Posted on Mar 15, 2015
CPT Clinical Psychology
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CSM Brigade Operations (S3) Sergeant Major
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Jack Daniels, Crossfit, the Chaplain, and the MFLC.
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SPC Monica Cole
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Yes. Still do. It’s a constant battle everyday. Because not only am I dealing with mine I am also dealing with my husbands cause we both were down range together. But we are here and taking it one day and one step at a time.

Monica Cole (SPC)
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SSG Harry Outcalt
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Unlike many I know who have various levels of PTSD effects I had zero effects , I attributed this to my mental discipline from a lifetime of study of Martial Arts. Until one day roughly 10 year's ago during a firestorm in Oklahoma I caught the smell of smoke and things burning and I suddenly had a flashback at 70mph and found myself reaching for my weapon and helmet not finding the items brought me back to reality and another close call . LoL I blew a fuse that day ,so I took the week off and meditated and I drank chilled Saki to help calm the mind . One thing I have learned ,no matter how each of us deal with it age works against us. Eventually the safeguard breaks down and we blow a fuse from a trigger , mine came from the Movie . Nicholas Cage about the Navajo Code Talker's I had watched a few day's before finding myself in Oklahoma during the biggest fire in the State. Seemed very strange to me as WW2 was my father's war ,anyway I was able to reset the fuse through Meditation and chilled Saki .....
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SSG Edward Tilton
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Strangely, exposure to the military seems to subdue problems. I was a basket case when I went into the Reserves and then wound up back on Active Duty. The more tactical the base the more at ease I am and live fire made me happy, if not somewhat weird
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SSgt Harvey "Skip" Porter
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CPT (Join to see) Well for myself after being in denial for so very long I finally got help at the VA. Not knowing myself why i was acting the way I was. It really didn't hit me until it started to affect my family and my work. I didn't have the slightest idea what was happening to me. Until one day having a discussion with a Doctor about insomnia. That lead to me being sent to mental health and from that point after seeing two Physiologist for sometime they both came to the conclusion I was suffering from issues from a tragic accident I had in the military in which I almost died. I never thought much it. I should have listened to my youngest daughter when she always said daddy you have issues. LOL.

Peace!
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CPT Gurinder (Gene) Rana
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TLC is a solid cure foundation for treatment of PTSD, I feel. Even if the entire treatment fails, the affected will earn a group that can help prevent relapses of traumatic incidents.
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SFC Richard Giles
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After my second deployment I put everything I had into my work. I was taking medication which seemed to help a lot. As far as counseling I tried it at the VA but I wasn't going to talk to counselors that admittedly had no experience in our kind of problems. One even told me she went to a 2 week seminar to help them.
So medication help me. After I retired last March I started experiencing some of the same issues again, my girlfriend suggested a pet, which I thought was crazy at the time but we got one anyway a Pit Bull. I'll tell you he sure has helped me.
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SSgt James Connolly
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I have dealt with PTSD for 50 yrs. and it does not get easy,I worked at it like step 12 in the AA,I worked around it and with it.I became a National service Officer for the CFW and then the MOPH for some 35 yrs.Fooling myself all that time and when they had me give it up I was scared and it was great that I had made some inroads to PTSR I knew the Medical staff and got good counseling For a short time at least,and before long they had me facilating the group,and you all know the program so I kept reversing the tables and got them off on another tangent and not me.We have all learned how to do that.So listen and learn,stop your drinking,no drugs(I know they keep some of us so high we don't need anything else)but you have to deal with this head on.Are you ever going to forget hell no,but you can find ways,start your own groups,meet for coffee and BS amonst yourselves you will even start laughing at your self and some of the stupid shit we used to do.Always use the phone and keep in touch these guys or women are going to become your knew family,kind of sorta,never let this new force interfer with your own family obligations.
J.connolly
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PO3 Rod Arnold
PO3 Rod Arnold
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The way I see it, a Veteran that goes in for PTSD issues could wind up loosing his 2nd amendment rights. The VA has made it more difficult for someone seeking help!!!
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SSG Michael Scott
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By having this kind of reach out program and a no label and judgment free zone. We all can make a difference for each other and for ourselves. I will not leave a fallen comrade behind. I remember hearing from somewhere........
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CPT Clinical Psychology
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I am revisiting this post and so happy to see service members reaching out to one another for support. As you were.
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