• Athena
    3.6k
    I find it remarkable that I did not realize I had PTSD for close to a decade. I could recognize mental illness in others but not myself. As a man, of a certain age, I think it was just not considered a possibility. This was a massive insight for me, not just personally, but because it made me realize how deeply embedded certain values and beliefs are in my progressive world.

    BTW, I look forward to a thread on PTSD.
    Jeremy Murray

    I was hoping PTSD would come up more in the thread about the Great Depression. I think economic collapses and wars create PTSD directly and indirectly. I think our civilizations need to understand and work with the reality.

    Personally, I know there are other causes of PTSD. I was born without a left hip socket and put in a body cast at age one. I did not have the vocabulary to record this experience with words, but fortunately, my mother told me about the problem when I was old enough to remember her explanation. Later, I was regressed to that moment in time, and I experienced the fear and then the terror I felt as a baby, and realized in my memory all there was to remember is the emotions. What I could not know was what PTSD is and how it affected my life.

    When I was regressed, I remembered my mother's fear when she realized something was wrong with my legs and ability to walk, and her fear when the doctor gave her my body encased in a body cast. Of course, I remembered the terror of realizing I was trapped in a cast from my toes to my armpits and not knowing why anyone would do this to me. That was the beginning of understanding why my life, in my 30s, wasn't making sense. It was like existing in two separate dimensions. At this time in history, we seemed to think only soldiers had PTSD. It was a long journey to fully understand, it isn't just soldiers who have PTSD.
  • Jeremy Murray
    94
    Athena, I've been hoping to see a thread here on PTSD or mental illness generally. I came back to philosophy later in life searching for answers to questions of mental illness, mental health and morality.

    It seems to me that philosophy doesn't seem to offer much on these topics? I am a lay philosopher, and sure I am missing something, so recommendations from anyone would be appreciated!

    Personally, I know there are other causes of PTSD. I was born without a left hip socket and put in a body cast at age one. I did not have the vocabulary to record this experience with words,Athena

    How has this experience shaped your life, your sense of self?

    Gabor Mate's "The Myth of Normal" starts with early trauma, his experiences as an infant separated from his family during the Nazi occupation of Hungary. The experience shaped his entire life, and forms a key touchstone in his book.

    At this time in history, we seemed to think only soldiers had PTSDAthena

    This is why I was so 'surprised' to realize I had PTSD. It was, in retrospect, obvious. I could tell my body was experiencing a 'fight or flight' response. But because my 'trauma' was the death of my brother, who had battled schizophrenia to a draw for decades, only to succumb to an overdose - and not a visceral, present 'trauma' in the sense of a soldier, it did not occur to me - nor to anyone around me, despite my years of experience with counselling, as a patient and in the trenches as a high school teacher - that I had PTSD.

    If I'm recommending Mate, I am already positioning myself outside of the ranks of the DSM-5 crew. I do view psych as having scientific grounding, it's just such a young discipline, and the topic is so vast, I hesitate to call it hard science.

    Is it safe to argue that we are, in the WEIRD world at least, facing a mental health crisis, in particular with young people? If so, what light can philosophy shed on these topics?
  • Athena
    3.6k
    Oh yeah, we are very aware that COVID strongly impacted children, and many have fallen so out of society, they may never become a part of mainstream society. I do not think the problem is COVID alone. Many of these children also experience bad parenting. Their parents can not teach them good coping skills because they don't have good coping skills themselves, and many of the parents may also be dealing with PTSD. All of this is going on in my family, and I do not feel good about the future of almost all of my family members.

    Back in the day of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, you know, they had to be dealing with PTSD. Socrates was totally hung up on the war with Sparta. He could not accept Athens' defeat, and with his belief system, that defeat was caused by the gods because somehow Athens must have displeased them. The rest of his life was a struggle to understand what Athens did wrong, to lead to the gods punishing them.

    We can not separate people's belief systems from all the rest, the PDST, and the parenting, and the history in the moment, and the stress factors in the moment, and the resources of lack of resources. Their belief tells them why things are as they are, and for me, not knowing anything about PTSD, I went through a short period of thinking I was possibly possessed by Satan. In my world at that time, that was a real and serious concern.

    I had to make a decision: either the Christian mythology was true and I was possessed by Satan, or it was all a false belief. Every day, I am extremely grateful that I decided Christian mythology is a false belief. And I determined to get on with my life, get counseling, return to college, and thank goodness LEARN MORE ABOUT THE GODS AND PHILOSOPHY.

    And sorry, guys, but male counselors can be part of the problem. :rofl: What we are talking about here is more complex than many would realize. No, the ancient philosophers didn't create the subject of psychology, but they understood the archetypes, which is a different subject. They did hold a notion of us becoming our own heroes. Stand up straight, determine what is the right thing to do, and move forward. Keep focused on what is right and good. In a Patriarchy, this is different for men and women. I resent what the Patriarchy did to men and women. And that is another subject tied to the complex subject of our sanity and ability to care for ourselves.

    Slowly, the Athenians pulled away from superstition until they thought a new religion was God's truth. Oh my, there is too much to talk about. The Heaven and Hell of the new religion came from Persia. Alexander opened the world to a new, contagious false belief system. :lol: We amuse our beliefs are correct, but when Satan appears to be consuming your life, you might want to question that belief system, and the reality of Satan possessing people, and the whole social order, and the role men and women play in it.

    Bottom line- with no idea of what PTSD is, our beliefs and expectations can be very problematic.
  • Jeremy Murray
    94
    Back in the day of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, you know, they had to be dealing with PTSDAthena

    I assumed yes and googled examples. First result was "Athenian soldiers witnessing the Battle of Marathon in 490 B.C.". Second was 'shell-shock' in WW1. People disputed the existence of that. I think we have examples of PTSD from history, but perhaps not a recognition of it as a state the way there appears to have been historical understanding of 'depression' or 'heartbreak'.

    I really enjoyed this article by Shayla Love, who writes with real empathy and insight on issues of mental health and illness.

    https://www.vice.com/en/article/the-relatable-emotions-of-depressed-people-from-3000-years-ago/

    “If Depression continually falls upon him, he continually sighs, he eats bread and drinks beer but it does not go well for him, then says, ‘Oh, my heart!’ and is dejected, he is sick with Lovesickness; it is the same for a man and a woman.”

    Could be me, today, but this was written on stone tablets in cuneiform 3000 years ago.

    Love's article also touches on historical examples of OCD and phobias.

    Mental illness exists in animals, who can 'learn helplessness' - a state resembling severe depression.

    I worry that our modern technocratic society is fixated on 'medical' considerations in mental illness, rather than the profoundly, universally human (animal?) nature of these forms of suffering, that has biological, psychological and social causes.

    I do not feel good about the future of almost all of my family members.Athena

    I am very sorry to hear this.

    Conversation and community can help, as can counselling. When my closest friend in high school killed himself, the people around me, and myself, were paralyzed into inaction, because our norms couldn't process Ryan's choice. Whatever the solutions, suffering should not be 'a private matter', nor a source of shame. I say that morally, but plenty of data supports this take.

    for me, not knowing anything about PTSD, I went through a short period of thinking I was possibly possessed by Satan.Athena

    Terrifying.

    Suffering seems a human universal. “Even if the symptoms get organized slightly differently, or the labels are slightly different from one time period or place to the next, I think it’s important to show how old our experiences are,” Al-Rashid said. “There are these common denominators in our experiences of mental distress that have always been there. And a lot of people say it makes them feel less alone.”

    Bottom line- with no idea of what PTSD is, our beliefs and expectations can be very problematic.Athena

    We DO have some idea what PTSD is - a hyper-attenuated fight-or-flight response, activated and problematic due to unexpected / severe trauma.

    The further we go from this starting point, the more abstract the concepts become. Does 'generational trauma' lead to PTSD, or is this best described with different language?

    Do you have texts / authors / counsellors that have helped you? I sure hope you have gotten more support than a 'possession' diagnosis!

    I agree with Al-Rashid and Love, in that greater knowledge of the universality of these experiences, greater understanding of the conditions themselves, can reduce individual suffering. Or, at least, they did for me!

    Does anyone on TPF have experience with philosophical counselling? I have only recently heard the term, but it makes sense to me, and I am seeing it mentioned more often.
  • Jeremy Murray
    94
    Another good article by Love, this time a personal narrative of her own family trauma.

    https://www.vice.com/en/article/my-grandparents-trauma-is-in-my-blood/

    She notes this concept, inherited trauma, is contentious, but it sure resonates intuitively. Events like the Cultural Revolution of the Holocaust were grand enough in scale to have shaped future generations.

    What effects from the pandemic might we anticipate from a generation that shared this trauma? Are certain epochal traumatic events more or less impactful? Why?
  • unenlightened
    9.9k
    While the long term result of trauma tends to be chronic stress, the long term result of abuse is more typically shame, guilt, self-disgust.

    Trauma and abuse are by no means mutually exclusive of course.

    She notes this concept, inherited trauma, is contentious, but it sure resonates intuitively.Jeremy Murray

    On the one hand damaged parents are more likely to damage their children all unwilling, and on the other, epigenetics have been shown to be affected by trauma and passed down at least one generation.
    https://www.theembodylab.com/blog/cross-generational-trauma-and-personality-the-interplay-of-genetics-epigenetics-and-healing
  • Athena
    3.6k
    What excites me most about your post is the possibility of dropping our religious notions and working with a more scientific understanding of our creation and existence. I think the proof of evolution is solid, with no doubt that we are evolved animals.

    As I read your post, I thought of people with addiction problems who speak about needing to avoid things that "trigger" the desire to use. Then my mind goes on to recall the book "Emotional Intelligence" and on to Kahneman's book "Thinking Fast and Slow" and the following books that put a stronger emphasis on emotions. We don't all read the books, but we can understand triggers that compel us to do things, like a picture of something good to eat makes me hungry.

    We might at least be more compassionate with people having a hard time. Hum,:chin: I love thinking, and now I am thinking about the argument about our free will. I thank my stars that I was given a sense of strength, which makes it possible for me to resist temptation and urges. PTSD can lead to what we might call acts of evil. It is easy to understand how people could have believed in being possessed by Satan or demons when they had only the religious stories to explain reality and not science. Punishing people who have mental defects that lead to bad decisions is no better than killing people suspected of being witches. If someone does wrong, there has to be a reason for that, and perhaps that is what we should address. Don't stop at judging a person who made a bad decision.

    When I learned of PTSD, it was one of the best days in my life because the chaos in my mind was changed. The stress factors in my life had led me to experiencing myself as several different personalities, and one of them was out to kill me. This was different from being one person having different experiences. By this time, I had learned about PTSD while I was cleaning a VA office, where there were flyers explaining the problem. I also read a book about traumatized children, and at an Est function, I regressed to my experience of being put in a body cast. I gave all this information to my counselor, and he regressed me to the moment of crisis, and helped me rewrite the story that was in my head. I returned to being one person with different experiences, and that was the end of my struggle for my sanity.

    I want to stress the importance of determining that Satan is not real and that Christian mythology is problematic, because how we understand reality and the reasoning and beliefs we use, makes a huge difference in all judgments. I am very glad we are no longer burning witches or fearing being possessed by Satan. But what if we had not evolved, but were still apes without language and stories to live by?

    Sorry, but I have to use AI because this is too serious to ignore....

    Traumatized apes, particularly chimpanzees, can exhibit symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and depression, often resulting from experiences like social deprivation, stressful events, captivity, invasive lab experiments, and the loss of their mothers. Common symptoms include self-mutilation, hypervigilance, dissociative behaviors, angry outbursts, and social withdrawal. Rehabilitation efforts for traumatized apes focus on providing social connections, environmental enrichment, freedom of movement, and therapy to help them cope with their ongoing psychological distress.
    .
  • Athena
    3.6k
    On the one hand damaged parents are more likely to damage their children all unwilling, and on the other, epigenetics have been shown to be affected by trauma and passed down at least one generation.unenlightened

    If I had known what I know today, I would have stayed single and avoided being a mother until I was confident that problems were resolved. But that is so unrealistic. Number one I had no idea I had PTSD. Number 2, society, and my father, demanded I get married, have children, and stay home to care for the family. I was doing the best I could to be the ideal woman of my day.

    I like the question about our freedom of will. It is our nature to react to life as it unfolds. Philosophically, what is our part in life? Can this be considered having free will, or is it more like being on a train, not separate from the flow of history?
  • Athena
    3.6k

    What effects from the pandemic might we anticipate from a generation that shared this trauma? Are certain epochal traumatic events more or less impactful? Why?
    Jeremy Murray

    I strongly hope that we shift our attention to the children who will never go to college and consider how we can integrate them into industrial jobs that do not require education. If we do not, I fear the future will have to deal with even homelessness and welfare cases as a result of a flood of poorly prepared young people lacking not only education skills but also social skills and an understanding of how people survive in an industrial economy. We have to make the effort to keep them included in society, as years ago we made an effort to keep seniors involved with the greater society.

    The more I think on this, the more urgent the need to take action, seems to me.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.