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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
I worked as a war reporter for 15 years before I realized that I really had a problem. There was something really wrong with me.
This was about a year before 9/11, and America wasn't at war yet. We weren't talking about PTSD. We were not yet talking about the effect of trauma1 and war on the human psyche2. I'd been in Afghanistan for a couple of months with the Northern Alliance as they were fighting the Taliban. And at that point the Taliban had an air force, they had fighter planes, they had tanks, they had artillery3, and we really got hammered pretty badly a couple of times. We saw some very ugly things. But I didn't really think it affected4 me. I didn't think much about it.
I came home to New York, where I live. Then one day I went down into the subway, and for the first time in my life, I knew real fear. I had a massive panic attack. I was way more scared than I had ever been in Afghanistan. Everything I was looking at seemed like it was going to kill me, but I couldn't explain why. The trains were going too fast. There were too many people. The lights were too bright. Everything was too loud, everything was moving too quickly. I backed up against a support column and just waited for it. When I couldn't take it any longer, I ran out of the subway station and walked wherever I was going.
Later, I found out that what I had was short-term PTSD: post-traumatic stress disorder5. We evolved as animals, as primates6, to survive periods of danger, and if your life has been in danger, you want to react to unfamiliar7 noises. You want to sleep lightly, wake up easily. You want to have nightmares and flashbacks of the thing that could kill you. You want to be angry because it makes you predisposed to fight, or depressed8, because it keeps you out of circulation a little bit. Keeps you safe. It's not very pleasant, but it's better than getting eaten.
Most people recover from that pretty quickly. It takes a few weeks, a few months. I kept having panic attacks, but they eventually went away. I had no idea it was connected to the war that I'd seen. I just thought I was going crazy, and then I thought, well, now I'm not going crazy anymore.
About 20 percent of people, however, wind up with chronic9, long-term PTSD. They are not adapted to temporary danger. They are maladapted for everyday life, unless they get help. We know that the people who are vulnerable to long-term PTSD are people who were abused as children, who suffered trauma as children, people who have low education levels, people who have psychiatric disorders10 in their family. If you served in Vietnam and your brother is schizophrenic, you're way more likely to get long-term PTSD from Vietnam.
So I started to study this as a journalist, and I realized that there was something really strange going on. The numbers seemed to be going in the wrong direction. Every war that we have fought as a country, starting with the Civil War, the intensity11 of the combat has gone down. As a result, the casualty rates have gone down. But disability rates have gone up. They should be going in the same direction, but they're going in different directions.
The recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have produced, thank God, a casualty rate about one third of what it was in Vietnam. But they've also created -- they've also produced three times the disability rates. Around 10 percent of the US military is actively12 engaged in combat, 10 percent or under. They're shooting at people, killing13 people, getting shot at, seeing their friends get killed. It's incredibly traumatic. But it's only about 10 percent of our military. But about half of our military has filed for some kind of PTSD compensation from the government.
And suicide doesn't even fit into this in a very logical way. We've all heard the tragic14 statistic15 of 22 vets16 a day, on average, in this country, killing themselves. Most people don't realize that the majority of those suicides are veterans of the Vietnam War, that generation, and their decision to take their own lives actually might not be related to the war they fought 50 years earlier. In fact, there's no statistical17 connection between combat and suicide. If you're in the military and you're in a lot of combat, you're no more likely to kill yourself than if you weren't. In fact, one study found that if you deploy18 to Iraq or Afghanistan, you're actually slightly less likely to commit suicide later.
I studied anthropology19 in college. I did my fieldwork on the Navajo reservation. I wrote a thesis on Navajo long-distance runners. And recently, while I was researching PTSD, I had this thought. I thought back to the work I did when I was young, and I thought, I bet the Navajo, the Apache, the Comanche -- I mean, these are very warlike nations -- I bet they weren't getting PTSD like we do. When their warriors20 came back from fighting the US military or fighting each other, I bet they pretty much just slipped right back into tribal21 life.
And maybe what determines the rate of long-term PTSD isn't what happened out there, but the kind of society you come back to. And maybe if you come back to a close, cohesive22, tribal society, you can get over trauma pretty quickly. And if you come back to an alienating23, modern society, you might remain traumatized your entire life. In other words, maybe the problem isn't them, the vets; maybe the problem is us.
Certainly, modern society is hard on the human psyche by every metric that we have. As wealth goes up in a society, the suicide rate goes up instead of down. If you live in modern society, you're up to eight times more likely to suffer from depression in your lifetime than if you live in a poor, agrarian24 society. Modern society has probably produced the highest rates of suicide and depression and anxiety and loneliness and child abuse ever in human history. I saw one study that compared women in Nigeria, one of the most chaotic25 and violent and corrupt26 and poorest countries in Africa, to women in North America. And the highest rates of depression were urban women in North America. That was also the wealthiest group.
So let's go back to the US military. Ten percent are in combat. Around 50 percent have filed for PTSD compensation. So about 40 percent of veterans really were not traumatized overseas but have come home to discover they are dangerously alienated27 and depressed. So what is happening with them? What's going on with those people, the phantom28 40 percent that are troubled but don't understand why?
Maybe it's this: maybe they had an experience of sort of tribal closeness in their unit when they were overseas. They were eating together, sleeping together, doing tasks and missions together. They were trusting each other with their lives. And then they come home and they have to give all that up and they're coming back to a society, a modern society, which is hard on people who weren't even in the military. It's just hard on everybody.
And we keep focusing on trauma, PTSD. But for a lot of these people, maybe it's not trauma. I mean, certainly, soldiers are traumatized and the ones who are have to be treated for that. But a lot of them -- maybe what's bothering them is actually a kind of alienation29. I mean, maybe we just have the wrong word for some of it, and just changing our language, our understanding, would help a little bit. "Post-deployment alienation disorder." Maybe even just calling it that for some of these people would allow them to stop imagining trying to imagine a trauma that didn't really happen in order to explain a feeling that really is happening. And in fact, it's an extremely dangerous feeling. That alienation and depression can lead to suicide. These people are in danger. It's very important to understand why.
The Israeli military has a PTSD rate of around one percent. The theory is that everyone in Israel is supposed to serve in the military. When soldiers come back from the front line, they're not going from a military environment to a civilian30 environment. They're coming back to a community where everyone understands about the military. Everyone's been in it or is going to be in it. Everyone understands the situation they're all in. It's as if they're all in one big tribe.
We know that if you take a lab rat and traumatize it and put it in a cage by itself, you can maintain its trauma symptoms almost indefinitely. And if you take that same lab rat and put it in a cage with other rats, after a couple of weeks, it's pretty much OK.
After 9/11, the murder rate in New York City went down by 40 percent. The suicide rate went down. The violent crime rate in New York went down after 9/11. Even combat veterans of previous wars who suffered from PTSD said that their symptoms went down after 9/11 happened. The reason is that if you traumatize an entire society, we don't fall apart and turn on one another. We come together. We unify31. Basically, we tribalize, and that process of unifying32 feels so good and is so good for us, that it even helps people who are struggling with mental health issues. During the blitz in London, admissions to psychiatric wards33 went down during the bombings.
For a while, that was the kind of country that American soldiers came back to -- a unified34 country. We were sticking together. We were trying to understand the threat against us. We were trying to help ourselves and the world. But that's changed. Now, American soldiers, American veterans are coming back to a country that is so bitterly divided that the two political parties are literally35 accusing each other of treason, of being an enemy of the state, of trying to undermine the security and the welfare of their own country. The gap between rich and poor is the biggest it's ever been. It's just getting worse. Race relations are terrible. There are demonstrations36 and even riots in the streets because of racial injustice37. And veterans know that any tribe that treated itself that way -- in fact, any platoon that treated itself that way -- would never survive. We've gotten used to it. Veterans have gone away and are coming back and seeing their own country with fresh eyes. And they see what's going on. This is the country they fought for. No wonder they're depressed. No wonder they're scared.
Sometimes, we ask ourselves if we can save the vets. I think the real question is if we can save ourselves. If we can, I think the vets are going to be fine. It's time for this country to unite, if only to help the men and women who fought to protect us.
Thank you very much.
点击收听单词发音
1 trauma | |
n.外伤,精神创伤 | |
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2 psyche | |
n.精神;灵魂 | |
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3 artillery | |
n.(军)火炮,大炮;炮兵(部队) | |
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4 affected | |
adj.不自然的,假装的 | |
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5 disorder | |
n.紊乱,混乱;骚动,骚乱;疾病,失调 | |
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6 primates | |
primate的复数 | |
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7 unfamiliar | |
adj.陌生的,不熟悉的 | |
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8 depressed | |
adj.沮丧的,抑郁的,不景气的,萧条的 | |
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9 chronic | |
adj.(疾病)长期未愈的,慢性的;极坏的 | |
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10 disorders | |
n.混乱( disorder的名词复数 );凌乱;骚乱;(身心、机能)失调 | |
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11 intensity | |
n.强烈,剧烈;强度;烈度 | |
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12 actively | |
adv.积极地,勤奋地 | |
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13 killing | |
n.巨额利润;突然赚大钱,发大财 | |
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14 tragic | |
adj.悲剧的,悲剧性的,悲惨的 | |
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15 statistic | |
n.统计量;adj.统计的,统计学的 | |
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16 vets | |
abbr.veterans (复数)老手,退伍军人;veterinaries (复数)兽医n.兽医( vet的名词复数 );老兵;退伍军人;兽医诊所v.审查(某人过去的记录、资格等)( vet的第三人称单数 );调查;检查;诊疗 | |
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17 statistical | |
adj.统计的,统计学的 | |
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18 deploy | |
v.(军)散开成战斗队形,布置,展开 | |
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19 anthropology | |
n.人类学 | |
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20 warriors | |
武士,勇士,战士( warrior的名词复数 ) | |
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21 tribal | |
adj.部族的,种族的 | |
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22 cohesive | |
adj.有粘着力的;有结合力的;凝聚性的 | |
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23 alienating | |
v.使疏远( alienate的现在分词 );使不友好;转让;让渡(财产等) | |
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24 agrarian | |
adj.土地的,农村的,农业的 | |
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25 chaotic | |
adj.混沌的,一片混乱的,一团糟的 | |
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26 corrupt | |
v.贿赂,收买;adj.腐败的,贪污的 | |
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27 alienated | |
adj.感到孤独的,不合群的v.使疏远( alienate的过去式和过去分词 );使不友好;转让;让渡(财产等) | |
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28 phantom | |
n.幻影,虚位,幽灵;adj.错觉的,幻影的,幽灵的 | |
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29 alienation | |
n.疏远;离间;异化 | |
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30 civilian | |
adj.平民的,民用的,民众的 | |
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31 unify | |
vt.使联合,统一;使相同,使一致 | |
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32 unifying | |
使联合( unify的现在分词 ); 使相同; 使一致; 统一 | |
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33 wards | |
区( ward的名词复数 ); 病房; 受监护的未成年者; 被人照顾或控制的状态 | |
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34 unified | |
(unify 的过去式和过去分词); 统一的; 统一标准的; 一元化的 | |
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35 literally | |
adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实 | |
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36 demonstrations | |
证明( demonstration的名词复数 ); 表明; 表达; 游行示威 | |
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37 injustice | |
n.非正义,不公正,不公平,侵犯(别人的)权利 | |
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