Explodes the myth that the cause of death can be attributed to loss of moral fiber or lack of will to survive. Leach gives good practical advice on the psychological first aid needed to survive. -Chris Brooks, Chief Medical Officer, Canadian Air ForceIn circumstances of extreme stress and deprivation, why do some survive while others perish? In this primer on the psychological aspects of human survival, John leach draws on dramatic historical and contemporary incidents of disaster to provide an engaging look at survival psychology under the harshest physical and psychological conditions. Focusing on such factors as hunger, thirst, cold, heat, crowding, isolation, fatigue, and sleep deprivation, and on their psychological consequences, Survival Psychology reveals much about the short and long term effects of disaster on the human psyche.
This is a dry (occasionally dryly funny) textbook-ish discussion of the psychology of survival. Leach defines all his terms, talks through them carefully, considers all angles. It is the exact opposite of The Survivors Club, in terms of attitude and realism. Leach is clinical (he does not shy away from the word "victim") and starkly realistic (i.e., not handing out little badges that say SURVIVOR to everyone who wants one); interestingly, he, too, ends with the observation that some people survive disasters and come out stronger and happier on the other side--this comes, however, after a considerably longer discussion of PTSD and psychological upheaval. Obviously I prefer this approach, even though it is a little uncomfortable, especially when he's talking about the prevalence of denial and inactivity among people who know a disaster could be or outright is coming. I look at my own failures in tornado preparedness (when tornadoes do happen where I live) and cringe. "Denial and inactivity," says Leach, "prepare people well for the roles of victim and corpse."
If you're interested in how people behave during disasters and why some people survive and others don't, this is definitely the place to start.
Every Fall I try to take a bit of time to disaster/contingency plan for the coming year; all suggest planning is crucial to success in times of crisis. Knowing this, I still frequently neglect the "soft" aspects of emergency event triage, the mind and emotions of crisis; reading this book was a means of addressing this knowledge gap.
Very clearly written and using many anecdotal and psychological studies, the author paints a good survey of the various stages of cataclysmic events and the ways in which most people react to them. The appendix shorthand lists for triage in crisis has been duly photocopied and added to the house emergency binder. Furthermore, the small but explicit portion on mitigating duress to children in turmoil was indispensable, and included some intuitive, but as yet unknown to me aspects like: Project calm, kids behavior will mirror your own; never allow a child to be separated from a parent if possible, and provide "touch" and token comforts when possible.
Like all prep resources, I hope to never have to use them, but I sure as hell want to be an asset for myself, family and others and not a mess when bad times come calling.
Genuinely fascinating exploration of the psychology behind survival. Whether it be from the survivor's perspective, the rescuer's perspective, the duration, and type of disaster.
The gist is - Break survival down into small, achievable tasks with an end goal in mind and then execute them. Fail to do so, and wander aimlessly around until dead. - Get support from those around you
So a microcosm of normal life mostly.
Not as dry as you would think, either
"Steven Callahan helped to ease the tension of struggling alone in a life-raft with humour and cynical jokes. A number of fish called Dorados had been shadowing his life-raft for some days. On the 11th day adrift he wrote on a notepad which served as a log: 'The Dorados remain, beautiful, alluring. I asked one to marry me. But her parents will not hear of it. I am not colourful enough. Imagine, bigotry even here! However, they also point out that I do not have a very bright future. It is a reasonable objection.'"
Health care practitioners should skip. Basic information. This sums it up. "The key psychological factors found in survivors have been described as establishing a mission, tasking, attachment, prayer, personal character, humour, active-passiveness, adaptation and consolidation."
Interesting read, including material that lead to a titillating discussion between my colleagues and I; how to pronounce 'give-up-itis' ('give up I-tis' or 'give up it is'). Although, I felt that the book should include less case studies, and include more material regarding brain functioning.