Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Two-legged dog gives hope to disabled Army vets


Two-legged dog gives hope to disabled Army vets
By SUE MANNING Associated Press
For several years, Jude Stringfellow and her Lab-chow mix have toured the country with a simple message: Faith walks.
Born without front legs to a junkyard dog around Christmas 2002, Faith the puppy was rejected and abused by her mother. She was rescued by Reuben Stringfellow, now an Army E-4 specialist, who had been asked to bury other puppies in the litter.

"Can we fix her? Stringfellow, then 17, asked his mom. "No, but maybe we can help her," she said.
read more here
http://www.komonews.com/news/local/79445672.html

Band of sisters: PTSD

Band of sisters: PTSD
Posted: 04:40 PM ET

By Lindy Hall
Senior Producer

Women are joining the military in record numbers. Of the 1.8 million troops that have been deployed in the Iraq–Afghanistan conflict, 200 thousand of them are women. 120 of them have died, over 600 have been wounded. But hundreds more have come home with wounds that are harder to see. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, or PTSD, “is best thought of as a disorder of recovery,” says Dr. Natara Garovoy who runs the Women’s Mental Health Clinic at the Veteran’s Administration in Palo Alto, California, and women are twice as likely as men to suffer from it. She says that when “someone experiences something traumatic, basically life threatening in some way” that event can really stay with them and make sleeping, socializing and working difficult. “Lives are lost, relationships are damaged-people have a hard time working…they drop out of school and they start to isolate…the very life they were hoping to lead kind of disappears,” she adds.


Women are facing a lot of “unique stressors”. Often they are the only women in their unit, many of them are mothers and many of those are single mothers. “As primary caregivers…being deployed and still having that responsibility” is unique to them, Garovoy says.

She also adds that “One traumatic event is enough…but the more trauma exposures you have, the more likely you are to suffer from PTSD.” And even though women aren’t technically in combat roles because they aren’t actually on the “front lines”, women are putting their lives on the line every day, but it is frustrating and stressful to many women who don’t feel they are recognized for their contributions. Corporal Shiloh Morrison is 24 years old and is a reservist in the U.S. Marine Corps. She says she is frustrated when people infer that, just because you’re a woman, you wouldn’t have been in combat.

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Band of sisters PTSDlinked from ICasualties.org

An army of volunteers helps build home for disabled soldier's family

Now this kind of thing is what really shows them they are supported more than anything else a community can do!

An army of volunteers helps build home for disabled soldier's family
By JIM McCONVILLE • STAFF WRITER • December 14, 2009


UNION BEACH — Soon, Army Staff Sgt. Michael Minard finally will have his own bed to sleep in.

Minard, his wife, Lynda, and their two children will take ownership of their new house next week. The one-story, 2,400-square-foot ranch was built by Homes For Our Troops, with the help of countless volunteers around the state.

The four-bedroom house, now in the final touch-up stage for its grand opening, is a roughly four-month labor of love that began Aug. 18.

For Minard, it's been a long and painful two-year journey since he was injured in Iraq.


Minard was on his third tour in Iraq in October 2007 when his legs were severely injured by an improvised explosive device detonated in the Sadr City section of Baghdad by the Stryker armored vehicle he was riding in.

Minard eventually was transported to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. He awoke in the hospital to find that his legs had been amputated above the knee as a result of the explosion.

Now nearly two years later, Minard finds himself perpetually stunned by the kindness of volunteers, many of them strangers, who have donated their time or money to help build his house, which is completely handicapped accessible, inside and out.
read more here
An army of volunteers helps build home for disabled soldier

Fort Bragg Special Forces soldiers to receive Silver Stars

Special Forces soldiers to receive Silver Stars

The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Dec 16, 2009 13:26:22 EST

FORT BRAGG, N.C. — Two Special Forces soldiers based in North Carolina will be awarded for repeatedly risking their lives to help their unit mates during battles in Afghanistan.

Master Sgt. Anthony Siriwardene and Staff Sgt. Lindsey W. Clarke will be awarded the Silver Star on Wednesday.

Clarke exposed himself to enemy fire to save his teammates during an ambush in 2009. Siriwardene flanked enemy machine guns repeatedly during a 56-hour gunfight in 2005.
Special Forces soldiers to receive Silver Stars

Grinch Steals Gifts From War Veteran

Grinch Steals Gifts From War Veteran
Army Sgt. David Frappier Just Back From Afghanistan When Burglar Takes Everything
Elizabeth Erwin
Reporter, KPHO.com

PHOENIX -- An Army veteran just back from overseas fell victim to a crime that left him scratching his head and his family scrambling for Christmas presents.

Sgt. 1st Class David Frappier was on leave from his third deployment to Afghanistan. The Army man decided to surprise his kids at a church function at the Thomas Road Baptist Church in Phoenix. He parked the family van under a well-lit carport, knowing what was inside was valuable.
read more here
http://www.kpho.com/news/21966660/detail.html