Men and Women ...
Lethal Force Aftermath
By Kathy Jackson
I need to start this article with a disclaimer: I have never, personally,
killed anyone. I do not personally know what it is like and I hope to
God I never do. I am not a psychologist, psychiatrist, counselor, trauma
therapist, or any other brand of professional listener. My only qualifications
to talk about this stuff are that I am a dedicated firearms student and
an autodidact with a wickedly obsessive reading habit.
The information below was gathered from a wide variety of sources, many
of which are referenced at the bottom of this page.
Generally speaking, women do better
than men dealing with the emotional and social aftermath of a defense
shooting. In part this is because society gives us a lot more leeway --
few people expect a woman to defend herself with her bare hands, or take
a beating "like a man" before a reasonable person would allow
us to use lethal force.
It's also because as women, we're given societal permission to have feelings
and express them, and any therapist can tell you that suppressed, unexpressed,
or outright denied feelings are the source of many of the worst aftereffects
of using lethal force. Similarly, religious folks tend to do better than
non-religious folks. After all, even if you can't talk to your buddies,
at least you can pour out your feelings to God in prayer, or to the universe
via meditation.
I also suspect women often do okay after defense shootings in part because
there is a social stigma against women being prepared to defend themselves
with lethal force in the first place. At the outset, we have to question
and then reject a lot of feminine stereotypes about lethal force and self
defense, simply in order to carry a gun. That's a difficult thing to do,
and pretty well requires careful thought and introspection. In this culture,
self-defense with lethal force is very rarely (if ever) a default setting
for women the way it can be for guys.
As a result, those of us women who do carry guns have usually had to think
through the ethical, social, and emotional issues a lot more thoroughly
than many concealed-carry guys have ever bothered to do. Carrying a gun
is not part of the culture of being female. When they find out a woman
carries a gun, very often one of the first questions friends ask is, "Could you really shoot someone?"
The answer our friends expect to hear is, "No, not really, I'd just
scare him ..." The way the question is asked often implies that we
should be literally unable to face the idea of killing. Women get asked
that question often enough that it makes it really hard to sidestep the
reality of what the gun is, or why you carry it. You're pushed to think
about it, think about it hard and in detail, simply because you are asked
that question or one like it so often, and need to think about your answer
every time you give it.
Contrast that with the typical gun-carrying guy. Although many men have
thought these issues through in great detail, there really is no social
pressure forcing them to do so. In large parts of this country, carrying
a weapon is simply what men do. As a result, it's a rare guy who feels
pressured to count the cost before he picks up a gun. There's also a sizeable
contingent of unrealistic chest-beating and emotional denial that takes
place. A guy's buddies are unlikely to ask him if he's emotionally able
to handle the taking of a human life, and if they do, the guy is expected
to make some flip comment like, "Kill 'em all and let God sort 'em
out!!" And after a shooting, his buddies might expect him to feel
happy and even proud of himself, his enemies probably expect him to feel
smug and self-satisfied, his wife could expect him to be the rock she
can lean on -- and if he has feelings to the contrary, he's probably going
to stuff them down inside rather than admitting them out loud. This is
not a recipe for mental health.
This doesn't mean that women get a free ride. After any kind of violent
encounter, there are predictable aftereffects. I'm told it's kind of like
the grieving process, and that some emotional and physiological reactions
are only to be expected. But you needn't fear that living through a lethal
force encounter will be more difficult for you, "just because you're
a woman." Nothing could be further from the truth.
If you are interested in learning
more about the aftermath of violent encounters, here are some resources
for further exploration.
- In The Gravest Extreme, a book by Massad Ayoob
- LFI-1, a class from Lethal Force Institute
taught by Massad Ayoob
- Into the Kill Zone: A Cop's Eye View of Deadly Force, a book
by David Klinger
- On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and
Society, a book by David Grossman
- The Bullet-Proof Mind, audio and video tape series by David Grossman
Next Steps
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this web site © 2006-2009 by Kathy Jackson. For permission to quote, please
contact author.
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Do not read anything else on this site. The author has made a reasonable,
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contain good advice, but hereby advises the reader that the author is
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with it. If it sounds stupid to you, don't do it. The author accepts absolutely
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of reading any material on this site. Live your own life.