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RE: The Legacy of Trauma: Does It Have the Potential to Shape Future Generations?

in Popular STEM5 months ago

To make things even more complicated, we might add that it's not even primarily about the things a mother passes on to her child while she's pregnant. Although this connection seems the strongest and most logical. Well, what is logical in our lives anyway?
One can be influenced by many other members of the family and the entire kin. Even people he didn't know, never met, might not have heard of. Big family secrets lend themselves to a forgotten relative suddenly coming to light through a child starting to live his/her life anew. Well, one can even experience the life of one's grandfather's jilted fiancee and whatnot. Rejected people, murders, crimes, secrets and not only - as you yourself write, experiences of wars and any other traumatic, external circumstances that are not related to the family, all this affects a person in his next life without him knowing it.
But you should not be troubled by thoughts like: then I could have lived in a different place, in a different way, I could have done something differently. You see the world is a playground where everything seems to be planned and set long before a person is born. And the trauma is constantly fueled and created again and again. Why don't wars stop, for example? One would say, we are "rational" beings, why should we go to war, kill each other? Even if a person is very careful in their actions, and they should be, and passes on a wonderful legacy to their children and grandchildren, there must be other circumstances to perpetuate the trauma.
Well, I've gone off topic a bit, but that's because just one comment can't cover everything on this complex subject.

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Well, I've gone off topic a bit, but that's because just one comment can't cover everything on this complex subject.

You have not gone off-topic, not even a bit! Actually, while writing this article, I thought, "What the actual heck? How will I cover everything under this very heading?" I may have touched a very tiny part of this complex debate. I mean, after completing the whole thing, I thought to myself, it seems more like a rant. But I could only talk from my personal experience. Do you know, or maybe you sensed, that I left out a very important detail? When I started my first paragraph, I told you about an experience and then I encountered the same event two more times in my life with somewhat different outcomes. She bears that melancholy (or maybe I'm being overly sentimental) that I bore during that period. I would cry insistently. That was the main reason to include my personal perspective, but it definitely turned into a vent!

One can be influenced by many other members of the family and the entire kin. Even people he didn't know, never met, might not have heard of.

Yes, yes, a hundred times yes! I have seen things and I'm in awe of how some people resurface again in another body and form.... Isn't it amazing???

Even if a person is very careful in their actions, and they should be, and passes on a wonderful legacy to their children and grandchildren, there must be other circumstances to perpetuate the trauma.

Agreed! Or as I said:

It has a life of it's own...

I was only wondering if this trauma can linger in the minds of future generations. My heart says a big fat yes ...

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