Author: [Institutional Affiliation] Date: [Current Date] Abstract The “thousand-yard stare” is a colloquial term describing a vacant, unfocused gaze observed in combat veterans, often associated with psychological trauma. While popularized by war art and media, this phenomenon represents a clinically significant intersection of peritraumatic dissociation, combat stress injury, and early indicators of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This paper synthesizes historical accounts, neurobiological mechanisms, phenomenological descriptions, and clinical implications of the thousand-yard stare. Drawing from military psychiatry, visual perception studies, and trauma theory, it argues that the stare is not merely a dramatic trope but a tangible dissociative response to overwhelming threat, with implications for early identification of trauma-related disorders. The paper concludes with recommendations for military mental health screening and destigmatization.
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