Is enough being done to stop/prevent suicide with Servicemembers and Veterans?
Our suicide rates are at historical highs...more Soldiers/Vets have committed suicide in the last few years than all of our fallen brothers and sisters for both OEF and OIF. It's averaging 23 a day.
We have suicide prevention training, but it's only required in my unit once a year. We are taught from Day 0 that we are to have our battle buddy's back while deployed, but what about while in garrison? I don't mean to sound disrespectful or attacking anyone with this next part but...What happened to NCO's actually living by the NCO Creed? What happened to "My two basic responsibilities will always be uppermost in my mind, the accomplishment of my mission and the welfare of my Soldiers...I know my Soldiers and will always place their needs above my own"? I get that we're in the Army, that we're Soldiers first, and there are going to be times where we have to just embrace the suck and drive on. I don't think that applies though to making sure that Soldiers are doing ok.
This is a huge issue, and I don't believe that there is enough being done. At what point is this going to be a "big enough problem" for something more to be done?
a) mandatory training and PowerPoint isn't reducing the total number of suicides
b) it seems so obvious and yet is never addressed
We need to stop treating Suicide as an individual problem. We enlist folks from all walks of life, every social and economic strata- so why is our suicide rate nearly double that of every other profession in the world? We have poured millions of dollars and hours into suicide prevention training, Master Resiliency Training, poster and leaflet propaganda... what do all these items have in common that is not being addressed?
The United States armed forces.
I am talking about command climate. I am talking about general officers casually ending the careers of Soldiers who have given their heart and soul for the armed forces for five or ten or fifteen years- officers who have never met the Soldier in question. I am talking about senior NCOs who no longer counsel and know their Soldiers, and who fail to express a genuine and staked interest in the emotional and social well-being of GI Joe, the Platoon Sergeants who go home at 1630 and seem inconvenienced by phone calls from their subordinates.
To avoid the perception of, "lets blame the other guy," I submit a simple test to validate my point. Pull up a diagram of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs. Now take every sub-bullet contained in the diagram and ask who has the most control over it: the individual troop, the E-5/O-1 level leadership, or the E-8/O-5 level of leadership? It is so stark and clear that there can be no other conclusion, and yet instead of addressing the problem we continue to give the individual "tools" to cope with the daunting amount of nonsense rolling down to the lowest level from on high.
This can be forwarded to DUI, Sexual Harassment, and every other area in which our individual Soldiers are being failed- it's time to address the fact that while we cannot pin these statistics on race, social strata, financial background, or MOS, there is a strong correlation between the frequency of these events and the perception of command climate. We don't need another program- we need better leaders who are accountable for their decisions to an independent counsel (be it civilian oversight or an office parallel to the IG).
It is not a defect. It is not a disease, it is not a syndrome. It is a perfectly normal human stress reaction. Part of the problem is the way we treat these people, like there's something wrong with them. How on earth is that supposed to help? Just be there for them. Help them. Talk to them. But treating it like it's some crazy new phenomenon, a disease or a "problem to be eradicated" is just adding to the problem.
My only point is, treating people like they are diseased and "icky" is only going to exascerbate the problem. There is a reason why the"D" has been dropped and it is now simply PTS.
It's time to treat human beings as human beings and not clinical subjects.
We have to be realistic about the topic of suicide as well. Suicidal thoughts have been a part of the human experience since the first caveman broke up with his cave girlfriend and realized all he has left is being chased by velociraptors.
.
It is not a defect. It is not a disease, it is not a syndrome. It is a perfectly normal human stress reaction. Part of the problem is the way we treat these people, like there's something wrong with them. How on earth is that supposed to help? Just be there for them. Help them. Talk to them. But treating it like it's some crazy new phenomenon, or a "problem to be eradicated" is just adding to the problem.
If we send 18 year olds to battle who just learned to drive and then teach them to fight we must show them how to heal. One must have an outlet to deal with war. This has gotten a lot better but we must continue to be aware of our members.
Most of society will never have to deal with what our combat vets have to deal with hundreds of times. The stress of the combat zone and the reality that people WILL die and you will lose friends. It is time to discuss the best way to fight a war and make sure our leaders our aware of the sacrifice and what it takes to fight and recover. And I haven't talked about the impact on our families. For my friends and fellow brothers and sisters in arms thank you!
I feel that a lot of the problem is how the military has gradually gone soft because of political correctness. They opened the flood gates for recruiters when Iraq was going full tilt and because of how soft training had gotten, a lot of people who would have been weeded out in years prior weren't. It seemed as if TRADOC had developed a "push them through and let their commands figure it out after" attitude. So we ended up with a soft bunch of individuals who probably weren't emotionally fit and wouldn't have made it 10 years prior.
Speaking for both the military and civilian world, the moral fabric of society has greatly degraded over the years, especially over the last decade. I saw an ad recently for the show suits and I couldn't believe the language that they were using on a basic cable channel that, at one time, you'd only hear on HBO.
Back in the early to mid 20th century, even if people weren't raised as religious, God fearing individuals, there were still basic morals, values, and disciplines that were instilled in people that we just don't really see anymore.
The media sensationalizes and a lot of times even glamorizes murder and suicide. You have all these kids that grew up seeing it on TV and think it's a way to get attention or a way out or something green good and wonderful.
If the media stopped desensitizing people and making them think that it was all ok, we might not have the issues we're seeing both inside and out of the military. Then you've got things like Call of Duty that all these kids play at much younger ages than they really should and they think "Oh wow! War is awesome! I can do this." And then when their buddy gets blown up and they see him bleeding and hear him screaming and they realize that there's no respawn, they're shattered.
However, most of the time, those who need help are afraid to reach out for fear of retribution. In his case it wold be loss of his clearance. Many commands have subtle or not so subtle ways of letting their people know asking for help is not welcome. Senior Enlisted and Officers more interested in their careers than their people or they show disdain for those who show "weakness"; who aren't a Sailor's Sailor or a Soldier's Soldier. Not like back when I joined the Service - "when men were men and suck it up Soldier was the order of the day". The men and women entrusted to us are not automatons, they are human beings we often times have to push to the limits and beyond to achieve our missions. It is then our duty as leaders to know our people and do all we can to make sure they are physically and emotionally/mentally well.