The Hidden Emotional Cost of War | Nancy Sherman | Big Think

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The Hidden Emotional Cost of War
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Maddening boredom. Utter numbness. Comradeship so intense that it threatens family ties. War’s worst psychological effects can be the ones you’d never expect.
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Nancy Sherman:

Nancy Sherman is a Distinguished University Professor in the Philosophy Department of Georgetown University. She received her BA from Bryn Mawr College, her PhD from Harvard, and her MLitt from the University of Edinburgh. From 1997 to 1999 Sherman served as the first Distinguished Chair in Ethics at the US Naval Academy. She has taught at Yale, Johns Hopkins, and the University of Maryland, and has trained in psychoanalysis at the Washington Psychoanalytic Institute. Since 1995 she has consulted for the U.S. Armed Forces on issues of ethics, resilience, and post-traumatic stress, lecturing at the Uniformed Services University, Walter Reed Army Hospital, the National Defense University, and elsewhere. In October 2005, Sherman visited Guantanamo Bay Detention Center as part of an independent observer team, assessing the medical and mental health care of detainees. She has served on the Board of Directors for the Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs.
Sherman's books include "Aristotle's Ethics: Critical Essays on the Classics," "Stoic Warriors: The Ancient Philosophy Behind the Military Mind," and her most recent, "The Untold War: Inside the Hearts, Minds, and Souls of Our Soldiers," published by W. W. Norton & Company in 2010.
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TRANSCRIPT:

Question: What are thernmajor short-term and long-term traumas of war?

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Nancy Sherman: Sometimes the rnsymptoms don’t show up right away, and there’s a kind ofrnnatural healing that can go on just like leaving a war zone and rnsometimes it’srnnot good to talk to people, we think now, right afterward, but rather tornalmost let the wound heal a little bit on its own. Butrn some of the symptoms that we’re aware of and they willrnbe a hyper vigilance, being in a hyper-sensory mode; so walking the rnperimeter,rnlistening with acuteness the way you would in a battle area, or it mightrn alsornbe flashbacks, inability to sleep. rnOne of my soldiers, Rob Kissler, just found himself in a bar withrn hisrnarms around someone’s neck. Hernstrangled this guy and then he realized that he had heard something and rnthoughtrnhe was in fighter mode, and had just slipped into fighter modernimperceptibly. And that was aboutrna year after battle. He was arnlong-term patient at Walter Reed and being treated, by the way, for rnphysicalrninjuries, a loss of an arm use,rna titanium arm replacement and a leg replacement.

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Other times it could also just be this numbing thatrn you’vernhad to—you’re exposed to the sort of stresses that are so superhuman rnthat yournhave to protect yourself by numbing, and you continue to dissociaternafterward. So those are some ofrnthe physical—the physiological effects that we are familiar with.

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Also feeling that life is darned boring at home rnwhen you’vernbeen so ramped up and revved up and hepped up, and it’s hard to find thern samernkind of thrill and adventure, even though it’s filled with danger.
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