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Hiroshima And The Inheritance Of Trauma

Decent Essays

What if I told you truma could be inherited; meaning you were not the one who initially experienced the traumatic event, however, you still suffer great stress from it. Sarah Stillman in “Hiroshima and the Inheritance of Trauma” suggests that trauma may be a ‘contagious disease’ that can spread amongst both families as well as generations. She uses an example of a woman named Tomiko Shoji who was only nineteen when she survived the bombing of Hiroshima. Shoji suffered post traumatic stress disorder as well has radiation poisoning, which consisted of her losing her hearing, sight, and teeth in her forties. She also had psychological symptoms which consisted of losing control during thunder storms and collapsing with fear when she tried to speak of the event. Some of these were inherited by her granddaughter Keni Sabath who first became aware of her grandmother’s experience in a disturbing way at the young age of six. According to an article in Scientific American by Tori Rodriguez, there is a study being done that researches mass trauma survivors and their offspring. The study looks at holocaust survivors and their descendents as well as their levels of cortisol, a hormone that helps the body return to normal after trauma. Sabath was affected by the trauma because she has close contact with Shoji who experienced the trauma. This goes to show that trauma after all may be a ‘contagious disease’, one that haunts not only the traumatized individual but those they are close to.

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