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Let the Reader Diagnose (But that means you need to give them symptoms) You don't need to tell the reader "Eris has PTSD." You do need to give them enough info to get there themselves. Harry doe...
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Source: https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/48375 License name: CC BY-SA 4.0 License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
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## Let the Reader Diagnose (But that means you need to give them symptoms) You don't need to tell the reader "Eris has PTSD." You do need to give them enough info to get there themselves. Harry doesn't need a diagnosis for you to intuitively understand why his heart is pounding out of his chest every time he sees someone wearing a cloak that looks like "You-Know-Who's". There's no need to explain why, after killing other children with her bow, Katniss' hands get sweaty every time she draws an arrow. Arguably, these stories would be better if the authors gave us some insight into how these characters experience, and respond to, the **side effects** of their trauma. The things that trigger them. Their irrational fears, and their responses to them. I this topic is important to you, research how PTSD manifests, and bring those sympoms to life in your character. Your readers will put the pieces together, and find your character more believable.