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LOST. BAD, AND EVIL. The Cripple, The Parasite, and the Predator
Sharon Esther Lampert (Author) · KADIMAH PRESS · Hardcover
LOST, BAD, AND EVIL: 3 Stages of Child Abuse By Sharon Esther Lampert
Why do children raised under the same roof grow into radically different adults? Why does one become a healer, another a destroyer, and a third-unthinkably-both?
One mother gives birth to three children: One child earns a Nobel Prize. The second becomes a serial killer. The third wins a Nobel Prize-and is also a serial killer. Who can explain it?
In this groundbreaking psychological exploration, Sharon Esther Lampert examines one of the most disturbing and least understood questions in human development: How does the same trauma produce a phoenix in one child and a predator in another?
Drawing from lived experience rather than clinical distance, Lampert traces a three‑stage progression of harm:
LOST - The Cripple
The wounded child who retreats inward, dissociates, and disappears into silence.
BAD - The Parasite
The adolescent who learns to manipulate, exploit, and survive by taking from others.
EVIL - The Predator
The adult who has normalized domination, severed empathy, and learned to replicate harm.
This is not a universal theory of trauma. It is a case study, a warning, and a map-showing where the cycle might be interrupted, and how society repeatedly fails to intervene before the wounded become the ones who wound.
Lampert weaves together psychology, criminology, spirituality, and personal witness to illuminate the fragile line between resilience and destruction. She exposes the generational transmission of trauma, the missed opportunities for rescue, and the terrifying ease with which cruelty can become a survival strategy.
Most abused children do not become abusers. This book is about the ones who do-and the ones who rise instead.
A powerful, unsettling, and necessary work, LOST, BAD, AND EVIL challenges everything we think we know about child abuse, moral development, and the making of monsters.
For readers of trauma studies, forensic psychology, true crime, and human resilience, this book offers one truth above all:
Trauma is not destiny. But it is a fork.
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