悲剧和治愈反应。

S. Chandrasoma
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引用次数: 0

摘要

9月11日,我和大多数美国人一样,全神贯注地盯着CNN,看着一架被劫持的商业客机以一个无尽的、多角度的循环撞向世界贸易中心。直到今天,我仍然部分地忘记了那天发生的事情。上学和担心内科期末考试,我发现很难意识到美国处于战争状态。CNN仍在铺天盖地地报道阿富汗的新闻,但在我不得不看电视的那几分钟里,我发现自己会内疚地切换频道,看看《实习医生风云》(Scrubs)到底在讲什么。午餐时间,我穿过四方广场,看到张贴的献血活动提醒,我惊讶于这样一件可怕的事件,深深刻在记忆中,竟然能把一个民族的人变成治疗师和帮助者。图1在所有的悲剧中,许多不同的人都成为了疗愈者AP/Pat Carter那天以及之后的日子里,我看到在美国实行的缓和疗法超越了医学专业。人们献血的速度如此之快,以至于CNN评论员保拉·扎恩(Paula Zahn)说,她曾试图献血,但没有得到足够的休假,无法站在等待献血的5个小时队伍中。在南加州大学校园和全国各地的校园,组织了紧急献血活动,并通过电子邮件通知学生。我和我的朋友和家人一起,花了一天的大部分时间打电话,查看东海岸的亲人,并试图谈论这一天的疯狂。每个人都为家人和朋友提供心理咨询,每个人都有无数的其他人帮助他们处理悲剧。通过捐赠、支持和安慰,美国证明了自己是一个“集体医生”,在治疗自己。“医生”的定义超越了学位、荣誉和教育水平。在美国几十年来最黑暗的时刻,除了卫生专业人员之外,还有大量的人进行了医学和姑息治疗。一名警察在舒适的环境中提供药品,以肺部燃烧为代价分享呼吸机,美国各地大量捐赠血液制品。事件发生一周后,一个不同类型的故事传来,不是来自CNN,而是来自当地的电视和广播。这些都是不容忍和偏执的悲惨故事。一个埃及店主在离我家十分钟路程的地方被枪杀了,凶手留下了一个装满钱的收银机还有抢劫的动机。穆斯林学生和他们的家人通过电话和邮件收到了死亡威胁。虽然悲剧,但对这些故事的反应是积极的;所有种族和信仰的人都谴责仇恨犯罪,人们采取行动,使肇事者受到与袭击世贸中心的肇事者同样严厉的惩罚。在美国的“身体”中,一些坏细菌发现自己被统一的红细胞所压倒,并被强大的免疫系统所追捕。美国正试图通过促进团结来治愈自己,而不是在不信任的恶性局面下堕落。我开车去学校,仍然能看到街角的人(不管多早)疯狂地挥舞着美国国旗。在每个十字路口,我们都能看到美国的星条旗悬挂在汽车的车窗或天线上。正是这种团结精神最能治愈我们的人民。现在,美国国旗似乎是市场上最有效的抗抑郁药。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Tragedy and the healing response.
September 11 found me, like most of America, riveted to CNN, watching a hijacked commercial airliner fly into the World Trade Center in an endless, multiangled loop. To this day, I am still partially dissociated from the reality of what happened on that day. Attending school and worrying about an internal medicine final, I find it difficult to realize that the United States is at war. CNN is still buzzing with exposes on Afghanistan, but in the few moments I have to watch television, I find myself guiltily switching to see what “Scrubs” is all about. Walking through the quad at lunchtime, I see a posted reminder of a blood drive, and I marvel that such a horrific event, burned into memory, could turn a nation of people into healers and helpers. Figure 1 In all tragedies, many different people become healers AP/Pat Carter The palliative medicine that I saw practiced in America that day and the days following transcended the medical profession. People donated blood at such a rate that CNN commentator Paula Zahn said that she had tried to donate but didn't get enough of a leave from reporting to stand in the 5-hour line of people waiting to give. At the USC campus and campuses across the country, emergency blood drives were organized, and students were informed via e-mail. Along with my friends and family, I spent much of the day on the phone, checking up on loved ones on the East Coast and trying to talk over the insanity of the day. Each person served as a psychological consultation to family and friends, and each person had countless other people helping to deal with the tragedy. Through the donations, support, and consoling, America proved itself to be a “collective physician,” treating itself. The definition of “physician” opened wide to rise above degrees, accolades, and educational prowess. In the darkest hour America has seen in decades, a vast population beyond that of just health professionals carried out the practices of medicine and palliative care. There was medicine in the comfort offered by a police officer, a respirator shared at the cost of burning lungs, and the overwhelming donation of blood products across America. A week after the event, a different type of story came in, not from CNN but through local television and radio. These were sad tales of intolerance and bigotry. An Egyptian storeowner was shot in his place of business 10 minutes from my house, his murderers leaving behind a full cash register and any chance of robbery as a motive. Muslim students and their families received death threats via phone and mail. Although tragic, the response to these stories was positive; people of all races and creeds denounced the hate crimes, and people took action to see that the perpetrators would be punished as severely as those responsible for the World Trade Center attack. In “the body” that is America, a few bad bacteria find themselves outnumbered by unified red blood cells and pursued by a strong immune system. America is trying to keep itself healed by promoting unity rather than degeneration at the hands of the malignancy of mistrust. I drive to school and still see people on street corners (no matter how early, it seems) frantically waving American flags. The Stars and Stripes can be seen whipping from the window or antenna of cars at every intersection. It is this spirit of unity that heals our population the most. Right now, the American flag seems to be the most effective antidepressant on the market.
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