Prescription for a grieving family
1) You may cry between the hours of 8 - 10 p.m. If you cry too much, you are a sissy weirdo, cry too little, your an insensitive
*****. Don't cry in front of a camera, but if someone gets a shot of you by accident, that's okay.
2) You may talk to the press exactly once monthly. Any more, you are seeking attention (= weirdo). Any less, you are being deceiving and obviously trying to hide something.
3) Should your child be returned home, do not respond with too much elation, you'll be perceived as weird. Too little emotion and you set the whole thing up.
4) Activism - should you take up a cause during your child's absence, I have no advice. Continue that activism and your priorities aren't straight. Drop them and you abandon those who aren't as lucky as you have been.
5) Abductees - should you feel gross and slimy when you return home and someone offers to give you a haircut, resist. Although it may be of comfort to have a different look than you had when accompanied by psychopaths, people will view this as odd (kind of like when rape victims take showers, does that mean they were odd too?)
6) Abductees - try not to act happy to be home. Any pictures taken of you smiling will result in the perception that you have rebounded too quickly. Try not to act too unhappy either, you'll look like you don't want to be home.
All joking aside, none of us know how to react properly in this situation unless it has happened to you. Speculating on how the family has reacted is irresponsible.
Maybe the family is a little off, or maybe they are right on. Maybe she was brainwashed, maybe not...I dunno, but I certainly think that this gal has a lot of healing to do. God forbid she actually access a computer a year from now, perhaps looking to get away from all this and go to Disney

, and gets to see everyone evaluating her behavior, how she looked too happy or too sad, made too many appearances or too little, commenting on whether or not she was pregnant, whether it was right to get a haircut, smile in a photo or if her dad cried too little or too often for her...
She will probably never read this, but I am saying a silent prayer that she can heal not only from whatever was done to her by those two people, but by society as well.