meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Virtual Couch

Murder on the Couch: When "I Did It For You" Is a Lie

The Virtual Couch

Tony Overbay LMFT

Education, Self-improvement, Health & Fitness, Mental Health

4.9 • 668 Ratings

🗓️ 4 June 2026

⏱️ 61 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A heads-up before you press play: this is a bonus crossover from my true crime podcast, Murder on the Couch, dropping into your Virtual Couch / Waking Up to Narcissism feed. It's heavier than usual and opens with a disturbing familicide case that I don't sugarcoat, so if that's not where you are right now, it's completely okay to sit this one out and come back when you're ready. If you stay, I use the case to get at the things we talk about all the time—shame, compartmentalization, the altruistic defense, emotional immaturity, and differentiation—because the behavior is horrific, but the psychology underneath it is deeply human. John List killed his wife, his mother, and his three children—then walked away convinced God would understand. Murder on the Couch is back. Licensed therapist Tony Overbay reopens one of true crime's most chilling family annihilation cases, but not for the manhunt or the famous 18 years List spent hiding in plain sight as "Bob Clark." Tony sits with the question that actually keeps him up at night: how does a devout, rule-following Sunday school teacher reach a place where murder becomes, in his own mind, the most loving thing he could do? If you've ever performed "fine" while something was quietly falling apart inside you, this one lands closer to home than you'd expect. In this episode: Untangle guilt ("I did something bad") from shame ("I am bad")—and why shame left in the dark only grows heavier Spot the "altruistic defense": how control and harm get repackaged as love, devotion, and protection See how rigidity, compartmentalization, and a performed self can hollow a person out long before any crisis hits Learn the ACT distinction between the conceptualized self (the story) and the observing self (the awareness)—and why List had no one home to catch him when the story collapsed Drawing on acceptance and commitment therapy, David Schnarch's work on differentiation, and Richard Rohr's reframe of shame, Tony brings 600-plus episodes of clinical insight to the cases that won't let him go. Shame grows in concealment and shrinks in connection. And Tony's looking for a co-host—if a case has gotten under your skin and you know why, email contact@tonyoverbay.com and pitch it. 00:00 Bonus Episode Setup 00:21 Murder on the Couch Returns 02:56 Content Warning and Themes 05:53 John List Case Opens 08:46 Show Relaunch and Co-Host Invite 12:40 John List Background and Unraveling 17:31 Compartmentalization Explained 19:53 Shame Versus Guilt 24:21 ACT Defusion and Healing 25:47 Shame Architecture of John List 28:21 Altruistic Defense and Covert Narcissism 30:49 Narcissistic Injury 31:26 Altruistic Defense 35:32 Love Versus Control 36:29 Rigidity Explained 38:08 Rules And Fragility 42:06 Eighteen Years Hidden 45:40 Conceptualized Self 48:35 Excavating The Self 52:56 Why This Case Haunts 54:31 Faith And Performance 58:07 Tell The Truth 59:41 Closing And Co-Hosts Please follow Tony on Instagram @virtual.couch on Tiktok @virtualcouch on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/tonyoverbaylmft and on Substack https://thevirtualcouch.substack.com/ You can reach out to Tony through his website tonyoverbay.com or by emailing contact @ tonyoverbay.com

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, already, welcome to a bonus episode of you may be listening to the virtual couch,

0:05.1

maybe waking up to narcissism, maybe even love ADHD.

0:08.2

However you arrived, first and foremost, thank you.

0:11.4

I am Tony Overbay.

0:12.4

I'm a licensed marriage and family therapist and host of the aforementioned podcast.

0:16.9

And I'm really glad that you are here today because I want to share something a little

0:19.9

different with you.

0:21.4

Some of you may remember if you've been around for a little while that back in 2022 and 2023,

0:27.7

my daughter, Sydney and I started a podcast called Murder on the Couch.

0:31.4

The concept was pretty simple.

0:33.8

Take true crime cases and run them through a therapist lens or maybe even more specifically,

0:39.1

I like true crime a lot. I listen to podcasts. I watch documentaries and interrogation videos,

0:44.7

and I find myself continually wondering and wishing that I had that person or that couple on my

0:51.3

couch. So I could really try and understand not just what happened, but really the

0:56.3

why. What was going on psychologically? What was the runway or the ramp that led up to why the person

1:03.8

did what they did? Because I think there are so many variables that go into why people do the things

1:08.3

that they do. What does it say about shame or their attachment or their family system?

1:14.2

Did they have a hole in their need for validation bucket so that bucket was never going to be filled?

1:19.8

Or did they have such deep dad issues that it wasn't going to matter who they interacted with in their personal lives?

1:25.6

There was eventually going to be a breaking point.

1:31.2

And my daughter, Sid, is one of the funniest and most clever and truly enjoyable humans that I have spent time with. So honestly, it was a fun experience to record those. And then

1:37.7

what was wild was the reception to those first five episodes was phenomenal. And I don't think that Sid, or I even realized where that podcast was potentially heading

...

Transcript will be available on the free plan in 28 days. Upgrade to see the full transcript now.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Tony Overbay LMFT, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Tony Overbay LMFT and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.