From the NY Post again today
“To say she is disturbed is the understatement of the year,” says Brooklyn-based psychologist Dr. Marcella Bakur Weiner. “I think she’s really certifiable. It’s more than just being angry. It’s more than just being jealous. It’s a kamikaze attack, a completely obsessed issue going on with her.”
Weiner, currently working on her new book, “Women Psychologists: The Journey of Female Healers,” says she thinks Hundley was probably neglected as a kid and is now the personality type that seeks out famous people. She says she’s seen this kind of behavior in people with borderline personality disorder and manic depression.
“[The letter] is like foreplay, orgasmic for her. She needs to be in some huge drama because there’s no meaning to her life on a daily basis,” Weiner says.
The note — left at Phillips’ Connecticut home and addressed to his wife, Marni — talks about her obsession with the ESPN baseball analyst with creepy precision.
“We talk about his life like when he went to see Ryan pitch and how he did, that fact that Ryan is starting football this week with 4 hour long practices, that Brett is going to be in 8th grade and gets stuck with babysitting duty a lot,” she writes, naming two of the Phillips’ four sons, one of whom she stalked on Facebook while pretending to be a classmate.
But psychologist Dr. Jeffery Gardere, author of "Love Prescription," thinks Hundley is dangerous.
“If I were her parents, I would have her hospitalized immediately. I would get her out of her job and I would get her to a hospital, because I believe she is having a nervous breakdown and I’m afraid she would be homicidal or suicidal at some point,” he says.
“This is not something to play with. This is not about a woman spurned, but is about a woman losing it.”
Steve Phillips is lucky she's not as crazy as Steve McNair's gf who felt like he was going to break up with her so she did something about it. But these two girls sound like they are in the same mental state.
“To say she is disturbed is the understatement of the year,” says Brooklyn-based psychologist Dr. Marcella Bakur Weiner. “I think she’s really certifiable. It’s more than just being angry. It’s more than just being jealous. It’s a kamikaze attack, a completely obsessed issue going on with her.”
Weiner, currently working on her new book, “Women Psychologists: The Journey of Female Healers,” says she thinks Hundley was probably neglected as a kid and is now the personality type that seeks out famous people. She says she’s seen this kind of behavior in people with borderline personality disorder and manic depression.
“[The letter] is like foreplay, orgasmic for her. She needs to be in some huge drama because there’s no meaning to her life on a daily basis,” Weiner says.
The note — left at Phillips’ Connecticut home and addressed to his wife, Marni — talks about her obsession with the ESPN baseball analyst with creepy precision.
“We talk about his life like when he went to see Ryan pitch and how he did, that fact that Ryan is starting football this week with 4 hour long practices, that Brett is going to be in 8th grade and gets stuck with babysitting duty a lot,” she writes, naming two of the Phillips’ four sons, one of whom she stalked on Facebook while pretending to be a classmate.
But psychologist Dr. Jeffery Gardere, author of "Love Prescription," thinks Hundley is dangerous.
“If I were her parents, I would have her hospitalized immediately. I would get her out of her job and I would get her to a hospital, because I believe she is having a nervous breakdown and I’m afraid she would be homicidal or suicidal at some point,” he says.
“This is not something to play with. This is not about a woman spurned, but is about a woman losing it.”
Steve Phillips is lucky she's not as crazy as Steve McNair's gf who felt like he was going to break up with her so she did something about it. But these two girls sound like they are in the same mental state.