlfriend. The woman did eventually break the subject’s heart. The subject did confirm she enjoys having sex with her husband and says it does not feel like having sex with a man.

What do you think about when you touch yourself?

In the first interview, the subject said she fantasizes about making love to her husband.

In the second interview, the subject said she fantasizes about being the husband of the other wives in the cul de sac, “including the ugly one”; referring, unkindly, to Twelve.

How do you feel about your parents now?

In the first interview, the subject said she lost all contact with her family members when after she left her first husband. The subject does not know what they are doing now and she does not care.

In the second interview, the subject said she misses her sisters. The subject said that despite everything she wishes she had the approval of her father, since the subject still admires him.

Do you feel you married the right person?

In the first interview, the subject said she better have married the right person, since the subject chose him by hand out of all the men she met in the army. The subject said she saw him and immediately knew he was like her; in that, unlike the other men on the base, he believed in the same libertarian views.

In the second interview, the subject said even in her fantasies of marrying many other women, the subject is still married to her husband as well. The subject is disappointed that her husband has not given her any sons yet.

Do you ever wish you were the husband?

In the first interview, the subject said that she was a normal woman with two children, so she does not wish she were the husband.

In the second interview, the subject said she does not wish she were the husband, since she is by far a better man than him;, though she does wish she had her husband’s “horse cock”.


  1. Six is a Barbarian. ↩︎

  2. The actual heir of Joseph Smith is James Strang. ↩︎

  3. After the leader Judy Garland’s most famous role, Dorothy Gale. ↩︎