Showing posts with label PTSD video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PTSD video. Show all posts

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Army seeks help of AF, civilians on suicides


Army seeks help of Air Force, civilians on suicides?


A good place to start is to

GET RID OF BATTLEMIND! It does not work! How much longer do they need to see the suicide and attempted suicide rate go up instead of down to figure out it does not work. This is not a matter of "it's better than nothing" because evidence shows it's worse than nothing.

I posted how a few days ago I was at the VA hospital with my husband and met a couple of Marines back from Iraq. I had a lengthy conversation with one of them who was having a very hard time. I had on my chaplain shirt, so it was obvious to him he could talk to me freely. He apologized for crying. He said Marines are trained to be tough and strong. Battlemind enforces this ideology that any emotion was bad. They need to stop using this program. They need to do what has been working. Videos like mine help just as a lot of others on the net have been working. They are saving lives. The Montana National Guard has a program that is working.

I've done 15 posts on the Montana National Guard stepping up.

http://woundedtimes.blogspot.com/search?q=Montana+National+Guard

Maj. Gen. Randy Mosley is a hero in all of this so much so that Senator Obama went there to find out more about the program and Chris Dana. Chris Dana's death started the program they have been doing. His life and suicide touched the commanders so much they knew they had to do something above what was being done and not working. They began Picking Up the Pieces.

If the DOD and the VA are serious about finding out what works, they need to talk to the people on the front lines of this to really find out and stop making the same mistakes over and over again.


Army seeks help of AF, civilians on suicides

By Dan Elliott - The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Sep 11, 2008 5:49:37 EDT

DENVER — The Army’s top medical officer says commanders are looking to their counterparts in the Air Force and in civilian agencies for ways to cope with an alarming increase in suicides.

“We work real closely with the Veterans Administration, who have for many years taken the lead in this,” Lt. Gen. Eric B. Schoomaker, the Army’s surgeon general, said Wednesday in a telephone interview. “We’ve also looked across the services and at other models that have been more successful than our own.”

The Army’s suicide rate was 18.1 per 100,000 last year, the highest since the service started keeping records in 1980. It was 9.8 just five years earlier.

The U.S. civilian rate is 19.5 per 100,000.

Leading factors behind soldier suicides are troubled personal relationships; legal, financial and work problems; and repeated deployments and longer tours in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Army says.

Schoomaker said the Army has redoubled its prevention efforts and looked outside for new models, especially to the Air Force, which he said successfully encouraged support systems to reduce suicides.

The Army’s program includes removing the stigma from asking for help, encouraging soldiers to look after each other and a campaign called ACE, for Ask, Care and Escort.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/09/ap_suicides_091008/

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

PTSD Final battle of war

After war, the price they pay goes on. They gave their best to us. Isn't it time to return the favor and do our best for them?

PTSD Final battle of war

This is the newest video I did on PTSD. Aside from these faces, there are more who are still alive, still fighting the battle to stay alive. They are the reason I do what I do. They are the reason thousands of others do what they do. Their lives are worth saving no matter what it takes and it's about time we did it. Vietnam veterans still lose their battles with PTSD and so do Gulf War veterans, just as the Korean veterans and all other veterans before them did. We have no excuses left. We've been at this for too many years to excuse the failures of this country when it comes to those who serve it. Everyday more veterans take their own lives.

As you watch the video, remember the stories behind the faces of just some of the warriors we've lost that should still be here.


The tragic death earlier this month of a 26-year-old Navy veteran who hung himself with an electrical cord while under the care of a Spokane, Washington Veterans Administration hospital depression underscores what veterans advocacy groups say is evidence of an epidemic of suicides due failures by the VA to identify and treat war veterans afflicted with severe mental health problems.

Lucas Senescall, who suffered from severe depression, was the sixth veteran who committed suicide this year after seeking treatment at the Spokane VA, according to a report published last weekend in the Spokesman Review.

Senescall’s father said his son was “begging for help and [the VA] kicked him to the curb,” according to the July 20 report in the Spokesman Review.
go here for more
http://www.atlanticfreepress.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4525&Itemid=81




Posted May 25, 2008 09:01 AM (EST)On Memorial Day weekend, yet another American family is mourning the death of son who survived the war in Iraq -- only to fall victim at home from post traumatic shock disorder.The family lives in Corpus Christi, Texas, and the Marine was Chad Oligschlaeger, age 21, who committed suicide this week at the Twenty Nine Palms base in California.While the cause of his death is still being investigated, family members say he was taking eight different types of medications to deal with post traumatic stress disorder after serving two tours in Iraq.


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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

From Queens to Kuwait, Where a Life Was Ended
Sgt. Denise A. Lannaman fatally shot herself in Kuwait last year.From Queens to Kuwait, Where a Life Was Ended



In the space of three months last year, three members of the U.S. Army who had been part of a logistics group in Kuwait committed suicide. Two of them — a colonel and a major — had power over contract awards and had been accused of taking bribes just before they killed themselves.The third was Sgt. Denise A. Lannaman of Queens. In a war that has cost the lives of more than 3,700 Americans and tens of thousands of Iraqis, the death of one woman by her own hand has attracted little attention beyond the circle of shattered family and friends.Yet those who know her say that questions about Sergeant Lannaman’s death remain unsettled, and go well beyond psychic agonies that she struggled with her entire life. “From the day she was born, she was different,” Barbara Lannaman, her mother, said. “Life was just not satisfactory to her.”



click above for more








Saturday, September 1, 2007

WOUNDS OF WAR Mental troubles plagued man before suicide

WOUNDS OF WAR



For one veteran, struggle didn't end



Mental troubles plagued man before suicide





By Laura Ungarlungar@courier-journal.comThe Courier-Journal





RELATED VIDEO: Derek Henderson Interviews





Derek Henderson's hands shook as he held the railing on the Clark Memorial Bridge and stared down at the dark waters of the Ohio River.A few feet away stood Aisha "Nikki" McGuire and her boyfriend, Patrick Craig, who had spotted Henderson while driving by. They begged him not to jump -- "It's not worth it," they said.Henderson wouldn't say what brought him there. "I don't want to talk about it," he told Craig, before climbing over the railing and hanging for a moment off the other side.



click above for more







Jason Cooper






When he went to the VA, they didn't have room to treat him that day," said the mother of Jason Cooper, an Army reservist in the Iraq war. Jason hung himself four months after coming back to Iowa. He was 23
http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/49226/







Joshua Omvig







After a long-fought battle, the Joshua Omvig Veterans Suicide Prevention Act (H.R. 327) overcame its last congressional hurdle Tuesday when it passed in the House for the second time by a vote of 417-0.
Introduced by Rep. Leonard Boswell, D-3rd District, the bill directs the Department of Veterans Affairs to develop and implement a comprehensive program addressing suicide prevention. The bill is named after Joshua Omvig, from Grundy Center, Iowa, an Iraq War veteran who served in the Army Reserve and took his own life in December 2005 after an 11-month deployment.
http://iowaindependent.com/1324/after-long-fought-battle-veterans-suicide-prevention-bill-passes
















Army Reservist Lance Waldorf totes a child while serving in Afghanistan in 2004. The financial consultant was expecting orders for a third tour. (Waldorf family photo)

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Major Lance Waldorf, suicide spotlights toll of repeated deployments







Michigan veteran's suicide spotlights toll of repeated deployments








Oralandar Brand-Williams / The Detroit News








HOLLY TOWNSHIP -- Lana Waldorf took calls from concerned family and friends Wednesday evening and tried to make sense of her husband's apparent suicide in a military cemetery in Oakland County.








Lance Waldorf, a 40-year-old major in the U.S. Army Reserve and a resident of Bingham Farms, was found dead Monday afternoon of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in the Great Lakes National Cemetery in Holly Township."The war had a great deal to do with this," said Lana Waldorf, about her husband's death.Waldorf said her husband suffered from post-traumatic stress and increasing depression after returning home from serving as a civil affairs specialist in Afghanistan.








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Sunday, May 25, 2008

Sgt. Brian Rand worth training but not worth saving

Since the start of the Iraq war, Fort Campbell, a sprawling installation on the Kentucky-Tennessee border, has seen a spike in the number of suicides and soldiers suffering from severe post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. Sgt. Brian Rand, shown here grilling chicken in Iraq, killed himself a few months after being discharged from his second tour of duty in Iraq. Rand believe he was being haunted by the ghost of the Iraqi man he killed.








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Saturday, June 21, 2008

Camp Pendleton 80% PTSD at Wounded Warrior Battalion
"Eighty percent of our residents have some degree of PTSD," Lawhorne said, referring to the disorder that requires counseling and group therapy in mild cases and more intensive psychiatric treatment and medications in its more severe form. "At the same time, we're seeing a lot more TBI cases."
MILITARY: Treating the troopsWounded Warrior Battalion focuses on injured Marines and sailorsBy MARK WALKER - Staff Writer Friday, June 20, 2008 5:13 PM PDTCAMP PENDLETON ---- Nearly three years and 14 surgeries after the right side of his body was torn apart by shrapnel in a roadside bombing in Iraq, Marine Sgt. Sean Webster is working to save his military career.After he was injured, he had visions of becoming a drill instructor; now, he'd be grateful for a job training fellow Marines in some less-intensive discipline."My goal is to stay in the Marine Corps on limited duty," the 23-year-old Virginia native said during a Wednesday interview at the base. "What I'd really like to do is stay as a staff member here."
click above for more


Borne on the 4th of July: Wounded Iraq Vet Who Helped Others a Likely Suicide








By Greg Mitchell Published: July 04, 2008 12:10 PM ET
NEW YORK Sean Webster was helping other severely wounded Iraq vets cope with their injuries but, in the end, apparently could not quite save himself. For the past year, Sgt. Sean Webster, 23, had worked in Wounded Warrior Battalion at Camp Pendleton, aiding sailors and Marines wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan get much-needed medical and psychological care. Just two weeks ago he was featured in a front-page story on this effort in the local North County Times newspaper. "I'm a wounded Marine and I know what these guys are going through,'" he said.Webster had been severely injured by an anti-tank mine explosion in September 2005 and underwent 14 surgeries on an arm and a leg. The Los Angeles Times reported yesterday: "At the Wounded Warrior Battalion, he felt at home. He was the barracks manager and provided encouragement to the other guys, urging them not to get despondent. Forty-one troops live at the barracks. Staffers are tracking another 600 to make sure they're getting appropriate help."Like many wounded Marines, Webster wanted to remain in the Corps. 'What I'd really like to do is stay as a staff member here,' he told the newspaper."On June 23, Webster's body was found in an isolated part of the base. It was quickly ruled not an accident and homicide was not immediately ruled out. But now the Naval Criminal Investigate Service is probing the death as a "probable" suicide. There is a veritable epidemic of suicides among Iraq vets these days.
go here for more
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003824506

Sunday, August 24, 2008

PTSD Videos from the BBC


US troops struggle with post-war trauma

One in five American soldiers returning from Iraq suffers trauma or depression according to new surveys.
18 May 2005


Legal challenge over Iraq trauma

Soldiers who suffered stress after returning from Iraq are preparing to sue the government for failing to treat them.
28 Jan 2006


Police payout for Lawrence friend

The surviving victim of the racist attack which killed Stephen Lawrence has been paid £100,000 damages.
10 Mar 2006


7 July survivor recalls day's events

Passenger Michael Henning was on a Circle Line train near Liverpool Street when a bomb tore apart the carriage in front.
5 Jun 2006


Former officer homeless

Former Met police officer Aphra Howard-Garde is homeless, living in a car, battling post traumatic stress and depression.
14 Dec 2006


Care for traumatised soldiers

A Midlands' home has been helping former armed service personnel suffering from post traumatic stress disorder to overcome the condition.
12 Apr 2007


'Stress risk' for army troops

Long periods of deployment are putting forces at risk of post-traumatic stress disorder, research suggests.
3 Aug 2007


Gulf War syndrome story told

The wife of a soldier who developed post-war traumatic stress disorder has written a book.
26 Nov 2007


Bridges Day Centre - Simon's story

For Simon Cracknell, the Rethink Bridges Day Centre is a vital part of life. Simon copes with his post traumatic stress disorder through the centre's open door. but what about...
17 Jan 2008


Rise in traumatised veterans

The number of ex-service personnel suffering Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is increasing and is expected to rise further.
12 Mar 2008


Veteran recalls nightmares

A former soldier has described how he developed post traumatic stress disorder years after he left the service.
12 Mar 2008


Soldiers' fight persists post-war

Nearly half the US soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan will suffer from post-traumatic stress, the US military says.
28 May 2008

Thursday, August 21, 2008

PTSD I Grieve Video featured on Fire Fighter Veteran Site


PTSD I Grieve Video featured on Fire Fighter Veteran Site

A special message to members of the Armed Forces who are firefighters police or e.m.s. front line persons who have served as active duty members on callout to America in her time of need. When you return to the front lines of your community and your civilian calling it can be with the woundings of the war you have been engaged in. The war to find the peace you need is one you can overcome if you listen to this message which was developed by N.A.F.F.V.N. and senior Chaplain Kathie Costos of the International Fellowship of Chaplains out of Florida. Her contact number is area code 407-754-7526.

A military veteran once expressed that "their are no non believers in the trenches". I would encourage anybody who serves on the front lines of Americas communities to view this video but especially those who leave to fulfill a National Guard, Reserve or other temporary military posting and who must return to America and finish the transition back to the jobs they left behind. Click on to the link below. Shannon Pennington ptsd firefighterveteran
http://firefighterveteran.com/

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

PTSD FINAL BATTLE OF WAR


The final battle of war is not fought with guns or helicopters or jets flying through the air. It is not fought with a uniform specifying branch of service. It is being fought in homes across America, on the streets by the homeless and in the hospitals. It is being fought by veterans of war.

We tally the dead on a daily basis from Iraq and Afghanistan. We try to track those who die back on our land from wounds they received serving overseas. Yet we never really know the true price paid because it can be paid in silent suffering, in families not knowing how to save them and in the eyes of those who try to serve them at the hospitals, clinics and shelters.

After Vietnam, the number of dead was counted and their names engraved on the black stone of the Vietnam Memorial in Washington DC, yet if the truthful accounting had been attempted, a couple of hundred thousand names would have to be added to it. By 1986 117,000 Vietnam veterans had committed suicide. They are still committing suicide. They are still dying from Agent Orange exposure as well. Other studies place the number of Vietnam veterans committing suicide between 150,000 and 200,000, but even these numbers experts agree could be lower than reality. Considering most of America has yet to come to terms with the price paid, they do not link the death of a veteran with service in war. Too often we think, "well it was just one year and so long ago" but we fail to see while they left war, the war did not leave them.

Today we see it all being repeated in the eyes of the veterans of today. Over thirty years later, we still have not gotten it right for their sake.

The song I chose for this is American Anthem by Norah Jones from Ken Burns The War. It says, "America I gave my best to you" and we need to ask ourselves if they deserve the same from us. Can we look them in the eye and tell them we gave our best to them when we let them suffer? When we let the stigma of stupid people stand in the way of them getting the help they need to heal? When we still have mothers burying their sons and daughters because the events of war cut them so deeply they could not heal on their own? Can we really? Have we even tried to come close to being able to do it?

We need to get this right for their sake. For all the generations who came before them and also paid the price with the wound inside of them. Each generation of warrior had the same wounds of war since the beginning of time. We owe it to all of them.

The new video is over on the side bar.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

MILITARY: When the war comes home

MILITARY: When the war comes home
Military wife recounts couple's journey through post-traumatic stress
By MARK WALKER - Staff Writer | Tuesday, August 12, 2008


SAN DIEGO ---- Michelle Carter Waddell is an unlikely casualty of the war in Iraq.

See related story

She's never deployed, she's strong in her faith and she's surrounded by friends and family.

Yet Waddell struggles with the emotional baggage of a combat veteran, sees a counselor on a regular basis and relies on prayer and a support network to make sense of the war.

Waddell's journey into darkness was not of her own doing; it was the result of her husband's post-traumatic stress disorder.

A former Navy SEAL, an elite warrior, Cmdr. Mark Waddell was diagnosed in 2005 following multiple tours of duty in Iraq and numerous covert operations around the world, she said. In their first decade of marriage, 19 of her husband's comrades were killed, she said.

Her husband's demons first emerged during a Fourth of July celebration on a Virginia beach in 2003, she said. Mark Waddell had just returned from the invasion of Iraq. When the fireworks were set off, he fled her side. She later found him standing alone in a dark and quiet spot far from the pyrotechnics.

"He just asked if we could go home," she recalled Tuesday.

Her account of her husband's illness and its impact on her and their three children came during the opening day of a three-day Marine Corps conference on combat stress, traumatic brain injuries and the effects those illnesses have on family members.
click post title for more

Be sure to view my two videos with the same title. When War Come Home, Part one and When War Comes Home Part two, over on the side bar toward the bottom.

New PTSD Video, I Grieve


Over on the top of the side bar, you'll find the new video, PTSD I Grieve. This one is for firefighters, police officers, national guards and reservists. We forget they carry the same wounds the troops do but they are expected to just pickup where they left off. They return to risking their lives right here while they still try to heal from risking their lives deployed into combat.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Wounded Times Blog is one year old today

For God and Country




Wounded Times blog is one year old today.





I've learned a lot since this first video.

Veterans and PTSD
6 min - Feb 25, 2006 -

Two and a half years later, these were added to the first one dealing with trauma.

Women At War08:02
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 8,880


The Voice Women At War09:49
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 729


Hero After War08:27
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 3,138


Nam Nights Of PTSD Still08:33
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 1,643


When War Comes Home Part One04:33
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 213


When War Comes Home Part Two07:10
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 1,075


A Homeless Veteran's Day04:00
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 599


Wounded And Waiting Part One08:00
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 624

Wounded And Waiting Part Two07:27
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 224

Coming Out Of The Dark Of PTSD04:25
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 635

PTSD After Trauma04:44
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 764

Point Man Int. Ministries Is There04:41
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 195

IFOC Chaplain Army Of Love07:14
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 214

PTSD Not God's Judgment06:00
From:NamGuardianAngelViews: 1,069

These are also on Google video but the site no longer has any hit counts. These two videos are only on Google video because they are too long for YouTube.

Death Because They Served PTSD Suicides

Wounded Minds PTSD and Veterans



After posting since 2005 on what became Screaming In An Empty Room, I started this blog attempting to keep politics out of it. I do submit to temptation when it comes between the people who really do support the troops and the veterans and those who only claim they do. When I get too tempted, I have to slap my hand trying to click on the link to post it here instead of on the other blog. Considering this blog began to respond to requests from veterans and the troops who were tired of having to wade through posts that had political rants in it. They're tired of politics and I can't say that I blame them. They have a job to do and no matter what, no matter what they think about what's behind all of this, they still do their duty to the Constitution and for their country. My heart belongs to all of them as well as those who came before them.

In the over 15 years I've been doing this work online, starting and abandoning blogs and message boards, I lost count how many posts I've done. There are over 9,700 posts on the Screaming In An Empty Room blog. As I post this, this blog has received 43,500 hits, has 1,077 Post Traumatic Stress Disorder posts, 527 PTSD, 93 Post Combat Stress, 200 suicides, 22 attempted suicides. With at least 10 hours a day I've spent over 3,650 hours on this blog alone. Between reading reports and posting, what you see here is only part of what I've read. I have to decide what to post and avoid articles with no meat or have been done to death on other blogs. Occasionally I toss in some that I just find very interesting or funny but most of them deal with some type of trauma. I do put in a lot about police officers and firefighters as well the events they are involved in. We need to remember that their jobs put them into very traumatic situations as well.



These are the camps and forts that have been focused on.

Camp Algonquin (1)
Camp Anaconda (1)
Camp Bucca (2)
Camp Buehring (1)
Camp Casey (5)
Camp Cobra (1)
Camp Curtis Guild (1)
Camp Diamondback (1)
Camp Falluhah (1)
Camp Foster (1)
Camp Harper Iraq (2)
Camp Lejeune (12)
Camp Lemonier (1)
Camp Liberty (2)
Camp Mirage (1)
Camp Pendleton (20)
Camp Shelby (3)
Camp Speicher (1)
Camp Stryker (1)

Fort Belvoir (1)
Fort Benning (8)
Fort Bliss (19)
Fort Bragg (28)
Fort Campbell (15)
Fort Carson (31)
Fort Craig (1)
Fort Detrick (2)
Fort Devens (1)
Fort Dix (2)
Fort Douglas (1)
Fort Drum (25)
Fort Drum Blizzard (2)
Fort Harrison (1)
Fort Hood (27)
Fort Huachuca (2)
Fort Irwin (2)
Fort Jackson (2)
Fort Knox (11)
Fort Lauderdale (1)
Fort Lawn (1)
Fort Leonard Wood (4)
Fort Levenworth (4)
Fort Lewis (8)
Fort Logan (1)
Fort McCoy (1)
Fort McPherson (1)
Fort Meade (1)
Fort Polk (2)
Fort Riley (7)
Fort Sill (1)
Fort Stewart (8)
Fort Thomas (1)
Fort Wainwright (4)
Fort Wayne (1)

When I post about our veterans and troops, I say a prayer that one day we will put taking care of them at the front of the list when it comes to funding and planing on what our government spends. I pray God watch over them and their families. I pray the homeless are taken care of and I pray even more deeply that those wounded with PTSD are not only helped but finally healed.

Today I'm asking for your prayers for me. There is no price I can put on what I get back from the veterans and their families but this work has become expensive. When I lost my job the beginning of the year, I had a choice to make. I was torn between trying to find a full time job or doing this work. I knew I couldn't do both with the same level, so I decided to do this exclusively. I became a Chaplain, which in itself is expensive between traveling and training. Financially my family is suffering for my choice. I keep praying for the money to come to continue to do this without the extra stress of paying the bills there never seems to be enough for. I'm asking you to take a minute and pray that God grant me the financial support I need to keep doing this and that He continue to guide me in the work I do, especially creating the videos.

The only video I did not want to do was the one He was pulling me to do. It's the PTSD Not God's Judgment video. I fought against doing it. I finally gave in and did it. Since then I've discovered exactly why He wanted me to do it. It has been helping people I had no idea it would touch. Too many people, regular people like you and me, struggle with our connection to God. We think that when we suffer, it comes from God judging us and condemning us. This video shows, that is not the case. It's also one of the very few videos I will watch after they have been put together. I need to be reminded of His love as much as others do.

Thank you for your support of this site and the work I do. I hope during the next year to continue to provide all the information I can find about PTSD and links to very good work being done by reporters across the nation as well as the other nations. I pray that by the next anniversary of this blog, there will be more reports of treatments being discovered and less reports of suicides and attempted suicides. Too many have suffered needlessly.



Senior Chaplain Kathie Costos

Namguardianangel@aol.com

www.Namguardianangel.org

www.Woundedtimes.blogspot.com"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation." - George Washington

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

PTSD takes A Different Kind of Courage

I am an American Soldier.

I am a Warrior and a member of a team. I serve the people of the United States and live the Army Values.

I will always place the mission first.

I will never accept defeat.

I will never quit.

I will never leave a fallen comrade.

I am disciplined, physically and mentally tough, trained and proficient in my warrior tasks and drills. I always maintain my arms, my equipment and myself.

I am an expert and I am a professional.

I stand ready to deploy, engage, and destroy the enemies of the United States of America in close combat.

I am a guardian of freedom and the American way of life.

I am an American Soldier.



Add this to it.

They are fallen comrades who have been wounded. Don't leave them behind!



Military Program: Overview
Now available: A Different Kind of Courage, a new video to encourage help-seeking for psychological health
View the promo of our new video (4 minutes)
View the full length version of our new video (25 minutes)
Press release for A Different Kind of Courage
Video order form
For a DoD overview of the program, please visit: www.pdhealth.mil/mhsa.asp
The Mental Health Self-Assessment Program® (MHSAP) offers service personnel and their families the opportunity to take anonymous, mental health and alcohol use self-assessments online, via the phone, and through special events held at installations. The self-assessments are a brief series of questions that, when linked together, help create a picture of how an individual is feeling.
The program is designed to help individuals identify their own symptoms and access assistance before a problem becomes serious. The self-assessments address posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, generalized anxiety disorder, alcohol use, and bipolar disorder. After completing a self-assessment, individuals receive referral information including services provided by TRICARE, Military OneSource and Vet Centers.
The program, part of the Department of Defense continuum of care, is fully funded by Force Health Protection and Readiness, Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense, Health Affairs.
To take a free, anonymous self-assessment, visit http://www.militarymentalhealth.org/ or call 1-877-877-3647.


Battlemind needs to be replaced with this video. It's honest and makes PTSD real. If you really want to help them, play this video from coast to coast, when you deploy them and when they are coming home.

Linked from Veterans for Common Sense

Monday, May 26, 2008

Don't forget our homeless Vets...

Looks like someone liked my video A Homeless Veteran's Day.

Monday, May 26, 2008
Don't forget our homeless Vets...

"According to national VA stats, about one-third of the nation’s adult homeless population has served their country in one branch of the Armed Services. Current national population estimates suggest that about 154,000 veterans -- male and female -- are homeless on any given night, twice as many experience homelessness at some point during the course of a year.

Many other veterans are considered near homeless or at risk because of their poverty, lack of support from family and friends, and dismal living conditions in cheap hotels or in overcrowded or substandard housing, according to VA stats.

Right now, the number of homeless male and female Vietnam-era veterans is greater than the number of service persons who died during that war -- and a small number of Desert Storm veterans are also appearing in the homeless population.

Although many homeless veterans served in combat in Vietnam and suffer from post- traumatic stress disorder, epidemiologic studies do not suggest that there is a causal connection between military service, service in Vietnam, or exposure to combat and homelessness among veterans, stats show.

Family background, access to support from family and friends, and various personal characteristics -- rather than military service -- seem to be the stronger indicators of risk of homelessness, according to VA statistics.

Almost all homeless veterans are male -- about 3 percent are women -- the vast majority are single, and most come from poor, disadvantaged backgrounds, according to various federal surveys.

Homeless veterans tend to be older and more educated than homeless non-veterans. But, similar to the general population of homeless adult males, about 45 percent of homeless veterans suffer from mental illness and, with considerable overlap, slightly more than 70 percent suffer from alcohol or other drug abuse problems. Roughly 56 percent are African-American or Hispanic.
go here for more
http://greatmindsthinklikemerainlillie.blogspot.com/2008/05/homeless-veterans-day.html

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

New Video for Point Man Int. Ministries




One of the greatest blessing in what I do is coming into contact with people from all over the country and in many other nations. People who work on PTSD do it for one reason and that is to help people who have survived trauma. Some do it because someone they know was wounded so deeply they developed PTSD, as in my case with my husband. Some do it because they survived trauma and felt blessed they did not develop PTSD. Others simply do it out of the goodness of their hearts. Whatever the reason, all of us agree that each part that makes us human has been wounded and needs to be taken care of to heal as well as possible. The mind, body and spirit are all connected. This I know very well and so do groups like Point Man International Ministries.

There is a lot of talk in the news about the soldier who is an atheist being treated badly because he does not believe in God. As a Chaplain it is not our duty to convert anyone or force anyone into anything. We are supposed to be there to help as humans. Oh, sure our faith is the basis for what we do, but Chaplains come in all faiths. More on this later.

For most who offer their spiritual guidance and support, nothing else matters but the need for help, healing, forgiveness and compassion. That is what Point Man has been doing since 1984.

Since 1984, when Seattle Police Officer and Vietnam Veteran Bill Landreth noticed he was arresting the same people each night, he discovered most were Vietnam vets like himself that just never seemed to have quite made it home. He began to meet with them in coffee shops and on a regular basis for fellowship and prayer. Soon, Point Man Ministries was conceived and became a staple of the Seattle area. Bills untimely death soon after put the future of Point Man in jeopardy.

However, Chuck Dean, publisher of a Veterans self help newspaper, Reveille, had a vision for the ministry and developed it into a system of small groups across the USA for the purpose of mutual support and fellowship. These groups are known as Outposts. Worldwide there are hundreds of Outposts and Homefront groups serving the families of veterans.

PMIM is run by veterans from all conflicts, nationalities and backgrounds. Although, the primary focus of Point Man has always been to offer spiritual healing from PTSD, Point Man today is involved in group meetings, publishing, hospital visits, conferences, supplying speakers for churches and veteran groups, welcome home projects and community support. Just about any where there are Vets there is a Point Man presence. All services offered by Point Man are free of charge.
It isn't about who got a parade! When I came home from Vietnam, my cousin, a WWII Vet invited me to a VFW meeting and I was all but ignored because I was not in a "real" war and so how could I have any kind of problem? All these guys stuck to each other like glue and pretty much ignored the "new" Vets. And you all remember how it felt. I see the same "new guys" 35 years later with the same baloney coming out of their mouths. How in the world can you say you support the troops and then ignore them when they get home?

Seems to me that no matter how many are killed, the survivors have an obligation to each other and to our posterity to insure the "new guys" don't go through the same stuff our dads, grandfathers and ourselves had to endure...

So to all you "NEW GUYS", Welcome Home. Thank you for a job well done. Your sacrifice is deeply appreciated here. We support you regardless of when or where you served; we understand what you've been through and what you're dealing with now. Continue through the site and get connected!
Dana Morgan (President of PMIM)http://www.pmim.org/


So this new video is for them and all the work they do. It is what they are about. From WWII and Korea, to Vietnam and the Gulf War and into Afghanistan and Iraq, Point Man is reaching out to help the wounded warrior's spirits heal. If you think you need help, you are pretty much 100% correct. You need all the help you can get right now, not tomorrow and not waiting for the VA to get in gear to be able to take care of all of you. Call Point Man Ministries and begin to heal now instead of waiting.

I posted earlier today how the bulk of the troops and veterans with PTSD are afraid to seek help because it will hurt their careers. This is not the case but the fear is still very real and keeping them from getting help. They are suffering while waiting. Show them the way and tell them to call Point Man Ministries to begin to heal. Speak to other veterans who have been there and done that.

These are some pictures of members of Point Man Ministries I met at the Traveling Wall in Florida for the reunion in Melbourne.








This is the President of Point Man Dana Morgan


And this is my friend Mike Harris


If you are a wounded veteran who wants to know how much you are loved, call them and know what pure love is.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

New PTSD Video

PTSD is not God's judgment. That is what this new video is all about. The bulk of the email I get is from Christians dealing with feeling as if God judged them and then abandoned them because they were part of combat. Warriors have been around since the beginning of time. While the video is about the Christian relationship with God through Christ, it is also applicable to anyone's one spiritual connection with their Higher Power. Each faith must address the healing of their people because it did not come from God but the traumas of war came from man. The video is with the rest of the ones I've done on PTSD on the right side of this blog toward the bottom.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Reason to not use Google Video

I can't stand this any longer. Google video has a hit counter on the videos we put up. There used to be a way to just look at the video and know how many times it was opened and downloaded. They dropped that when people view the video. As if that was not aggravating enough, they also constantly have problems with the hit counter in the account itself. While it does show your video files, that's just about all you can trust. You cannot find out how many times it was viewed most of the time because it keeps going back to zero. That's right! All the work people put into videos and Google cannot even give an accurate count on the number of times it was viewed. I can only imagine how frustrating this is for people who get over a million hits! I'm not one of them but I spend days and often weeks researching the videos on PTSD, searching for the right music to put these together. The least I can expect from Google is an accurate count but they can't even be bothered to answer a question without a form letter telling me all the issues they have and never once actually answering the question asked.

If you go into the message section and look at the postings put up about problems with Google video, you can see the frustration across the posts. How much money do they make off the advertising they charge? And they cannot be bothered to answer questions or get their act together enough so that the producers of the videos know where they stand as far as hits go?

I have never had videos vanish from YouTube and never had the hit count zero out. Whatever keeps happening with Google, they seem disinterested in answering the question and even less interested in solving the problem in the first place. Days later a zero hit count will be resolved but the account holder has no clue if it was fixed correctly or not. Don't they understand that people work very hard on these videos? They took over YouTube videos and you end up being able to trust YouTube more than you can them.

The biggest reason I use Google Video is that they have the capacity to hold larger video files. I have two that are about 20 minutes long and YouTube won't allow that size file. When it comes to having something coming up from now on, I have to consider the time frame more than the message and the information I want to get out on PTSD. Considering this is a life and death matter, it is vital to my work that I can trust where it is being uploaded to. I just wish Google would care about their account holders enough to at least provide a straight answer. Right now, I'm frustrated beyond belief!!!! Don't plan on any longer more detailed videos in the near future until I can trust Google video. They haven't earned it. Up until now I just posted the frustration in emails and a few on the message board. That got me no where and a lot of other people are just as frustrated at the lack of response from them.
4/14/08
Coming Out of The Dark of PTSD 0 0
Death Because They Served PTSD Suicides 0 0
Heal the wounds of PTSD 0 0
Hero After War Combat Vets and PTSD 0 0
Homeless_Veterans_Day.wmv 0 0
Nam Nights Of PTSD Still 0 0
Out Of Many One 0 0
PTSD After Trauma 0 0
PTSD Soldiers Wounded And Waiting 0 0
The Voice Women At War 0 0
Veterans Every Day 0 0
When War Comes Home PTSD 0 0
When War Comes Home Part Two 0 0
Wounded Minds PTSD and Veterans 0 0
Wounded Minds Veterans and PTSD 0 0

Saturday, March 8, 2008

PTSD:Service in Bosnia took a toll

Service in Bosnia took a toll
Now, Fred Doucette helps others with stress disorder
PAUL GESSELL, Freelance; Ottawa Citizen Published

The first disturbing flashback came in the King of Donair restaurant on King St. in Fredericton. Capt. Fred Doucette was feeling tired and miserable, just as he had most every day since returning home July 7, 1996, from a year-long tour of duty as a UN peacekeeper in Bosnia. He closed his eyes for a moment. Suddenly, Doucette was no longer in the fast-food outlet, but back in time many months, in the doorway of a building in the UN Protected Area of Gorazde, "a small island of humanity" surrounded by the Bosnian-Serb Republic of Srpska.

"I can smell the wood smoke, the burning garbage and the sour, overpowering smell of urine and excrement," Doucette would write later of his hallucination on King St.

"My body contracts, my muscles tense in fear of being in a very dangerous place." Doucette was not aware he was experiencing a flashback. He truly believed, while in the grip of the hallucination, that he was back in war-ravaged Bosnia.

"There is the burnt-out tank, the pharmacy with its front covered by logs and a dirty Red Cross flag draped over them in an attempt to play on the humanity of the Serbs who have surrounded the town. I am afraid and terrified. What am I doing here?"

Suddenly, someone entered the King of Donair and banged the door. Doucette snapped out of the flashback. He staggered onto King St., dazed and confused about what had just happened to him.

"The only thing I know for certain is that I will tell no one," he thought at the time. "Only crazy people can travel into the past." Doucette did not know it then, but he was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. He was not diagnosed and treated for this mental illness until 2001. The disorder was simply a taboo subject in many military circles. Today, Doucette is no longer in the Forces and no longer shy about discussing his illness. In fact, he has written a book about his experiences, Empty Casing: A Soldier's Memoir of Sarajevo Under Siege. Retired general Roméo Dallaire, Canada's most famous soldier with post-traumatic stress disorder, wrote the foreword. Doucette has become experienced discussing what used to be called "battle fatigue," "shell shock" or other, far more pejorative terms. Now, based at Lincoln, N.B., near CFB Gagetown, he has spent the past five years working with the government-funded Operational Stress Injury

go here for the rest
http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/books/story.html?id=7dd1f5a7-8a88-45e5-846b-1a7f7c3131e6

When I did the video, Wounded And Waiting, I used the same terms about what they go through during combat and what comes after with a flashback when it all comes back to life. If you want to know what it' like, go to the side bar in the video section and watch Wounded And Waiting.

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Who Will Stand new video on impact of PTSD with Clint Holmes

Photo may be used in documentary
Monday, March 3, 2008
By Clint Confehr


An image of Christian Golczynski, published here nearly a year ago, may be used in a documentary and music video to illustrate psychological impacts of war on Americans.

The photograph, by now-retired Times-Gazette editor Kay Rose, portrays the son of slain Staff Sgt. Marc Golczynski, who grew up in Lewisburg. Her photo shows an 8-year-old boy receiving the American flag that had been draped across his father's coffin at Wheel Cemetery.

Phil Valentine of his own Red Live production company in Las Vegas, Nev., explained he wanted to use the picture in a music video for "Who Will Stand" as sung by Clint Holmes, and as an image during a documentary that explores issues such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

An early cut of the music video may be seen at www.whowillstand4us.com. The site did not yet include the photograph by Rose when viewed early this week. Valentine said he hoped to reach Marc Golczynski's widow Heather in Maryland, and/or his parents here in Tennessee. Henry Golczynski is a Murfreesboro businessman. Marc's mother, Elaine Huffines, teaches science at Forrest High School.

Rose agreed that the photo should be available for the Red Live productions so long as it wasn't used to advocate or oppose the war, she said Sunday. The Times-Gazette has had a policy of sharing its images with other media that acknowledge the source. Valentine has agreed to that.

The director's videos are avoiding any "political spin," he said, by focusing on what the documentary reveals from speaking with soldiers, Marines, their families and doctors.

"It's such a powerful photograph," Valentine said Friday. "People see it and it brings things together; the pain and sacrifice that the families go through."

The sacrifice of families of soldiers and Marines was recognized late last year in Lewisburg where the Golczynskis, Huffines and survivors of Todd Nunes and David Heirholzer were honored by the Elks Club where members expressed their respect for what survivors experience.

"It was a very emotional moment," Rose said of that afternoon of April 4 in the Wheel Cemetery. "I left in tears and I didn't know the family."
go here for the rest
http://www.t-g.com/story/1315445.html

Army to Release Anti-Suicide Film

Army to Release Anti-Suicide Film
Last Update: 6:32 am

Film Aims to Lower Soldier Suicide 3/2/08

Oswego County, New York (WSYR-TV) - The Army is releasing an interactive video in April aimed at curbing the soldier suicide rate. It’s the highest it’s been in more than twenty years. That’s just among active soldiers. There have also been a staggering number of suicides among veterans home from the war, who are dealing with post traumatic stress disorder.

Joe Godfrey from Oswego County says he doesn’t think the video will work. Godfrey knows far more about post traumatic stress disorder than any father should.

His son, Joe, came home from Iraq at the end of 2004 a different man. He couldn't sleep, was afraid of the dark and started drinking despite being on a slew of medications.

“He was always afraid that someone was out to get him,” Godfrey says.

Joe knew he needed help but didn't get it from the VA in time. Joe was killed outside a bar in Oswego a few months later. His father believes that he ended up dying as a result of the fact that he couldn’t get treatment in a timely manner.

Godfrey's other son, Justin, will be leaving for Iraq this summer – on his third tour.
“You make it through the first time, then the second time was when his brother was killed. Now, he’s going back a third time. Every time you go back, you're bucking the odds, you know?” Godfrey says.
go here for the rest

http://www.9wsyr.com/news/local/story.aspx?
content_id=8143c4df-7ec4-4c1f-919a-dd5d7f59c70b

Monday, February 25, 2008

PTSD DVD sets available again soon

I received several donations and thank you for them. I just purchased a DVD drive that is supposed to be able to keep up with the load. The donations were not enough to cover a new PC. I will still need all the donations I can get to be able to keep sending the DVD's out, that is if I can get the drive to work right. Remember I'm no Bill Gates.

I was promised donations when requests came in for the DVD's but some people never sent in the donation. If you want one, I will send them out for free still but if you promise to make a donation, please make sure you do. I'm out of work now so I don't have extra money to cover the cost of doing them. Email me for a DVD at Namguardianangel@aol.com and if you can make a donation, use the PayPal button on the side bar. Even $10.00 helps a lot more than you think it does.

The DVD will now have Hero After War and you can pick one other video to go onto the DVD. If you don't request another video, then the Wounded Minds video will be included. These are the two top requested videos I've done.

Please also consider making a donation for the hours I spend doing this work. I do about 12 hours a day and seven days a week, except for play day on Friday with my husband, when I get mental health time away and act like a kid again. At least he knows he can get me away from the PC for 5 hours or so before I disappear back into the office.

If you want to write to me by snail mail send it here.
Nam Guardian Angel
5703 Red Bug Lake Road #154
Winter Springs, FL 32708-4969

Make sure the box number is there or the UPS store will send it back to you.

Thanks again and say a prayer I can figure out the new DVD drive.

PTSD? Why be afraid if you're not alone?






Cpl. Brent Phillips
Wounded marine helps other vets get benefits
Bert SassSpecial Projects Producer12 NewsFeb. 24, 2008 09:47 PM
War Stories: Corporal Brent Phillips


Nearly five years after he was wounded, it has taken Phillips a long time to adjust to civilian life. He says he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) which affects many combat veterans.


Phillips tells about flashbacks




Phillips is determined to manage his PTSD and not let it control his life. He says, "I pretty much deal with it by telling my parents about it...both sheriff's officers (in California). Both of them have been in different firefights." Phillips also finds his wife and three small children help relieve the tension. He also is taking a proactive role in helping vets, like himself, get the VA benefits they deserve. He organized a recent information meeting to help vets learn about benefits and get VA appointments. Some Valley veterans with PTSD attend regular meetings that were started by case manager Patricia Tuli at the Carl T. Hayden Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Phoenix. Tuli works with many veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan.


dealings with POWs surprised Phillips


Phillips describes firefight


go here for the rest


http://www.azcentral.com/12news/news/articles/052007warstorywebbonus-CR-CP.html


From the University of Virginia


Mental Health Disorders
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Statistics related to PTSD
According to the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH):

Nearly 7.7 million Americans have PTSD at any given time.

About 30 percent of men and women who have spent time in war zones experience PTSD.

What is post-traumatic stress disorder?
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating condition that often follows a terrifying physical or emotional event - causing the person who survived the event to have persistent, frightening thoughts and memories, or flashbacks, of the ordeal. Persons with PTSD often feel chronically, emotionally numb.

PTSD was first brought to public attention by war veterans and was once referred to as "shell shock" or "battle fatigue." The likelihood of developing PTSD depends on the severity and duration of the event, as well as the person's nearness to it.

What triggers PTSD to develop?
The event(s) that triggers PTSD may be:

something that occurred in the person's life.
something that occurred in the life of someone close to him or her.
something the person witnessed.
Examples include:

serious accidents (such as car or train wrecks)
natural disasters (such as floods or earthquakes)
man-made tragedies (such as bombings, a plane crash)
violent personal attacks (such as a mugging, rape, torture, being held captive, or kidnapping)
military combat
abuse in childhood

http://www.healthsystem.virginia.edu/UVAHealth/adult_mentalhealth/anptsd.cfm


If PTSD wound becomes part of you, why would you be afraid to talk about it? You're not alone suffering from it. Your family is not alone coping with it. All you have to do is look over the last few years of news reports to know how large the world's population has been wounded by trauma.

Thirty years ago, it was America's secret. It was trapped in whispers and silence. Hidden under shame with the thought this wound was a character defect of those who suffered from it. They would look at others who lived through the exact same event appearing to be untouched. The thought of being weaker than others caused them to suffer in secret. It was not a well kept secret because others could see the changes in them.

Families began to keep the secret as well. They would find excuses why a combat veteran would not go to family functions. They would find excuses to provide bosses when they could not go to work because of yet another night of terrifying nightmares.

I found myself making excuse as well. Even though I knew what PTSD was from the beginning, it was hard to protect my husband from judgmental attitudes that PTSD meant Jack was crazy. Working in offices, and most of the time surrounded by men, it was hard to hear them talk about normal life. They would talk about taking their wives to movies. I would tell them I wasn't interested in going to movies, when the truth was, I loved to go to them. I couldn't tell them my husband couldn't tolerate them anymore. He couldn't handle being in a crowd, in the dark and feeling vulnerable especially if he had a flashback, feeling as if the enemy was right behind his seat.

They would complain their wife stole the covers at night or how she would stick her cold feet on their warm leg. I couldn't do anything more than laugh while I wanted to cry. My husband and I never spent an entire night in the same bed during our 23 years of marriage. I doubt we ever will.

The church I attended back home in Massachusetts, the same one I attended since birth, where everyone knew me, hardly knew what my husband looked like. Some wondered if we were still married.

I would go shopping by myself because he couldn't stand the malls and hated to be in crowds.

The list goes on of how what we found to be normal for us, was abnormal to the rest of the world. Years later it was easier to talk about it because I had come into contact with so many others going through the same things. Once someone spoke of it, or I indicated something about it, then the communication opened up. It was never racking every time I did because I wondered what they were thinking about me and especially about Jack.

To this day, knowing what I know, knowing the stories of others, knowing that we are not alone with this, I still feel the need to protect him. I don't even use my married name when I write. Often I wonder why I would still feel this need of protecting him considering to me there is no reason the stigma lives on and that there is no shame in being human, no shame in being wounded by tragedy and trauma and there is nothing about him to be ashamed of. To me, he is an amazing man, filled with kindness and gentleness as well as strength. His character lives on beneath the dark days of flashbacks and drained days following nightmares. Still in my mind I know the attitude of too many in this country and around the world. It is one of the reasons I work so hard to provide information and stories of others going through all of this. Sooner or later there will be no more stigma to overcome.

There are some people who can speak openly about the ravages of PTSD on their lives. I admire them greatly. It's very hard to have all of this going on in your life and be able to talk about it. It takes a lot of courage to be able to look at your life and see the need to open up about it. Jack can't. I walk a very thin line on what I feel free to speak out about and what remains in the shadow of the work I do.

When I did the video Coming Out Of The Dark, the song by Gloria Estefan was perfect.



COMING OUT OF THE DARK (Gloria Estefan)

Why be afraid if I'm not alone?
Though life is never easy, the rest is unknown
Up to now, for me, it's been hands against stone
Spent each and ev'ry moment
Searching for what to believe


Coming out of the dark
I finally see the light now
And it's shining on me
Coming out of the dark
I know the love that saved me
You're sharing with me

Starting again is part of the plan
And I'll be so much stronger holding your hand
Step by step, I'll make it through; I know I can
It may not make it easier
But I have felt you near all the way


Forever and ever, I stand on the rock of your love
Forever and ever, I'll stand on the rock
Forever and ever, I stand on the rock of your love
Love is all it takes, no matter what we face





Why is it that we still feel the need to be ashamed and afraid? What is there to be afraid of? The thoughts of others who would not have those ignorant thoughts if we all spoke out about it? The more people talk about being human, surviving a traumatic event, overcoming it and still stand, the weaker the stigma will become. It takes a greatness of character to survive the carnage of combat, the violence of police work, the tragedy of a firefighter and emergency responder, the terror of crime and the wrath of nature. Yet we look at the survivors as damaged instead of wounded.

When we look at the veterans who have committed suicide, we fail to see how they not only carried on when their lives were in danger, as well as their military brothers and sisters, they acted with bravery and courage. It was not until they were no longer in danger from the human enemy, but when they were back home with the enemy in their mind that they felt they could no longer go on. When they commit suicide while deployed, they don't do it while the fight is going on, but in the quiet of their barracks or the silence of the night.

Family Thinks PTSD Drove Veteran to Suicide

Dylan Darling


Redding Record Searchlight

Feb 24, 2008


February 24, 2008 - During Michael Sherriff's nine-month tour in the battlefields of Iraq, his mother worried that one day a pair of Army officers in full dress would come to her door with terrible news.

"You're just on edge every single minute," Jennifer Cass said.

She didn't dream her son would become a victim of the war the way he did -- not on a faraway battlefield like she feared, but like a growing number of veterans -- by his own hand once he made it home.

Of 807,694 veterans diagnosed with depression and treated at a Department of Veterans Affairs facility nationwide between 1999 and 2004, 1,683 committed suicide, according to a study released in October 2007 by the University of Michigan Depression Center.

After her son safely returned stateside in April 2004, Cass dealt with a new set of worries. She said she began experiencing stress and anxiety as her Mikey had an increasingly difficult time adjusting to civilian life.

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/articleid/9410

Information, sharing and caring will erode the stigma and replace it with hope. Hope that they will be able to speak of what is happening inside of them and be embraced instead of embarrassed. Hope that once they say they need help, the help they need to heal will be there waiting for them. Hope that as soon as they know the trauma was too strong for them, they will be supported by those who care about them. Hope that life can regain a quality of what it once was. Hope that compassion will rap arms around them instead of point fingers at them.

So why be afraid if you're not alone? 7.7 million Americans are in the same company of wounded. We are not the only nation with PTSD. Every nation has a population of people wounded by it as long as they have humans in it.





Kathie Costos
Namguardianangel@aol.com
http://www.namguardianangel.org/
http://www.namguardianangel.blogspot.com/
http://www.woundedtimes.blogspot.com/


"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation." - George Washington