Fresh from Iraq, Fort Hood soldiers cope with life back home
Newly returned soldiers get counseling to make transition from battlefield.
By Robert W. Gee
INTERNATIONAL STAFF
Thursday, December 13, 2007
NOLANVILLE — The nightmare is usually the same. First, an explosion. He is thrown across the room. The walls and ceiling collapse on top of him. His mouth fills with dust. Then, silence.
Staff Sgt. Steven Johnson escaped that day in February with a Purple Heart and returned to combat. Three of his comrades died.
"Ever since that happened, I've just wanted to be home with my family," Johnson, 29, of Spring said late last month, near the end of his 14-month tour of duty in Iraq.
Now that he's home, he has found that the war followed him.
As in Iraq, he sleeps in fits and starts. His nightmare revisits him as he sleeps beside his wife. Once since his return Dec. 1, he was strangling her as they slept until she pushed him away.
"It's scary to be in bed with him," said Sarah Johnson, 26.
Like many of his fellow returning soldiers from the Fort Hood-based 1st Battalion, 12th Regiment, Johnson has symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, a severe and ongoing emotional reaction to psychological trauma, which affects as many as one in five soldiers returning from Iraq, according to the Veterans Affairs Department.
It's one piece of an often difficult transition from combat to everyday life in America.
"It's not the same when you come home. It's never the same," said Maj. Leslie Ann Parrish, who oversees a clinical review at Fort Hood of soldiers returning from war zones.
About 60 percent of soldiers returning from Iraq to Fort Hood, the largest military base in the United States, are required to seek mental health treatment, and an additional 20 percent are recommended for treatment, according to Army officials. In extreme cases, soldiers are escorted to an Army hospital because they are considered to be suicidal or homicidal.
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