According to the Wikipedia page on 'Abandoned child syndrome' "Abandonment may be physical (the parent is not present in the child's life) or emotional (the parent withholds affection, nurturing, or stimulation)."
VeePees was treated like an outsider and emotionally neglected by his parents because they could not deal or accept his deformity. A situation were the parents blame the child can be present in these situations according to Claudia Black M.S.W., Ph.D in her paper 'The many faces of addiction'.
- Children cannot live up to the expectations of their parents. These expectations are often unrealistic and not age-appropriate.
- Children are held responsible for other people's behavior. They may be consistently blamed for the actions and feelings of their parents.
- Disapproval toward children is aimed at their entire beings or identity rather than a particular behaviour.
This evidence would show that VeePees parents are to blame for his psychological disorder, and why he became the bitter, twisted and angry individual.
Another excerpt from 'The many faces of addiction' shows how this abuse as a child would still be very much felt in VeePees adult life, controlling his behaviour.
"Still, the wounds are struck deep in their young hearts and minds, and the very real pain can still be felt today. The causes of emotional injury need to be understood and accepted so they can heal. Until that occurs, the pain will stay with them, becoming a driving force in their adult lives."
According to the Wikipedia page on 'Abandoned child syndrome
Symptoms may be physical or mental, and may extend into adulthood and perhaps throughout a person's life.
- Alienation from the environment - withdrawal from social activities, resistance towards others.
- Guilt - the child believes that he/she did something wrong that caused the abandonment (often associated with depression)
- Fear and uncertainty - insecurities
- Sleep and eating disorders - malnutrition, starvation, disturbed sleep, nightmares
- Physical ailments - fatigue, depression, lack of energy and creativity, anger, grief
Most of these symptoms are very relevant to the character of VeePees. He is an isolated character, removed from society. Nightmares torment him leading to further psychosis and he has very little control over his anger.
Claudia Black M.S.W., Ph.D also states that "When children are raised with chronic loss, without the psychological or physical protection they need and certainly deserve, it is most natural for them to internalize incredible fear."
What I have learned and how this effects the emotional domain of the character:
- Because VeePees is not responsible for his condition the audience will naturally feel a certain sympathy for the character, even if his actions are morally questionable.
- Fear is a big factor that rules a persons life who have been affect by child abandonment, so I will try to bring this across in my character sketches and 3D models. Concentrating on how I draw the eyes (eyes can communicate a range of emotions) and the overall demeanour of the character.
- I had the early idea that VeePees would be a typical evil villain, but this means the audience will have trouble connecting to the character emotionally and find very little to relate to him. So VeePees will be more of an 'anti-hero'. His actions are still morally questionable or even unjustifiable but his goal is a selfless one. He wants to rid the world of deformities so no one has to experience what he had to go through. But to achieve this goal he has reverted to human experimentation for the 'greater good'. He uses his unwilling patients to search for cure.
- It seems the anti-hero character is very popular in contemporary entertainment so if VeePees was this type of character the audience would feel a stronger emotional connection to him. I will do more research on the role of the anti-hero in a narrative.
References:
The journey to healing and recovery by Claudia Black, M.S.W., Ph.D. (Published on June 4, 2010 by Claudia Black, M.S.W., Ph.D. in The Many Faces of Addiction)
Home>search Claudia Black>The Many Faces of Addiction>Understanding the pain of abandonment
Wikipedia page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abandoned_child_syndrome














