| |
Phobias
PHOBIAS EXPLAINED
Traumas & Phobias
There are two kinds of bad memories. Some fade slowly, so
that a year or so later the memory of the car crash, or whatever it was, is no longer
intrusive, and in time it goes away only to be recalled as an ordinary narrative memory about
some unfortunate incident you once experienced.
Traumatic memories do not fade in the same way, and
as time goes by they may become worse. These memories are usually connected with a life
threatening or other serious event and are more deeply embedded in the brain as a 'survival
template'. If they are not treated they may continue to fire off strong emotional reactions
at inappropriate moments and thereby cause trouble for the rest of your life.
What is
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)?
Trauma, as a medical term, refers to any injury or wound violently inflicted on the body. Post
traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating condition that often follows a terrifying
physical, life threatening, or perceived as life-threatening, event. It causes the person who
survived it to have persistent, frightening thoughts and memories, or flashbacks, of the ordeal.
Persons with PTSD often feel chronically, emotionally numb. Once referred to as “shell shock” or
“battle fatigue”. About 25 per cent of people involved in major traumatising events go on to
develop long-term PTSD symptoms. This percentage rises if life-threatening incidents are almost
constantly repeated, as in front line fighting during sustained battles in war.
What kinds of event can cause it?
Violent attacks on the person. Rape. Sustained verbally aggressive attacks. Sudden illness events
like a heart attack. Traffic accidents. Industrial injuries. Witnessing sudden violent death, as in
train crashes, bombings and war-zone incidents. Panic attacks where the person thinks he is dying.
In fact, any event that triggers a strong fear (phobic) response can lead to PTSD. Children have
even developed PTSD symptoms from watching horror films on TV.
What is a phobia?
Any uncontrolled, persistent, irrational fear that is accompanied by a compelling desire to avoid
the object, activity, or situation that provokes the fear, is called a phobia. As far as the brain
is concerned it is no different from PTSD. The same neuronal pathways are
involved..
|
|