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The following studies on attacking the eyes are now from the perspective of the possible consequences of these attacks on the individual
and how that individual will react to trauma.
we need right now, scoring and characterize what would this traumatic blindness.
Although we are studying so theoretically all these aspects related to attacks on the eye region
is important to consider that in a practical situation, which in real life
this attack allows the individual a feeling of stopping their initial intention to attack,
so as to cause a shock.
The nervous system will react in different ways to those proposed that the individual initially thought,
the feeling of confusion, fear, due to the attack on this region.
Soon after this attack on the ocular region
the individual despite not feeling pain,
probably due to a discharge of adrenaline,
he will have independent reactions, which are not connected to this feeling of pain,
show that as a loss in the sense of navigation, its direction,
fear and distancing himself from the situation in order to escape, wanting to get out of there
a sense of protection that is independent of pain.
the body its self, as a way to protect these devices triggers.
Now, after we've seen what happens to the individual at the time of the attack,
is important to consider what happens after, the post traumatic.
how it takes place for each person, individualy.
In this sense it is important to emphasize that the psychosocial impacts of visual impairment are different from individual to individual
thus altering the way each reacts and responds to these adverse situations
To this we must also consider other important factors to analyze these impacts psychosocial as:
The degree of vision remaining,
the type and stability of the view that the individual still has,
Whether there is some form of an outside observer identify this lack of vision,
Since for any, this individual will be marked, he has a face on display, showing the signs of this trauma.
When we are in a rehabilitation center, for example,
realize that individuals who suffered these injuries,
not necessarily physical assault, most eye injuries in general, suffer greatly under the social coercion,
how the other sees him in society,
this makes his living with others a little harder,
making necessary a psychosocial treatment for this individual is accepted again with their new condition.
When we take for example the bujutsu
and experience of older Masters, we must take care in the very large sense,
about what we learn of good from those informations and this ancestor which are so pressious
Thus, we get that the dangerousness of such sensitive areas as the eye region is very large and it can happen in fractions of a second.
If you take someone experienced in tantojutsu for example
it happens too fast and this loss; this trauma is over is a long process
and most importantly: being distant these actions danger of confrontation and conflict.
Some authors consider that this blindness has to be a death of a person who sees,
going through a time of mourning, and rebirth as someone who can not see.
In this sense we find some phases of adaptation that are not consensus for the entire academic community,
some consider a number of phases "x"
others feel that to qualify this process in stages, disregard individual skill readaptation.
I think it's more important to consider this moment
Containing: a part of trauma, followed by pain and grief
when the individual moves away from society in order to digest and process what has happened,
to the stage of mobilization, readaptation, restructuring and finally culminate in an acceptance in an readaptation of a self-image,
causing this individual to accept
and look forward to his new position and his new life, Finally he gets to walk straight in to a new future.