What has worked best for you?
What methods/steps have you taken to bring positive change in your life?
Which services provided the best / most desired outcomes for your needs?
We expect to learn from you and will try to help you where we can. We also believe Veterans, families, and caregivers sharing their struggles in forums like RallyPoint can make it easier for others to share and get help.
If you need help now, dial 988, option 1 for the Veterans Crisis Line.
If you are not yet receiving benefits or care for VA and want to see if you qualify:
Visit https://rly.pt/VAHealthCareEligibility or call [login to see] (TTY: 711).
2. Do internal audits to see how the VA Healthcare system is helping or failing veterans. It is a shame that so many struggle and can't find resources to really help them.
3. Provide support, real all around support, to service members before and during transition from the military. Many feel lost and without a sense of purpose, coupled with PTSD, MST, TBIs and bodily injuries, disability, etc. Do better by the people to sacrifice to keep this country and the world safe. Provide solid Healthcare, mental healthcare and familial support. Delays in care, barriers to access and incomplete and incompetent care kills veterans.
4. Provide veterans with the ability to financially sustain themselves. Many live below poverty levels and this is absolutely unacceptable and mkrally and ethically wrong. This country cannot have people signing off their lives to defend it only to end up in poverty after they come back from deployments and wars, are discharged because of injuries or retire.
5. Act! Veterans cannot wait. Fix what does not work and do better!
Please feel free to contact me in person as I would like to help solve this horrible situation asap. Wayne Thiltgen
Right now the VA talks and talks about mitigating veteran suicides but many veterans may be afraid to be open about their depression. What to do? Some kind of walk-in clinic where you don't have to show ID to talk with someone?
"Since 1998 ... the VA has reported the names of veterans appointed fiduciaries to the FBI's National Instant Criminal Background Check System, or NICS, which is the system used to determine whether someone is legally prohibited from buying a gun. "
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2023/07/18/va-argues-gop-bill-restore-veteran-gun-rights-would-harm-suicide-prevention-efforts.html?ESRC=eb_230719.nl
VA Spars with Republicans over Gun Rights for Veterans Deemed Mentally Incompetent
Republicans argue the legislation is a matter of ensuring veterans receive due process before their rights to own a gun are restricted.
"... Operation Vigilant Eagle, a program launched by the Department of Homeland Security in 2009, military veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan are also being characterized as extremists and potential domestic terrorist threats because they may be "disgruntled, disillusioned or suffering from the psychological ..."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Vigilant_Eagle
I've used the veteran's crisis line (988) once and it actually provided me with relief at the time when I was very close to the edge.
One thing I think would help and I don't think many people have said or would say is: veterans with other-than-honorable (OTH) discharges should get and still deserve help, services, and even benefits after their military service. They still served their country like everyone else. Sure, they may have had some issues while they were in causing them to get an unfavorable discharge but they fought, bled, cried, and did so much for the country just like everyone else yet they get denied so many benefits and they have to fight the system just to get even the most basic scraps. This leads to so much mental stress and pain that many of us don't even seek out our benefits or help from the VA anymore and just give up.
I didn't give up fully and managed to get some of my benefit from the VA, namely medical benefits, but I didn't have those benefits for several years and the struggle for receiving Any benefits was o much added stress that I wanted to quit and it made my mental health struggles worse and worse.
It's also hell trying to get a discharge upgraded which, again, would help those OTH veterans get access to services and benefits which would improve their lives and mental health. I basically have given up on upgrading my discharge because of the process and previous denials, the mental stress is just too much. Making it easier for OTH veterans to seek upgrades would be a tremendous help, especially since many OTH's are given out for shady reasons at best.
Other things that can be done:
Spread the word about the crisis line, the easy to dial one. 988 is much easier to dial and remember. There's a longer number that is spread around and to be honest I don't even know that number as do many veterans, so they forget about it and in a crisis situation they think there's no help. We need to disseminate the 988 crisis line as the main number for veterans in crisis to call. Tell people to put it in their phones as an emergency contact, to memorize the number, etc.
Remind veterans about and push the mental health options available through VA healthcare. Many veterans don't realize how the military has affected them mentally (I didn't realize I was depressed until several years after I was out, I was just wallowing without knowing why) and offering them the option to see therapists and psychiatrists who know the military struggle would be an excellent way to help.
Suggest more veterans to seek out disability if they have military caused issues. Money troubles are a major mental health issue (something else I struggle with) and having even a small additional supplement could be the key to saving someone's mental state and life.
I hope someone actually reads all this, especially the parts about OTH veterans, and really takes this stuff into consideration to help us out. It's a struggle for many of us out here and I really wanna believe someone is out here trying to help us.
Psychologists push being open about all your feelings. OK for some folks; but repression works for some people - who lead productive normal lives and die of old age.
And them calling was more triggering than my social anxiety, migraines, depression, high sensitivity.
I know they mean well, but the VA is a perfect example of many problems.
I believe we have to break the stigma behind seeking help. EVERYONE needs it sometimes. It's not a bad thing to need help. We all have skills and abilities that will complement someone else's skills and abilities. No one person can "do it all."
Some other resources that I'd like to include for my fellow brothers/sisters in addition to the 988 option:
The Crisis Text line: Text Home to 741741.
GroundWire (.net)
What helps me when I find myself in a mental funk: Challenge the thought. Generally, I do this one of two ways. 1.) Map it out by listing the thought, and then make two columns. One labeled True and one labeled false. Build the case. 99% of the time, my negative thoughts are false. 2.) Replace the negative thought with a positive one. I personally find this one more rewarding. However, for me, it's MUCH harder to do.
Take time to get some fresh air. Get some exercise. It doesn't have to be "PT." It can be walking. Endorphins help make (and keep) us happy.
Get plenty of sleep. I struggle with this one, but there are a number of studies that show that adequate sleep is beneficial. I know we all have so much to do, but that's another reason why we need to ask for help. Some people are AWESOME at tasks that I stink at or take a long time to do (and vice versa).
10 CAN INC. | Christian Adventure Network | USA
Welcome to America's outdoor ministry, where warriors, women, and youth discover purpose, find joy, and get healing. We're a nonprofit organization that's synergizing a coalition of grassroots partners to better serve military and first responder families. We host educational hunting camps, therapuetic adventures, and conservation projects. Spiritual Combat Training | Hunting | Fishing | Survival | Adaptive Sports | Agri-therapy | Hoorah...