The only question I would ask her:
What about you?
Then I would continue:
What was your earliest memory in life and how did it impact you?
What were the most significant memories of the following 2 years.
What was your level of comfort as a child and how did it change?
She understands her impact.
She understands how most react towards her.
She doesn’t understand herself.
Her putting herself out there makes her a useful case study.
If put on the spot, she would likely deny anything to do with confronting her self.
An rh- empath cannot turn into a sociopath.
Your questions about early childhood memories are germane to this conundrum, because I believe that the split of a sensitive rh- into either an empath OR a sociopath happens very early in life.
Often, a severe case of abuse is a cause. The very LAST thing a sociopath will want to do is revisit this traumatic incident, hence the denial in connection with confronting her/himself.
As a person who has been diagnosed with Aspergers Syndrome (a form of autism), I have noticed a certain overlap with rh- characteristics. The factor that touches on this is a sense of alienation. Taken to the extreme, I think this can lead to sociopathy.
I need to emphasise that this is not the ONLY cause of a link between rh- and sociopathy…
PS. I am B-. Perhaps taking a look at ABO blood types will uncover more links.