Laurie Halse Anderson depicts ,sexual violence can have psychological, emotional, and mental effects on a victim. Damage that has been placed can take years of recovering and healing. Situations like these aren’t ones you forget about the next day or in a week. Sexual assault scars have long lasting effects. Someone has to wake up everyday knowing that this has happened to them.…
The first way in which collective trauma is recognized is through the loss of bonds. Due to the tragedy of the flood, the people of Buffalo Creek were stripped of their sense of connection to their community. They had become accustomed to living and working for a society, and when left on their own they struggled to do tasks, such as decision-making. Since the survivors lost their support through the loss of community, they soon began to isolate themselves and become lonely. Collective trauma is recognized because the survivors of Buffalo Creek were no longer able to care and comfort each other. The trauma of the flood affected the entire community and stripped the survivors of the bonds they had shared as a community. The loss of ties is…
Apparently, this type of abuse causes more psychological pain than physical infringements. The physical contact is usually short-lived, and the victim takes a short period to recover; however, the ordeal leaves the affected with chronic psychological discomforts. Jacobs endured the psychological abuses in the hands of her master and could not question the injustices. She suffered in silence and had to perform the assigned chores without showing her emotional stress during sexual harassment occurrences (Garfield and Zafar 77). Essentially, psychological abuse is a catalyst for the internal pain that the other people cannot feel and understand. In most cases, the victims themselves must disclose their feelings to obtain external…
Being raped is a great ordeal. Whether it be by the same or opposite sex. An individual I once knew was a victim of a rape crime. Because of this incident the slightest bit of uncomfortable sensation would cause her to shut down. Until this very day, she always expects fowl intentions of every man who approaches her. Whether it be just a man asking for directions, she’ll drop her things and scream rape at the top of her lungs and dash to a “safe haven.” Even in the event when she has become comfortable with an individual, her deepest most inner thought assumes them to have ulterior motives. The inclement of being molested has to linger in the back of your mind for as long as you live. What if the individual was to one day find true love? She may be reluctant to open up to and trust her spouse. The exploration of the intimate sector of their relationship may be postponed for who knows how long. Some victims end up pregnant by their attacker. That can be cause a copious amount of anguish in one’s lifetime. To have to raise and nurture the baby of the man who violated you. Every time you look in to that child’s face you can see your attacker. Or, maybe the individual lost their virginity to their rapist. That can also mess up a person’s head, their first sex encounter being so agonizing. That could possibly induce a lifetime of celibacy. Can you imagine being deflowered by force, and enduring such soul crippling pain and embarrassment the whole way through and even after? Let that be…
“Prominent studies of child abuse and maltreatment point to several unfortunate outcomes for victims as they grow up. Adolescents who were victims of sexual assault are three times more likely to suffer from posttraumatic stress disorder, be abused again be dependent on drugs and alcohol, or commit delinquent acts compared to adolescents who were not victimized, according to a nationally representative sample.…
As Gladwell argues why society needs people who have endured a traumatic experience, “For every remote miss who becomes stronger, there are countless near misses who are crushed by what they have been through”. Not everyone will have the same outcome from the disadvantage they went through at an early age. For instance, John Wayne Gacy, he grew up with an abusive and alcoholic father. After years of physical abuse and a head injury at the age of 11, Gacy questioned his sexuality. He entertained the idea to be sexually active with a young man he lured into his home.…
There is significant stress associated with the use of deadly force - having to kill another human being (Volpe & Anderson, 1998). No officer is ever emotionally ready to kill another human being. Many officers say that the first thing that came to mind after they fired the fatal bullet was "Thou shall not kill." All of these stressors make police work different from other professions. Of course, the on-going, day-to-day exposure to murders, assaults, rapes, child abuse, domestic violence and "man's inhumanity to man" intensifies this stress-related burden. Vicarious Trauma is a diagnostic term used to depict the cluster of symptoms many police officers suffer as a direct result of the job of policing. In diagnosing trauma-related disorders…
Although Kanel (2015) described developmental crises as normal transitional phases, changing can occur when people respond abnormally (p.10). In chapter 7(PTSD, Trauma, and Community Disasters) mentioned how natural (Landslides, floods, fires, earthquakes, hurricane, and storm), community, and manmade (bombing, gun violence, and shooting) disasters contribute to development of PTSD and trauma. Natural disasters are the causes of community disaster. There are some other situations which can lead to PTSD, such as being in a war, physical, and sexual assault. Everyone has experienced stressful events in their lives. When people cannot cope with the stresses, which usually has a sudden onset; they will view their stresses as a traumatic event.…
Psychological trauma can have an everlasting effect on a person’s life. According to Armsworth and Holaday (1993), Psychological trauma occurs when an individual is exposed to an overwhelming event that renders him or her helpless in the face of intolerable danger, anxiety, and instinctual arousal (p. 49). Anyone no matter what age, can experience a traumatic event. However, children are the ones mostly affected by a traumatic event. Trauma regardless if it is sexual abuse, physical abuse, or psychological abuse, affects a person’s life. The abuse will alter the way a person thinks, feels, and their ability to cope with the abuse. The human body responds to trauma in different ways. The traumatic experience or experiences can…
Jennifer was administered assessments to understand the areas in which her reported trauma and previous diagnoses may be affecting her life. The assessments have aided in the clinician’s background knowledge to assist in the client’s therapeutic growth. Jennifer has completed a genogram, a timeline activity, and the PTSD Check List for the DSM-5. All of the instructions for these assessments, formal and informal, were explained to the client as well as the reasons for administering them.…
Every year thousands of children are abused. This abuse can be physical, emotional or sexual in nature. All forms of abuse are wrong, all forms of abuse are harmful, but childhood sexual abuse can cause major emotional and physical harm in our adolescents. Before we can properly treat these victims we must first have a solid grasp of how and why sexual abuse occurs, the typical effects of the abuse and how the abuse changes the child's stages of development.…
Cognitive function is impacted in children who have experienced traumatic events. Traumatic events or stress may occur when children are unexpected faced with a “danger”. The trauma may be within the family, or outside of the family. However, traumatic situations tend to catch children off-guard and occur unexpectedly (Practice Notes, 2012).…
Children who witness or hear their mother being abused are potentially at risk of becoming traumatized by the events (Pocock & Cram, 2011). Many of these children experience emotional, physical and behavioral issues. For example, they may be fearful, depressed or sad. Some of the children even act out, experience anxiety or withdraw from those around them. Physical symptoms of witnessing/hearing abuse include headaches, bed wetting, stomach aches and possibly the inability to concentrate (Pocock & Cram, 2011). It is apparent from the film that the Hughes children experienced fear, sadness, and possible…
There has been an enormous amount of research, going back almost thirty years, about the relationship between childhood trauma, and juvenile delinquency. Many researchers cannot say that there is a direct link between the two, but after much research, researchers have found that childhood trauma can perhaps be a predictor for juveniles who later in life commit crimes. Trauma is defined as, “a disordered psychic or behavioral state resulting from severe mental or emotional stress or physical injury,” because the definition is broad and can range from a variety of different events, though the focus for this paper will be on neglect trauma in juveniles (Trauma, 2016). Neglect “according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is, the…
Childhood trauma effects children worldwide in different ways in regards of their mental status, attention, and memory. There have been astounding amount of evidence in regards of the effects of childhood trauma in regards to impairment in cognition. Children who experience sexual, physical, or psychological abuse research have indicated the child will demonstrate psychiatric symptoms, neurodevelopment deficiencies and physical health consequences (Szanto et al, ). According to Hovens () childhood trauma will put a child at higher risk for depression and anxiety.…