Collective Trauma
Who else remembers September 11, 2001?
I live on the West Coast, so it was 6:00 our time. I had the alarm clock set for 6:00, and it was set to
Then the second plane came into view, flying straight toward that second tower. I remember a feeling
I was absolutely traumatized. I was crying, my head was spinning, I felt confused and panicked and I
I sat down and tried to think.
It was a weekday but I didn’t know if we would be working. I called my boss at the State and asked
I went to work but I couldn’t concentrate. I was absolutely horrified. I couldn’t get my head around the
I found a really good interview with Dr. Roxanne Cohen Silver on this event and the ensuing constant
media coverage and the trauma it caused and continues to cause. There is a recording and a transcript,
and I highly recommend going over the whole thing.
https://www.apa.org/news/podcasts/speaking-of-psychology/9-11-twenty-years
The introduction:
This week marks 20 years since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Researchers call this kind of shared disaster
a “collective trauma.” Roxane Cohen Silver, PhD, of the University of California
Irvine, who studies collective trauma and led a multi-year study on the mental and
physical health effects of 9/11, discusses that research and how what we learned in
the aftermath of 9/11 can inform our response to the COVID-19 pandemic,
hurricanes, wildfires, and other large-scale disasters.
About the expert:
About the expert: Roxane Cohen Silver, PhD
Roxane Cohen Silver, PhD, is a distinguished professor of psychological science, medicine, and public health at the University of California Irvine. She studies the long-term physical, cognitive, emotional, and social effects of traumatic experiences, both personal traumas as well as large community disasters such as terrorist attacks, earthquakes or firestorms, infectious disease outbreaks, school shootings, and war. She also studies resilience factors and how people cope with these traumas. She was the principal investigator of a multi-year longitudinal study of the national impact of the September 11 terrorist attacks on mental and physical health. She has also studied the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, the Ebola public health crisis, the 2016 Orlando nightclub mass shooting, and Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Michael. Most recently, her research team has also undertaken an NSF-funded national longitudinal study of the 2020 novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic in the United States.
The parameters of the study:
My colleagues and I began in the days after the September 11th terrorist attacks to study a large representative sample of Americans who were followed for about three years. Those individuals were from across the United States. We had people, of course, who were from the New York area, as well as people in every state of the country.
We started a few days after the 9/11 attacks to ask people about their exposure to the attacks, whether or not they knew anybody who was in the World Trade Center or the Pentagon or on one of the airplanes, whether or not they themselves were in New York City or Washington, D.C., whether they knew anybody who was lost and presumably at that point killed by the attacks. We also asked people the amount of television that they watched in the first few days after the 9/11 attacks.
You may remember, or those who can remember that day, know that in general, most regular programming was suspended, with a very intense media focus on the 9/11 attacks and the attempts to find survivors in the rubble, and also to understand a little bit more about what happened. We followed these individuals in our study. It was about 3,500 individuals. We followed them, as I said, for three years, and we looked at their emotional responses, their ongoing concerns about terrorism.
We also measured some of their physical health complaints, those physical health complaints that developed over the next three years. And in addition, during that period of time that we studied people, we assessed their ongoing, as I said, concerns about terrorism, but their continued exposure to personal traumatic experiences like, did they lose a loved one to cancer? Did they themselves get sick? Did they witness violence?
We explored the impact of people's exposure to 9/11, the impact of exposure to other events in their lives, and how that impacted their psychological state over the next several years.
So what about it?
Did you witness it on TV? Live? (Did it happen before you were born lol?)
What were your immediate reactions?
What do you think about the changes in the routines for air travel?
What do you think of the documentaries and the anniversary specials?
Did it change your life/how you see the world in the present day?
Let’s talk about it.
And yes, I know this isn’t technically about childhood trauma but I thought it would be a good addition
to our discussions. Cut me some slack!
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