PTSD, repression, and "whistling past the graveyard&quo

PTSD, repression, and “whistling past the graveyard”

I suspect that PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) might well become one of the most important concerns for America that results from this war in Iraq.

What I have read about these matters indicates that our fundamental fear of death and its subsequent repression forms the foundation for this mental breakdown called PTSD. Repression becomes completely exhausted and the consciousness of death becomes constant and finally irrepressible. The victims of PTSD can no longer ‘whistle past the graveyard’.

The evolution into self-consciousness from self-satisfying ignorance inherent in animal nature had one great tragedy for wo/mankind, which is anxiety or dread. It is our very humanness which produces anxiety–dread of death. This anxiety results from the ambiguity of our situation and our inability to overcome such an ambiguity. This ubiquity of ambiguity drives us into the creation of a virtual world in which to live. Self-consciousness cannot be denied, we cannot disappear into a state of vegetation, we cannot flee dread; we can only create delusions–a virtual reality.

The task of the sciences of psychology, psychoanalysis, sociology, and anthropology are to discover the strategies that humans use to avoid anxiety. How do we function automatically and uncritically in our virtual world and how do these strategies deprive us of true growth and freedom of action?

Today we talk about ‘repression’ and ‘denial’; Kierkegaard, the pioneer, called these same things “shut-upness”. He recognized the ‘half-obscurity’ in which wo/man lives her life, he recognized that man recognizes the truth of ceremony, how many times to bow when walking past the altar, he knows things in the same way that a pupil uses ABC of a mathematical expression but not when it is changed to DEF. “He is therefore in dread whenever he hears something not arranged in the same order.”

[b]Shut-upness is what we today call repression. Kierkegaard recognized a “lofty shut-upness” and a “mistaken shut-upness”. It is important that a child be reared in a lofty shut-upness, i.e. reserve, because it represents an ego-controlled and self-confident perception of the world.

Mistaken shut-upness, however, results “in too much blockage, too much anxiety, too much effort to face up to experience by an organism that has been overburdened and weakened in its own controls…more automatic repression by an essentially closed personality”. Good is openness to new possibilities and evil is closed to such possibility.

Shut-upness is called, by Kierkegaard, “the lie of character”. “It is easy to see that shut-upness eo ipso signifies a lie, or, if you prefer, untruth. But untruth is precisely unfreedom…the elasticity of freedom is consumed in the service of close reserve…Close reserve was the effect of the negating retrenchment of the ego in the individuality.”[/b]

This ‘lie of character’ is developed by the infant’s need to adjust to the world. This unfreedom becomes mistaken shut-upness when the character becomes too fearful of the world to open itself up to its possibilities. Such individuals become ‘inauthentic’; they are not their own person; they follow a life style that becomes automatic and uncritical, they become locked in tradition. This infant grows up becoming the ‘automatic cultural-man’.

Quotes from “The Denial of Death”; Pulitzer Prize winner for nonfiction by Ernest Becker.

Chuck, I have always benefited by reading your quotes from Becker because he never fails in giving me the opportunity to offer what I think is a more reasonable conclusion to his Pulitzer Prize winning presentation of the observations of our ‘experiment’. In my view that life is a reaction to the void I suggest it is not our “fundamental fear of death” that causes “mental breakdown” but rather the sense of meaninglessness in “the void” we instinctively fear we will discover if we ask “Why am I?” the question I call “the last why”. It seems to me the fear of discovering the void has to be the source of “shut-upness”, “don’t ask”.

As I see life, we generate what fleeting sense of meaning we do now have with our natural activity of reaching out to the limits of our capacities, to others and to God, the ideal reaction to the void. So I suggest that if we were to engage exclusively in this natural activity and thus generate the maximum possible sense of meaning in life, we might not concern ourselves at all with death. Unfortunately, we will never find out unless we empty the void of all the inherited ways we are trying to fill it and thus free ourselves to create me(aning) in life.

It appears that we have anxiety about many things. We strive to create meaning in life so that life has some significance. If we fail to create that meaning then we face the void you speak of. As I comprehend the matter psychology teaches us that the fear of death is a component of all normal humans.

I am not disputing what psychology teaches. If fact, I believe a common fear of death is a fact that was learned through common sense long before psychology was invented in an effort to explain how we lost our common sense. All I am suggesting is that the fear of death seems to be variable and the amount of fear we experience appears to be directly proportional to the degree of meaningless we feel.

It might appear “that we have anxiety about many things”. However if we were really honest with ourselves I think we would agree that the “many things” are convenient distractions that keep us from acknowledging the source of all anxiety, the fact that there is no answer in the conventional sense to questions of meaning.

DEB

I suspect we are in the same ball park and we are not speaking about much difference in understanding.

Perhaps our increasing understanding will allow us to play on the same team some time.

I suspect we have always been on the same team. We both want a population that learns and becomes more conscious of important ideas and thereby become more responsible citizens.

In my view there should be only one team. It is called Humanity. Humanity divided is humanity destroyed.