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1.
Psychopathology ; 55(3-4): 190-200, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34515210

ABSTRACT

Reports of not feeling understood are frequent in testimonies of psychological trauma. I argue that these feelings are not a matter of a cognitive failure but rather an expression of the absence of a more pervasive background feeling of belonging. Contemporary accounts of we-intentionality promise but ultimately fall short in explaining this sense of belonging. Gerda Walther offers an alternative account of communal experiences. Her notion of "habitual unification" can explain the background feelings of belonging that are woven through the individual's everyday experience of being in a shared world. Having unified with another person, the world feels different. It is now experienced in light of a "we." This is not only the case in actual, singular person-to-person encounters. Unification with others becomes habitual: it retreats into the background of the individual's awareness, colouring their experience of the world. Thus sedimented, it forms a background sense of belonging to a shared world. Unification is enabled by experiencing others as being similar in a significant way, such as having the same experiences, values, or basic attitude: in Walther's words, as being a "human, who also…." This, I shall argue, is impacted through traumatizing experiences. Trauma survivors struggle to experience others as "humans, who also…," resulting in a failure of unification and thus impeding feelings of belonging. Trauma testimonies also suggest that actively seeking out recognition of similarities and shared aspects of experience may once again enable experiencing others as "humans, who also…," thus enabling unification and re-establishing a sense of belonging.


Subject(s)
Psychological Trauma , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic , Emotions , Female , Humans , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/psychology
2.
Med Health Care Philos ; 22(1): 141-145, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30069812

ABSTRACT

With my research, I wish to contribute to the discussion of post-traumatic psychopathologies from a phenomenological perspective. The main question I pursue is to what extent PTSD can be understood as an intersubjective psychopathology and which implications this view might have. In this paper, I argue that the mode of perception allowing for intersubjective experience is vulnerable to disruptions through traumatic events. I begin with a short elaboration on what intersubjectivity entails before proceeding to illustrate how it can be impaired. Then, I focus on the concept of empathy as a mode of perception: I propose that due to a disruption of the ability to empathize an individual suffering from PTSD may cease to experience the other as another subject that offers possibilities for interaction. The traumatized individual is thus unable to establish meaningful connections with others. I offer some implications this view might entail for thinking about trauma treatment.


Subject(s)
Empathy/ethics , Physician-Patient Relations/ethics , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic , Ethics, Medical , Humans , Psychological Theory , Social Support
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