On a recent trip to my dad's neuro doctor the doctor said that they believe that some of the dementias & alz could be caused by traumatic childhood experiences. I was shocked, as this is the first I had heard of this. Has anyone else heard anything like this from a health care professional?
In later wars, farther away in more unfamiiar territory, Korea I think, certainly Vietnam, society began to have doubts - if WW1 was supposed to be the war that would end all wars, and WW2 was entered reluctantly at the end, to help with a horrible victimization within familiar European countries, and a response to Japan's action. It was short, seen to end in victory, so society was united in relief. Some of trauma is related to how your family and neighbors see things. In later wars, the reasons and timing were far less clear, and debates began about whether or not we should be so engaged. Those soldiers returned home not to praise and gratitude, but to frequent debates over whether or not we should have been there at all. Wondering if we were doing the right thing, makes risk of war a lot less clear, and returning home to arguments over whether or not there should even be a war - that was traumatic, a horrible way of greeting people who saw much human trauma first hand. We later learned to be more sensitive and welcome veterans home, whether we are for or against war.
But ongoing wars are debated, the methods, duration and goals far less clear. So many soldiers arrive home to a country where many just go on with their lives, and only close family notice their absence. Children who experience or witness abuse are also more traumatized when their family members do not believe them - leaving the impression that there is no-one to trust to help.
All a big topic, but having one's experience discounted by surrounding people is known to compound trauma, as is having nowhere to go for help, few who understand a sense of meaning and value. Perhaps if one has lived a long time with little understanding of one's losses and shocks, one is more upset. I've seen elders whose verbal shouts represent a sense of order that used to be familiar in their world, but the world changed, and they didn't follow.
trauma.
Since I'd never heard DH speak of a Grandpa on that side of the family I asked about him. He said he'd died when he was little, but that he was weird, "lived in the basement". Said when the family went to their house to visit the Grandma they told the little kids "don't go in the basement, never be alone with your Grandpa". That's all he knew about him.
Poor MIL was a mess later in life, seemed normal, married DH's father, had the one son, flipped out at church one day when DH was 4 years old. Stayed in a state facility 'til he was 13. Sort of in and out after that. I always wondered if her issues were from traumatic childhood, genetic, or both?
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2933793/