"There is an idea of a Patrick Bateman; some kind of abstraction. But there is no real me: only an entity, something illusory. And though I can hide my cold gaze, and you can shake my hand and feel flesh gripping yours and maybe you can even sense our lifestyles are probably comparable... I simply am not there."
Imagine being hollow, yet full of of an almost emotion that you can't quite explain, all you know is that you're exhilarated. Patrick Bateman is not your typical Wall-Street Wolf looking to capture the American dream, he's looking to capture the very essence of life itself.
Patrick Bateman is a sociopath, contrary to what the book is called. There is an explicit difference between Psychopaths and Sociopaths.
Psychopaths feel a great deal of emotions that range from extreme bliss, to an unending depression. These wide array of emotional outputs tend to cause the sufferer to act out in uncontrollable ways. This is not Patrick Bateman.
Sociopaths are a better refined psychopath, and that is bad. Sociopaths are devoid of all emotion and moral integrity. Their empathy is non-existent and they have only their motives in mind. Sociopaths have to learn emotions through vivid observation and constant acting. When not in the presence of others, sociopaths tend to just be hollow, cold, suits of flesh. It is no wonder that a lot of high ranking officials in government and executive CEOs tend to be sociopaths.
Bateman does the many horrors he does in the book because he knows no other way. In his hunt for emotion, he turns to violent crimes to ignite what is lost to him and what he may never be able to attain. From love lost to killing the ones he "loves", Patrick leaves a trail of blood in his wake, all during his never ending journey for emotional satisfaction.
Often times in Clinical Psychology, we often draw portraits of patients to represent what might be on the patient's mind at all times, so I drew the picture below because I believe it represents Patrick as a whole. A darkened, hollow heart giving guidance to a troubled individual. There is no salvation for him.
Patrick Bateman is a sociopath, contrary to what the book is called. There is an explicit difference between Psychopaths and Sociopaths.
Psychopaths feel a great deal of emotions that range from extreme bliss, to an unending depression. These wide array of emotional outputs tend to cause the sufferer to act out in uncontrollable ways. This is not Patrick Bateman.
Sociopaths are a better refined psychopath, and that is bad. Sociopaths are devoid of all emotion and moral integrity. Their empathy is non-existent and they have only their motives in mind. Sociopaths have to learn emotions through vivid observation and constant acting. When not in the presence of others, sociopaths tend to just be hollow, cold, suits of flesh. It is no wonder that a lot of high ranking officials in government and executive CEOs tend to be sociopaths.
Bateman does the many horrors he does in the book because he knows no other way. In his hunt for emotion, he turns to violent crimes to ignite what is lost to him and what he may never be able to attain. From love lost to killing the ones he "loves", Patrick leaves a trail of blood in his wake, all during his never ending journey for emotional satisfaction.
Often times in Clinical Psychology, we often draw portraits of patients to represent what might be on the patient's mind at all times, so I drew the picture below because I believe it represents Patrick as a whole. A darkened, hollow heart giving guidance to a troubled individual. There is no salvation for him.