Posted on Mar 15, 2015
CPT Clinical Psychology
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CSM Michael J. Uhlig
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I almost went to jail, I about did something stupid - at work, luckily I had a someone I trusted there to see there were some changes going on and he asked me to get some help. So, I ask for help and end up take the pharmacy home with me! I followed the directions on the medicine bottle until I started getting close to the max tape....I was on pills to fall asleep, to stay asleep, to not remember my dreams, taking 3 valiums to make it thru the workday, pills to make me relax and pills to control anger and rage.

I knew there had to be a change so I bought a brand new mountain bike and started riding, everywhere. Back and forth to PT & work (12 miles each way), to every meeting and appointment, to the gym before heading home for the day...everywhere I had to go I was riding that bike. It really helped me to have alone time (without drugs) to just think, until I was cut off by a guy in a white Camry....he turned into a gas station and saw me heading his direction - I guess he could see I was enraged because he ran into the store and locked himself in the bathroom! I continued to ride that bike until I PCS'd....the mover forgot to load it in my household goods. For me, it took something physical, and alone for me to deal with it, I still have many days where unexpected booms, or smells trigger thoughts and feelings.
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LCpl Gilberto Elizondo
LCpl Gilberto Elizondo
>1 y
LCDR Jaron Matlow, I have done anger resolution classes. However the best thing I got out of it was connecting with other veterans dealing with similar demons
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Cpl Mike Weber
Cpl Mike Weber
>1 y
I went to jail for a day after blowing up on a family member, I was then introduced to the VA which I was never associated with and went to a 6 week long PTSD specific program. Glad I attended.
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LTC Donell Kelly
LTC Donell Kelly
>1 y
I have a Vietnam Veteran friend who is STILL doing daily exercising with a stationary bike & lifting weights as a means of stress reduction. This is almost 50 years after a couple of tours in 'Nam. It's how he's dealt with it for many years, and far less destructive than some of his early other methods .
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PO3 Rod Arnold
PO3 Rod Arnold
9 y
Great news, and you hit upon something I also struggled with, being able to relax and sleep. I found the gym also helped a great deal. A little light weight lifting and an hour in the pool, has really helped.
Good luck to you, and enjoy life's journey!!!
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SGT Infantryman (Airborne)
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Edited >1 y ago
I quit drinking, smoking, I take 23 pills day and night. I don't read anything about war, I don't watch anything about war, and I don't discuss what I did in Nam, except through counciling.I try to stay busy and enjoy fishing out of my kayak. Now, I really enjoy RP and the people I've come in contact with. Because of RP, I am starting to open up a little and I really enjoy the topics and replies. Other than that, it's a great life.
I always worked shift work and I never turned down overtime. I used to drink as much as I could to get drunk. My family saw me come home many times at night and when I opened the door, I fell out and laid on the grass until my wife helped me up. We never argued because I was hardly ever there. Our marriage was our second marriage. I had two kids and she had two kids. We combined the family and almost all of the time my wife did everything by herself, with four kids. In 2002 I was reunited with a guy that I saved his life in Nam. The memories of the night he was rescued kept playing through my mind. If I stayed drunk I didn't dream anything about Nam because I usually passed out. In 2006 my wife went to work for an airlines as a flight attendant. I was home alone three weeks out of four. One night I decided I'd had enough and took a whole bottle of anti depressant pills and sleep medicine. My wife returned earlier than normal on her trips. She told me when she came in the bedroom, she thought I was sleeping until she saw the bottles and couldn't wake me up. She called 911 and I was taken to the VA emergency room. They were able to save me and when I woke up I realized what had happened and I was pissed off. My mind is still fuzzy about that night, but I did eventually go back to work. I was still drinking like a fish but my production at work was going down quick. One day at work I flipped out and started yelling and crying, throwing wall lockers around in the change room, until my supervisor came in. He got me calmed down and we went to the front office. They called my wife to come out I was forced to take medical retirement. As I contineud to go to VA counciling, I had to make a life or death decision. Did I want to continue drinking or did I want to be helped. I decide I wanted the help so I quit drinking, and later quit smoking. My entire outlook on life changed and I could actually smile sometimes. In November, 1994 one of our sons was killed in a car accident. Two people in the other car died also. When the blood tests came back it showed my sons alcohol content was .013. When I found out that, I felt like I was responsible because of all my drinking. Fourteen months later our house caught fire and burned down. All of these things plus Vietnam came to a head and that's when I tried to kill myself again We have always gone to church and are Christians, and I think that is the only reason I'm alive today and our marriage stayed together. Things aren't 100% now but as I'm getting older and have seven grandchildren, my thoughts are only about them. I still get depressed and down, but the medication helps me get throught it because I stopped drinking.
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SGT Infantryman (Airborne)
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>1 y
I've been kicking myself in my butt since 1971 for not re-enlisting. I miss it too.
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SSG Gerhard S.
SSG Gerhard S.
>1 y
Thanks for sharing your inspiring story Sgt Bodine. I too miss the people I served with, but I can't honestly say that I miss the Army itself. 22 years of missing weddings, anniversaries, birthdays, summer vacations with my family was enough, for my family, and for me.
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SPC Curtis Hanzlik
SPC Curtis Hanzlik
>1 y
I am also a Veteran, though nothing compared to Viet Nam vets! Have you ever heard of Young Living Essential Oils? They are making a huge difference for me. Not only with PTSD, but sciatica pain, addictions, losing my temper and many other things normal people deal with. Low self esteem, trust issues, the list is endless. Friend me on Facebook if you can or leave a reply of how I can get a message to you. Curtis Hanzlik
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CW5 Donna Smith
CW5 Donna Smith
9 y
Bless you on your journey. I would recommend journaling. Buy a composition book, sit down and write down all tat you have been carrying around. This way you get to tell the truth about what you are feeling without judgement. If you have more questions, I'd be happy to talk you through the process. Been there, done that.

CW5 (R) Donna S, (Now Senior Minister with CSL Anacortes)
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MAJ Senior Observer   Controller/Trainer
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Officers aren't supposed to be affected by conditions like Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, right? I mean, PTSD is a mental health issue. Mental health issues are a sign of weakness; a defect of character, right? Of course, when our NCOs and Enlisted Soldiers come to us directly with a personal issue, or if their Battle brings it to us, we don't think any less of these good Soldiers; but Officers? Why, it's tantamount to Conduct Unbecoming...

Believe it or not, this was my mindset, once upon a time. And once upon a time, this way of thinking almost proved fatal to me.

I was a Company Commander of a Combat Support MP Company in the area of Bayji, Iraq, from November 2006 - November 2007. We were on the ground for the Surge and the violence that ensued. In addition to the violence and carnage I witnessed firsthand, there were other things going down behind the scenes that upon DEMOB, I felt like I had failed my Soldiers; let them all down. I started to blame myself personally for every casualty suffered; particularly the severely burned, the amputees, and the paraplegics. Of course, I also assumed full responsibility for our two KIA.

Following a winter of doing little more than drinking and ice-fishing, I had to find something to distance myself from this shitstorm of guilt and depression that was seeking to devour me. I hated sleep, as images from IED strikes and decapitated Iraqi Policemen kept running amok in my dreams. My wife urged me to go to the VA; "Fuck you!", was my bitter response. It would get better, I rationalized, once I got back to doing something productive. For a little while, I was right.

In June, I started a full-time Master's Program to get my Degree in Special Education. It felt good have something to focus all of my attention on; blocking out most of the outside world for several hours at a time. I was studying; surely I wasn't isolating! Yet that is precisely what it was. Before long, when studying (isolating) in the evenings, it felt relaxing to have a beer while working (Don't normal guys enjoy a beer while working into the night?). Gradually, the amount of beer consumed increased over time.

As the program increased in intensity, I was happy. I had found a way to outrun my nightmares; I was working every night to the point of exhaustion. I had schoolwork and research to do, so I had the perfect out to avoid most family functions and get-togethers. In an effort to convince myself that I wasn't a failure, I had become a perfectionist; striving for the highest grade possible on every assignment and test, and driving my poor classmates insane if it was their misfortune to end up assigned to a group project with me. Following two years of living the good life, and another year of student-teaching, I graduated with my Masters of Ed Degree from the University of Minnesota. I had even landed a job in one of the classrooms I had done one of my student-teaching placements in! At this point, I thought I had it beat.

My first year of teaching was great! I had the same support staff working for me that my mentor had the year prior, and the Principal who hired me was very pleased. Still, my evenings were no longer filled with the frantic activities of writing and studying, which left more time to devote to beer drinking. I was up to a 6-pack a night when I got the idea to switch up to the 16 ounce cans, but I stayed at the 6-pack a night quantity, of course. Thank God I had a comfortable place to sit and watch my hockey games at home; this is the only explanation as to why I never got a DUI; I never had to drink and drive! My wife and I would argue quite frequently about the drinking, but in my mind, I knew the drinking wasn't the real problem. I never wanted to talk about the real problem.

In my second year, my building had a new Principal and the District had hired a new Special Ed Director. Where I found support and positive reinforcement in everything I did the year prior, it seemed I could do no right at all in the eyes of my superiors in my second year. In November, I received a By Name Request for a mission to Afghanistan. I had worked for the O-5 and O-6 who had made the request in the past, so that part made it easy. The situation at work, when coupled with the sense of unfinished business from Iraq, made it even easier. I said I would go. A week later, I had a Mob Order. If all went according to plan, I would be leaving on 1 May 2013.

Within a week of submitting my Mob Order to my employer, I was out of a job. The end was abrupt, unexpected, and came the day before Christmas Break. Just prior to the start of the day, I was called to the Principal's Office. Sitting there was my Union Rep and the Special Ed Director. I was informed that in light of my "decision" to go to Afghanistan (I would have been involuntarily mob'ed anyway), the District was exercising it's right to buy-out my contract, effective immediately, and after the Union Rep had escorted me to collect my personal things, I was done. Never got to say good bye to my students or co-workers; gone!
That was a tough blow to absorb.

Oh well, at least we have Afghanistan, right? Wrong. A few weeks later, when the DOD was ordered to cut expenses in Afghanistan, the Reserve Component BDE I was to be a part of was scrubbed from the mission. Suddenly, I felt totally empty inside. I no longer had a job to go to nor a deployment to explain away why I wasn't at work right now. I sat and got good and drunk. When my wife came home, she got really pissed, because I was too drunk to go to a dinner party at her co-worker's house. I didn't really give a fuck, I explained, because people would only ask me what I was doing now, and what the Hell was I supposed to tell them? She left. I finished off the last three beers in the fridge. I then chambered one round in my .357 Ruger, spun the cylinder, and pulled the trigger. Nothing. I did it again. Nothing. Suddenly, this sense of sanity came over me, and I got really, really terrified. I unloaded the firearm and secured it. I called my wife, and told her to get home, at once. When she got home, I had a bag packed and ready to go to the VA Hospital. She asked me if we couldn't wait until tomorrow. I said I didn't want to take that chance.

That was two years ago this past February. Those were some very dark times. After two separate in-patient programs a bunch of out-patient sessions, and the discovery of a TBI that I was unaware of from one of our very first incidents in Theater, things are much better today than they were, still, there are costs. As a result of disclosing my issues, I am now in the process of going through a Medical Evaluation Board. I am at peace with that. I am still a leader, and if by my example, someone else who is struggling feels a little less stigmatized when they decide to seek care, then it will have been worth it. If anyone ever wants to talk to me about this, I will honor your privacy. Feel free to shoot me a PM.
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SGT Infantryman (Airborne)
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>1 y
CPT Sutton, you have every right to experience PTSD with what you and your buddy went through. I take 23 meds for mine and I still have flashbacks and nightmares. Anything as traumatic as you went through, you wouldn't be human to not have some problems. Thank you for sharing Sir. It really is better to write or talk about it, even though it's hard as hell to do. God Bless you Sir.
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SFC Nikhil Kumra
SFC Nikhil Kumra
>1 y
We all know that officers, like hot women, don't poop either. It's science!!
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MSG Tim Gray
MSG Tim Gray
>1 y
Thanks sir, not just for sharing- but also for caring!
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LTC Donell Kelly
LTC Donell Kelly
9 y
Nurses, medics & docs also aren't supposed to get PTSD, because we're the caretakers, right? Wrong. Yet few of us seek help. The main reason I did was because I'm no spring chicken. I don't have another 40-50 years to figure things out, and to live my life for those who didn't make it back, means being actually engaged in living it, not just going through the motions. It has gotten better. I just wish more of my fellow AMEDD folk would seek help.
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How have you dealt with PTSD?
COL Charles Williams
14
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Edited >1 y ago
Time, time, and time... And talking with folks who have been there.
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SPC Glen Youker
SPC Glen Youker
>1 y
I agree time and talking about it with others who also have experienced the same!!!
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LTC K Bucy
LTC K Bucy
>1 y
I agree with COL Williams, Time and talking about it, with friends, fellow Soldiers who understand where you're coming from. Knowing that you are not alone with the feelings and memories you have. Getting things out in the open, off your chest.
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SSgt Stevan Auldridge
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As a medic I saw many horrendous things, saw the light vanish in a mans eyes and watch the eyes dilate as the heart stops providing pressure to the muscle. BUT I think the job prepared me well for this and, as far as I can tell, I do not have PTSD. I don't have nightmares because I knew I did the best that I could at my job and found peace in that. I think finding acceptance and comprehension in the gruesome helps.
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Stevan, I have seen the light leave while tending to patients in hospitals. It's an incredibly powerful moment....
SSgt Stevan Auldridge
SSgt Stevan Auldridge
>1 y
I would caution vets from "masking" your issues with drugs, alcohol drugs etc. That is a cover up. You need to treat the wound not just put dressing on it or it will never heal.
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SGT Signal Support Systems Specialist
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Medication... It seems to be the only thing working at the time.
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Cpl Michael Strickler
Cpl Michael Strickler
>1 y
SGT (Join to see), I recommend joining a blog anonymously, starting a tumblr persona, or something to that effect. Troll around in the cyber world speaking your mind and not only will you feel less afraid to be criticized/nervous about something, but you will find those you can bond with. Kind of like an anonymous pen pal that you can dump whenever you want if things get to real/ serious/ or it is not working out.
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SGT Signal Support Systems Specialist
SGT (Join to see)
>1 y
PTSD was the main reason I joined RP. To talk with like minded people. :-) But yes, I will think about giving that a try.
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TSgt Photojournalist
TSgt (Join to see)
>1 y
I have had a hard time dealing with issues when I first came back was not a very nice person to be around not violent but what ever was on my mind no matter what it was came right out was hurtful to many a person my wife and I made a pact that if she saw a lot of changes would go and seek help I did after a while was nervous to go and talk about what was really on my mind since worried about repercussion part of it was losing my mom 3 days before leaving country she did not want a service so I did not go home than my great family decided to have one after I turned down going home have been on ambien and such to help me sleep Sgt Fulgham if you need to talk or anything just hit me up.
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SGT Signal Support Systems Specialist
SGT (Join to see)
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Wow! Sorry about your Mom. :-(
I lost my favorite aunt when I was on my second. She meant the world to me. I hate I couldn't go to her funeral. I think about that all the time.
When I first got home, there were fits of complete and utter RAGE. IDK why it happened either. It just did. Something would set me off and SNAP! Done! It is SO MUCH better now, good Lord. It's a very slow process and I am not a patient person. Lol. We all want it now, but I have to just deal with it one day at a time.
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CPT (Join to see) I assume you are asking this from a professional standpoint since you are a Psychologist.

I do not have PTSD, and have no combat experience. I do, however, deal with Combat PTSD, as I provide counseling services to vets who are suffering from it.

THIS IS A PSA: If you are suffering and need help - call the hotline at [login to see] option 1.

If you need non-urgent help, you can always reach out to me through RP...

I can't endorse highly enough the book "Once a Warrior Always a Warrior" http://amzn.to/1G9JfWF This book, by Col C Hoge MC USA Ret. is a "how to" manual for vets and their families, dealing with Combat PTSD. It is a must read, if you have it, or know someone who is suffering.

For those of you in RP land that have gotten into legal trouble due to your PTSD, I say that this is a national tragedy and embarrassment. It is outrageous, but not surprising, that DOD does so little to help the troops with PTSD.

Some jurisdictions have veteran's courts, and they have specific programs to help troubled vets regain control of their lives.

Please, I can't say this enough, if you are hurting, don't self-medicate, and don't ignore it. Reach out to someone. Don't let your life become a statistic, because you served your country...
SGT Orazio Castellana
SGT Orazio Castellana
>1 y
Love this book. I actually got to meet and have Charles Hoge help me through some of my therapy.
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SGT Orazio Castellana io What a blessing. This book is a MUST READ for every military person and veteran who has been in combat...

SSgt (Join to see) I'm glad you found an outlet for your turmoil. The worst thing to do is keep it bottled up...
CPL Rifleman
CPL (Join to see)
>1 y
I served in the Nam with the 101st in 69. I am retired now and much of my combat experience is coming back to me, in a bad way. I have filed a ptsd claim with the VA, but I can't seem to remember dates, specific places or names, and this is what they want on the claim, calling them "incidents". The VA, VFW, and DAV all claim that they will help a guy with military issues, but I have found that not to be very true. I need someone who can help me with these specifics. Any ideas?
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Curtis, as long as you have evidence of having served in combat, you no longer need to provide specific details and precipitating events to prove PTSD. The rules on this were changed several years ago, to make it easier for especially Viet Nam vets to file claims.

Likewise if you're dealing with any Agent Orange related conditions, as long as you have evidence of "boots on the ground" (or Brown water service and certain Blue Water ships for Navy folks) you can claim the presumptive conditions.

Note that the Viet Nam service and campaign medals are not proof of being in combat. Proof includes things such as the CIB/CAB, Purple Heart, service record entries and Buddy Statements.

If you don't have copies of your service records, download and complete an SF-180 and send it to the appropriate address on the second page of the form. Where you send it depends on when you served, what service, and whether you're requesting service and/or medical records... http://bit.ly/1FRR72a

To submit buddy statements, you need VA Form 21-4138; your colleagues must make their statements on this form... http://www.vba.va.gov/pubs/forms/VBA-21-4138-ARE.pdf

Contact me off line if you need more help...

1LT Sandy Annala
SPC(P) Jay Heenan
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I don't have PTSD, I just have 'Major Depressive Disorder with Anxiety Disorder'...whatever in the hell that means. Thank God that I can deal with it without the assistance of pills. I, like CSM Michael J. Uhlig, used physical activity (mine was hiking) until recently. My physical injuries have made hiking no longer a viable option. I am going to try pool therapy to see if that will help me. Contrary to popular belief (in my unit), I don't enjoy being injured and going through a MEB...

I pray all of you dealing with PTSD are able to find something that works for each of you! Keep trying different things until you find what works for you! God Bless!
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Sgt Michael Johnson
Sgt Michael Johnson
>1 y
I got out in 1992 after the Gulf War. I've only worked one job for a couple years where I wasn't self-employed in the last 22 years. I abandoned my house outside Camp Lejeune and rode a bicycle from there to the farthest parts of Alaska. The hardest thing I ever had to do was turn around when I got to the Arctic Ocean and do something with my life. Almost died a few times on that trip, but didn't. Went over mountain ranges, worked the crab boats. I went to the VA in 2001 or 2003, at a girlfriends insistence, because of serious memory problems. I was diagnosed by a college intern with less education and certainly less life experiences than me, with a personality disorder and anxiety. I don't agree with that. I've done about every dangerous job there is in my life. I've been hurt numerous times, but now I'm going on 56 - I never ever thought I would live that long. Back in 2003 or so the VA gave me 20% for an injury that happened on active duty. I never knew I was getting that money for over ten years when I got my first 200. check. The VA was using the money to pay my mortgage on the house I abandoned. Well, I'm not trying to tell my life story. I guess the point I'm trying to make is that in my experience the VA threw my generation under the bus. How do I deal with it? By myself and the best I can do.
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SSG Buddy Kemper
SSG Buddy Kemper
>1 y
Sgt Michael Johnson That's a powerful story brother and very inspiring. Thanks for sharing it, thank you for your service and I am glad to see you on here. God bless you. -kemp
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LTC Donell Kelly
LTC Donell Kelly
9 y
I was told I had "compassion fatigue" as did the majority of the nurses @ LRMC. I'd been a nurse for over 30 years at that point, and I was so pissed off that someone had told me I was out of compassion, that it was just one more thing to be angry about. I cam home & was numb enough for 2 years that I didn't seek help for 2 years. When I finally found the counselor at the VA that really helped me, and I was telling him about the compassion fatigure, he said "you do realize, don't you, that compassion fatigue is the new term for secondary PTSD." As it turned out I also had primary PTSD from seeing & working with the seemingly endless flow of incoming and outbound wounded, injured & sick service members. I'm finally, 10 years later, getting a handle on it. I do know that the only people I feel really comfortable with are fellow Army members. I'd still do it again, as it was an honor to help care for each & every one.
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LTC Donell Kelly
LTC Donell Kelly
9 y
Depression and anxiety are part of PTSD. If they're trying to sell you that nonsense, get another psychiatrist.
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SGT Bobbi Schroeder
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9
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I keep to myself and stay away from situations that could trigger an episode. I was an 88M (transportation) and was a huge target. I saw and experienced so much. Driving, loud noises, fireworks are the worst. I don't enjoy what I used to. I dive into doing things for my kids that I am raising by myself. I have also started "farming". I have goats, chickens, ducks, dogs and cats and will plant a garden this spring. I just do things to keep my mind off of the things that I have to my meds for. It is not something to be ashamed of, and I now know this. It happens to the weakest and strongest of us all.
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TSgt Photojournalist
TSgt (Join to see)
>1 y
Thank you for sharing we all need to reach out and help each other no matter branch or what ever just know I will be here for anyone that needs to talk vet suicides are just crazy I also hate fireworks and such and stay away if i can from triggers.
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MSG Robert Schmidt
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Edited >1 y ago
In 1990 I was activated with my Army Reserve Unit for Desert Shield/Storm. I was a civilian Chief of Police at the time and could have opted out of deployment as my job was considered civilian essential. However, I did not feel I could abandon all I had trained so hard for, or all the professional soldiers I had helped train throughout the years. As the Operations St. for this Military Police Company, I felt very confident in our leadership especially our NCO's.

The day before the ground war started, my CO and 1SG directed me to take over our 1ST PLT. as they had relieved the existing PSG. I knew most soldiers in the PLT., however, I had been Operations St., for several years, and was not totally aware of their capabilities. I had to admit to myself that for the first time since activation, I was scared to death of losing one of my troops. So much so that it was all consuming. I trusted nearly everyone to do as they were all trained to do, but I still worried about them all.

We went in with 1st ID, into Kuwait, and then Iraq. All platoons went in different directions and were on their own. My platoon was directed to set up the 7th CORP EPW cage and begin taking EPW's. The platoon of 33 soldiers took in and secured several thousand EPW's in for 48 hours before getting additional support. The ground war was fast paced with the usual smells, sights, sounds, mine fields, cluster bombs, scud missiles, etc. I think what made some things worse for me was I broke my back and injured my shoulder and neck in a fall on the first day of the ground war. However, I thought I had just bruised it badly. There was no immediate medical treatment available. About two weeks later when I met with a doctor he wanted to air lift me to Landsthuel, Germany. I refused to go as I didn't want to leave the troops in the platoon.

Upon deactivation, I was a medical holdover and received treatment for my injuries. I left Active duty and continued treatment at the VA in Minneapolis. A couple of surgeries later, I returned to my job a Police Chief. I found, that my concentration, communication, decision making capability, and my enthusiasm for my job had diminished. In was exhausted and never woke up feeling rested. I argued with my Officers and Civilians. I lost interest in things I had liked to do. Things that were important to me before deployment, were no longer that way. This went on for two years. I had trouble sleeping 4 hours straight. My days and nights reversed. I had terrible dreams and thoughts. All the negatives of war came back at night.

I just did not feel like myself. I felt totally numb and alone even thought I had a wife and three children at home. One day at work, I was at my desk and I just started to cry, which I never did. I suspected that I was depressed, but as a Senior NCO I could not let on that there was something wrong. I did not want to break the Army Culture at the time, and did not want to be booted from service. After 2 1/2 years of struggle, I finally sought help at the Minneapolis VA. They were not equipped for the influx of soldiers asking for help. There had been no form of re-integration training at all. I was put on medication, and eventually started some counseling. I was diagnosed with Acute Depression and PTSD. I could understand the depression, but not the PTSD. After all, I was a COP who had see traffic fatalities, suicides, rapes, deaths, and all the negatives associated with policing. I was a hardened and seasoned Officer, who had never been troubled by any of it before.

Seeking help when I did probably saved my life. I only wished I had sought help earlier. I received treatment that did help. Last year I participated in a new 12 week PTSD Program that I think was very helpful for me. There is light at the end of the tunnel. Although those of us with PTSD will always have it with us. Good days, bad days, but with counseling it's much easier to deal with it. My family received counseling, and now understand what PTSD is and how to help me deal with it. If I had bucked the Army Culture at the time perhaps my struggles would have been easier. I should have thrown out the Strong NCO and Soldier thing right away.
MY ADVICE IS TO EDUCATE YOURSELF ON THE SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF THESE DISEASES, LISTEN TO YOUR FAMILY MEMBERS, AND DON'T HESITATE TO ASK FOR HELP. IF YOU KNOW OF A FELLOW SOLDIER WHO IS STRUGGLING, ENCOURAGE THEM TO SEEK HELP, OR NOTIFY LAW ENFORCEMENT OR MEDICAL AUTHORITIES TO POSSIBLY GET THAT SOLDIER SOME HELP.
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