A recent New YorkTimes/CBS News poll opines that Americans are more afraid than they have been since the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. As a psychologist who specializes in traumatic stress, I believe there can be some value in empathizing with other people’s suffering.
For trauma survivors, seeing
terrible world events—such as recent mass shootings and terroristic attacks—can
be re-traumatizing. It can trigger Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. This
can cause them to have more nightmares, become more hyper-aroused and alert,
and anticipate danger at every turn. It can reinforce in their minds
that the world is a dangerous place, people are bad, and they are unsafe. During
stressful times, we have to be resilient and keep perspective.
But how does it affect those of
us who haven’t physically experienced trauma?
After the 9/11 attacks, there
was widespread concern that people who did not directly experience the attacks
but who watched it on TV could experience PTSD. This idea got pushback
from scholars in the scientific community, so much so that the recently revised
psychiatric diagnostic classification system, which came out in 2013, excluded
indirect exposure to terrorist attacks from the definition of a traumatic
event.
My 20-odd years of working with
combat veterans, former prisoners of war, men and women who have experienced
interpersonal violence, and people who escaped the World Trade Center towers on
Sept. 11 supports that analysis. The reactions of trauma survivors are
different from those of people who have not experienced trauma firsthand. But
the difference in no way diminishes the emotional distress that many of the
rest of us experience in watching or hearing about awful events. What we feel
may not be full-blown PTSD per se, but that does not mean our signs of distress
do not warrant recognition and possible intervention.
As news of attacks and possible
threats seem to pile up, many react with compassion fatigue—feeling
helpless, shutting down and not caring. Others become hyperaroused—feeling
overly fearful, taking too much to heart, and changing their routines.
After the 9/11 attacks, the
American Psychological Association released a series of free fact
sheets to help people cope with terrorism and other disasters. They are as
timely now as they were then. During stressful times, it’s important to
maintain a daily routine; stay connected with social support systems, such as
friends, family and organized religion; and take care of yourself, such as by
eating properly, exercising and resting.
It’s also very important to
keep things in perspective. In an insightful op-ed for the New
YorkTimes, Richard Friedman, a professor of clinical psychiatry at Weill
Cornell Medical College in New York, reminds us that Americans are far more
likely to die in a car accident than in a terrorist attack.
I tell my trauma patients that
together we are going to take off their “trauma glasses” and clean them a
bit—not make them rosy, but just clean them so that they can see the world more
clearly. Although there are people in this world who are dangerous, and these
attacks are absolutely horrific, we all need to know that the world and the
people in it are far more good than they are dangerous.
So while we need to take care
of ourselves and our loved ones, please do not stay in your homes “locked and
loaded.” Instead of viewing all of the world or certain groups as evil and
dangerous, I hope we learn to carry on with our normal lives—not react with
fear.
Written by:
Joan Cook, a psychologist and
associate professor at Yale University and an Op-Ed Project Public Voices
Fellow.
This article was first published on Time Magazine
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