Anonymous ID: c3ac9c Sept. 6, 2018, 4:41 a.m. No.2901162   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1173 >>1192 >>1329

>>2901138

one thing i'll mention that i noticed.

The 4th pic.

She has Anderson close to her, and has her arm out, behind his brother Carter( who died by committing suicide by Jumping out the window at his mothers apartment( same one in picture)

not sure if it is the same exact window, but i bet it is, kek

 

to me it shows her offering him, keeping cooper close, and is showing how he will be sacrificed( thrown out a window, or told to jump,)

Anonymous ID: c3ac9c Sept. 6, 2018, 4:45 a.m. No.2901192   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1215 >>1264 >>1267

>>2901138

>>2901162

>>2901173

Introduction

On the morning of July 22, 1988, 23-year-old Carter Cooper, oldest son of Gloria Vanderbilt and Wyatt Cooper, brother of Anderson Cooper, arrived unexpected at his mother's 14th floor apartment in New York City. He had recently broken up with the girl he loved. He told his mother he was moving back home.

 

Mrs. Vanderbilt suggested he take the larger vacant bedroom, the one his brother used to have. It had a fireplace and sliding glass doors to the terrace. Having not slept for several nights, after dinner Carter retired to the sofa in his room for a nap. He opened the sliding glass door. In spite of the terrific heat, he vetoed his mother's suggestion for air conditioning, even asking her for a quilt for his nap. Before she left, he asked her, "Mom, am I blinking?" (p. 96 of his mother's book, cited at bottom of page) (He was.)

 

He definitely slept during his nap because Mrs. Vanderbilt checked on him several times during his nap and found him sleeping.

 

They were planning to see a rented movie together after his nap.

 

About 7:00 p.m. Carter, awake, entered his mother's room, looking dazed and asking several times, "What's going on?" (102) After a short conversation in which Mrs. Vanderbilt's attempts were to soothe and orient her son, Carter took off, running up the stairs to his bedroom. His mother arrived swiftly behind him. She found him sitting on the low wall of the terrace, one foot on the floor, the other on the wall. Another short conversation ensued, attempts on the part of his mother to get him away from the wall. He stopped her concerned approach with arm held in a military gesture for "stop!." He wondered, "Will I ever feel again?" (103) He stood, "with a terrible, rigid tenseness, staring past her, past the river as if he didn't see them." (103) Mrs. Vanderbilt suggested calling his new therapist but couldn't remember the number. Carter shouted out the number, then said, "Fuck you!" He stared down, as if mesmerized by the scene fourteen stories below. A helicopter passed overhead. Carter looked up, then back at his mother. He reached his hand out longingly to her. Then he moved "deftly as an athlete, over the wall, holding on to the edge as if it were a practice bar gym, holding firmly and confidently, then he let go." (pp. 104-105)

 

Carter Cooper was not into alcohol or drugs. His autopsy confirmed none were in his system. He did, however, have a newly prescribed inhaler for his asthma. He was also seeing a therapist, but even his therapist was surprised by his suicide.

 

Eight years later Gloria Vanderbilt wrote A Mother's Story about this horrendous experience. Her belief was that Carter's suicide was the result of a psychosis induced by that new prescription inhaler.

 

A Mother's Story contains a number of details, some not that alarming by themselves, that prick ones attention, suggesting that something is not right with Carter:

 

He had just recently broken up with a girlfriend he loved.

He had not slept for several nights.

He was cold even in the blazing heat of the summer day.

He requested a quilt for his nap.

His questions, asked several times, "Mom, am I blinking?"

He was very thirsty.

His eyes were glazed over when he entered his mother's room after his nap.

His question, asked several times, "What is going on?" when nothing in particular was going on.

His question on the terrace, uttered several times, "Will I ever feel again?"

His rigid tenseness and mesmerization with the scene below.

Carter had had allergies since he was a child. He even hated anesthetics because they made him unconscious. He didn't want to miss a moment of life.

 

In her search for answers for her son's behavior, Mrs. Vanderbilt looked into the then known properties of the drug, Theophylline, used in Carter's new inhaler. A paper in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (1988, Vol. 81. No. 2) attributed the following reactions to Theophylline: "agitation, insomnia, terrifying nightmares and acute paradoxic, depressive states (97-98)." There were more, but we have enough.

 

In this paper we are going to look at Carter Cooper's astrology before and during his crisis. We will be asking the following questions:

 

Does his astrology show susceptibility to asthma?

He had never shown any form of psychosis. Does the astrology of his mind show a vulnerability to psychosis, either with or without the influence of drugs? If he did have that vulnerability, was it even stronger at the time of his death?

Is there anything in astrology which indicates death at so young an age?

If our answer to all of the above questions is "yes," then we are going to ask the question, why did he jump?

 

http://www.angelfire.com/sd/binah/cooperweb.html