“The ORDINARY RESPONSE TO ATROCITIES is to banish them from
consciousness. Certain violations of the social compact are too terrible
to utter aloud: this is the meaning of the word unspeakable.
Atrocities,
however, refuse to be buried. Equally as powerful as the desire to deny
atrocities is the conviction that denial does not work. Folk wisdom is
filled with ghosts who refuse to rest in their graves until their
stories are told. Murder will out. Remembering and telling the truth
about terrible events are prerequisites both for the restoration of the
social order and for the healing of individual victims.
The
conflict between the will to deny horrible events and the will to
proclaim them aloud is the central dialectic of psychological trauma.
People who have survived atrocities often tell their stories in a highly
emotional, contradictory, and fragmented manner that undermines their
credibility and thereby serves the twin imperatives of truth-telling and
secrecy. 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.
The
psychological distress symptoms of traumatized people simultaneously
call attention to the existence of an unspeakable secret and deflect
attention from it. This is most apparent in the way traumatized people
alternate between feeling numb and reliving the event. The dialectic of
trauma 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 calm, precise language, call
"dissociation." It results in protean, dramatic, and often bizarre
symptoms of hysteria which Freud recognized a century ago as disguised
communications about sexual abuse in childhood. . . .”
―
Judith Lewis Herman,
Trauma and Recovery: The Aftermath of Violence - From Domestic Abuse to Political Terror
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