Traumatic Memory Essay

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The memory of a traumatic experience rests at the core of posttraumatic stress disorder, whether the memory is consciously absent from traumatic amnesia or forcefully intrusive into the patient’s dreams and waking memories. When recalled, often without the patient’s initiation, the memory is so vivid that it overtakes the traumatized individual, filling them with the same emotions and sensory details, inspiring the same anxieties to return as if the moment is being relived in the present. These memories, as current research suggests, are not fully experienced at the time of their occurrence, nor fully understood during and intrusive experience (Caruth 1995b). They exist as internal tormenters, yet seem external to our various systems of memory …show more content…

They are encoded as raw experience, cut off from meaning and sense-making. In many ways, they appear to preserve the basic input of our sense organs, nearly unprocessed and purely experiential. This aspect supports the possibility of the emotional processing explanation as, if true, the traumatic experience overwhelms the person and the raw information is too terrible to completely incorporate. There could also be neurological factors in play which derail the incorporation process. As sensory information, sensory triggers would be more prone to connect with the memory and summon …show more content…

All memory is a reconstruction influenced by many factors present at either the moment of events or at the moment of recall. Numerous studies have uncovered that mood (Eich & Metcalf 1989), external cues (Godden & Baddeley 1975; Loftus 1975; Loftus & Hoffman 1989; Manier, Piers, Greenstein & Hirst 1992), and cognitive encoding strategies (Tulving & Thomson 1993; Johnson, Raye, Foley & Foley 1981) can change details of memory for ordinary and traumatic events

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