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anoninnyc
20-03-2007, 10:38 PM
By RUSSELL GOLDMAN

March 20, 2007 — "I'd take it in a second," said Sgt. Michael Walcott, an Iraq War veteran, referring to an experimental drug with the potential to target and erase traumatic memories.

Walcott, who served in a Balad-based transportation unit that regularly took mortar fire, now suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. Since returning to the United States two years ago, he has been on antidepressants and in group therapy as he tries to put his life back together and heal from the psychological scars of war. "There are moments," he said, "when you just want be alone and don't want to deal with everyone telling you that you've changed."

There are many others like Walcott. The Army estimates that one in eight soldiers returning home from Iraq suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. Symptoms of the disorder, once known as shell shock, include flashbacks, nightmares, feelings of detachment, irritability, trouble concentrating and sleeplessness.

Much about why painful memories come back to haunt soldiers and those who live through other traumatic experiences remains unknown. Scientists say that is because little is known about how the brain stores and recalls memories.

But in their early efforts to understand the way in which short-term memories become long-term memories, researchers have discovered that certain drugs can interrupt that process. Those same drugs, they believe, can also be applied not just in the immediate aftermath of a traumatic event — like a mortar attack, rape or car accident — but years later, when an individual is still haunted by memories of event.

The hope is that a post-traumatic stress disorder patient can work with a psychiatrist and focus a traumatic event, take one of these drugs and then slowly forget that event. With that hope, however, comes a series of ethical concerns. What makes up our personalities — the essence of who we are as individuals — if not the collected memories of our experiences?

"This is all very preliminary," said Dr. Roger Pitman, a Harvard Medical School psychiatrist. "We're just getting started. There is some promising preliminary data but no conclusions."

Much of the research Pitman is currently conducting on human subjects at Massachusetts General Hospital focuses on altering memories in the immediate aftermath of a specific type of trauma —

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=2964509&page=1

pollock
21-03-2007, 06:06 AM
Brrrr, thats scary!
"Id take it in a second"
If you have done something so horrid it haunts you, then it is probably because its suposed to haunt you!
And what if it goes wrong, what if it erases all your memories of loving your wife (or such) but leaves the things you wanted to forget.
It seems I get more angry at the people who would take these drugs than the ones who made them, I wonder why!

F

melbo
21-03-2007, 09:01 AM
Memories are what makes us who we are. They are also how we learn. If we erase the memories we are doomed to keep repeating the same mistakes.

tinmenace
21-03-2007, 12:30 PM
I posted the exact same thread! It's unbelievable!

janeway
21-03-2007, 02:06 PM
Memories are what makes us who we are. They are also how we learn. If we erase the memories we are doomed to keep repeating the same mistakes.

Ofcourse it is a scary topic. And sure memories can haunt you.

But NO Melbo; memories are NOT what makes us who we are!

I have had a moment of total amnesia.
At that moment I was aware of the fact that I didn't know where I was (it was my bedroom); who I was (my name, my gender, my familyposition) and I felt so completely happy and I felt myself, with my humor, my confident. I was at that very moment contemplating about the fact that I couldn't remember who I was, but how odd it was that I felt so comfortable with myself. I knew my memory would come back soon and for a moment I wanted to stay in that serene sphere where there were no labels, but it was just me, labelfree!
When my memory came back and this happening is a memory now too,
I was richer and I now know that memories don't make who you are.
:)

ho1ogram
21-03-2007, 05:37 PM
Memories may be what keeps us in the matrix. They are like frozen moments of space/time, attachments that the mind hangs onto. Memories create physical sensations, remind us of smells, tastes, etc and can also make us nervous, happy, sad, angry etc.

Instead of being free they tie us to this plane of existence. But I wouldn't want a pill though. That would probably block them from the conscious mind but they would still be within us somewhere, just waiting to bubble to the surface in some other way or whan we die they might still tie us to the time loop if we haven't detached ourselves from them willfully.

They are to be experienced and then let go of like everything else in 'life'.

tinmenace
21-03-2007, 10:45 PM
Yeah, but still, nobody has any right to remove the memories of anyone still entrapped in Matrix. It's cruel.