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Questions:
8.
According to the author, why is survivor guilt no longer one of the formal criteria for diagnosing PTSD?
9.
According to Matsakis, what are the two most likely reactions of a combat veteran to one of their triggers?
10.
What does Hybels-Steer consider to be an upside of intrusions?
11.
According to Schiraldi, what are the five fears that interfere with intimacy in PTSD survivors?
12.
According to Porterfield, what is one way that children cope with trauma that is significantly different from adult coping mechanisms?
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Answers:
A. The intrusion can become an opportunity to think about the trauma in order to understand it and its meaning, to put it in perspective, and to resolve it by putting it into place.
B. A combat veteran may respond with anger and aggression, or he may respond with a shutdown of emotion or with attempts to remove himself physically or distance himself emotionally from the trigger.
C. Instead of experiencing denial, children often consciously and deliberately try to rid their minds of all thoughts of the traumatic incident and of the feelings that arise when they have these thoughts.
D. Although prevalent and devastating among trauma survivors, survival guilt was not seen as being essential to the numbing reexperiencing cycle of PTSD.
E. Loss of control, abandonment, rejection, attack, and one’s own tendency to hurt others. |
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