
WHAT IS POST TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER AND THE
APPROPRIATE RESPONSE TO IT?
An overview of
the work of
Dr. Judith Herman Lewis
By Jim Spencley.
Introduction: PTSD is not malingering, dependency,
avoidance of responsibility, attention seeking or any of a number of ways
of discounting and not believing the sufferer - it is a normal response to
abnormal situations.
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a
relatively new diagnosis of a condition which has always been part of the
human experience. This diagnosis first appeared in the fourth edition of
the official bible of the American Psychiatric Association - The
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV). Because of the identicy of
symptoms of various previous diagnosis applied to different histories, but
all sharing some form of traumatic experience, the American Psychiatric
Association brought together service providers who had worked with
traumatized people from many different social settings, including,
political violence, hostage victims, combat veterans, accident victims and
victims of domestic and sexual violation.
Dr. Judith Herman Lewis was on this committee. She
is now a professor of psychiatry at Harvard's Medical School, head of
Cambridge's Center for the Treatment of Trauma and a chief trauma
consultant for The United States' Departments of Defense and Veterans
Affairs. In short she is currently considered to be a pre-eminent
authourity on trauma, treatment and recovery.
What follows are from of her work. The first is a
summary of the introduction her book Trauma and Recovery (copy
enclosed herein) and the second is a synopsis of her work, taken from the
book, and various articles and interviews with her. I AN OVERVIEW OF THE
SOCIAL RELATIONS OF PTSD (A summary of the introduction of the textbook
Trauma and Recovery) The study of psychological trauma does not languish
for lack of interest; in fact it has an abundant, and rich tradition but
also a curious history - one of episodic amnesia. Periodically in the past
century, similar lines of inquiry have been taken up, abruptly abandoned
and forgotten only to be periodically rediscovered and reclaimed much
later. This intermittent amnesia is not the result of the ordinary changes
in fashion that affect any intellectual pursuit rather; the subject
provokes such intense controversy that it periodically becomes anathema.
To study psychological trauma means bearing witness
to horrible events. It means to come face to face both with human
vulnerability in the natural world and with the capacity for evil in human
nature. When the events are natural disasters or "acts of God,"
those who bear witness sympathize readily with the victim. But when the
traumatic events are of human design those who bear witness are led into
realms of the unthinkable and caught in the conflict between victim and
perpetrator.
In this conflict it is morally impossible to remain
neutral and the observer is forced to take sides. Consequentially the
study of psychological trauma founders on fundamental questions of belief.
Certain violations of the social compact are too terrible to utter aloud
and the ordinary response to such atrocities is to banish them from
consciousness: this is the meaning of the word unspeakable. Atrocities,
however, refuse to be buried because remembering and telling the truth
about such events are the prerequisites both for the restoration of the
social order and for the healing of individual victims. Consequently,
equally as powerful as the imperative to deny is the imperative that
denial does not work. This conflict between the will to deny horrible
events and the will to proclaim them aloud is the central dialectic of
psychological trauma to which perpetrators, victims and witnesses are all
subject.
In order to escape accountability for his crimes
the perpetrator does everything in his power to promote forgetting.
Secrecy and silence are the perpetrator's first line of defense. If
secrecy fails, the perpetrator attacks to make sure that no one listens.
To this end, he marshals and impressive array of arguments, from the most
blatant denial to the most sophisticated and elegant rationalizations.
After every atrocity one can expect to hear the same predictable
apologies: it never happened; the victim lies; the victim exaggerates; the
victim brought it upon them self; and in any case it is time to forget the
past and move on. The more powerful the perpetrator, the greater is his
prerogative to name and define reality, and the more completely his
arguments prevail. Ranging from the effects of a single overwhelming event
to the more complicated effects of prolonged and repeated abuse there is a
spectrum of traumatic disorders.
However, people who have endured horrible events
suffer predictable psychological harm. The dialectic of trauma (the
imperatives of silence and speaking out) is internalized in victims and
evident in their psychological distress symptoms. It results in the
protean, dramatic, and often bizarre symptoms of hysteria which Freud
recognized a century ago as disguised communications about abuse. It gives
rise to complicated, sometimes uncanny alterations of consciousness which
George Orwell, one of the committed truth-tellers of our century, called "doublethink,""
and which mental health professionals, searching for a calm precise
language call "dissociation." This is most apparent in the way
traumatized people alternate between feeling numb and reliving the event.
Thus the symptoms of traumatized people
simultaneously call attention to the existence of an unspeakable secret
and deflect attention from it. Because the traumatic syndromes have basic
features in common, the recovery process also follows a common pathway.
The fundamental stages of recovery are establishing safety, reconstructing
the trauma story, and restoring the connection between survivors and their
community.
However people who have survived atrocities often
tell their stories in a highly emotional, contradictory, and fragmented
manner which undermines their credibility and thereby serves the twin
imperatives of truth-telling and secrecy. When the victim is already
devalued (a woman, a child, a psychiatric patient, etc.), they may find
that the most traumatic events of their life take place outside the realm
of socially validated reality. Her experience becomes unspeakable. When
the truth is finally recognized, survivors can begin their recovery. But
far too often secrecy prevails and the story of the traumatic event
surfaces not as a verbal narrative but as a symptom. Because denial,
repression and dissociation operate on social as well as an individual
level witnesses as well as victims are subject to the dialectic of trauma.
It is difficult for an observer to remain clearheaded and calm, to see
more than a few fragments of the picture at one time, to retain all the
pieces, and to fit them together. It is even more difficult to find a
language that conveys fully and persuasively what one has seen.
Those who attempt to describe the atrocities that
they have witnessed also risk their own credibility. To speak publicly
about one's knowledge of atrocities is to invite the stigma that attaches
to victims. It is very tempting to take the side of the perpetrator. All
the perpetrator asks is that the bystander do nothing. He appeals to the
universal desire to see, hear and speak no evil.
The victim, on the contrary, asks the bystander to
share the burden of pain and demands action, engagement and remembering.
The perpetrator's arguments prove irresistible when the bystander faces
them in isolation. Without a supportive social environment, the bystander
usually succumbs to the temptation to look the other way. The study of
psychological trauma must constantly contend with this tendency to
discredit and render the victim invisible. Throughout the history of the
field, dispute has raged over whether patients with post traumatic
conditions are entitled to care and respect or deserving of contempt,
whether they are genuinely suffering or malingering, whether their
histories are true or false and, if false, whether imagined or maliciously
fabricated.
In spite of a vast literature documenting the
phenomena of psychological trauma, debate still centers on the basic
question of whether these phenomena are credible. We find the two sides
face to face; on one side the victims who perhaps wish to forget but
cannot, and on the other all those with strong, often unconscious motives
who very intensely both wish to forget and succeed in doing so. The
contrast...is frequently very painful for both sides. The weakest one ...
remains the losing party in this silent and unequal dialogue.
" II SYNOPSIS The History of Research into
PTSD Periods of active investigation of trauma have alternated with
periods of oblivion this is because the history of psychological insight
is related to the ferment of the times. The paying of attention, the
selection of what it is that we're going to consider interesting and
significant in human behavior and how we name it is formed by the social
and political context that we're embedded in. That's particularly true
about the emotions related to power and control, the emotions related to
one's place in society, one's place in the family, and the emotions of
shame, of resentment, of pride, of a sense of legitimacy or illegitimacy
Three forms of trauma have come to light over the
past century, and each time, the investigation of that trauma has
flourished in affiliation with a political movement. In the first
instance, Freud's work and that of others on hysteria came at a political
moment in French history when there was a brief inclination to consider
'hysteria' as a possible manifestation of the isolated, politically
powerless lives led by most Western women (an interpretation later
dismissed in favor of Freudian reductionism). The second form of trauma to
be studied was "shell shock" or combat neurosis, which became an
issue in England and the United States after the First World War and which
reached a peak after the Vietnam War.
Here the political context was the growth of an
antiwar movement and a re-thinking of the effects of armed combat in the
modern world The most recent type of trauma to achieve widespread public
awareness was sexual and domestic violence, spotlighted by the feminist
movement as well as modern political advocacy to secure the human rights
and protection of children. Trauma vs. Fear Traumatic experiences must be
distinguished from fear inducing ones (no matter how threatening the
latter may be) by one crucial difference. Fear is a complex biological,
integrated system of reactions to danger, encompassing both body and mind
which we share with other animals.
A threat initially arouses the sympathetic nervous
system, causing the person in danger to feel an adrenalin rush and go into
a state of alert. In this state our attention becomes concentrated on the
immediate situation, our ordinary perceptions of such things as hunger,
fatigue, pain, etc., may alter such that we are able to disregard them and
we feel intense feelings of fear and anger. These changes in arousal,
attention, perception, and emotion are normal, adaptive reactions which
mobilize the threatened person for strenuous action, either in battle or
in flight.
In short, in fear we perceive danger; we startle,
look around, do a quick appraisal of the situation and figure out what to.
That is, fear is a response to danger in which there is some control,
choice or way out even if it is only to either fight or flee. Traumatic
experiences are those fight or flight doesn't work action is of no avail
and this instills helplessness and terror. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
There are two degrees of PTSD, Simple (sPTSD) and Complex (cPTSD). Simple
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (sPTSD) The public at large is most
familiar with sPTSD through such things as the Vietnam veterans, Bosnian
civilians, witnesses to schoolyard shootings [and most recently 9-11]
Here the impact of a single or temporally discrete
event in conditions of terror and helplessness results in trauma. Even so
such experiences give rise to complicated, sometimes uncanny alterations
of consciousness. When neither resistance nor escape is possible, the
self-defense system becomes overwhelmed and disorganized. While we
understand little about the psycho-biology it appears that some kind of
biological rewiring seems to occur in people as well as animals. [Current
research has shown that in animals which have been experimentally
traumatized and in autopsies of humans who have died in violent incidents
there are lesions in the amygdala, of the brain, believed to play a role
in the processing of short-term memory into long term memory].
Traumatic events produce profound and lasting
changes in physiological arousal, emotion, cognition and memory. After
trauma each component of the ordinary response to danger (startle, alert,
focused attention, non attendance to tertiary stimuli, anger, fear) these
normally integrated functions become severed from each other, disconnected
from their cause, take on a life of their own and persist in an altered
and exaggerated state long after the actual danger is over. Thereafter
the victim continues to respond to both specific reminders and to
generally stressful and threatening situations as though this terrifying
event were still occurring in the present.
Clinically speaking the triad of sPTSD is
hyper-arousal, re-experiencing and numbing. Hyper-arousal is activation of
the fear system. Re-experiencing is the reliving of the trauma through
flashbacks and nightmares as if the event were still occurring. And,
numbing/withdrawal (which is poorly understood) where there is a general
loss of interest, a sense that things aren't real, amnesia for some, more,
or all of the event and a sense in the aftermath that one is just not
really oneself.
Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (cPTSD)
Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (cPTSD) is more difficult and less
understood (both socially and medically) than sPTSD. Unlike the later,
which is the result of accident, conflict, or 'act of God,' cPTSD is
caused by one's fellow humans. CPTSD results from: 1. prolonged and
repeated trauma, 2. in situations of captivity and coercive control, 3.
where the perpetrator isn't content to just have external compliance, but
wants the victim to adopt and endorse his worldview. CPTSD occurs in
situations of: · domestic violence (towards women, children and
dependent adults where the cycle goes on and on) · sexual abuse ·
religious cults · prolonged hostage situations · concentration
camps and political prisoners
In all these cases both the methods and the
resultant mental processes they produce are the same. Oppression is
oppression. Being the underdog is being the underdog. Being treated with
contempt is being treated with contempt. Being treated violently is being
treated violently. People do it and respond to it in the same ways. When
you get right down to it, pain is pain. Complex Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder is a normal response to very abnormal experience.
The 'singe cell family' of domestic abuse is not
just the model for learning about the techniques of coercive control,
torture and the transmission of this knowledge to the other contexts but
the progenitor. That is, it is in isolated dysfunctional/abusive families
that the spousal abuser, the pimp/child pornographer, the hostage taker,
the political interrogator, etc., first experiences and learns these
techniques and perhaps later develops them into a fine art. The abuse is
done in the name of (not necessarily done by) the dominant authourity
figure (primarily the father). The key elements in the development of
cPTSD are: isolation; secrecy; splitting behaviour and betrayal (which
destroy the relationships that would afford protection) withholding care
and/ or affirmation or using or threatening to use care/affirmation as
reward or punishment in order to undermine personal identity.
Fear is further increased by the polar extremes of
fawning love, inconsistent capricious enforcement of petty rules and
unpredictable outbursts of violence. And while violence is a universal
method of terror perpetrators don't have to resort to it in order to cause
trauma and it may be used infrequently, as a last resort. Apparent
conventionality and normality are the most consistent features of
perpetrators of this kind of terror. The general stereotypes of the
'ignorant blue collar worker,' the bottom-line alcoholic and drug user,
the lurking insular psychopath, etc., are the remote exceptions not the
rule.
Perpetrators of such abuse are extremely difficult
to identify, until they are caught. They do not give warning signals. They
do not perceive that anything is wrong with them, are convinced of their
ultimate rightness, rationalize the abuse in heroic terms (i.e. for the
good of...) and emphasize the deservedness of the victim - if only to
bring them into line. They do not seek help and only rarely get into
difficulties with the law. The profile of such abusers is that they are
generally, charismatic, authoritarian, secretive, sometimes grandiose, and
even paranoid. They seek out social and professional situations where
their tyrannical behavior will be tolerated, condoned, or admired. They
are exquisitely sensitive to the realities of power and to social norms.
They are usually economically successful and involved in their
communities. Their demeanor and status provide excellent camouflage, for
few people believe that such extraordinary crimes can be committed by
persons of such conventional appearance and position.
When exposed the public is shocked by how
upstanding such people. Survivors of this kind of abuse have all the
responses of sPTSD but only more so. Not only are there many more
traumatic incidents where neither resistance nor escape is possible but
the danger is in reality never over - Not only is the self-defense system
overwhelmed and disorganized but repeatedly done so. As well, personal
identity is repeatedly undermined through fawning love, capricious rules
and violation or threats of violation - consequently there is no recourse
a to previous sense of self to fall back on as is the case with sPTSD.
The disintegration of the components of
physiological arousal, emotion, cognition, and memory such that and each
function takes on a life of its own is much more intense with cPTSD. The
sufferer doesn't 'merely' experience intense emotion without clear memory
of the events or remember everything in detail but without emotion, their
thinking processes are themselves fragmented. On the one hand they
continually relive intense flashbacks of fragmented pieces of various
incidents which are more real than the here and now (not just of a single
event) with either all the terror intact or complete numbness.
And they experience intense anxiety and phobias
unassociated with any present object. On the other hand they have an
inability to remember discrete moments in current experience (fugues) and
entire periods (up to years) are blocked from memory (long term amnesia)
and not just of a single event. Relatedly, they often are aphasic - that
is, their internal cognition remains intact but they are unable to take in
new information and express their thoughts externally in meaningfully
constructions. [It is akin to sitting in a concrete cell, communication
with the outside world is imperative, a telephone is the only mode of
communication with the outside world but there is a voice scrambler
attached to it - what is said in either direction is undecipherable.] And,
they experience 'pseudo' hallucinations - that is visual and auditory
hallucinations with the awareness that they are hallucinations.
To make this response even more difficult to
comprehend is the fact that under conditions of coercive control and
captivity consciousness divides. We don't understand unitary consciousness
very well consequently when people have double consciousness, double
reality, it is more challenging. Survivors experience living in a double
reality of the present and the past co-existing in mind they go back and
forth between the two and it is not clear which is more real. Even with
the amnesia, people will describe simultaneously knowing and not knowing
what happened -remembering and not remembering simultaneously and when
people get their memories back, they will often describe it as
simultaneously re-living the experience and being outside of it as though
it happened to somebody else.
Further they internalize and mentally co-exist with
the perpetrator and the perpetrators way of seeing the world constantly
unsure of which thoughts or feelings belong to them or the perpetrator. In
this state of confusion and uncertainty they over-idealize the
'authourity' of the perpetrator and are in constant dialogue with him/her-
either hopelessly trying to live up to unrealistic expectations or blaming
themselves for not being able to do so - seeing oneself as bad,
responsible for and deserving of what happened Weighted under these
experiences the sufferer withdraws into isolation, paralysis, self-injury
or explosive anger and frequent suicide attempts.
This is the realm of apparent hopelessness and
despair Features of hope and recovery and the road back. Sufferers of PTSD
demonstrate a remarkable resilience. If given the right circumstances they
really do get better, make new lives for themselves and in so doing
re-instill hope for other victims. Disintegration, in all probability at a
biological level, of the normally integrated functions of fear, where
those functions become dissociated from their source and take on a 'life
of their own,' under conditions where the survival mechanisms of flight or
flight are overwhelmed and no recourse is possible, is the defining cause
of PTSD.
This disintegration extends beyond the biological
and includes the perceptual, psychological and social realms. Such
traumatic events destroy the sustaining bonds between individual and
community. With cPTSD the destruction of these bonds and imposition of
their interpretation of reality is the goal of the perpetrator and cause
of the disorder. On the biological level, it is highly probable that both
the symptomlogy (the continual reliving of the events, the isolation) and
the continued imposition of the perpetrators world view do not allow the
healing process to take place.
Traumatically victimized people cannot recover in
isolation. They need other people and they need to take action in
affiliation with others. Elements of survival and recovery The means of
recovery is by working back through these disintegrated elements and
reintegrating through the social, personal and ultimately allowing the
biological to heal. Those who have survived, who have recovered their
sense of self, of worth, of humanity learn that the only way back from
severe psychological trauma depends upon re-establishing connectedness
with others.
The 3 interconnected conditions of recovery are: 1.
providing a zone of safety with other victims and survivors 2. remembering
and feeling 3. telling and listening to others (reconnect elements of this
safety support for telling the story) This kind of work cannot be done by
a single therapist. Nor can a therapist do this kind of therapeutic work
alone. Therapists if they believe their clients have empathic reactions to
what they hear. They have nightmares, fragmented thinking, visual flashes,
etc., of the horror that they bear witness to.
When they are isolated they lose perspective, burn
out, give in to despair and resort to attempting to manage or control
behaviour. Further damage can be incurred when therapy attempts to control
the symptoms of cPTSD. This is especially true when the victim is
characterized as a person with problem behaviors who must experience
aversive "treatments" as a "medical necessity," and
when the perpetrator seems both pleasant and reasonable. Those who are
without speech, whose ability to produce the needed words 'on demand' is
unreliable, or whose words are discounted, are more vulnerable to
experiences of intense frustration, helplessness, and entrapment in no-win
situations.
Treatments, services, and living facilities which
not only fail to help the person accomplish what they need to do, but make
their quality of life contingent on their successful accomplishment of
what someone else wishes them to do establish situations of intense threat
from which neither victory nor escape are perceived as possible. As a
common feature of post-traumatic stress syndrome is the flashback in which
a person acts as if a memory is present reality, every time they are put
in situations of such threat they recall their previous maltreatment and
unless their panic and rage are recognized as a function of this stress,
they are likely to be further stigmatized as 'impossible to serve' and
subjected to more intensive aversive control thus aggravating the problem.
The experience of being hurt in the name of this
kind of 'treatment' is no different than being hurt in familial, sexual
and cult abuse. Consequently the emphasis must be on community, a
community of therapists, victims and survivors. The solidarity of a group
provides the strongest protection against terror and despair, and the
strongest antidote to traumatic experience. Trauma isolates; the group
recreates a sense of belonging. Trauma shames and stigmatizes; the group
bears witness and affirms. The group provides a place where one's
experience can be safely told without fear of invalidation, challenge or
re-interpretation. A context of empathy allows a re-association of memory
and feeling - a very painful process which may have to be done time and
time again but which allows the victim to eventually affirm the reality
and feel the appropriate emotions for the abuse and reconnect and learn to
hear the pain of others (thus recognizing that they are not alone in their
suffering).
Those who recover most successfully are those who
discover some meaning in their experience that transcends the limits of
their own personal tragedy. This is what it means to say that
psychological insight cannot be separated from political insight and
action. It means hearing other people's stories, it means mentoring in the
context of a tragedy and working with others in social action such as
joining organizations that change the laws about what the criminal justice
system says is a violation of human rights.
New researchers lack a passionate intellectual and
social commitment they do not see the essential interconnection between
the biological, psychological, social, and political dimensions of trauma.
The interesting questions lie in values but this is a murky confusing,
emotionally laden area we don't understand and which is riddled with
controversy. People write dissertations and apply for research money from
drug companies who are seeking to get approval for their drugs for the
treatment of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and if you want to get
research funding, you probably should stay away from this murky, messy,
social issue 'stuff.' You can just do a nice psycho-biological study and
you can randomly assign people to eight sessions of cognitive behavioral
therapy or eight sessions of a serotonin re-uptake inhibitor, or a
combination of the two, or a placebo, and see what works best. But if you
want to really figure out how the mind works or how society works, you
have to look at the broader society and asking question about
relationships of power authourity and sanctioned perception.
Ultimately if you're talking about horrible abuses
of power, you're talking about the atrocious things that one person does
to another person. Here you are dealing with very profound questions of
human evil, human cruelty, human sadism and the abuse of power and
authority. The antidote to that is the solidarity of resistance. Nobody
can do that alone. Under conditions of abuse of power and authority much
of what people say about relationships of sex, parenthood, society,
authourity, etc., depends on what one thinks or has been told to think is
legitimate to express - what ought to be said and felt as opposed to what
one actually feels. That is unless one has a support system that says, "Forget
what everybody else thinks you ought to be feeling, what you ought to be
saying. Get down to it, tell the truth."