Shawn

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Many of the Western counselors and experts who rushed in after the tsunami assumed that the long and brutal civil war had made the individuals in the population ever more psychologically vulnerable and therefore more likely to experience PTSD after the tsunami. There was, of course, an alternative possibility: that the Sri Lankans—because of their intimate familiarity with poverty, hardship, and war—had evolved a culture better able to integrate and give meaning to terrible events.
Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche
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