Sunday, February 10, 2013

Soldier Hard's hip-hop lyrics reveal PTSD's rough edges

There is no one size treatment that works for everyone because while PTSD is what it is, people are all different. Some do this, some do that but as long as they are taking care of their mind-body-spiritual part of them, how they do it depends on what fits best for them.

Some like classical music, some like oldies and some in this generation like hip-hop. Some can play, some can sing but others can't do more than listen and enjoy.

The best point in this article, aside from Jeff Barillaro doing something to help others, is this section.
“Research does suggest that certain music can regulate negative emotions,” said Savion, a Texas-based applied behavior scientist. “But conversely, some therapists have found some music with spoken words or lyrics could cause and has caused agitation when its played for those diagnosed with PTSD. So there is a duality between whether the music will evoke a positive feeling or whether it will conjure up those memories that can cause negative feelings. Not everyone’s going to respond to the music in the same way.

“But there is no definitive line that a rapper should or shouldn’t cross,” she added, “because each individual will respond to it differently.”
The only time I tell veterans to listen to something else is when they are taking a walk with headphones in their ears. They need to listen to calming music because they are trying to teach their bodies to calm down again. They need to focus on something calming when their memories kick in. Everything inside of them needs to be reconnected. Some use Yoga, some use meditation, but again, there is no one size fits all program.

I tell them to listen to whatever they want otherwise but for a therapy walk, most music will not calm them down.

Otherwise, music like this because it offers a bridge from one veteran with PTSD to others, it can be very helpful and supportive.

Soldier Hard's hip-hop lyrics reveal PTSD's rough edges
By Bill Briggs
NBC News contributor

Sleep-starved from a repeating nightmare and weary from wondering when all that therapy would reignite his fading hope, former Army tank gunner Jeff Barillaro took aim at his stubborn target with an attack as brilliant as it was simple.

He decided to break up with PTSD.

And he would do it in his increasingly famous style — studio-recorded hip-hop, under his stage name, Soldier Hard.

“I thought: If I could write a letter to PTSD, what would I say to PTSD? Then I thought: Oh, wow, this is going to be powerful,” said Barillaro, an Iraq War veteran, out of the service since 2010, who has steadily gained fame among active-duty troops, young veterans and their families for his bare, often-bleak music about the daily demons of living with severe Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
He has recorded 14 albums, laying down his first tracks on “a minimum setup” at Camp Taji, Iraq, where he discovered that “between missions I could create music as my escape.” He has launched a nonprofit record label, Redcon-1 Music Group, that already boasts a roster containing an Air Force staff sergeant, a Navy sailor, Marine Staff Sgt. Jerry Lozano, and two Army soldiers, including Fort-Hood-based Spc. Stephen Hobbs. click link for more

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Saturday, February 9, 2013

Sandy Hook Shooter used more than handguns

Too many people are now believing the shooter at Sandy Hook only used handguns.
What you are about to read should clear it up the next time someone tells you that rumor because it is all over the web.

Newtown shooter's guns: What we know
By Steve Almasy
CNN
updated 10:11 AM EST, Wed December 19, 2012
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Police: Newtown, Connecticut, gunman came to school grounds with four weapons
Guns included a shotgun, an AR-15 rifle, a Glock 10 mm and a Sig Sauer 9 mm
Lanza used numerous 30-round magazines to load his rifle, police say
The shotgun was found in Lanza's parked car, police say

But there is also now a conspiracy theory saying that it never really happened and it was a set up.

Breaking news they thought three victims were in the hospital.
ABC News on Dec 14, 2012
20/20
Part 1: The gunman, the hero teacher and other details of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.
The original reports about what was used in shooting all the kids and teachers were coming out so fast it was hard to know exactly what went on. Original reports said the rifle was in the car and the shooter (won't glorify his name) used only hand guns.
FBI two fire arms recovered. at 4:32 into video report Two children injured.
In this one they said the shooter's mother was an aid at the school. But as we learned later, that was not true. That's the problem. When you rely only on original reports, the reports that come out afterwards all too often are forgotten about and that is what the latest spin is all about. People are saying that the shooter only used handguns. It is all over the web and lately I've been hearing people I trust tell me that they believe it was only handguns used.
By the 15th they knew more.

"at lease three semi-automatic weapons including a rifle." 1:42

Police To Re-Create Scene Outside Sandy Hook School
Bullets Hit Cars In Parking Lot, And Officers Want To Know If Lanza Was Firing At Them
December 29, 2012
By DAVE ALTIMARI and JON LENDER and EDMUND H. MAHONY
The Hartford Courant

State police are considering partially re-creating the scene outside the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown on Dec. 14 as the first police officers responded to the mass shooting to try and answer a nagging question: Did Adam Lanza fire at police officers?

Police are discussing bringing back some of the cars that were in the school lot as the first Newtown officers and state police troopers arrived following 911 calls that was a shooter was on the loose. The cars will be placed exactly where they parked that morning as will the police cruisers of the first responders. The plan is to receate the scene in the coming week.

Police have found numerous bullets outside the school that hit at least three cars, including the one owned by Lauren Rousseau, who was killed by Lanza in her classroom along with 14 of her students and a special-education aide. The three cars that were hit, belonging to Sandy Hook staffers, were near where at least one of the first group of officers parked before running into the school, sources said.

First responders said they could hear gunshots when they arrived, meaning Lanza was still firing. It was only after they entered the building that the shooting stopped and police discovered that Lanza, 20, had killed himself with a pistol, but not before killing 26 others in the school, including 20 first-graders, with a Bushmaster .223 rifle.

Sources said the bullets that hit cars outside probably were fired from teacher Victoria Soto's room. That was the second room Lanza entered as he firing at teachers and students. Soto and her aide, Mary Ann Murphy, were killed there, as were six students. Six other children escaped because, police believe, Lanza stopped firing briefly either because his gun jammed or he had trouble reloading his gun. Seven other students survived because Soto hid them in a closet.

Who is really to blame for sequestration?

Who is really to blame for sequestration?
Army offers more budget crunch guidance
Army Times
By Paul McLeary
Staff writer
Posted : Friday Feb 8, 2013

Today is the deadline for the services to submit their sequestration and continuing resolution (CR) implementation plans to the secretary of Defense, and according to an internal Army document obtained by Defense News, the service has identified more potential operational impacts if Congress and the White House don’t get the nation’s fiscal house in order by March 1 (sequestration deadline) and March 27 (the end of the current CR).

In the Wednesday memo titled “Operating Under Uncertain Budgets,” the Army estimates that it will take as long as 150 days to restart any contract that has been shut down due to budget pressure, and that “this considerable time lag creates a FY14 problem. Workload to renegotiate contracts will over burden an already taxed acquisition workforce and likely increase costs in the short term.”

Some of those contracts are significant. Other documents have already reported that 21 of the service’s 26 major acquisition priorities would be at risk to incur significant Nunn-McCurdy breaches, which would in turn impact 300 contractors and 1,000 suppliers in 40 states.
read more here


That would be John Boehner


But what does he say now?


The other truth is that President Bush did not have Afghanistan and Iraq in the Budget but President Obama put them in it.
Total outlays in recent budget submissions
Annual U.S. spending 1930-2014 alongside U.S. GDP for comparison.
2013 United States federal budget - $3.8 trillion (submitted 2012 by President Obama)[122]
2012 United States federal budget - $3.7 trillion (submitted 2011 by President Obama)
2011 United States federal budget - $3.8 trillion (submitted 2010 by President Obama)
2010 United States federal budget - $3.6 trillion (submitted 2009 by President Obama)
Washington, DC — President Obama today submitted to the Congress a Fiscal Year (FY) 2009 supplemental appropriations request totaling $83.4 billion to fund ongoing military, diplomatic, and intelligence operations.
Oct 22, 2009
"For 500,000 priority 8 veterans" benefits were restored.
"Biggest increase in more than 30 years."
"Post 9-11 GI Bill"
The President speaks at the signing of a bill that will increase the VA budget, help fund the post 9/11 GI Bill, and dramatically increase funding for veterans health care. October 22, 2009.


2009 United States federal budget - $3.1 trillion (submitted 2008 by President Bush)
2008 United States federal budget - $2.9 trillion (submitted 2007 by President Bush)
2007 United States federal budget - $2.8 trillion (submitted 2006 by President Bush)
2006 United States federal budget - $2.7 trillion (submitted 2005 by President Bush)
2005 United States federal budget - $2.4 trillion (submitted 2004 by President Bush)
2004 United States federal budget - $2.3 trillion (submitted 2003 by President Bush)
2003 United States federal budget - $2.2 trillion (submitted 2002 by President Bush)
2002 United States federal budget - $2.0 trillion (submitted 2001 by President Bush)
2001 United States federal budget - $1.9 trillion (submitted 2000 by President Clinton)

Was Madigan PTSD doctor suspended in retaliation?

Madigan PTSD doctor suspended
Dr. Russel Hicks, a Madigan Army Medical Center psychiatrist, has been suspended from his hospital duties for alleged problems with patient care. He believes the action is retaliation for information he gave Army investigators looking in to the hospital’s troubled PTSD diagnosis program.
Seattle Times
By Hal Bernton
Seattle Times staff reporter

A Madigan Army Medical Center psychiatrist has been suspended from his hospital duties because he allegedly practiced outside the scope of his clinical privileges and did not properly document patient records.

Dr. Russel Hicks, a senior member of Madigan’s staff with 15 years of service, received a Jan. 17 memorandum that informed him his privileges were in “abeyance.”

During an initial investigation that could last a month or more, he must refrain from any diagnosis, prescriptions, charting or treatment.

Hicks, in a letter to Madigan’s credential’s committee, said he believes the actions were in retaliation for information he offered Army investigators who last year examined diagnoses of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) at the hospital.
read more here

Injured soldier receives a new home

Injured soldier receives a new home
KXAN News
Friday, 08 Feb 2013
Casey James

"Operation FINALLY Home" has built 50 homes

JONESTOWN, Texas (KXAN) - There's a special home being built in Jonestown, at no cost to the new owner.

Operation Finally Home (OFH) is a non-profit created by Bay Area Builders Association for wounded soldiers and their families.

"What better way could there possibly be for a group of builders, suppliers and realtors to give back then to do what we do for a living, build homes," said Lee Kirgan of OFH.

OFH has built 50 homes in 11 states so far for wounded soldiers and their families.

"They end up lighting up our lives, which it's incredible," said Kirgan.
read more here