I don't want to single out people who have suffered my trauma and relate to them exclusively, but I wouldn't mind talking with someone who has been traumatized by a false alarm in nuclear forces. It's too abstract for most people. It's not that I want to compare the severity of impairments or experience, but most people have no idea what it's like to face the threat of impending omnicide. I've found that counselors are especially good at minimizing and denying that the nuclear threat is a real threat and I'm experiencing THREATS and not just triggers---a threat that threatens everyone.
It's difficult to find a framework in which to think about it. Coping with the traumatized self is pretty much the same. Coping with the reality of the continuing threat is something else though. There doesn't seem to be any place to put it. And activism is out of the question.
It's difficult to find a framework in which to think about it. Coping with the traumatized self is pretty much the same. Coping with the reality of the continuing threat is something else though. There doesn't seem to be any place to put it. And activism is out of the question.