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Case Conceptualization: Charles Lindbergh
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this case conceptualization may not necessarily reflect the opinions of other mental health professionals. Any diagnosis presented in a case conceptualization is projected, and many not represent an actual diagnosis given to any individual. Any diagnosis given in a conceptualization will be from the most up-to-date Diagnostic & Statistical Manual published by the American Psychiatric Association (current issue being utilized: DSM V-TR)
ashleywaller0830
Aug 19, 202510 min read


Chapter 8: The Lone Eagles Soars into the Sunset
Even as World War II came to an end with the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945, Charles Lindbergh’s life pressed on as he continued to explore various interests and opportunities that came his way. Shortly after the end of the war, Lindbergh became involved with a top-secret project at the University of Chicago identified with the acronym CHORE (Chicago Ordnance Research) that involved weapons development. Simultaneously, Lindbergh was also working as a cons
ashleywaller0830
May 23, 20253 min read


Chapter 7: The Lone Eagle Circles Back Home
Lindbergh delivering a speech at an America First Committee rally at Madison Square Garden (May 23, 1941) Charles Lindbergh’s return to the United States began as if he had never left… with, in his words, “…close to a hundred pressmen were on the ship and dock waiting for me.” (Lindbergh, 188) Lindbergh traveled to Washington D.C. where he spent his first week back in the U.S. providing the Department of War intel on his observations of various aeronautical developments in
ashleywaller0830
Apr 9, 20253 min read
Chapter 6: The Lone Eagle Migrates
The Lindberghs began 1936 anew across the pond in England, as Lindbergh shares “…because we had been told that Englishmen respected rights of privacy, and that English newspapers had more respect for law than ours at home.” (Lindbergh, 145) Considering the family went through their own version of hell with the trial and conviction of Charles Jr.’s murderer and the publicity that resulted, it was necessary for the couple and their son Jon to seek as much privacy as needed to h
ashleywaller0830
Feb 20, 20253 min read


Chapter 5: The Lone Eagle Mourns His Eaglet
On March 1, 1932, The Lindberghs’ world was turned upside down when Charles Jr. was kidnapped from his room around 9 P.M. at their home outside Hopewell, New Jersey. As Charles describes in A utobiography of Values : “I had been sitting in the parlor with my wife. Outside, the wind blew and the night was black. Our house was long, with two stories, enclosed by walls of whitewashed stone and gray slate roof… I went upstairs to the child’s nursery, opened the door, and immed
ashleywaller0830
Nov 29, 20245 min read


Chapter 4: The Lone Eagle Becomes a National Hero
On May 21, 1927 Charles Lindbergh achieved what was believed to be an impossible feat: he flew across the Atlantic and proved that transoceanic crossings were possible. He changed the face of travel forever! After Lindbergh finally got a chance to sleep (at the U.S. Embassy), the non-stop adulation began with him engaging in meetings with various French celebrities and then-President Gaston Doumergue, who awarded him the Legion d’Honneur. (highest French order
ashleywaller0830
Oct 12, 20244 min read


Chapter 3: The Lone Eagle Soars (Over the Atlantic!)
In 1926, Lindbergh began preparations for taking on the challenge of flying nonstop from New York to Paris. The first order of business was designing a plane; as he describes in Autobiography of Values : “I thought it was a mistake to build a multiengine plane… especially when the route lay across the ocean. A single-engine plane would have greater range, and it seemed to me it would offer its pilot greater safety.” (Lindbergh, 70) Clearly Charles had a strate
ashleywaller0830
Sep 20, 20244 min read


Chapter 2: The Lone Eagle Spreads His Wings
Even after graduating from high school, his yearning to become a pilot had not faded. In 1920, Charles enrolled at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, choosing to major in mechanical engineering. He found out early on he may not have been cut out for academia as he was struggling to perform well in most of his classes, including math and chemistry; as a result, he was placed on academic probation by his class advisor. Having come to the realization that he was unlikely t
ashleywaller0830
Sep 9, 20243 min read


Chapter 1: The Lone Eagle Hatches
Charles Augustus Lindbergh was born February 4, 1902 in Detroit, Michigan, just one year before the Wright Brothers made their now-famous flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. He was born in Detroit at his mother Evangeline’s request of having her great uncle Edwin, one of three doctors in her family, to assist in his birth. Charles’ father, C.A. Lindbergh, a lawyer, was not present for his birth (typical for the period). Lindbergh was raised on the family farm
ashleywaller0830
Aug 28, 20243 min read
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