[Early Draft, Please Do Not Quote]

Troubles-Related Delayed Stress Reactions:

Historical, Theoretical, and Cultural Contexts

 

By Charles R. Figley, Ph.D.

Florida State University

School of Social Work and the FSU Traumatology Institute[1]

 

__________________________________________________________

 

Abstract

 

This paper reviews briefly the state of knowledge about how traumatic experiences induced by national and internal violence are processed following periods of violence. Three theoretical models of trauma recovery are applied and discussed in an effort to predict the impact of domestic terrorism and violence. The paper identifies twenty-eight axioms that may be useful in understanding the current state post-Troubles distress in Northern Ireland. Implications of these axioms will be discussed further in the next paper.

 

_________________________________________________________________

 

 

Troubles-Related Delayed Stress Reactions:

Historical, Theoretical, and Cultural Contexts

 

Hopes for peace in Northern Ireland are still strong. As an outsider with very little awareness of the struggles during and following the Troubles here, I offer a perspective shaped by the available research literature. Without comprehensive research directed toward my topic today, I can only offer some observations drawn from my own experiences and my reading of the research on this and similar situations.

 

Marie Smyth, in her book, Half the Battle: The Cost of the Troubles (Understanding the impact of the Troubles on children and young people), the Cost of the Troubles (COTT) Study found that there have been 3,585 people killed in Northern Ireland between December 3, 1997 and 1969.

 

Among the dead 91% were male and three quarters were of the dead were under 40 years of age. The death rate among Catholics was 2.5 per 1,000 and among Protestants, 1.9 per 1,000. Responsibility for these deaths is largely due to paramilitary forces (59% by Republicans, 28% by Loyalists).

In addition to the COTT study there has been the highly influential We Will Remember Them, a Report of the Northern Ireland Victims Commission by its Commissioner, Sir Kenneth Bloomfield, KCB (April, 1998). Also there is the Health Service report of the Social Services Inspectorate: Living with the Trauma of the 'Troubles' (March, 1998). Both reports call for much more attention to the psychosocial and emotional needs of the traumatized including but not limited to those directly in harms way.

 

Special Characteristics of the Troubles

 

In reviewing the characteristics of the Troubles, it appears to include the following seven characteristics:

 

  1. Traumatic stressors are domestic (versus foreign). As a result, the reminders of the original trauma are constant and the treat of re-traumatization is real. On the other hand, there is greater opportunity for permanent desensitization once peace is firmly established, since reminders of the trauma will be supplanted by neutral or positive experiences. This is in contrast to war veterans returning to the scene of combat many years later and activating distress long forgotten.

 

  1. Threat is everywhere and continuing now (versus limited to only a certain area in the past). As a result, fear and caution is an appropriate survivor response. Assessment and treatment of the traumatized must not eliminate vigilance. Rather, the focus should be on proper stress management and differentiating real versus irrational threat.

 

  1. Threat is assumed to be associated with those who are different in terms of culture (i.e., religion) and not any obvious differences (e.g., skin color). As a result of this characteristic, there is a greater tendency toward prejudice, hatred, demonization, and marginalization. This is a well-researched phenomenon of stereotyping and selectivity in person perception, biases in attribution, social attraction, in/out group formation, and rules of conformity.

 

  1. The domestic strife extends for more than one generation (versus a single incident or quite recent situation). As a result of this characteristic, it will take generations to fully erase the lack of trust between groups, unless any program of national trauma reduction includes efforts to correct the cultural prejudices and mistrust. The same challenge faces Israel and Palestine, the Hindus and Muslims in India, the Hutus and the Tutsis in Rwanda, and elsewhere around the world. The differences here is that high level of sophistication of the people of Northern Ireland with such a rich history of hard work and creativity.

 

  1. Rituals and artifacts remind and reinforce inter-group hatred (rather than limited to the memories of some). They are quite evident to everyone, including those of us from abroad: The painted curbs, the walled in neighborhoods, the posters and murals communicate who is welcome and who is not. They function well in times of war. Just as the sticking points to the peace accord have been disarmament, so will abandonment of these rituals and artifacts to lasting peace and an end to the traumatic reactions of its people.

 

 

  1. Outside forces tend to modulate tensions (versus attending exclusively to internal stimulus). Former Senator Mitchell has always said he is an instrument to the wishes of the people who seek peace. Yet, third parties are vital here as they are everywhere people are divided internally. It will require outsiders in peace as well to help heal the wounds of the Troubles. Yet, there must be a commitment to healing that follows a commitment to being healed from the hatred and suspicions of the past.

 

 

  1. Peace efforts affect hope for reconciliation and signaling of letting go of our fear and defensiveness (versus no peace effort and hopelessness). Just as the Palestinian Authority is hopeful about peace in spite of the election of someone they so revile as Sharon for his hostile actions and attitudes toward them, it is their salvation. And after peace does finally arrive there as we all hope it has arrived here, hope is for reconciliation and with it resiliency at a personal and social level.

 

Axioms of Post-Troubles Recovery

 

Based on my familiarity with contexts like the Troubles, I would make the following observations:

 

  1. Peace leads to a period of transition from a state of readiness and numbness to a state of hope and freedom.
  2. This is the first post-traumatic period I have described as the second wave of trauma and a period of "relief and confusion" (see Figure 1).
  3. It is characterized by relief about increased safety but confused about all that had happened during the state of distress and trauma (e.g., the Troubles).
  4. In Wave I (crisis) there is a state of war. One is conditioned to prepare for the worst, to not feel hope, and to hunker down emotionally and socially.
  5. As hope surfaces that a state of war will end and a state of peace will begin, any set backs will discourage hope. There is a constant moving forward and backward among the initial waves.
  6. As sense of peace becomes a routine the reactions so appropriate in a state of war become superfluous and irrational. There is less and less return to the initial crisis period and great disparity among the survivors.
  7. Left unattended, these survivor-oriented reactions interfere with the quality of life.
  8. Gradually, the survivor enters the third wave of avoidance as a reprieve against constantly thinking about the Troubles and the past.
  9. Eventually, within months of the post-trauma period, many survivors move into the fourth wave, period of Reconsideration.
  10. This period includes the various symptoms of acute stress reactions and post-traumatic stress reactions that include, but are not limited to

ü      Re-experiencing the traumatic memories of past traumas

ü      Shutdown in emotional responsiveness in anticipation of or in the process of struggling with these memories,

ü      Increased arousal and startle reactions associated with the reminders

ü      Avoidance of reminders of the trauma in order to avoid the unwanted negative reactions;

ü      Impairment in social, occupational, and other functioning caused by the struggles with these memories and delayed reactions to them.

  1. People and families will vary in entering into the final wave, their willingness to recognize and do something about their trauma: The memories and associated symptoms. It is at this point years after peace is a reality here that the most traumatized people will need help to make the final journal into recovery.
  2. The purpose of attending to Troubles-related trauma is to finding meaning that improves the quality of life now and in the future.
  3. Figure 2 is a kind of road map for understanding the entire trauma induction, reduction, and learning process.
  4.  Experiencing traumatic stress reactions is analogous to being obsessed.  This is an alternative way of thinking about trauma apart from a more medical model that views traumatic stress reactions as an illness)[2].
  5. Being possessed means being held captive by our experiences until we are able to learn from the past; to be free of being possessed when we have found the meaning that enables us to thrive in our world not just survive our experiences.
  6.  Being traumatized is also analogous to being phobic[3] about certain things associated with the trauma. As a phobic organizes their lives around the limitations imposed by the phobia, so do the traumatized.
  7.  The cure for these difficulties is facing the fears, learning from them, and applying the lessons to the future.
  8.  Easier said than done.
  9.  Yet, the most difficult traumatic experiences are associated with death.
  10.  Consistent with the Figley & Rando Model of Loss Accommodations (Figley, 1997), those who have experienced a major loss have a far greater set of challenges.
  11. This can be illustrated in Figure 3.
  12. Appraisal of loss by the grieved is associated with either normal grieving (death was expected, timely), trauma processing apart from and in the absence of grieving, or processing both the trauma and the loss simultaneously (most typical).
  13. Each is associated with a non-specific arousal (symptoms) reduction process that is either professionally or non-professionally facilitated.
  14. Loss accommodation evolves over time through the re-working of new information about the beloved in the process of self-soothing and desensitization processes.
  15. Loss accommodation includes “six functions of the mourning process" (Rando, 1993). These Sextet ("R") Functions to recovery from trauma and loss are:

 

(1)  Recognize the loss

(2)  React to the separation

(3)  Re-experience the deceased and the relationship

(4)  Relinquish the old attachments to the deceased and the old assumptive world

(5)  Readjust to moving into the new world without forgetting the old

(6)  Reinvest in the new world

  1. Finally, another group that was exposed to the Troubles and who may not be able to fully separate from those memories, despite lasting peace are YOU.
  2. Northern Ireland counselors, lawyers, nurses, physicians, reporters, managers and policy makers must visit and revisit not only their own personal experiences of the Troubles, but also those of the survivors for whom they treat and work.
  3. The same factors of recover in the models noted earlier apply equally to the professionals who work with the traumatized.

 

Discussion of the Clinical and Policy Implications

 

What ARE the clinical and policy implications of the points I have made this morning? I hope to discuss them in my next paper, this afternoon. For now, let me make these observations based on my experiences in South Africa. Following the end of Apartheid in 1993, President Mandela established the Commission on Truth and Reconciliation. It was composed of a dozen respected academics, members of the religious community, politicians, and lawyers. The purpose of the Truth Commission was to bring reconciliation of all citizens through an airing of the truth by both the victors and the vanquished, by the perpetrators as well as the victims. Over a four-year period of time the Commission split into several subcommittees and groupings and held hearings all over the country. Every minute of these hearings were recorded. Most were shown nationally, some of the more notable sessions were shown live nationally. In the end they produced a massive document that fully described what happened during the thirty years of bloodshed, horror, and brutality. Hundreds of people testified. Some sought and were granted amnesty. Some sought and were granted compensation. By and large, however, the true benefits of the Commission could be seen in the signs of hope, reconciliation, and healing throughout the country. South Africa remains a poor country and still divided along racial and ethnic lines. Yet, few would have predicted how smoothly the post-Apartheid transition period has gone. It is remarkable that so few people have been killed out of revenge and racial hatred.

 

Though not perfect, South Africa provides a beam of hope to all people so divided for so long that a traumatized nation, with the right people and the right plans, could heal. As the words of Mandela suggest, in his Long Walk to Freedom (Mandela, 1994) talks about hope, mercy and generosity.

No one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin, or his background, or his religion. People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite. Even in the grimmest times in prison, when my comrades and I were pushed to our limits, I would see a glimmer of humanity in one of the guards, perhaps just for a second, but it was enough to reassure me and keep me going. Man's goodness is a flame that can be hidden but never extinguished (p. 622).

 

 

References

 

Dovido, J. F. and Gaertner, S. L. (Eds.) (1986). Prejudice, discrimination, and racism. NY: Academic Press.

 

Figley, C. R. (Ed.) (1997). The Traumatology of grieving. Philadelphia: Taylor & Francis.

 

Kleber, R. J., Figley, C. R., and Gersons, B. P. R. (Eds) (1995). Beyond trauma: Cultural and societal dynamics. NY: Plenum Press.

 

Mandela, N. (1994). Long walk to freedom. Boston: Little, Brown & Company.

Rando, T. (1993).

Smyth, M. (1997).  Mapping Troubles-Related Deaths in Northern Ireland, 1969-1998.



Figure 1: Waves of Recovery Model

Figure 2 Trauma Processing Model



Figure 3: Loss Accommodations Model



[1] Invited keynote address at a conference, Fragile People in Fragile Peace:

Exploring Why People Are Coming Forward for Help Many Years After Traumatic Incidents and Impact of an Unstable Peace Process on Those Affected by Conflict, Belfast, Northern Ireland, March 13, 2001

[2] Obsession is a persistent disturbing preoccupation with an often unreasonable idea or feeling.

[3] Phobia is an exaggerated and irrational fear of a particular object or class of objects