The Psychology of Disaster: The Impact of Calamity on Mental, Emotional, and Spiritual Health

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Jamie Aten, Ph.D.

Jamie D. Aten is a disaster psychologist and disaster ministry expert. He helps others navigate mass, humanitarian, and personal disasters with scientific and spiritual insights. He is the Founder and Executive Director of the Humanitarian Disaster Institute and Disaster Ministry Conference and holds the Blanchard Chair of Humanitarian & Disaster Leadership at Wheaton College. And he’s the author of A Walking Disaster: What Surviving Katrina and Cancer Taught Me about Faith and Resilience (https://www.jamieaten.com/walkingdisaster).

Dr. Pam King

Pamela Ebstyne King is the Executive Director of the Thrive Center and the Peter L. Benson Professor of Applied Developmental Science in the School of Psychology at Fuller Theological Seminary. Her life’s purpose is to help people thrive. To this end, her academic work focuses on psychological and theological perspectives of human thriving and social flourishing. Her psychological research focuses on spiritual and moral development; the role of transcendent beliefs, narratives, and emotions in virtue development; and environments that promote thriving for diverse people. TheThriveCenter.org translates research into resources that promote wholeness, thriving, and spiritual health, and she is the host of the With & For podcast.

Episode Summary

“Meaning making is so fundamental to who we are as humans, and when that’s ruptured, it’s devastating.” (Dr. Pam King, from this episode)

“Spiritual fortitude is different from resilience … it helps us to realize that we still learn to live in the midst of suffering. … It helps us metabolize our suffering.” (Dr. Jamie Aten, from this episode)

One of the hopeful things in the aftermath of the Los Angeles fires is how I have seen people within L.A. show up with and for each other. And I’m especially grateful for this audience because I know you are all people who care to show up with people, and for people. Thank you for being light in these hard times. And I was talking with Evan Rosa. The producer and host of For the Life of the World (Yale Center for Faith & Culture) about the turbulent times that we are experiencing in Los Angeles. And I was also speaking about experts who deal with trauma, disaster, psychological first aid, spiritual first aid, and also reflecting on my own experiences of watching the community around me evaporate. Evan had the great idea to invite me and Dr. Jamie Aten, the head of Wheaton’s Humanitarian Disaster Institute, for an interview. And I think you’ll resonate with a lot of the themes of this episode, even if you aren’t living in the midst of a disaster. We all have challenges, and these are great moments to dig deep and live connected with each other and for each other in purposeful ways. So what follows is sharing our interview with Evan Rosa. Thanks for listening.

Show Notes

From the episode page of For the Life of the World podcast

Disaster preparedness is sort of an oxymoron. Disaster is the kind of indiscriminate calamity that only ever finds us ill-equipped to manage. And if you are truly prepared, you’ve probably averted disaster. There’s a big difference between the impact of disaster on physical, material life—and its outsized impact on mental, emotional, and spiritual life. Personal disasters like a terminal illness, natural disasters like the recent fires that razed southern Californian communities, the impact of endless, senseless wars … these all cause a pain and physical damage that can be mitigated or rebuilt. But the worst of these cases threaten to destroy the very meaning of our lives. No wonder disaster takes such a psychological and spiritual toll. There’s an urgent need to find or even make meaning from it. To somehow explain it, justify why God would allow it, and tell a grand story that makes sense from the senseless. These are difficult questions, and my guests today both have personal experience with disaster. Dr. Pam King is the Peter L. Benson Professor of Applied Developmental Science at Fuller School of Psychology, and the Executive Director the Thrive Center. She’s an ordained Presbyterian minister, and she hosts a podcast on psychology and spirituality called With & For (https://thethrivecenter.org/podcast/). Dr. Jamie Aten is a disaster psychologist and disaster ministry expert, helping others navigate mass, humanitarian, and personal disasters with scientific and spiritual insights. He is the Founder and Executive Director of the Humanitarian Disaster Institute Wheaton College, where he holds the Blanchard Chair of Humanitarian & Disaster Leadership. He is author of A Walking Disaster: What Surviving Katrina and Cancer Taught Me about Faith and Resilience. (https://www.jamieaten.com/walkingdisaster).  

In this conversation, Pam King and Jamie Aten join Evan Rosa to discuss:

  • Each of their personal encounters with disasters—both fire and cancer
  • The psychological study of disaster
  • The personal impact of disaster on mental, emotional, and spiritual health
  • The difference between resilience and fortitude
  • And the theological and practical considerations for how to live through disastrous events. Humanitarian Disaster Institute
  • Spiritual First Aid
  • Jamie Aten’s A Walking Disaster: What Surviving Katrina and Cancer Taught Me about Faith and Resilience
  • Pam King’s personal experience fighting fires in the Eaton Fire in January 2025
  • 5,000 homes destroyed
  • 55 schools and houses of worship are gone
  • “Neighborhoods are annihilated …”
  • Jamie Aten offers an overview of the impact of disasters on humanity, and the human response
  • 1985: 400% increase in natural disasters globally
  • Japan 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami
  • Haiti 2010 earthquake
  • Physical, emotional, spiritual
  • Infrastructural impacts that set up disasters
  • USAID support
  • Jamie Aten’s experience during Hurricane Katrina
  • Personal disasters
  • Jamie Aten’s experience with colon cancer
  • “Evacuation Impossible”
  • Impact of disaster on personal sense of thriving
  • Thriving vs surviving
  • Understanding trauma
  • Collective traumatic events
  • The historically Black multigenerational community in Altadena
  • What constitutes thriving?
  • Thriving as adaptive growth: with and for others
  • Self-care is not just me-care, but we-care.
  • Trauma brain and the cognitive impacts of disaster
  • The psychological study of disaster: grapefruit vs beachball
  • A rupture of meaning making
  • Place and spirituality and the impact of disaster on sense of place
  • Bethlehem pastor Munther Isaac’s “Christ in the Rubble”
  • Finding meaning in both the restructuring or rebuilding, but also in the rubble itself
  • Hope embodied in service
  • Everything is a cognitive load
  • Miroslav Volf and Ryan McAnnally-Linz’s *The Home of God: A Brief Story of Everything*
  • Psychological and trauma-informed care
  • ”One of the things that we found was that when people received positive spiritual support, that they reported lower levels of trauma, lower levels of depression and lower levels of anxiety.”
  • BLESS CPR
  • BLESS: Biological, Livelihood, Emotional, Social, Spiritual
  • “What’s the most pressing need?”
  • Spiritual health
  • Spirituality and our ultimate sources of meaning
  • Transcendence
  • Lament as a practice for dealing with disaster
  • Prayer or sacred readings
  • Meaning making and suffering: Elizabeth Hall (Biola University) and Crystal Park (University of Connecticut)
  • Baton Rouge Flood 2016
  • Navigating suffering
  • Religion in disaster mental health
  • Faith as a predictor for resilience
  • Meaning making outside of religion
  • Mr. Rogers: “Look for the helpers”
  • Best disaster preparedness: “Get to know your neighbor.”
  • “Proximity alone is not what it takes to become a neighbor.”
  • Neighbors helping neighbors
  • Managing burnout in helpers
  • “Spiritual self-aid” instead of “self-care”
  • Self-care is like surfing
  • “God holding the fragmented pieces of me”
  • “God’s love is with me.”
  • Spiritual fortitude in personal and natural disasters

Production Notes

  • This podcast featured Jamie Aten and Pam King
  • Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa
  • Hosted by Evan Rosa
  • Production Assistance by Macie Bridge, Alexa Rollow, Zoë Halaban, Kacie Barrett & Emily Brookfield
  • A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about - Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

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