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traumas

alt. (plural of trauma English) n. (plural of trauma English)

Usage examples of "traumas".

Across the screen of Macy’s awareness floated a cloud of mucky particles of experience, miscellaneous rapes, seductions, artistic triumphs, investment decisions, childhood traumas, and indignations, drifting murkily about.

I have also treated sixty-four patients for traumas and wounds of various sorts.

Most out-of-body experiences were the results of traumas and useless in a commercial sense--and theo rists still argued over whether the out-of-body phenom enon was a kinetic manifestation or a strong telepathic projection.

She was haunted by memories of Carrik and, as such traumas can, they colored, and augmented, her responses to Lars.

The boy had simply had one too many profound traumas in a short space of time.

Even Daisy, whom the medics had once thought might be muted by the traumas she had lived through, now babbled away without inhibitions.

This section discusses the internal dynamics--the mental processes making adjustment better or worse, the emotional/physiological reactions, the development or lack of coping skills--that play an important role in the way we handle traumas over time.

While we largely recover, there are so many traumas in life that lots people are carrying scars from old traumas and, at the same time, still hurting somewhat from more recent distresses.

Only a few of us continue to suffer greatly from the same traumas others recover from.

Recriminations and lawsuits did the cult in within five years, and the place became an avant-garde secondary school, where the scions of the Connecticut gentry took courses in copulatory gymnastics, polarity traumas, and social relativity.

The analysis had led by the correct path to such infantile sexual traumas, and yet these were not true.

If hysterics refer their symptoms to imaginary traumas, then this new fact signifies that they create such scenes in their phantasies, and hence psychic reality deserves to be given a place next to actual reality.

Disposition and experience here became associated into an inseparable etiological unity, in that the disposition raised certain impressions to inciting and fixed traumas, which otherwise would have remained altogether banal and ineffectual, whilst the experiences evoked factors from the disposition which, without them, would have continued to remain dormant, and, perhaps, undeveloped.

The end result is the same—and we suffer no traumas requiring the oblivion of metamorphosis.

Your species' mode of propagation may be brutal, but you do have a high level of adult civilization, unfettered by the traumas of youth.