I don't think @SolarisOne was agreeing with you. He and @ohdeve were the only ones who offered opinions.Actually the one person who claims to have had it agreed with my explanation.
While the rest were just wrong.
I don't think @SolarisOne was agreeing with you. He and @ohdeve were the only ones who offered opinions.Actually the one person who claims to have had it agreed with my explanation.
While the rest were just wrong.
Really? Because our explanations were more or less the same. So...I don't think @SolarisOne was agreeing with you. He and @ohdave were the only ones who offered opinions.
Don't think soReally? Because our explanations were more or less the same. So...
vsAnd that's utter bullshit.
The event in question was an explosion, not a bunch of Klingons with guns shooting her parents while she watched. Meaning if she had PTSD it would have been triggered by explosion like events, not Klingons.
Not really seeing the crossover.Your knowledge of how PTSD works is lacking. Depending on the person, even little, insignificant-seeming (on the surface) things can trigger fight-or-flight, panic, paranoia, flashbacks, or any other PTSD-related response. Sights, sounds, and smells--among other more complicated things--can all be triggers.
TL;DR: The manner in which PTSD symptoms present is often rather more complicated than you think.
And, yes, I am speaking from experience.
Yes it is.
PTSD flashbacks are connected to the event that caused the PTSD. Be it a smell, a sight, a sound. The trigger will be something connected to the event that puts the person back into the state of mind they were when they event occurred. Because that's how associative memory works.
And the fact is there's nothing to associate the sight of Klingon's with the traumatic event Burnham experienced.
You're probably using the wrong adhesive. Use Pros-Aide.The new look of Klingons doesn't stick to me. Oh my.. the spore drive is a kickass!
Actually it does.
Dude, read your own articles cause they just proved my point.Please read this:
http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-how-everyday-sounds-trigger-veterans-with-ptsd-2017-6?IR=T
and this:
https://www.verywell.com/ptsd-triggers-and-coping-strategies-2797557
The second article specifically mentions seeing someone that reminds you of a specific event.
Dude, read your own articles cause they just proved my point.
I don't think Michael is actually prejudiced against Klingons but it has the very Un-Trek idea that she's trying to communicate, "I'm not racist against Klingons. It's not their genes which bother me, it's the fact they're a culture of violent psychopaths coming to kill us all." It's like suddenly the universe operates by the same values on display in Homeland.
She's panicking because she knows what's coming as much as a nervous breakdown.
Which is actually my big issue in all of. I'm both a Star Wars as well as a Trek fan as @Jedi Ben can attest. One of the big flaws of the EU was when they had a major character fall and NOT be redeemed just to be different.
I'm cool with Michael having serious issues with the Klingons and the Klingons being strange, dangerous, and violent.
HOWEVER, I think Gene had it right that the goal should ultimately be peace with them not victory in war--which is hard to support when they're eating people.
Which is actually my big issue in all of. I'm both a Star Wars as well as a Trek fan as @Jedi Ben can attest. One of the big flaws of the EU was when they had a major character fall and NOT be redeemed just to be different.
I'm cool with Michael having serious issues with the Klingons and the Klingons being strange, dangerous, and violent.
HOWEVER, I think Gene had it right that the goal should ultimately be peace with them not victory in war--which is hard to support when they're eating people.
And this episode featured a tardigrade creature that murdered an entire starship crew and on-screen straight up killed a major character (Landry), end up being considered innocent and Michael is currently suffering a crisis of conscience over its well-being.
The Klingons eat people. They murder families. They enslave entire civilizations. We're going to see soon their lovely treatment of prisoners. They are the bad guys for a reason. But I think the show will surprise us, and there will be peace achieved. A tentative one, if canon is to be our guide (the cold war erupts again in 11 years). Michael will be involved, maybe Lorca too. And probably not one of the more fanatical Klingons.
This 100%. And yes, I speak from experience.How can seeing a Klingon not be a trigger for someone who lost their family in a KLINGON ATTACK? Your argument would be valid if Burnham's parents had been killed in an explosion with cause unrelated to the Klingons. You even argue against your own point in your first paragraph. By your argument, an Army vet who served in Iraq in combat would only be triggered by going back to iraq and getting involved in combat again. Please explain then why there are countless accounts of Army veterans suffering from PTSD being trigger by fireworks, a car back firing, a plastic bag blowing on a street or the smell of cooking meat?
It's the same with survivors of sexual abuse. They can be triggered by a strangers after shave or someone wearing similar clothes as their attacker, a room with wallpaper the same colour as the room where their abuse took place. They don't need to be subject to abuse again to be triggered.
How do you know that them overcoming their issues won’t also cause the same in Lorca?Oh, I am sure it will come up again. But I doubt they will stop doing morally questionable things anytime soon. The show wants to be all dark and gritty.
If Lorca isn't dying anytime soon, they practically would have to mutiny though to change anything. I doubt this will happen in the near future. Maybe at the end of the season. So we will get more episodes with the Discovery crew doing questionable things. They might calm their bad conscience with the excuse that they were just following orders or war made their actions necessary, but this still doesn't make them particular likeable to me.
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