Addressing Trauma in the Modern World

Dr. Gabor Maté is certainly making good points about the factors precipitating trauma and illness in our culture. He mentioned that the medical profession is not formulating solutions based on current research, but it should be pointed out that published research is coming out in an enormous volume, and that is before AI even entered the equation. Perhaps using AI to process research and formulate treatment strategies will no doubt be on the horizon, in the near future.
 

Dr. Gabor Maté is certainly making good points about the factors precipitating trauma and illness in our culture. He mentioned that the medical profession is not formulating solutions based on current research, but it should be pointed out that published research is coming out in an enormous volume, and that is before AI even entered the equation. Perhaps using AI to process research and formulate treatment strategies will no doubt be on the horizon, in the near future.
Above all, he is saying that many doctors are themselves traumatised people, but have no way of addressing the influence this has on their lives. One of my friends is a retired GP who started out as a surgeon. He said that he went into general practice because he saw so many of his colleagues using alcohol to steady their nerves, which explains why some were almost robotic in their responses.

My experiences of caring for elderly people revealed how many were still carrying trauma from the war with them. This made me reflect on some of the strange elderly people I encountered as a child, and I was told I was "very impressionable" when I mentioned it. My own experiences of a disrupted family life at that time, as well as suffering sexual abuse outside of the family, apart from nightmares that troubled me, had traumatic effects that I only realised through personal introspection later in life.

Such issues are often suppressed, and their impact on our lives only becomes apparent through introspection or therapy.
 

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