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    John Lewis

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    John Lewis is a powerful biography that chronicles the life and legacy of the civil rights icon and U.S. Congressman, John Lewis. From his early activism during the 1960s, including leading the historic march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, to his decades of service in Congress, the book highlights Lewis's unwavering commitment to justice, equality, and nonviolent resistance. It offers an inspiring account of his profound impact on American history and his enduring fight for civil rights.

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    Cover of John Lewis
    Biography

    John Lewis

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    John Lewis is a powerful biography that chronicles the life and legacy of the civil rights icon and U.S. Congressman, John Lewis. From his early activism during the 1960s, including leading the historic march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, to his decades of service in Congress, the book highlights Lewis's unwavering commitment to justice, equality, and nonviolent resistance. It offers an inspiring account of his profound impact on American history and his enduring fight for civil rights.

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    Cover of John Lewis
    Biography

    John Lewis

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    John Lewis is a powerful biography that chronicles the life and legacy of the civil rights icon and U.S. Congressman, John Lewis. From his early activism during the 1960s, including leading the historic march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, to his decades of service in Congress, the book highlights Lewis's unwavering commitment to justice, equality, and nonviolent resistance. It offers an inspiring account of his profound impact on American history and his enduring fight for civil rights.

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    John Lewis

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    John Lewis is a powerful biography that chronicles the life and legacy of the civil rights icon and U.S. Congressman, John Lewis. From his early activism during the 1960s, including leading the historic march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, to his decades of service in Congress, the book highlights Lewis's unwavering commitment to justice, equality, and nonviolent resistance. It offers an inspiring account of his profound impact on American history and his enduring fight for civil rights.

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    Biography

    John Lewis

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    John Lewis is a powerful biography that chronicles the life and legacy of the civil rights icon and U.S. Congressman, John Lewis. From his early activism during the 1960s, including leading the historic march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, to his decades of service in Congress, the book highlights Lewis's unwavering commitment to justice, equality, and nonviolent resistance. It offers an inspiring account of his profound impact on American history and his enduring fight for civil rights.

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    INDEX
    The page num­bers in this index refer to the print­ed ver­sion of this book. To find the cor­re­spond­ing
    loca­tions in the text of this dig­i­tal ver­sion, please use the “search” func­tion on your e‑reader. Note
    that not all terms may be search­able.
    Page num­bers in ital­ics refer to illus­tra­tions.
    aban­don­ment, 140, 141, 150, 179, 301, 304, 327, 340, 350
    Abil­i­fy, 37, 101, 226
    ACE (Adverse Child­hood Expe­ri­ences) study, 85, 144–48, 156, 347, 350–51
    acetyl­choline, 266
    acu­pres­sure, 264–65, 410n–11n
    acupunc­ture, 231, 410n–11n
    addic­tion, see sub­stance abuse
    addic­tive behav­iors, 288–89
    see also spe­cif­ic behav­iors
    ADHD (atten­tion deficit hyper­ac­tiv­i­ty dis­or­der), 107, 136, 150, 310, 322
    ado­les­cent behav­ior prob­lems, child-care­giv­er rela­tion­ship as pre­dic­tor of, 160–61
    adren­a­line, 46, 61, 77, 176, 225
    Aeschy­lus, 332
    Afghanistan War:
    deaths in, 348
    vet­er­ans of, 222–23, 229, 332
    agency, sense of, 95–98, 331, 355
    as lack­ing in child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors, 113
    Ainsworth, Mary, 115
    Ajax (Sopho­cles), 332
    alco­holism, 146
    alex­ithymia, 98–99, 247, 272–73, 291, 319
    All Qui­et on the West­ern Front (Remar­que), 171, 186
    alpha-theta train­ing, 321, 326
    alpha waves, 314–15, 321, 326, 417n
    Amer­i­can Acad­e­my of Pedi­atrics, 348
    Amer­i­can Col­lege of Neu­ropsy­chophar­ma­col­o­gy (ACNP), 29, 33
    Amer­i­can Coun­sel­ing Asso­ci­a­tion, 165, 393n
    Amer­i­can Jour­nal of Psy­chi­a­try, 27, 140, 164
    Amer­i­can Psy­chi­atric Asso­ci­a­tion (APA):
    devel­op­men­tal trau­ma dis­or­der diag­no­sis reject­ed by, 149, 158–59, 166
    PTSD rec­og­nized by, 19
    see also Diag­nos­tic and Sta­tis­ti­cal Man­u­al of Men­tal Dis­or­ders (DSM)
    Amer­i­can Psy­cho­log­i­cal Asso­ci­a­tion, 165, 393n
    amne­sia, 179, 183
    dis­so­cia­tive, 190
    see also repressed mem­o­ry
    amyg­dala, 33, 35, 42, 68–69, 301
    bal­ance between MPFC and, 62–64
    fight/flight response and, 60–61, 61, 247, 265, 408n
    mind­ful­ness and, 209–10
    Anda, Robert, 144, 148
    androstene­dione, 163
    anes­the­sia aware­ness, 196–99
    Angell, Mar­cia, 374n–75n
    Angelou, Maya, 356
    ani­mals, in trau­ma ther­a­py, 80, 150–51, 213
    anorex­ia ner­vosa, 98–99
    ante­ri­or cin­gu­late, 91, 91, 254, 376n, 387n
    Antho­ny (trau­ma sur­vivor), 150
    anti­con­vul­sant drugs, 225
    anti­de­pres­sants, 35, 37, 136, 146, 225
    see also spe­cif­ic drugs
    antipsy­chot­ic drugs, 27–29, 101, 136, 224, 225–27
    chil­dren and, 37–38, 226
    PTSD and, 226–27
    see also spe­cif­ic drugs
    anx­i­ety, 150
    ARC (attach­ment, self-reg­u­la­tion, com­pe­ten­cy) mod­el, 401n
    Archimedes, 92
    arousal, 56, 107, 153, 165
    flash­backs and, 42–43, 196–97
    in infants, 84, 113, 121, 161
    mem­o­ry and, 175–76
    neu­ro­feed­back and, 326
    PTSD and, 157, 326
    reg­u­la­tion of, 77–79, 113, 160, 161, 205–8
    sex­u­al, 94, 108
    SNS and, 77
    sooth­ing and, 113
    yoga and, 270
    see also threat, hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to
    art, trau­ma recov­ery and, 242–43
    asanas, 270, 272
    Assault, The (film), 375
    ath­let­ics, 349, 355
    Ati­van, 225
    attach­ment, 109–11, 113, 128–29, 210, 213, 318, 401n
    anx­ious (ambiva­lent), 116, 117
    avoidant, 116, 117
    as basic instinct, 115
    ongo­ing need for, 114–15
    resilience and, 161
    in rhe­sus mon­keys, 153–54
    secure, 115–16, 117, 154–55
    attach­ment, dis­or­ga­nized, 117, 166, 381n
    long-term effects of, 119–21
    psy­chi­atric and phys­i­o­log­i­cal prob­lems from, 118
    socioe­co­nom­ic stress and, 117–18
    trau­ma and, 118–19
    trau­ma­tized par­ents as con­trib­u­tors to, 118
    attach­ment dis­or­der, 282
    atten­tion deficit dis­or­der (ADD), 151
    atten­tion deficit hyper­ac­tiv­i­ty dis­or­der (ADHD), 107, 136, 150
    attrac­tors, 32
    attune­ment, emo­tion­al, 111–14, 117, 118, 122, 161, 213, 215, 354
    lack of, dis­so­ci­a­tion and, 121–22
    in rela­tion­ships, 210
    Auden, W. H., 125
    Auer­hahn, Nanette C., 372n
    Auschwitz con­cen­tra­tion camp, 195
    auto­bi­o­graph­i­cal self, 236
    autoim­mune dis­ease, 291–92
    Automa­tisme psy­chologique, L’ (Janet), 178
    auto­nom­ic ner­vous sys­tem (ANS), 60, 63–64, 77, 80, 225, 266–67
    bal­ance (pro­pri­o­cep­tive) sys­tem, 247
    Bal­ti­more, Md., home-vis­i­ta­tion pro­gram in, 167
    basal gan­glia, 254
    Bas­ti­aans, Jan, 223
    Beebe, Beat­rice, 109, 118
    Beech­er, Hen­ry K., 32–33
    befriend­ing one’s body, 96, 100–101, 206–19, 206, 273, 274–75, 354
    ben­zo­di­azepines, 225, 227
    Berg­er, Hans, 310
    beta waves, 314, 322, 417n
    binge eat­ing, 120
    Bion, Wil­fred, 109
    bipo­lar dis­or­der, 136, 151, 226
    Blaustein, Mar­garet, 351, 401n
    Bleuler, Eugen, 24–25
    blood pres­sure, 46, 61, 66
    body:
    befriend­ing of, 96, 100–101, 206–19, 206, 273, 274–75, 354
    islands of safe­ty in, 245, 275
    self-aware­ness of, 87–102, 206, 206, 208–9, 236, 237–38, 247, 382n
    body-brain con­nec­tions, 74–86, 381n
    body func­tions, brain stem reg­u­la­tion of, 56, 94–95, 266
    body ther­a­pies, 3, 26, 72, 86, 89, 207–8, 215–17, 228–29, 245
    see also spe­cif­ic ther­a­pies
    bor­der­line per­son­al­i­ty dis­or­der (BPD), child­hood trau­ma and, 138–41
    Bowl­by, John, 109–11, 114, 115, 121, 140–41, 232
    brain:
    bod­i­ly needs and, 55
    cog­ni­tive, see ratio­nal brain
    default state net­work (DSN) in, 90
    elec­tro­phys­i­ol­o­gy of, 310–12, 328–29
    left vs. right sides of, 44–45, 298
    mid­line (“Mohawk”) struc­tures of, 90–91, 91, 376n
    old, see emo­tion­al brain
    sen­so­ry infor­ma­tion orga­nized by, 55, 60
    sur­vival as basic job of, 55, 94
    trau­ma and changes to, 2–3, 21, 59, 347
    tri­une mod­el of, 59, 64
    warn­ing sys­tems in, 55
    see also spe­cif­ic regions
    brain scans, 21
    of PTSD patients, 102, 347, 408n
    of trau­ma sur­vivors, 39–47, 42, 66, 68–70, 68, 71–72, 72, 82, 99–100, 319
    brain stem (rep­til­ian brain), 55–56, 59, 60, 63, 176
    basic body func­tions reg­u­lat­ed by, 56, 94–95, 266
    freeze response gen­er­at­ed by, 83
    self-aware­ness and, 93–94
    see also emo­tion­al brain
    brain waves, 321
    alpha, 315, 321, 326, 417n
    beta, 314, 322, 417n
    com­bat and, 324
    delta, 320
    dream­ing and, 321
    theta, 321, 326, 417n
    of trau­ma sur­vivors, 311–12, 311, 320
    breath­ing:
    ANS reg­u­la­tion through, 64
    in fight/flight response, 61
    HRV and, 267
    ther­a­peu­tic, 72, 131, 207, 208, 245, 268–69
    in yoga (pranaya­ma), 86, 270
    Breuer, Josef, 181–82, 194, 231, 246
    British Gen­er­al Staff, shell-shock diag­no­sis reject­ed by, 185
    British Psy­cho­log­i­cal Soci­ety, 165
    Broca’s area, 43, 44, 45, 408n
    Brodmann’s area 19, 44
    Buchen­wald con­cen­tra­tion camp, 43
    bulim­ia, 34, 98–99, 286, 287
    calm­ing and relax­ation tech­niques, 131, 203–4
    see also breath­ing; mind­ful­ness; yoga
    can­cer, 267
    Can­non, Katie, 184
    care­givers:
    attune­ment of infants and, 111–13, 117, 118
    children’s loy­al­ty to, 133, 386n
    children’s rela­tion­ships with, as pre­dic­tor of ado­les­cent behav­ior, 160–61
    infants’ bonds with, 109–11, 113, 128–29
    inse­cure attach­ments with, 115–16
    as source of children’s dis­tress, 116–17
    trau­ma­tized, and dis­or­ga­nized attach­ment in chil­dren, 118
    cata­to­nia, 23
    Catholic Church, pedophile scan­dals in, 171–75, 183, 190, 191
    CBT, see cog­ni­tive behav­ioral ther­a­py (CBT)
    CD45 cells, 127
    Celexa, 35, 254
    Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion (CDC), 1, 144
    Chang, C.-C., 22
    Char­cot, Jean-Mar­tin, 177–78, 178, 182, 184
    Chem­tob, Claude, 119
    child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors, 123–35, 351
    agency, sense of, as lack­ing in, 113
    arousal in, 161
    attach­ment cop­ing styles in, 114–20
    atten­tion and con­cen­tra­tion prob­lems in, 158, 166, 245–46, 328
    bor­der­line per­son­al­i­ty dis­or­der and, 138–41
    dis­or­ga­nized attach­ment in, 118–19, 166
    dys­reg­u­la­tion in, 158, 161, 166
    high-risk behav­ior in, 120, 134, 147
    home-vis­i­ta­tion pro­gram for, 167
    hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to threat in, 158, 161, 310, 328
    increased risk of rape and domes­tic abuse in, 85, 146–47
    inhi­bi­tion of curios­i­ty in, 141, 350
    inter­nal world maps of, 127–30
    loy­al­ty to care­givers of, 133
    mis­di­ag­no­sis of, 136–48, 150, 151, 157, 226, 282
    numb­ing in, 279
    rage in, 304
    rela­tion­ship dif­fi­cul­ties of, 158
    safe­ty, sense of, as lack­ing in, 141, 213, 301, 317
    school prob­lems of, 146, 158, 161
    schools as resources for, 351–56
    self-harm­ing in, 141, 158
    self-hatred in, 158, 279
    sense of com­pe­tence lack­ing in, 166, 350
    social engage­ment and, 161
    social sup­port for, 167–68, 350
    sub­stance abuse by, 146, 151
    sui­ci­dal behav­ior in, 141, 146
    tem­po­ral lobe abnor­mal­i­ties in, 416n
    trust as dif­fi­cult for, 141, 158, 340
    see also devel­op­men­tal trau­ma dis­or­der (DTS)
    child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors, of emo­tion­al abuse and neglect:
    aban­don­ment of, 141, 304, 327, 340
    deper­son­al­iza­tion in, 72
    numb­ing in, 87–89
    preva­lence of, 20–21
    psy­chother­a­py of, 296–97
    Sandy as, 97
    self-harm­ing in, 87, 88
    self-respect lack­ing in, 304
    sense of safe­ty lack­ing in, 296–97
    sub­mis­sive­ness in, 97, 218
    sub­stance abuse by, 327
    sui­ci­dal behav­ior in, 88, 290
    trust as dif­fi­cult for, 150
    child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors, of sex­u­al abuse and fam­i­ly vio­lence:
    dis­so­ci­a­tion in, 132–33, 162, 172, 265, 316, 329
    flash­backs of, 20, 131, 135, 172, 173
    “hal­lu­ci­na­tions” in, 25
    help­less­ness of, 131, 133–34, 211, 265, 289–90
    hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to threat in, 17, 143
    of incest, see incest sur­vivors
    inco­her­ent sense of self in, 166
    inti­ma­cy as dif­fi­cult for, 143
    iso­la­tion of, 131
    legal cas­es involv­ing, 174–75, 183, 190
    Lisa as, 316–18, 325, 329
    loy­al­ty to care­givers of, 386n
    Mag­gie as, 250–51
    Maria as, 300–304
    Mar­i­lyn as, 123–35, 289
    Mary as, 130, 277–78
    night­mares of, 20, 134–35
    numb­ing in, 124, 265–66
    obe­si­ty in, 144, 147, 266
    preva­lence of, 1, 11, 20–21
    pub­lic acknowl­edg­ment of, 189
    rage in, 285
    repressed mem­o­ries in, 190
    seizures in, 172, 174
    self-blame in, 131
    self-deceit in, 2, 23–24
    self-harm­ing in, 20, 25, 141, 172, 264, 316, 317
    self-hatred in, 134, 143
    shame in, 13–14, 67, 132, 174
    sub­stance abuse by, 327
    sui­ci­dal behav­ior in, 141, 147, 150–51, 286, 287, 316
    TAT test and, 106–7
    trust as dif­fi­cult for, 134
    chil­dren:
    abuse of, as most cost­ly pub­lic health issue, 148, 149–50
    antipsy­chot­ic drugs pre­scribed to, 37–38, 226
    attach­ment in, see attach­ment
    care­givers’ rela­tion­ships with, as pre­dic­tor of ado­les­cent behav­ior, 160–61
    inter­nal world maps of, 109, 127, 129
    loy­al­ty to care­givers of, 133
    see also infants
    Children’s Clin­ic (MMHC), 105–9, 111, 121
    Child Sex­u­al Abuse Accom­mo­da­tion Syn­drome, The (Sum­mit), 131, 136
    Chi­na, tra­di­tion­al med­i­cine in, 207
    chlor­pro­mazine (Tho­razine), 22–23
    chron­ic fatigue syn­drome, 330
    cloni­dine, 225
    Clozaril, 28
    cog­ni­tive behav­ioral ther­a­py (CBT), 182, 230–31, 246, 292
    in treat­ment of PTSD, 194, 220–21
    Cole­man, Kevin, 336, 342, 344
    col­lapse, see freeze response (immo­bi­liza­tion)
    com­bat:
    brain waves and, 324
    see also PTSD (post­trau­mat­ic stress dis­or­der), of com­bat vet­er­ans
    com­mu­ni­ty, men­tal health and, 38, 213–14, 244, 331–34, 355
    Com­mu­ni­ty Men­tal Health Act (1963), 373n
    com­pe­tence, sense of, 166, 341
    Com­pre­hen­sive Text­book of Psy­chi­a­try (Freed­man and Kaplan), 20, 188–89
    con­duct dis­or­der, 282, 392n
    con­flict:
    as cen­tral to the­ater, 335
    trau­ma sur­vivors’ fear of, 335
    con­scious­ness, see self
    Cope, Stephen, 123, 230, 263, 272
    cor­ti­cal net­works, local, 417n
    cor­ti­sol, 30, 61, 154, 162, 223
    Count­way Library of Med­i­cine, 11, 24
    cre­ativ­i­ty, see imag­i­na­tion
    Cum­mings, Adam, 155
    cum­mings, e. e., 122
    Cym­bal­ta, 35, 37
    Dalai Lama, 79
    Dama­sio, Anto­nio, 93, 94–95, 382n
    dance:
    in trau­ma recov­ery, 242–43, 355
    see also rhyth­mic move­ment
    Dar­win, Charles, 74–76, 75, 77
    Daubert hear­ings, 174–75
    Dece­ty, Jean, 222
    default state net­work (DSN), 90
    Defense Depart­ment, U.S., 156, 224, 226–27, 332
    Phar­ma­coeco­nom­ic Cen­ter of, 224
    defense mech­a­nisms, sus­pen­sion of, in inti­mate rela­tion­ships, 84–85
    Del­bo, Char­lotte, 195
    delta waves, 320
    Demen­tia Prae­cox (Bleuler), 24–25
    denial, 46, 291
    Denial: A Mem­oir (Stern), 7
    deper­son­al­iza­tion, 71–73, 71, 99–100, 132–33, 286, 386n, 401n
    depres­sion, 136, 150, 162, 225
    chem­istry of, 26, 29
    dere­al­iza­tion, 401n
    desen­si­ti­za­tion ther­a­pies, 46–47, 73, 220, 222–23
    devel­op­men­tal psy­chopathol­o­gy, 2
    devel­op­men­tal trau­ma dis­or­der (DTS; pro­posed), 166–68
    APA’s rejec­tion of, 149, 158–59, 166
    cri­te­ria for, 158, 359–62
    see also child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors
    Dewey, Kip­py, 337
    diag­no­sis, def­i­n­i­tion of, 137–38
    diag­no­sis, psy­chi­atric, child­hood trau­ma as mis­un­der­stood in, 136–48
    Diag­nos­tic and Sta­tis­ti­cal Man­u­al of Men­tal Dis­or­ders (DSM), 29, 137
    arbi­trari­ness of, 323
    child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors ignored by, 143
    DSM-III, 29, 137, 142, 156, 190
    DSM-IV, 143
    DSM‑5, 159, 164–66, 329, 393n
    reli­a­bil­i­ty issues in, 164–65
    social cau­sa­tion ignored in, 165
    dialec­ti­cal behav­ior ther­a­py (DBT), 262, 270
    Dia­mond, Adele, 418n
    dis­rup­tive mood dys­reg­u­la­tion dis­or­der, 157, 393n
    dis­so­ci­a­tion, 66–68, 95, 179, 180–81, 194, 211, 247, 281, 294, 317–18, 401n
    mater­nal mis­at­tune­ment and, 121–22, 286
    neu­ro­feed­back and, 318
    in sex­u­al abuse sur­vivors, 132–33, 162, 172, 265, 316, 329
    dis­so­cia­tive amne­sia, 190
    dis­so­cia­tive iden­ti­ty dis­or­der (DID), 277–78
    Doer­ries, Bryan, 332
    domes­tic vio­lence, 1, 11, 23–24
    deaths from, 348
    increased inci­dence of, in sur­vivors of child­hood abuse, 85, 146–47
    repressed mem­o­ry and, 190
    vic­tims’ loy­al­ty to abusers in, 133
    vic­tims’ sub­mis­sive­ness in, 218
    dopamine, 29, 226
    dor­sal vagal com­plex (DVC), 82, 82, 83
    dor­so­lat­er­al pre­frontal cor­tex (DLPFC), 68–69, 376n
    dream­ing, 260–61, 308, 309–10, 321
    drum­ming, 86, 208
    Duffy, Frank, 328
    Dunkirk evac­u­a­tion, repressed mem­o­ry and, 189–90
    dys­func­tion­al think­ing, 246
    ecsta­sy (MDMA), 223–24
    edu­ca­tion sys­tem:
    cut­ting of social engage­ment pro­grams in, 349
    inat­ten­tion to emo­tion­al brain in, 86
    as resources for child­hood trau­ma recov­ery, 351–56
    EEGs (elec­troen­cephalo­grams), 309–11, 320, 321
    Effex­or, 225
    Ekman, Paul, 74
    Eli Lil­ly, 34–35
    El Sis­tema, 355
    EMDR, see eye move­ment desen­si­ti­za­tion and repro­cess­ing (EMDR)
    Emer­son, David, 269
    emo­tion­al brain, 54, 57, 62, 63, 176, 226, 265
    bal­ance between ratio­nal brain and, 64–65, 129–30, 205, 310
    befriend­ing of, 206–19, 206, 273, 274–75
    edu­ca­tion system’s inat­ten­tion to, 86
    inner world map encod­ed in, 129
    medi­al pre­frontal cor­tex and, 206, 206, 236, 353
    phys­i­cal man­i­fes­ta­tions of trau­ma in, 204–5
    Emo­tion­al Free­dom Tech­nique (EFT), 264–65
    emo­tion­al intel­li­gence, 354
    emo­tions:
    artic­u­la­tion of, 232–34
    calm­ing effect of phys­i­cal activ­i­ty on, 88
    fear of, in trau­ma sur­vivors, 335
    phys­i­cal expres­sion of, 74–76, 75, 78
    reg­u­la­tion of, see self-reg­u­la­tion
    in ther­a­peu­tic the­ater, 335, 344–45
    vagus nerve and, 76, 78, 80–82, 81
    writ­ing and, 238–42
    empa­thy, 58–60, 111–12, 161
    endocrine sys­tem, 56
    endor­phins, 32
    epi­ge­net­ics, 152
    epilep­sy, 310, 315
    equine ther­a­py, 150–51, 213
    Erich­sen, John Eric, 189
    Erick­son, Mil­ton, 254
    Esalen Insti­tute, 300
    Esto­nia, “Singing Rev­o­lu­tion” in, 334
    Eth, Spencer, 231
    exec­u­tive func­tion, 62, 323
    exiles (in IFS ther­a­py), 281–82, 289–90, 291–95
    expo­sure ther­a­py, 194
    EMDR vs., 255–56
    PTSD and, 256
    Expres­sion of the Emo­tions in Man and Ani­mals, The (Dar­win), 74–76
    eye con­tact, direct vs. avert­ed, 102
    eye move­ment desen­si­ti­za­tion and repro­cess­ing (EMDR), 47, 220, 225, 228, 231, 246, 248–62, 290,
    308, 321
    author’s train­ing in, 251–53
    clin­i­cal study of, 254–55
    expo­sure ther­a­py vs., 255–56
    med­ica­tion vs., 254, 261
    ori­gin of, 251
    PTSD and, 248–49, 253–54, 260
    sleep dis­or­ders and, 259–61
    eye­wit­ness tes­ti­mo­ny, unre­li­a­bil­i­ty of, 192
    Fair­bairn, Ronald, 109
    false mem­o­ries, 189, 190, 191–92
    Father-Daugh­ter Incest (Her­man), 138
    “Faulty Cir­cuits” (Insel), 328
    Feel­ing of What Hap­pens, The (Dama­sio), 93
    Feldenkrais, Moshe, 92
    Felit­ti, Vin­cent, 143–47, 156
    fem­i­nist move­ment, 189
    fight/flight response, 30, 42, 45–47, 54, 57, 60–61, 64, 77, 78, 80, 82, 85, 96, 97, 209, 217, 218, 247,
    265, 329, 408n
    fire­fight­ers, in IFS ther­a­py, 282, 288–89, 291–92
    Fish­er, Sebern, 312–14, 316–18, 325
    Fish-Mur­ray, Nina, 105–7
    Fisler, Rita, 40
    flash­backs, 8, 13, 16, 20, 40, 42, 44, 45, 66–67, 68, 68, 70, 72, 101, 135, 172, 173, 176, 193–94,
    196–98, 219, 227
    flu­ox­e­tine, see Prozac (flu­ox­e­tine)
    Foa, Edna, 233
    focus:
    in trau­ma recov­ery, 203, 347–48, 355
    trau­ma sur­vivors’ dif­fi­cul­ties with, 158, 166, 245–46, 311–12, 328
    For­tunoff Video Archive, 195
    Fos­ha, Diana, 105
    fos­ter-care youth, Pos­si­bil­i­ty Project the­ater pro­gram for, 340–42
    free writ­ing, 238–39
    freeze response (immo­bi­liza­tion), 54, 54, 82–83, 82, 85, 95, 217, 218, 265
    of Ute Lawrence, 65–66, 68, 71–72, 80, 82, 99–100, 219–20
    see also numb­ing
    Freud, Sig­mund, 15, 27, 177, 181–82, 183, 184, 194, 219, 220, 231, 246–47
    Frewen, Paul, 99
    Fried­man, Matthew, 159
    frontal cor­tex, 314
    frontal lobes, 57–58, 62, 176
    ADHD and, 310, 320
    empa­thy and, 58–60
    imag­i­na­tion and, 58
    PTSD and, 320
    see also medi­al pre­frontal cor­tex (MPFC)
    frontal mid­line theta rhythm, 417n
    func­tion­al mag­net­ic res­o­nance imag­ing (fMRI), 39, 66
    Fussell, Paul, 243–44
    Galen, 77
    Gaz­zani­ga, Michael, 280–81
    gene expres­sion:
    attach­ment and, 154–55
    stress and, 152, 347
    genet­ics:
    men­tal ill­ness and, 151–52
    of rhe­sus mon­keys, 153–54
    Ger­many, treat­ment of shell-shock vic­tims in, 185, 186–87
    Glen­haven Acad­e­my, Van der Kolk Cen­ter at, 213, 401n
    Gottman, John, 113
    Grant Study of Adult Devel­op­ment, 175
    Gray, Jef­frey, 33
    Great Depres­sion, 186
    Great War in Mod­ern Mem­o­ry, The (Fussell), 243–44
    Great Work of Your Life, The (Cope), 230
    Green­berg, Mark, 31, 32, 33
    Green­berg, Ramon, 409n
    Greer, Ger­maine, 187
    Grif­fin, Paul, 335, 340–42
    Gross, Steve, 85
    group ther­a­py, lim­its of, 18
    Gruze­li­er, John, 322
    gun con­trol, 348
    Gun­trip, Har­ry, 109
    gut feel­ings, 96–97
    Haig, Dou­glas, 185
    Haley, Sarah, 13
    Ham­lin, Ed, 323
    hand­writ­ing, switch­ing in, 241–42
    Har­ris, Bill, 155
    Hart­mann, Ernest, 309–10
    Har­vard Med­ical School, 40
    Count­way Library of Med­i­cine at, 11, 24
    Lab­o­ra­to­ry of Human Devel­op­ment at, 112
    see also Mass­a­chu­setts Men­tal Health Cen­ter
    Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 309
    Head Start, 350
    heart dis­ease, 267
    Heart­Math, 413n
    heart rate, 46, 61, 66, 72, 116
    heart rate vari­abil­i­ty (HRV), 77, 266–69, 268, 271, 355, 413n
    Heck­man, James, 167, 347
    Hedges, Chris, 31
    help­less­ness, of trau­ma sur­vivors, 131, 133–34, 211, 265, 289–90, 341
    Her­man, Judith, 138–41, 189, 296
    hip­pocam­pus, 60, 69, 176
    Hob­son, Allan, 26, 259–60, 261
    Holo­caust, 43
    Holo­caust sur­vivors, 99, 195, 223, 372n
    chil­dren of, 118–19, 293–95
    Holo­caust Tes­ti­monies: The Ruins of Mem­o­ry (Langer), 195, 372n
    Hölzel, Brit­ta, 209–10, 275
    home­osta­sis, 56
    Hop­per, Jim, 266
    Hos­sei­ni, Khaled, 7
    human con­nec­tome, 329
    humans, as social ani­mals, 110, 166, 349
    Hurt Lock­er, The (film), 312
    Hus­ton, John, 187, 220
    hyp­n­a­gog­ic (trance) states, 117, 187, 238, 302, 305, 326
    hyp­no­sis, 187, 220
    hypo­thal­a­mus, 56, 60
    hys­te­ria, 177–78, 178
    Freud and Breuer on, 181–82, 194
    hys­ter­i­cal blind­ness, 126
    imag­i­na­tion:
    dreams and, 261
    frontal lobes as seat of, 58
    loss of, 17, 350
    patho­log­i­cal, 25
    psy­chomo­tor ther­a­py and, 305
    recov­ery of, 205
    imi­ta­tion, 112
    immo­bi­liza­tion, see freeze response (immo­bi­liza­tion)
    immune sys­tem, 56
    stress and, 240
    of trau­ma sur­vivors, 126–27, 291
    impul­siv­i­ty, 120, 164
    incest sur­vivors:
    cog­ni­tive defects in, 162
    depres­sion in, 162
    dis­so­ci­a­tion in, 132–33, 162
    dis­tort­ed per­cep­tion of safe­ty in, 164
    father-daugh­ter, 20, 188–89, 250, 265
    high-risk behav­ior in, 164
    hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to threat in, 163
    immune sys­tems of, 126–27
    lon­gi­tu­di­nal study of, 161–64
    mis­guid­ed views of, 20, 188–89
    numb­ing in, 162–63
    obe­si­ty in, 144, 162
    self-harm­ing in, 162
    self-hatred in, 163
    trou­bled sex­u­al devel­op­ment in, 162, 163
    trust as dif­fi­cult for, 163
    India, tra­di­tion­al med­i­cine in, 207
    inescapable shock, 29–31
    infants, 83–84
    arousal in, 84, 113, 121, 161
    attune­ment of care­givers and, 111–13, 117, 118
    care­givers’ bonds with, 109–11, 113, 128–29
    inter­nal locus of con­trol in, 113
    sense of self in, 113
    sen­so­ry expe­ri­ences of, 93–94
    VVC devel­op­ment in, 83–84
    infe­ri­or medi­al pre­frontal cor­tex, 376n
    Insel, Thomas, 328
    Insti­tute of the Penn­syl­va­nia Hos­pi­tal, 251
    insu­la, 91, 91, 247, 274, 274, 382
    inte­gra­tion, of trau­mat­ic mem­o­ries, 181, 219–20, 222, 228, 237, 279, 308
    inter­de­pen­dence, 340–41
    inter­mit­tent explo­sive dis­or­der, 151
    inter­nal fam­i­ly sys­tems (IFS) ther­a­py, 223–24, 262, 281–95, 418n
    exiles in, 281–82, 289–90, 291–95
    fire­fight­ers in, 282, 288–89, 291–92
    man­agers in, 282, 286–88, 291–92, 293
    mind­ful­ness in, 283
    rheuma­toid arthri­tis and, 291–92
    Self in, 224, 283–85, 288, 289, 305
    unbur­den­ing in, 295
    inte­ro­cep­tion, 95–96, 413n
    yoga and, 272–74
    see also sen­so­ry self-aware­ness
    inter­per­son­al neu­ro­bi­ol­o­gy, 2, 58–60
    inti­ma­cy:
    sus­pen­sion of defense mech­a­nisms in, 84–85
    trau­ma sur­vivors’ dif­fi­cul­ty with, 99, 143
    Iraq War:
    deaths in, 348
    vet­er­ans of, 220, 221, 222–23, 229, 312, 332
    irri­tabil­i­ty, 10
    iso­la­tion, of child­hood sex­u­al abuse sur­vivors, 131
    James, William, 89–90, 93, 184, 277, 280, 296, 309
    Janet, Pierre, 54, 177, 178–79, 181, 182, 184, 194, 218, 220, 312, 396n
    Jou­vet, Michel, 259–60
    Jung, Carl, 27, 280, 296
    Jus­tice Resource Insti­tute, 339, 401n
    Kabat-Zinn, Jon, 209
    Kagan, Jerome, 79, 237–38
    Kaiser Per­ma­nente, 144
    Kamiya, Joe, 315
    Kan­del, Eric, 26
    Kar­diner, Abram, 11, 187, 189, 371n
    Kat­ri­na, Hur­ri­cane, 54
    Keats, John, 248
    Kee­gan, John, 185
    Keep­ing Togeth­er in Time (McNeill), 333
    Keller, Helen, 234–35
    Kennedy, John F., 373n
    Kin­neb­urgh, Kris­tine, 401n
    Kite Run­ner, The (Hos­sei­ni), 7
    Klonopin, 225
    Kluft, Richard, 251, 281
    Koch, Robert, 164
    Kradin, Richard, 126
    Krantz, Anne, 243
    Krys­tal, Hen­ry, 99
    Krys­tal, John, 30
    Kulkosky, Paul, 326, 327
    Lancet, 189
    Langer, Lawrence, 195, 372n
    lan­guage:
    fail­ure of, in trau­ma sur­vivors, 43–44, 243–45, 352–53
    lim­i­ta­tions of, 235–37, 243–45
    men­tal health and, 38
    self-dis­cov­ery and, 234–35
    in trau­ma recov­ery, 230–47, 275–76
    Lanius, Ruth, 66, 90, 92, 99, 102
    Laub, Dori, 372n
    Lawrence, T. E., 232
    Lazar, Sara, 209–10, 275
    learn­ing dis­abil­i­ties, neu­ro­feed­back and, 325
    LeDoux, Joseph, 60, 206
    legal cas­es:
    admis­si­bil­i­ty of evi­dence in, 174–75
    involv­ing pedophile priests, 183, 190, 191
    Lejune, Camp, 270
    Let­ters to a Young Poet (Rilke), 87
    Let There Be Light (film), 187, 220
    Levine, Peter, 26, 96, 217–18, 245, 408n
    Lifton, Robert J., 19
    lim­bic sys­tem, 42, 42, 56–57, 59, 60, 64
    devel­op­ment of, 56–57
    ther­a­py for, 205–6
    in trau­ma sur­vivors, 59, 95, 176, 265
    see also emo­tion­al brain
    lithi­um, 27–28, 136, 225
    loss, as basic human expe­ri­ence, 26–27
    love, as basic human expe­ri­ence, 26–27
    LSD, 223
    L‑tryptophan, 34
    lupus ery­the­mato­sus, 126
    Lyons-Ruth, Karlen, 119–22
    MacArthur, Dou­glas, 186
    Mac­beth (Shake­speare), 43, 230
    McFar­lane, Alexan­der, 89, 245–46, 311–12, 324–25
    McGaugh, James, 176
    MacLean, Paul, 64
    McNeill, William H., 333
    Maier, Steven, 29–30
    Main, Mary, 115–17, 381n
    Mamet, David, 331
    man­agers, in IFS ther­a­py, 282, 286–88, 291–92, 293
    Man­dela, Nel­son, 356
    map of the world, inter­nal:
    in child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors, 127–30
    of chil­dren, 109, 127, 129
    March of the Pen­guins (film), 96
    Mar­lantes, Karl, 233–34
    mar­tial arts, 86, 208, 355
    Mass­a­chu­setts Depart­ment of Men­tal Health, 253
    Mass­a­chu­setts Gen­er­al Hos­pi­tal, 192, 251
    Neu­roimag­ing Lab­o­ra­to­ry of, 40
    Mass­a­chu­setts Men­tal Health Cen­ter, 19–20, 22, 26, 28, 36, 142, 259–60
    see also Children’s Clin­ic (MMHC); Trau­ma Clin­ic
    mas­sage ther­a­py, 89, 92
    Matthew, Eliz­a­beth, 253–54
    Mau­rice, Prince of Orange, 333–34
    MDMA (ecsta­sy), 223–24
    mean­ing-mak­ing, as human trait, 16–17
    medi­al pre­frontal cor­tex (MPFC), 62, 63, 69, 91, 92, 96, 274, 274
    access­ing emo­tion­al brain through, 206, 206, 236, 353
    bal­ance between amyg­dala and, 62–64
    sen­so­ry self-aware­ness and, 90–91, 206, 354, 376n, 408n, 417n
    Med­ic­aid, 37
    med­i­cine, non-West­ern, 76, 86, 207–8
    med­i­ta­tion, 208
    mind­ful­ness, 63, 321, 400n
    in yoga, 270
    Melt­zoff, Andrew, 112
    mem­o­ry:
    lev­el of arousal and, 175–76
    as nar­ra­tive, 176, 179, 194, 219
    rewrit­ing of, 175, 191, 236, 255–56, 398n
    see also repressed mem­o­ry; trau­mat­ic mem­o­ry
    men­tal health, safe­ty as fun­da­men­tal to, 351, 352
    men­tal hos­pi­tals, pop­u­la­tion of, 28
    men­tal ill­ness:
    dis­or­der mod­el of, 27
    genet­ics and, 151–52
    phar­ma­co­log­i­cal rev­o­lu­tion and, 36–38
    as self-pro­tec­tive adap­ta­tions, 278–79
    social engage­ment and, 78–79
    methy­la­tion, 152
    mil­i­tarism, 186
    mind­ful­ness, 62, 63, 96, 131, 207, 208–10, 224, 225, 269, 270, 283, 292, 321
    med­i­ta­tion for, 63, 321, 400n
    Mind­ful­ness-Based Stress Reduc­tion (MBSR), 209
    Min­neso­ta Lon­gi­tu­di­nal Study of Risk and Adap­ta­tion, 160–61
    Min­sky, Mar­vin, 281
    mir­ror neu­rons, 58–59, 78, 102, 111–12
    mis­di­ag­no­sis, of child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors, 136–48, 150, 151, 157, 226
    mod­el mug­ging pro­gram, 218–19, 308
    monomethyl­hy­drazine (MMH), 315
    mood dys­reg­u­la­tion dis­or­der, 226
    mood sta­bi­liz­ing drugs, 225
    Moore, Dana, 269
    MPFC, see medi­al pre­frontal cor­tex (MPFC)
    mul­ti­ple per­son­al­i­ty dis­or­der, 277–78
    Mur­ray, Hen­ry, 105–6
    Mur­row, Ed, 43
    mus­cu­lar bond­ing, 333–34
    music, in trau­ma recov­ery, 242–43, 349, 355
    Myers, Charles Samuel, 185, 187, 189
    Myers, Fred­er­ic, 189
    nal­trex­one, 327
    Nathan Cum­mings Foun­da­tion, 155
    Nation­al Aero­nau­tics and Space Admin­is­tra­tion (NASA), 315
    Nation­al Asso­ci­a­tion of State Men­tal Health Pro­gram Direc­tors, 159
    Nation­al Child Trau­mat­ic Stress Net­work (NCTSN), 155–56, 157, 351, 356
    Nation­al Insti­tutes of Health, 28, 138, 207, 251, 254, 315, 329
    DSM‑5 diag­nos­tic cri­te­ria reject­ed by, 165–66, 329
    nature vs. nur­ture debate, 153–55, 160
    Nazis, shell-shock vic­tims as viewed by, 186–87
    neo­cor­tex, see ratio­nal brain
    ner­vous sys­tem, 76–77
    auto­nom­ic (ANS), 60, 63–64, 77, 80, 225, 266–67
    parasym­pa­thet­ic (PNS), 77, 83–84, 264, 266–67
    sym­pa­thet­ic (SNS), 77, 82, 82, 209, 266–67
    neu­ro­cep­tion, 80
    neu­ro­feed­back, 207, 312–29, 313, 418n
    ADHD and, 322
    alpha-theta train­ing in, 321, 326
    author’s expe­ri­ence of, 313–14
    dis­so­ci­a­tion and, 318
    epilep­sy and, 315
    his­to­ry of, 315
    learn­ing dis­abil­i­ties and, 325
    per­for­mance enhance­ment and, 322
    PTSD and, 326–28
    self-reg­u­la­tion in, 313
    sub­stance abuse and, 327–28
    Trau­ma Cen­ter pro­gram for, 318–20
    neu­roimag­ing, see brain scans
    neu­ro­plas­tic­i­ty, 3, 56, 167
    neu­ro­science, 2, 29, 39, 275, 347
    neu­ro­trans­mit­ters, 28–29
    see also spe­cif­ic neu­ro­trans­mit­ters
    New­berg­er, Car­olyn and Eli, 355
    New Eng­land Jour­nal of Med­i­cine, 374n–75n
    New York Times, 334, 375n
    night­mares, 8, 9, 14, 15, 20, 44, 134–35, 327
    Nijen­huis, Ellert, 281
    1984 (Orwell), 109
    non-West­ern med­i­cine, 76, 86, 207–8
    nor­ep­i­neph­rine, 29
    North Amer­i­can Asso­ci­a­tion for the Study of Obe­si­ty, 144
    numb­ing, 14–15, 67, 71–73, 84, 87–89, 92, 99, 119, 124, 162–63, 198, 205, 247, 265–66, 273, 279,
    304–5, 306
    see also freeze response (immo­bi­liza­tion)
    obe­si­ty, 144, 147, 162, 266
    Ogden, Pat, 26, 96, 217–18
    Olds, David, 167
    On the Ori­gin of Species (Dar­win), 74
    oppo­si­tion­al defi­ant dis­or­der (ODD), 150, 151, 157, 282, 392n
    orbital pre­frontal cor­tex, 91
    Oresteia (Aeschy­lus), 332
    Orr, Scott, 33
    Orwell, George, 109
    out-of-body expe­ri­ences, 100, 132–33, 286, 386n
    oxy­tocin, 223
    Pack­er, Tina, 330, 335, 345–46
    “Pain in Men Wound­ed in Bat­tle” (Beech­er), 32–33
    painkillers, 146, 349
    pan­ic attacks, 97, 172
    Panksepp, Jaak, 334, 387n, 398n
    paral­y­sis, episod­ic, 228–29
    para­noid schiz­o­phre­nia, 15
    parasym­pa­thet­ic ner­vous sys­tem (PNS), 77, 83–84, 264, 266–67
    par­ent-child inter­ac­tive ther­a­py (PCIT), 215
    pari­etal lobes, 91
    Pas­cual-Leone, Alvaro, 417n
    Pas­teur, Louis, 164
    Pat­ton, George, 186
    Pavlov, Ivan, 39
    Pax­il, 35, 225, 254
    PBSP psy­chomo­tor ther­a­py, see psy­chomo­tor ther­a­py
    Pearl­man, Chester, 409n
    pen­du­la­tion, 217–18, 245, 286, 333, 408n
    Penis­ton, Eugene, 326, 327
    Pen­nebak­er, James, 239–41, 243
    per­for­mance enhance­ment, neu­ro­feed­back and, 322
    peri­aque­duc­tal gray, 102
    Per­ry, Bruce, 56
    Per­ry, Chris, 138, 141, 296
    Pes­so, Albert, 297–99
    phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal indus­try, pow­er of, 374n–75n
    phar­ma­co­log­i­cal rev­o­lu­tion, 27–29, 36–38, 310
    prof­it motive in, 38
    pho­bias, 256
    phys­i­cal actions, com­ple­tion of, in trau­ma sur­vivors, 96
    phys­i­cal activ­i­ty:
    calm­ing effect of, 88
    in trau­ma ther­a­py, 207–8
    phys­i­ol­o­gy:
    self-reg­u­la­tion of, 38
    see also body; brain
    Piaget, Jean, 105
    Pilates, 199
    Pit­man, Roger, 30, 33, 222
    place­bo effect, 35
    plane crash­es, sur­vivors of, 80
    Plutarch, 334
    pneu­mo­gas­tric nerve, see vagus nerve
    Pol­lak, Seth, 114
    poly­va­gal the­o­ry, 77–78, 86
    Porges, Stephen, 77–78, 80, 83, 84–85, 86
    positron emis­sion tomog­ra­phy (PET), 39
    Pos­si­bil­i­ty Project, 335, 340–42
    pos­te­ri­or cin­gu­late, 90–91, 91
    Post­trau­mat­ic Cog­ni­tions Inven­to­ry, 233
    pranaya­ma, 86, 270
    pre­frontal cor­tex, 59, 68–69, 102
    exec­u­tive func­tion in, 62
    see also medi­al pre­frontal cor­tex (MPFC)
    pre­frontal lobes, 254
    Prince, Mor­ton, 184
    Prin­ci­ples of Psy­chol­o­gy, The (James), 277
    pris­ons:
    pop­u­la­tion of, 348
    spend­ing on, 168
    pro­lactin, 223
    pro­pra­nolol, 225
    pro­pri­o­cep­tive (bal­ance) sys­tem, 247
    pro­tag­o­nists, in psy­chomo­tor ther­a­py, 297, 300–302
    pro­to-self, 94
    Prozac (flu­ox­e­tine), 34–35, 37, 223, 262
    PTSD and, 35–36, 225, 226, 254, 261
    psy­chi­a­try:
    drug-based approach of, 315, 349
    socioe­co­nom­ic fac­tors ignored in, 348
    psy­cho­analy­sis, 22, 184, 230–31
    see also talk ther­a­py (talk­ing cure)
    psy­cho­dy­nam­ic psy­chother­a­py, 199
    Psy­chol­o­gy Today, 315
    psy­chomo­tor ther­a­py, 296–308
    author’s expe­ri­ence in, 298–99
    feel­ing safe in, 300, 301
    pro­tag­o­nists in, 297, 300–302
    struc­tures in, 298–308
    wit­ness­es in, 297, 300, 301, 306
    psy­chophar­ma­col­o­gy, 20, 206
    psy­chother­a­py, of child neglect sur­vivors, 296–97
    psy­chotrop­ic drugs, 27–29, 37–38, 101, 136, 315, 349–50
    PTSD and, 254, 261, 405n
    in trau­ma recov­ery, 223–27
    see also spe­cif­ic drugs
    PTSD (post­trau­mat­ic stress dis­or­der):
    acupunc­ture and acu­pres­sure in treat­ment of, 410n–11n
    amyg­dala-MPFC imbal­ance in, 62–64
    atten­tion and con­cen­tra­tion prob­lems in, 311–12
    brain scans of, 102, 347, 408n
    brain-wave pat­terns in, 311, 312
    CBT and, 194, 220–21
    chil­dren of par­ents with, 118–19
    diag­no­sis of, 136–37, 142, 150, 156–57, 188, 319
    dis­so­ci­a­tion in, 66–68
    EMDR in treat­ment of, 248–49, 253–54
    expo­sure ther­a­py and, 256
    flash­backs in, 72, 327
    in Holo­caust sur­vivors, 118–19
    HRV in, 267, 268
    hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to threat in, 102, 327, 408n
    lan­guage fail­ure in, 244–45
    MDMA in treat­ment of, 223–24
    mem­o­ry and, 175, 190
    numb­ing in, 72–73, 99
    psy­chotrop­ic drugs and, 254, 261, 405n
    reliv­ing in, 66–68, 180–81, 325
    and secu­ri­ty of attach­ment to care­giv­er, 119
    sen­so­ry self-aware­ness in, 89–92
    social engage­ment and, 102
    sub­stance abuse and, 327
    yoga ther­a­py for, 207, 228–29, 268–69
    PTSD (post­trau­mat­ic stress dis­or­der), of acci­dent and dis­as­ter sur­vivors, 41–43, 142–43, 348
    EMDR and, 260
    flash­backs in, 66–67, 68, 68, 196–98
    hyper­sen­siv­i­ty to threat in, 45–47, 68
    irri­tabil­i­ty and rage in, 68, 248–49
    Lel­og as, 177–78
    numb­ing in, 198
    PTSD (post­trau­mat­ic stress dis­or­der), of com­bat vet­er­ans, 1–2, 106, 348, 371n
    antipsy­chot­ic drugs and, 226–27
    atten­tion and con­cen­tra­tion prob­lems of, 312
    CBT and, 194, 220–21
    diag­no­sis of, 19–21
    down­side of med­ica­tions for, 36–37
    flash­backs in, 8, 13, 16, 227
    hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to threat in, 11, 327
    hyp­no­sis and, 187, 220
    in-or-out con­struct in, 18
    irri­tabil­i­ty and rage in, 10, 14
    neu­ro­feed­back and, 326–28
    night­mares in, 8, 9, 14, 15, 134–35
    numb­ing in, 14–15
    pain and, 33
    preva­lence of, 20
    Prozac and, 35–36, 226
    sero­tonin lev­els in, 33–34, 36
    shame in, 13
    shell-shock as, 11, 184–85
    sleep dis­or­ders in, 409n
    stress hor­mone lev­els in, 30
    sui­cide and, 17, 332
    the­ater as ther­a­py for, 331–32, 343–44
    trau­mat­ic event as sole source of mean­ing in, 18
    VA and, 19, 187–88, 222–23
    yoga ther­a­py for, 270
    PTSD scores, 254, 319, 324
    Puk, Ger­ald, 252–53
    pur­pose, sense of, 14, 92, 233
    Put­nam, Frank, 30, 161–64, 251
    qigong, 86, 208, 245, 264
    quan­ti­ta­tive EEG (qEEG), 323
    rage, 83
    dis­place­ment of, 133–34, 140
    in PTSD, 10, 14, 68, 248–49
    in trau­ma sur­vivors, 46, 95, 99, 285, 304
    “rail­way spine,” 177
    rape, 1–2, 17, 88, 213–14
    increased inci­dence of, in sur­vivors of child­hood abuse, 85, 146–47
    preva­lence of, 20–21
    ratio­nal brain, 55, 57–58
    bal­ance between emo­tion­al brain and, 64–65, 129–30, 205, 310
    feel­ings and, 205
    Rauch, Scott, 40, 42
    reac­tive attach­ment dis­or­der, 150, 151
    reci­procity, 79–80
    reck­less behav­ior, 120
    reen­act­ing, 31–33, 179, 180, 181, 182
    rela­tion­ships:
    emo­tion­al brain and, 122
    men­tal health and, 38, 55
    in trau­ma recov­ery, 210–13
    see also inti­ma­cy; social engage­ment
    reliv­ing, 66–68, 180–81
    Rel­man, Arnold, 374n–75n
    Remar­que, Erich Maria, 171, 186
    Rem­brandt van Rijn, 215
    Remem­ber­ing, Repeat­ing and Work­ing Through (Freud), 219
    REM sleep, 260–61, 309–10, 409n
    repressed mem­o­ry, 183, 184–99
    of child­hood sex­u­al abuse sur­vivors, 190, 397n
    false mem­o­ries and, 189, 190, 191–92
    reli­a­bil­i­ty of, 191
    see also trau­mat­ic mem­o­ry
    Research Domain Cri­te­ria (RDoC), 165–66
    resilience, 105, 109, 161, 278–79, 314, 316, 351, 355, 356
    Respiri­dol, 215
    rhe­sus mon­keys:
    peer-raised, 154
    per­son­al­i­ty types in, 153
    rheuma­toid arthri­tis (RA), IFS in treat­ment of, 291–92
    rhyth­mic move­ment, in trau­ma ther­a­py, 85, 207, 208, 214, 242–43, 333–34, 349
    right tem­po­ral lobe, 319, 324
    Rilke, Rain­er Maria, 87
    Risperdal, 37, 226, 227
    Rital­in, 107, 136
    rit­u­al, trau­ma recov­ery and, 331–32
    Rivers, W. H. R., 189
    road rage, 83
    role-play­ing, in psy­chomo­tor ther­a­py, 298–300
    Rorschach test, 15–17, 35
    Roy, Alec, 154
    Rozelle, Deb­o­rah, 214
    Rumi, 277
    Rwan­da geno­cide, 244
    safe­ty:
    a fun­da­men­tal to men­tal health, 351, 352
    as lack­ing in child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors, 141, 213, 296, 301, 351
    in trau­ma recov­ery, 204, 212, 270, 275, 300, 301, 349, 353
    trau­ma sur­vivors’ dis­tort­ed per­cep­tion of, 79–80, 85, 96–97, 164, 270
    Salpêtrière, La, 177–78, 178, 194
    Saul, Noam, 51–53, 52, 58, 261
    Saxe, Glenn, 119
    Scen­tif­ic Amer­i­can, 149
    Schac­ter, Dan, 93
    Schilder, Paul, 100
    schiz­o­phre­nia, 15, 22–23, 27, 29
    genet­ics and, 151–52
    schools, see edu­ca­tion sys­tem
    Schwartz, Richard, 281, 282, 283, 289, 290, 291, 418n
    Sci­ence, 94–95
    selec­tive sero­tonin reup­take inhibitors (SSRIs), 35, 36
    see also Prozac (flu­ox­e­tine)
    Self:
    dis­or­ga­nized attach­ment and, 120
    in IFS ther­a­py, 224, 283–85, 288, 289, 305
    in infants, 113
    mul­ti­ple aspects of, 280–95; see also inter­nal fam­i­ly sys­tems (IFS) ther­a­py
    reestab­lish­ing own­er­ship of, 203–4, 318
    in trau­ma sur­vivors, 166, 233, 247
    self-aware­ness:
    auto­bi­o­graph­i­cal self in, 236
    sen­so­ry, 87–102, 206, 206, 208–9, 236, 237–38, 247, 273, 354, 376n, 382n, 408n, 418n
    self-blame, in child­hood sex­u­al abuse sur­vivors, 131, 132
    self-com­pas­sion, 292
    self-con­fi­dence, 205, 350
    self-deceit, as source of suf­fer­ing, 11, 26–27
    self-dis­cov­ery, lan­guage and, 234–35
    self-harm­ing, 20, 25, 87, 138, 141, 158, 162, 172, 264, 266, 288–89, 316, 317
    self-hatred, 134, 143, 158, 163, 279
    self-lead­er­ship, 203, 280–95
    self-nur­ture, 113
    self-recog­ni­tion, absence of, 105
    self-reg­u­la­tion, 113, 158, 161, 207, 224, 300, 347–48, 354, 401
    neu­ro­feed­back and, 313
    yoga and, 271–72, 274, 275
    Selig­man, Mar­tin, 29–30
    Sem­rad, Elvin, 11, 26, 237
    sen­sa­tion seek­ing, 266, 272
    sen­so­ri­mo­tor ther­a­py, 96, 214–15, 217–18
    sen­so­ry self-aware­ness, 87–102, 206, 206, 208–9, 236, 237–38, 247, 273, 347, 354, 376n, 382n,
    408n, 418n
    Sep­tem­ber 11, 2001, ter­ror­ist attacks, 51–53, 52
    chil­dren as wit­ness­es to, 119
    ther­a­pies for trau­ma from, 230–31
    Sero­quel, 37, 101, 215, 226, 227
    sero­tonin, 33, 153, 154, 262
    sero­tonin reup­take inhibitors (SSRIs), 215, 225
    Ser­van-Schreiber, David, 304
    Sev­en Pil­lars of Wis­dom (Lawrence), 232
    sex­u­al promis­cu­ity, 120, 285, 286
    Shadick, Nan­cy, 291
    Shake­speare, William, 43, 230, 343–46, 355
    Shake­speare & Com­pa­ny, 335, 343–46
    Shake­speare in the Courts, 335, 336, 342–44
    Shalev, Arieh, 30
    shame, 13–14, 102, 132, 138, 174, 211, 300
    Shan­ley, Paul, 171–74, 183, 191
    Shapiro, Francine, 251
    Shatan, Chaim, 19
    shavasana, 271
    shell-shock, 11, 184–85
    Shell Shock in France (Myers), 187
    singing and chant­i­ng, in trau­ma recov­ery, 86, 214
    “Singing Rev­o­lu­tion,” 334
    Sketch­es of War, 331
    Sky, Licia, 216–17
    sleep dis­or­ders, 46, 95
    EMDR and, 259–61
    in PTSD, 409n
    REM sleep and, 260–61, 409n
    see also night­mares
    SMART (sen­so­ry motor arousal reg­u­la­tion treat­ment), 215
    smok­ing, sur­geon general’s report on, 148
    Social Brain, The (Gaz­zani­ga), 280–81
    social engage­ment:
    as basic human trait, 110, 166
    PTSD and, 102
    as response to threat, 80–81, 82, 88
    in rhe­sus mon­keys, 153–54
    in trau­ma recov­ery, 204
    trau­ma sur­vivors and, 3, 62, 78–80, 84, 86, 161, 349
    social sup­port, for child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors, 167–68, 350
    socioe­co­nom­ic stress, dis­or­ga­nized attach­ment and, 117–18
    Solomon, Richard, 32
    Solomon, Roger, 260
    somat­ic expe­ri­enc­ing, 217–18
    Somme, Bat­tle of the (1916), 185
    sooth­ing, arousal and, 113
    Sopho­cles, 332
    South Africa, 213–14, 333, 349
    South­bor­ough Report, shell-shock diag­no­sis reject­ed by, 185
    South­wick, Steve, 30
    Sow­ell, Nan­cy, 291
    speech cen­ters (brain), 42, 43
    Sper­ry, Roger, 51
    Spinaz­zo­la, Joseph, 156, 339, 351
    Spitzer, Robert, 142
    Sroufe, Alan, 160–61, 166
    Steel, Kathy, 281
    Ster­man, Bar­ry, 315
    Stern, Jes­si­ca, 7
    Stick­gold, Robert, 260, 261
    stim­uli:
    adjust­ment to, 32
    hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to, see threat, hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to
    Sto­ry of My Life, The (Keller), 234
    Strange Sit­u­a­tion, 115
    stress:
    gene expres­sion and, 152
    immune func­tion and, 240
    see also trau­ma
    stress hor­mones, 30, 42, 46, 60, 61, 66–67, 158, 162, 217, 233
    struc­tur­al dis­so­ci­a­tion mod­el, 281
    struc­tures, in psy­chomo­tor ther­a­py, 298–308
    sub­cor­ti­cal brain struc­tures, 95
    sub­mis­sive­ness, 97, 218
    sub­per­son­al­i­ties, 280–95
    sub­stance abuse, 70, 120, 146, 151, 225, 266
    neu­ro­feed­back and, 327–28
    with­draw­al and, 32, 327
    sui­ci­dal behav­ior and thoughts, 24, 28, 88, 120, 138, 141, 146, 147, 150, 151, 154, 256, 287, 316,
    332
    sui­cide by cop, 182
    Sum­mit, Roland, 131, 136
    Suo­mi, Stephen, 153–54, 160
    supe­ri­or tem­po­ral cor­tex, 386n
    sym­pa­thet­ic ner­vous sys­tem (SNS), 77, 82, 82, 209, 266–67
    Szyf, Moshe, 152
    tai chi, 207–8
    talk ther­a­py (talk­ing cure), 22, 27, 36, 72, 181–82, 230–37, 253
    expe­ri­ence vs. telling in, 235–36
    TAQ, see Trau­mat­ic Antecedents Ques­tion­aire (TAQ)
    Tavi­s­tock Clin­ic, 109
    Teich­er, Mar­tin, 140, 149, 416n
    tem­po­ral lobe abnor­mal­i­ties, 416n
    tem­po­ral pari­etal junc­tion, 100
    ten­sion, in trau­ma sur­vivors, 100–101, 265–66
    ter­ror­ism:
    PTSD from, 348
    see also Sep­tem­ber 11, 2001, ter­ror­ist attacks
    testos­terone, 163
    thal­a­m­o­cor­ti­cal net­works, 417n
    thal­a­mus, 60, 70–71, 176, 324
    the­ater, in trau­ma recov­ery, 214, 330–32, 334–46, 355
    con­flict and, 335
    emo­tions and, 335, 344–45
    feel­ing safe in, 336–37
    The­ater of War, 332
    The­mat­ic Apper­cep­tion Test (TAT), 106–7
    ther­a­pists, in trau­ma recov­ery, 212–13, 244
    theta waves, 321, 326, 417n
    Tho­razine (chlor­pro­mazine), 22–23
    thoughts, phys­i­cal sen­sa­tions and, 209
    threat:
    con­fu­sion of safe­ty and, 85, 97, 119, 164
    hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to, 2, 11, 17, 33, 45–47, 68, 84, 95, 102, 143, 158, 161, 163, 196–97, 225, 265,
    310, 327, 328, 408n
    social engage­ment as response to, 80–81, 82, 88
    whole-body response to, 53–55, 53, 60–62, 61
    see also fight/flight response; freeze response (immo­bi­liza­tion)
    time, sense of, 273
    Tourette, Gilles de la, 177
    trance (hyp­n­a­gog­ic) states, 117, 187, 238, 302, 305, 326
    tran­scra­nial mag­net­ic stim­u­la­tion (TMS), 417n
    trau­ma:
    artic­u­la­tion of, 232–34
    brain changes from, 2–3, 21, 59, 347
    grow­ing aware­ness of, 347
    as most urgent pub­lic health issue, 148, 149–50, 356
    nar­ra­tives of, 7, 43, 46, 70, 130, 135, 175, 176, 194, 219, 220, 231, 250, 252–53, 261–62; see also
    trau­mat­ic mem­o­ry
    phys­i­o­log­i­cal changes from, 2–3, 21, 53, 53, 72
    preva­lence of, 1
    reac­ti­va­tion of, 2
    risk of, socioe­co­nom­ic sta­tus and, 348
    trau­ma, heal­ing from, 203–29
    ani­mal ther­a­py in, 80, 150–51, 213
    ARC mod­el in, 401n
    art and, 242–43
    body ther­a­pies for, 3, 26, 72, 86, 89, 207–8, 215–17, 228–29, 245; see also spe­cif­ic ther­a­pies
    calm­ing and relax­ation tech­niques in, 131, 203–4; see also breath­ing; mind­ful­ness; yoga
    CBT in, 182, 194, 220–21
    com­mu­ni­ty in, 213–14, 244, 331–34, 355
    desen­si­ti­za­tion ther­a­pies in, 46–47, 73, 220, 222–23
    EMDR ther­a­py in, see eye move­ment desen­si­ti­za­tion and repro­cess­ing (EMDR)
    emo­tion­al self-reg­u­la­tion in, 203–4, 206–8, 212, 353, 401n
    feel­ing safe in, 204, 212, 270, 275, 300, 301, 349, 353
    focus in, 203, 347–48, 355
    giv­ing up self-deceit in, 204
    IFS ther­a­py in, see inter­nal fam­i­ly sys­tems (IFS) ther­a­py
    inte­grat­ing trau­mat­ic mem­o­ries in, 181, 219–20, 222, 228, 237, 279
    lan­guage and, 230–47, 275–76
    lim­bic sys­tem ther­a­py in, 205–6
    liv­ing in present as goal of, 204
    mind­ful­ness in, 207, 208–10, 224, 225, 269, 270
    music in, 242–43, 349, 355
    need to revis­it trau­ma in, 204–5, 211
    neu­ro­feed­back in, see neu­ro­feed­back
    pro­fes­sion­al ther­a­pists for, 212–13, 244
    psy­chomo­tor ther­a­py in, 296–308
    reestab­lish­ing own­er­ship of one’s self as goal of, 204–5
    rela­tion­ships in, 204, 210–13
    rhyth­mic move­ment and, 85, 207, 208, 214, 242–43, 333–34, 349
    schools as resources for, 351–56
    search for mean­ing in, 233–34
    self-aware­ness in, 208, 235–38, 273, 347
    self-lead­er­ship in, 203, 280–95
    sen­so­ri­mo­tor ther­a­py in, 96, 214–15
    singing and chant­i­ng in, 86, 214
    talk ther­a­py in, 230–37, 253
    the­ater in, see the­ater, in trau­ma recov­ery
    writ­ing and, 238–42
    yoga in, 63, 86, 207, 225, 228–29, 231, 263–76
    Trau­ma and Recov­ery (Her­man), 189
    Trau­ma Cen­ter, 3–4, 72, 85, 86, 121, 122, 163–64, 166, 214–15, 228, 266, 269, 271, 340, 351
    neu­ro­feed­back lab­o­ra­to­ry at, 318–20, 324
    Trau­ma Dra­ma pro­gram of, 335, 336–37, 339, 355
    Urban Improv study of, 338–39
    Trau­ma Clin­ic, 35, 251, 253
    trau­ma sur­vivors:
    alex­ithymia in, 98–99, 247, 272–73, 291, 319
    blam­ing in, 45
    brain scans of, 39–47, 42, 66, 68–70, 68, 71–72, 72, 82, 99–100, 319
    brain-wave pat­terns in, 311–12, 311, 324
    con­tin­ued stress mobi­liza­tion in, 53–55, 53
    denial in, 46, 291
    deper­son­al­iza­tion in, 71–73, 71, 99–100, 132–33, 286, 291, 386n, 401n
    dere­al­iza­tion in, 401n
    dis­so­ci­a­tion in, 66–68, 95, 172, 179, 180–81, 194, 211, 247, 281, 294, 316, 317–18
    dis­tort­ed per­cep­tion of safe­ty in, 79–80, 85, 96–97, 119, 164, 270
    fear of emo­tions in, 335
    fear of exper­i­men­ta­tion in, 305
    flash­backs in, 40, 42, 45, 70, 176, 193–94, 219
    freeze response (immo­bi­liza­tion) in, 54, 54, 80, 82–83, 82, 85, 95, 217, 218
    hand­writ­ing of, 241–42
    help­less­ness of, 217, 341
    hyper­sen­si­tiv­i­ty to threat in, 2, 61–62, 84
    immune sys­tems of, 126–27, 291
    inner void in, 296–308
    inti­ma­cy as dif­fi­cult for, 99
    irri­tabil­i­ty and rage in, 46, 95, 99
    lan­guage fail­ure in, 43–44, 243–45, 352–53
    lim­bic sys­tem in, 59, 95, 265
    liv­ing in present as dif­fi­cult for, 67, 70, 73, 312
    loss of imag­i­na­tion in, 17, 96
    loss of pur­pose in, 92, 233
    med­ica­tion and, 3
    mem­o­ry and atten­tion prob­lems in, 46
    night­mares in, 44
    numb­ing in, 67, 84, 119, 205, 247, 272, 304–5, 306
    pan­ic attacks in, 97
    polar­iza­tion of self-sys­tem in, 281
    reci­procity and, 79–80
    reen­act­ing in, 31–33, 179, 180, 181, 182
    self-harm­ing in, 266, 288–89
    self-pro­tec­tive strate­gies of, 278–79
    sen­sa­tion seek­ing in, 266, 272
    sense of self in, 166, 233, 247
    sense of time in, 273
    sen­so­ry over­load in, 70–71
    sen­so­ry self-aware­ness in, 89, 96, 247, 418n
    shame in, 102, 138, 211, 300
    sleep dis­or­ders in, 46, 95
    social engage­ment and, 3, 62, 78–80, 84, 86, 161, 349
    somat­ic symp­toms in, 97–98
    stress hor­mone lev­els in, 30
    sub­stance abuse by, 70, 120, 146, 151, 225, 266
    ten­sion and defen­sive­ness in, 100–101, 265–66
    trust as dif­fi­cult for, 18, 134, 141, 150, 158, 163, 253
    see also child­hood trau­ma sur­vivors; PTSD (post­trau­mat­ic stress dis­or­der)
    Trau­mat­ic Antecedents Ques­tion­aire (TAQ), 138–40, 141
    trau­mat­ic mem­o­ry, 171–83, 246–47, 278
    as dis­or­ga­nized, 193
    hys­te­ria as, see hys­te­ria
    inte­gra­tion of, 181, 219–20, 222, 228, 237, 255–56, 261–62, 279, 308
    nar­ra­tive mem­o­ry vs., 176, 179, 194, 219, 231–32, 236
    nor­mal mem­o­ry vs., 175–76, 180, 181, 189, 192–94, 219, 372n
    “rail­way spine” as, 177
    see also repressed mem­o­ry
    Trau­mat­ic Neu­roses of War, The (Kar­diner), 11, 187
    Tre­varthen, Col­wyn, 111
    Trick­ett, Pene­lope, 161–63
    trig­gered respons­es, 66–68
    Tron­ick, Ed, 84, 112
    trust, dif­fi­cul­ty of, 18, 134, 141, 150, 158, 163, 253
    Truth and Rec­on­cil­i­a­tion Com­mis­sion, 213–14, 333, 349
    Tutu, Desmond, 333
    Ubun­tu, 349
    Unit­ed States Asso­ci­a­tion for Body Psy­chother­a­py, 297
    Urban Improv, 334–35
    Trau­ma Cen­ter study of, 337–39
    vagus nerve, 76, 78, 80–82, 81, 207, 245
    Val­i­um, 225
    val­proate, 136, 225, 405n
    van der Hart, Onno, 281, 396n
    Van der Kolk Cen­ter, 213, 401n
    vaso­pressin, 223
    ven­tral vagal com­plex (VVC), 81–82,
    82, 83–84
    devel­op­ment of, 84
    Ver­sailles, Treaty of (1919), 186
    Vet­er­ans Admin­is­tra­tion (VA):
    Boston Clin­ic of, 7, 10, 11, 12, 187–88, 227, 331
    PTSD and, 19, 222–23, 226–27, 244–45
    Vet­er­ans Affairs Depart­ment, U.S, 156, 224, 255
    Viet­nam vet­er­ans, 7–8, 12, 15, 17–18, 33, 156, 182, 187–88, 190, 222–23, 227, 233–34
    visu­al cor­tex, 42, 44
    voice, respons­es to, 85–86
    Wal­ter Reed Nation­al Mil­i­tary Med­ical Cen­ter, 322
    War Is a Force That Gives Us Mean­ing (Hedges), 31
    Warn­er, Liz, 214, 418
    War­ren, Robert Penn, 22
    Wern­er, Emi­ly, 392n
    “What Is an Emo­tion?” (James), 89–90
    What It Is Like to Go to War (Mar­lantes), 233
    “When the Patient Reports Atroc­i­ties” (Haley), 13
    Wiesel, Elie, 356
    Williams, Dar, 203
    Williams, Lin­da Mey­er, 190–91
    Wil­son, Scott, 126
    Win­frey, Oprah, 356
    Win­ni­cott, Don­ald, 109, 113–14
    wit­ness­es, in psy­chomo­tor ther­a­py, 297, 300, 301, 306
    Wood­man, Mar­i­on, 230
    World Enough and Time (War­ren), 22
    World I Live In, The (Keller), 235
    World War I, 243–44
    shell-shock in, 11, 184–86, 189
    World War II, 9, 210
    com­bat trau­ma in, 187–88
    vet­er­ans of, 18, 53, 187, 188
    writ­ing, in trau­ma recov­ery, 238–42
    Xanax, 225
    Yale Uni­ver­si­ty, For­tunoff Video Archive at, 195
    Yehu­da, Rachel, 30, 118
    yoga, 63, 86, 231, 263–76, 354
    asanas (pos­tures) in, 270, 272
    clin­i­cal stud­ies of, 273–75, 274
    HRV and, 268–69, 271
    inte­ro­cep­tion and, 272–74
    med­i­ta­tion in, 270
    pranaya­ma (breath­ing) in,
    86, 270
    PTSD and, 207, 228–29, 268–69, 270
    self-reg­u­la­tion and, 271–72, 274, 275
    Yoga and the Quest for the True Self (Cope), 263, 272
    Zaichkowsky, Len, 322
    Zoloft, 35, 225, 254
    Zyprexa, 37, 101

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    Cover of John Lewis
    Biography

    John Lewis

    by LovelyMay
    John Lewis is a powerful biography that chronicles the life and legacy of the civil rights icon and U.S. Congressman, John Lewis. From his early activism during the 1960s, including leading the historic march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, to his decades of service in Congress, the book highlights Lewis's unwavering commitment to justice, equality, and nonviolent resistance. It offers an inspiring account of his profound impact on American history and his enduring fight for civil rights.

    Hen­ri Bergson’s work, as sum­ma­rized in this chap­ter, empha­sizes the excep­tion­al impor­tance and infi­nite reach of his new phi­los­o­phy. This nov­el approach, marked by its unique­ness and poten­tial for mis­un­der­stand­ing, posi­tions itself as the future depar­ture point for spec­u­la­tive phi­los­o­phy, attract­ing an increas­ing num­ber of adher­ents despite the inevitabil­i­ty of mis­in­ter­pre­ta­tions and the poten­tial for its trans­for­ma­tion into a new form of scholas­ti­cism.

    Bergson’s phi­los­o­phy under­lines the cen­tral­i­ty of intu­ition over analy­sis and the dynam­ic nature of real­i­ty and con­scious­ness. It con­trasts con­cep­tu­al analy­sis with the imme­di­a­cy and depth of intu­itive under­stand­ing, see­ing life and exis­tence as con­tin­u­al becom­ing and empha­siz­ing the role of change as fun­da­men­tal to both being and knowl­edge. This per­spec­tive chal­lenges tra­di­tion­al meta­phys­i­cal and sci­en­tif­ic frame­works, propos­ing instead that real­i­ty is char­ac­ter­ized by flux, dura­tion, and a qual­i­ta­tive con­ti­nu­ity that eludes sta­t­ic con­cep­tu­al­iza­tion.

    The chap­ter out­lines a com­pre­hen­sive cri­tique of exist­ing philo­soph­i­cal and sci­en­tif­ic tenets, includ­ing deter­min­ism, mate­ri­al­ism, and mech­a­nism, advo­cat­ing for an under­stand­ing of real­i­ty that acknowl­edges the lim­i­ta­tions of lan­guage, the pit­falls of ratio­nal­ism, and the insuf­fi­cien­cy of mere analy­sis to cap­ture the essence of life. Berg­son asserts the impor­tance of free­dom, the real­i­ty of change, and the val­ue of imme­di­ate expe­ri­ence, posit­ing intu­ition as not only a method­olog­i­cal start­ing point but as a fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ple that tran­scends the bound­aries of ratio­nal dis­course and empir­i­cal obser­va­tion.

    Key con­cepts such as dura­tion, mem­o­ry, free­dom, and the cri­tique of intel­lec­tu­al­ism are high­light­ed as cen­tral to Bergson’s phi­los­o­phy. He calls into ques­tion the ade­qua­cy of sci­en­tif­ic and ratio­nal­ist mod­els to ful­ly grasp the nature of real­i­ty, argu­ing for a philo­soph­i­cal approach that pri­or­i­tizes the flu­id, dynam­ic, and inher­ent­ly qual­i­ta­tive aspects of life and con­scious­ness. The chap­ter also touch­es on the philo­soph­i­cal impli­ca­tions of evo­lu­tion, the role of intu­ition in under­stand­ing the con­tin­u­ous flow of exis­tence, and the cri­tique of sta­t­ic con­cep­tions of being and knowl­edge.

    In essence, Berg­son advo­cates for a rad­i­cal reeval­u­a­tion of the way we under­stand the world, urg­ing a shift from the ana­lyt­i­cal and dis­sec­tive modes of thought that have dom­i­nat­ed West­ern phi­los­o­phy and sci­ence to a more holis­tic, intu­itive, and dynam­ic per­spec­tive. This approach seeks to rec­on­cile the human expe­ri­ence with the under­ly­ing real­i­ties of life, empha­siz­ing growth, change, and the intrin­sic unpre­dictabil­i­ty and cre­ativ­i­ty of the nat­ur­al world.

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