From Best To Worst

2020-11-27 11:38:38 Written by Namish Gali

Is life unfair?

This is Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong.

(Marjorie as a teen and as a 50-year-old)

She grew up in a confidential household. Her parents were prosperous and doted on her, and one time even prepared her a real-sized dollhouse.

 

She had friends, was beautiful, charismatic, charming, intelligent. She graduated at the top of her class in her high school then went to college and got a master’s degree in education.

 

Her life was set up flawlessly for success.

 

Unfortunately, that’s where the good part ends.

 

Despite everything, she couldn’t hold down a job. Never mind, her parents delivered her loads of money.

 

Then she got into numerous brawls with the law. After that, her parents attempted to cut off all relations with her because they couldn’t deal with her.

 

She became a hoarder and disregarded personal maintenance.

 

It’s rumoured that she had severe mental disease. She was diagnosed numerous times with several illnesses varying from bipolar to narcissistic personality disorder, but the precise illness was never inferred let alone cured.

 

She ultimately became a criminal mastermind.

 

In 2003, she attracted a pizza delivery guy into her house and, with the assistance of some of her morally needy friends, she committed a heist using him as a hostage.

 

A bomb was strapped to the guy’s neck.

The heist resulted in the demise of this innocent man, Brian Wells.

 

 

She spent the remainder of her life in jail until she perished in 2017.

 

Her best friend says that it was a disastrous waste of talent, brains and charm.

 

She had everything going for her (aside from the mental disease, even for which she did have the money and time to get treated).

 

But she wasted it.

 

Some people, despite being born with every freedom possible, will grow up to be horrible.

 

And vice versa—some people, from the terrible background imaginable, can happen to become remarkable people.

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