Soldiers experienced this after prolonged bombardment. Symptoms include shaking and convolution, crying, mental breakdowns, and nightmares. As Remarque describes it in his book, “The first recruit seems actually to have gone insane. He butts his head against the wall like a goat,” (Remarque 111). The soldier had gone mad from the constant bombardment and started to have a mental breakdown; eventually it gets to the point where they have to strap him down to prevent him from injuring himself or anyone else. Shell shock was a terrible condition to have, especially during the war. Generals would blow it off as cowardness when it was (and is) a very real, horrible mental illness. Back then, there was no cure for it, whereas now we have different medicines and therapies to treat
Soldiers experienced this after prolonged bombardment. Symptoms include shaking and convolution, crying, mental breakdowns, and nightmares. As Remarque describes it in his book, “The first recruit seems actually to have gone insane. He butts his head against the wall like a goat,” (Remarque 111). The soldier had gone mad from the constant bombardment and started to have a mental breakdown; eventually it gets to the point where they have to strap him down to prevent him from injuring himself or anyone else. Shell shock was a terrible condition to have, especially during the war. Generals would blow it off as cowardness when it was (and is) a very real, horrible mental illness. Back then, there was no cure for it, whereas now we have different medicines and therapies to treat