The concept of trauma, which is as old as the history of humanity, has been the subject of joint work of many different disciplines such as art, literature, science and philosophy. Trauma can occur in a single event, but large disasters can occur in large scale, such as mass killings. The traumatic situation is the imbalance between a real threat and a person's coping power. For a variety of reasons, such as the occurrence of the event, existing support, psychopathological predisposition, presence of previous traumas, the effects may vary from person to person. Today, as experiences in the field of developmental psychopathology grow, the interest has shifted to how the memories are stored in the mind, how these memories affect daily perceptions and how it is made meaningful with external reality. In addition to the fact that events from childhood and even births can have different effects on each individual, is each experience processed the same way with spirituality? Studies have shown that traumatic experience is coded differently from a non‐traumatic event. Only a selected part of the traumatic experience can be processed with a conscious focus that is required for the open operation. The need to reduce emotional floods during trauma can lead to distraction from the traumatic elements of an experience, and some traumas transcend one's subjective coping power and are dissociated to survive spirituality. In traumatic situations, especially in very severe mass trauma traces like a ghost, generations like a shadow.
Alan : Sosyal, Beşeri ve İdari Bilimler
Dergi Türü : Ulusal
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