joeylittle
Sponsor
Bolded for emphasis. That's it, in a sentence.The diagnostic criteria actually do not define criterion A trauma as any situation where one fears for their lives or feels xyz way at the time of the event for good cause. It’s not based on the at-the-time feelings about an event, but the event itself.
Our understanding of the physical components of the acute stress response - the adrenal overactivity, cortisol flooding, amygdala hyperarousal - is it's own kind of physical injury, even if externally the body remains unharmed. Internally, there's been a profound chain reaction.For example if someone was assaulted without actual physical consequences (threat of serious injury, possibly death or sexual violence?) and they don't realize the "what could've been" (subconscious denial?), could PTSD still develop from the potential of such threat?
It's an interesting hypothetical - I think that in the moment of those cascading physiological events, it would be difficult for the person to be completely unaware of that physiological response. Probably not impossible, though.
And certainly, we're all very familiar with the concepts of how the mind then attempts to right itself, and hyper-normalizing is part of that. Denial, diminishment, compartmentalization...I've read some compelling studies suggesting PTSD is instigated in that aftermath phase of the acute stress response, and that those avoidance/denial ways of coping - pushing the experience down and away, mentally - are part of how PTSD gets "made". Folks going down that research alley are connected to those who are working on a chemical sort of antidote to PTSD formation - a drug meant to extinguish the fear response - as an early-intervention tool to help mitigate the aftereffects of trauma.
Or in less words - you got someone who was just in a serious auto accident? Administer the anti-PTSD med as a way of blocking the development of the long-lasting, problematic neurological effects that make up this disorder.