Posted on Feb 14, 2022
Nearly 4,000 More 9/11 Vets Have Died in the Past 20 Years Than Anticipated, Study Finds
2.25K
37
8
11
11
0
Edited 3 y ago
Posted 3 y ago
Responses: 3
Lt Col Charlie Brown
I don't know for certain, but some of the people I've come across in workshops have been deployed more than six times to the middle east and their marriages have collapsed...perhaps that has something to do with it.
(5)
(0)
I don’t understand the veterans’ suicide rate. Why are so many veterans killing themselves when I they presumably fought so hard to survive when they were on active duty?
(3)
(0)
MCPO Hilary Kunz
1LT Voyle Smith, Retirement is boring. You have time to think about what happened.
Checking every supermarket aisle for threats is irritating, both for you and the people in the aisles, so you don’t go out to stores anymore. This causes isolation.
In the heat of the moment on AD you do what you need to. You are “up” all the time.
When you come home and are sitting bored you dwell upon your memories. Sometimes the pleasant ones get lost in the shuffle,leaving only the horror. Sometimes you become, “up” with your family.
A dent in my head does weird things to me, sometimes it hurts like the dickens and sometimes I can forget about it.
I rock crawl, which is a dangerous motorsport that you can fall off cliffs doing. I’ve fallen twice, totaling the Jeep, rebuild the Jeep and do it again. I do wear a helmet. I also like to hike long distances, dance on narrow mountain trails, and ride my bike on the rim of the Grand Canyon. It’s always a self-contest to beat my last adrenaline fueled adventure.
I can speak from experience a bit. I festered for decades. When filling out one of those PTSD questionnaires I checked all the blocks.
The VA and Ohio State are collaborating on a program called, “STRIVE”. I went through it, it really helped me see my issues and analyze them intellectually. It isn’t perfect but definitely recommended by someone who’s BTDT.
Checking every supermarket aisle for threats is irritating, both for you and the people in the aisles, so you don’t go out to stores anymore. This causes isolation.
In the heat of the moment on AD you do what you need to. You are “up” all the time.
When you come home and are sitting bored you dwell upon your memories. Sometimes the pleasant ones get lost in the shuffle,leaving only the horror. Sometimes you become, “up” with your family.
A dent in my head does weird things to me, sometimes it hurts like the dickens and sometimes I can forget about it.
I rock crawl, which is a dangerous motorsport that you can fall off cliffs doing. I’ve fallen twice, totaling the Jeep, rebuild the Jeep and do it again. I do wear a helmet. I also like to hike long distances, dance on narrow mountain trails, and ride my bike on the rim of the Grand Canyon. It’s always a self-contest to beat my last adrenaline fueled adventure.
I can speak from experience a bit. I festered for decades. When filling out one of those PTSD questionnaires I checked all the blocks.
The VA and Ohio State are collaborating on a program called, “STRIVE”. I went through it, it really helped me see my issues and analyze them intellectually. It isn’t perfect but definitely recommended by someone who’s BTDT.
(2)
(0)
Read This Next