To what we know about Suzanne is that she lost her parents at quite an early age and that must have been really hard on her. She might have had certain encounters in her life whereby she thought she was all alone and couldn’t come to terms as to what has happened. But what we see is that she has moved on and has grown up to be a mother a wife and a nurse. Therefore we can see that she became quite strong and became a woman of her own. She started seeing a psychologist to explain her problems and for the very first time she acknowledges that she has not been functioning well for a while. According to Seligman “the distribution of human reactions to extreme adversity is bell shaped, on the far left hand are people who fall apart under thrilling adversity, they become helpless, they show what we now call “post-traumatic stress disorder” they occasionally become massively depressed” (2010, p. 239) . …show more content…
These are people who are tough in the sense that although they have a very hard time after the awful event, within a month or two, by our psychological and physical measures, they are back where they were. For example like Suzanne she had lost her parents at a very young age meaning that she also experienced a very awful event. Therefore then there’s a certain number of people on the right hand side of the distribution show post-traumatic growth. That is they sometimes go through post-traumatic stress disorder, but a year later, by physical and psychological measures, they are stronger than they were before the adversity occurred. (Seligman, 2010, p. 239). These are the people whom Nietzsche said, “If it doesn’t kill me, it makes me stronger” (1990). Suzanne in a sense became quite strong because she didn’t give up she saw that she did need help that is why she started consulting a psychologist as they would say “The first step is realizing that you do have a