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- W2595959999 abstract "IntroductionThe treatment of trauma has perplexed psychologists all over the world in almost every age. This is an area where there are far too many variables to deal with. Trauma is very difficult to categorise and resilience too is highly relative. Stressors too cannot be distinctly classified for this reason and duration for recovery too is highly variable. Thus a systematically unique treatment is elusive. Further, the human potential of the therapist is crucial to recovery and how he bonds with the client. All these make trauma therapy a daunting area of activity, asking for an intrepid practitioner with aptitude, the right attitude and great research skill. Often overlooked is the linguistic skill of the clinician while the more care-giving attributes are emphasised. A complete package of therapeutic qualifications would certainly be one where a linguistic intelligence is not anywhere in the recesses.ArgumentStress disorders became rampant by the 1970's. The United States was mainly impacted by the Vietnam wars and the rest of the world followed suit due to the already prevalent mode of fast life with hectic competition and success determinants. Yet, there were other segments of the afflicted population who were not the professionals and businessmen engaged in the rat-race for success. These were mostly women and children quite outside the competitive fray, who had long been victims of abuse. Apparently many such people led normal lives without giving the least suspicion of torment. This is still the case where a set of people suppress injury without ever forgetting it, allowing it to eat into their lives and paralyse harmonious co-existence. This has extremely harmful effects when trauma is relived either on a daily basis or reawakened when stressors repeat, or similar stressors arrive, or even when similar incidents happen to others in their midst. In such cases a revisiting trauma has the effect of a sporadic earthquake which may or may not destroy an endemic population. What is sure is that a convulsion is acutely experienced.Like any case of trauma displaced trauma or trauma that is not concurrent has a chronology. Instant symptoms of trauma are normally thought of as demanding more urgent attention. A recalled trauma is no less dangerous in impact however, and there is no real boundary line separating the two where the hazards are concerned. In estimating the gravity of trauma normally duration and the severity of symptoms are the parameters. Also, there are clinically misleading cases where there is a period of oblivion which may be mistaken for a recovery or a clear phase, only to be made to realize that it was just a temporary hiatus or a detachment from memory. In such cases the trauma revives with the arrival of stressors or reminders of the crisis. B. Naparstek gives detailed case studies of several clients in her book PostTraumatic Stress Disorder: Reduce and Overcome the Symptoms of PTSD [6780]. There are still other cases where the victim has remained comparatively noiseless for a long time but gets certain flashes of hysteria or disturbance or turmoil remembering the trauma with which he or she had fairly been coping all along. It may not have produced vigorous reactions then, but when it visits memory in vulnerable moments or is seen to compound with other unhappy events in later life it becomes pathological. On the other terminus are those affected by compassion fatigue, who had been witnesses of tragic incidents without being directly afflicted. Even therapists handling gross incidents of horror and abuse of their clients come under this wing.Following from her lifelong research in PTSD, Naparstek enumerates the various potent symptoms of traumatic experience as flashbacks, nightmares, intrusive thoughts, agitation, numbness, insomnia, irritability, depression, concentration problems, anxiety, panic, guilt, shame, temper, estrangement, and sudden startling.... [xviii]. …" @default.
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- W2595959999 date "2015-07-01" @default.
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- W2595959999 title "The Chronology of Displaced Trauma" @default.
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