Saturday, August 14, 2010

National Guards, what they did for love


National Guards, what they did for love
by
Chaplain Kathie

The rest of us wonder why other people want to join the military as Soldiers, Sailors, Marines or Airmen. Why do some want to go a step beyond that and combine their civilian lives with serving in the National Guards or Reserves? Why do some enter into law enforcement? The answer is not as complicated as you think.

Corinthians 13:7

Love
It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.



John 15:13
Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.


The rest of us get on with our lives, thinking of ourselves and what we need, want and our own problems. They have them too but they take on the problems of their communities and their nation as well. Then we end up expecting them to just go back to their homes when their commitment is up never once thinking of what they are going back home with.

Police officers have to confront the worst people do. Murder, robbery, rape, domestic violence, drunk driving and drug related crimes. They see drunk drivers and speeders knowing they had no thoughts about anyone else but themselves causing accidents that will change everyday after that for the innocent people involved. They see the hopelessness in the addicted. They see the worst what people do to each other and they see the suffering of the victims. It always protects.

Firefighters respond after a fire or accident, all too often when a person is trapped and they have to rescue them as well as fight the fire. Sadly they arrive too late to save a life and then they have to return home knowing no matter how hard they tried, someone died that day.

Yesterday six firefighters went to work and six were hurt doing their jobs.


Six Detroit firefighters hurt when roof collapsed
Firefighters hurt in Detroit
By the CNN Wire StaffAugust 13, 2010(CNN) -- Six firefighters were hospitalized in Detroit, Michigan on Friday, a hospital spokesman said.They were hurt when a roof collapsed as they were battling a blaze CNN affiliate WDIV-TV reported.


They never know if they will be just hanging around the firehouse or rushing into a burning building when they start their day or if they will end their day going home or recovering in a hospital or having their body recovered.

Yet with all these courageous professions, some take it one step further. They go into the National Guards. It is not enough for them to risk their lives in their full time positions. They are willing to do it on their time off as well.


National Guards
History:
For over 360 years the citizen soldiers of the Army National Guard have come to the aid of their neighbors during times of need. The Guard plays a key role during floods, fires and other natural disasters. The Army National Guard's mission involves helping communities during natural disasters, civil emergencies, and national conflict, having answered the call to defend America in every war. Today, the Army National Guard plays a key role in conjunction with the nation's active military forces. Whether guarding our country's interests at home or abroad, the Army National Guard is always ready, always there. Guard members are ordinary people doing extraordinary things.


Some Guardsmen/women have tame desk jobs in their civilian lives but still manage somehow to train to be able to save lives as well as trained to go into combat. Gone are the times when they were not faced with being deployed with the regular military. With 50,000 remaining in Iraq until next year and more troops being sent into Afghanistan, anyone joining the Guard must face the risk of being sent away from their families, their civilian jobs and friends.

So why do they do it?

Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.



It is the fact they are willing to lay down their lives that makes them so remarkable. They do it with love for their families, their friends and for total strangers.

Yet with all of this, we are surprised when so many need help recovering from what they have to go through. After they faced the "one too many times" of horror, they need help to overcome it. They need someone to talk to they trust. If they know the person listening to them will not be overwhelmed by hearing what they lived through, they will open up. If they know the person listening will not judge them for feeling the way they do or dismiss their emotions, they will tell everything going on inside of them. Yet if they hear the "fix" response of a person trying to come up with answer of how they get over it, then the conversation ends, an opportunity to serve them is gone and precious time is lost.

When they are deployed, there isn't someone to talk to most of the time. They see their buddies going through the same thing they did and think they will be seen as weak if they complain to their "stronger" friend. How can you complain or "whine" to someone else who went through the same exact thing but acts as if it was no big deal? It's not easy especially if they think their friend is never bothered by any of it.

When they carry these feelings onward they begin to eat away at the emotions. Depression, self-judgment and sadness sets in. It begins to eat away at their character. Good emotions become trapped behind a wall of pain and anger is the only emotion to surface. They seek alcohol and drugs to become numb to it.

On 9-11 it was one day many have still not recovered from.

September 11 numbers
Death, destruction, charity, salvation, war, money, real estate, spouses, babies, and other September 11 statistics.

The initial numbers are indelible: 8:46 a.m. and 9:02 a.m. Time the burning towers stood: 56 minutes and 102 minutes. Time they took to fall: 12 seconds. From there, they ripple out.

Total number killed in attacks (official figure as of 9/5/02): 2,819
Number of firefighters and paramedics killed: 343
Number of NYPD officers: 23
Number of Port Authority police officers: 37
Number of WTC companies that lost people: 60
Number of employees who died in Tower One: 1,402
Number of employees who died in Tower Two: 614
Number of employees lost at Cantor Fitzgerald: 658
Number of nations whose citizens were killed in attacks: 115
Bodies found "intact": 289
Body parts found: 19,858
Number of families who got no remains: 1,717


We can understand the lives changed forever from this one day because we understand how we were changed as well. Everyone in this country stopped thinking about their life here as safe from being attacked after that day. We can understand because every news station in this country and around the world covered this story for weeks. Everyone alive that day remembers where they were when they heard the news the first tower was hit.

One morning of terror turned into memories that will not go away. To this day as the anniversary comes, we remember that day with great sadness. Most of us forget all the houses with flags flying, cars with flags and magnets on every city street and highway. We forget about how wonderfully we joined together to help the families of the fallen and how we honored the men and women daring to rush into ground zero territory as everyone else was running away. The bad sticks in our minds more than the good. It is the same for them.

The good inside of them compelling them to serve is replaced by bad memories of the worst man can do to man. They forget what their own intent was, what they tried to do, what they wanted to do and what they thought they were doing. They forget about what they were willing to sacrifice to do it, to be there and to be ready to respond.

While one day weighs heavily on the rest of us just as our own traumatic events do, we need to remember for them it is not just one time but many of them. When they return from deployment it is often too late for them to just get over it. Their times of danger have been numerous and they knew they would have to face more of those times while they were deployed.

By the time they return home, there have been too many times to count piled onto other days. The thirty day window of recovery closed on them after the first time because others followed. Time to seek help when they come home is when you notice something different. Don't wait for another 30 days to pass. In a perfect world they would be emotionally debriefed after every mission with use of weapons, after every loss, wounding or attack. This is not a perfect world and there are not enough mental health workers or Chaplains to go around.

The military has been trying to train buddies to watch out for signs of suicide but they need to train these "buddies" to listen so that it never gets that far. This is why it is so important for families and communities to step up for the Guardsmen and women. The military has a community support system, even as failing as it is, but when the citizen soldiers come home, they often have no one to talk to willing to listen instead of "fix" the problem.

It is because they care so much they end up feeling it more, facing higher numbers of PTSD and related symptoms. It cut them deeper. They need the help of the clergy and all service organizations to do more than give them parties to go to, bars to drink in and parades a couple of times a year. They need more than a sermon on morals and ethics when they did what they did out of love and unselfishness. They need more than coming home to a job that no longer exists for them with a desk full of bills to pay. Regret sets in and that feeds PTSD. When they look around for someone to help them after all they did for everyone else, it makes it harder to find the reason they were willing to do it in the first place.

Help them see the good so they will know they are really appreciated so they do not regret what they did for love.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Six Detroit firefighters hurt when roof collapsed

Firefighters hurt in Detroit
By the CNN Wire Staff
August 13, 2010
(CNN) -- Six firefighters were hospitalized in Detroit, Michigan on Friday, a hospital spokesman said.

They were hurt when a roof collapsed as they were battling a blaze CNN affiliate WDIV-TV reported.
read more here
Firefighters hurt in Detroit

Germany awakens to treating wounded minds of Afghan vets

PTSD does not know what country the men and women it strikes live in or serve under. This shows that Germany, even with its long history of warfare, they are coming to terms with it.

When we talk about the high numbers in the US military and veteran population, we need to understand we have more suffering because we have more of them.

Germany awakens to treating wounded minds of Afghan vets

Published 13 August, 2010
In Germany, one of the worlds most developed countries, the German army is trying to help hundreds of suspected, but unreported cases, of metal trauma among soldiers who served in combat.

Fighting in a war zone is never easy, but at least when a soldier returns home they can expect to be looked after by the country they fought for, but this is sometimes not the case.
These men were once soldiers.

Andreas Timmerman served Germany for twenty-four years, rising to a Lieutenant Colonel in Afghanistan.
read more here
Germany awakens to treating wounded minds of Afghan vets



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Longshot unemployed vet candidate Alvin Greene indicted

Longshot unemployed vet candidate indicted

By Meg Kinnard - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Aug 13, 2010 14:16:37 EDT

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Longshot U.S. Senate candidate Alvin Greene was indicted Friday on two charges, including a felony charge of showing pornography to a South Carolina college student.

A Richland County grand jury indicted Green for disseminating, procuring or promoting obscenity — a felony — as well as a misdemeanor charge of communicating obscene materials to a person without consent.

Greene, who surprised the Democratic party establishment with his primary victory, was arrested in November after authorities said he approached a student in a University of South Carolina computer lab, showed her obscene photos online, then talked about going to her dorm room.
go here for more
Longshot unemployed vet candidate indicted

Christian Chaplain slammed again for taking on PTSD?

Simplicity must really breed contempt. There is nothing wrong with a Christian Chaplain talking about how Christ can heal the wound to the soul. That is what PTSD is. It strikes the emotional part of the brain. Many believe that this region of the brain is also where the soul lives within all of us. As a matter of fact, it is the belief of many therapists the best healing happens when the mind-body and spirit are joined together to heal the whole person. There is nothing wrong with a Muslim Chaplain or a Hebrew Chaplain addressing the healing from their own faith. That is why there are Chaplains from many faiths, beliefs and walks of life.

There is a problem with Chaplains more focused on getting coverts instead of taking care of those in need, which I have a huge problem with, but that's another story. There is no constitutional problem as long as they do not cross the line as many have done. There have been and always will be Chaplains in the military. The problem comes when Christian Chaplains decide they will not uphold their nondenominational duty to attend to all Christians. We need to face the fact there are not enough Chaplains in any faith to attend to all those in need.

Faith can help the healing if they really understand it, but too many have limited understanding or claim to be Christian but have never heard how much they are loved and there is nothing they cannot be forgiven for. Yet it is the same story for other faiths.

The belief that we were all created, souls sent to this earth for a reason, is a Christian belief. It is thought that what we were intended to do on this earth was already hard wired into our soul and everything we needed to accomplish it, carry us through and heal from, was already there inside of us. That humans are called to go into certain fields and they respond to the "tug" seeking what they feel compelled to do.

Ask a member of the clergy why they chose that profession or why a doctor chose their's and you will hear they always wanted to do it or felt pulled into it.

For me, I believe that the members of the military and the people who go into law enforcement are called because there will always be a need for people of compassion and courage to defend others. When they are trying to heal from PTSD, their wounding is deeper because they were not only subjected to traumatic events, they participated in them. They don't have to just try to get over the event itself but all too often what they had to do in response to those events.


Chaplain Holdridge is also right on the fact that what we now call PTSD can be seen in the pages of the Bible. The spiritual crisis is recorded over and over again, particularly in the Psalms. Suggesting that this can help the Christians in the military heal is not wrong and if the other Chaplains from other faiths saw helpful readings within their own faith, there would be nothing wrong with that either. Telling all servicemen and women they had to use the Christian teachings to heal would be very wrong.

You can read it all here
Spiritual Resiliency

The other issue here is that in the Old Testament, the word Lord was used for God. In the New Testament the word Lord meant Christ. Most of what the Chaplain uses are taken from the Old Testament and we also need to remember that Christians, Jews and Muslims use the same pages along with their own.

Chaplain
1. A member of the clergy attached to a chapel.
2. a. A member of the clergy who conducts religious services for an institution, such as a prison or hospital.
b. A member of the clergy who is connected with a royal court or an aristocratic household.
3. A member of the clergy attached to a branch of the armed forces.


It is their job to take care of the spiritual needs of the troops. It is something that I have been saying for a very, very long time. Some cross the line and some go their own way but the issue of taking care of the mind-body-spirit by psychological, physical and religious professionals should be supported.


Army Chaplain Tries to Cure PTSD With Jesus
A top army chaplain has published his prescription for PTSD: Jesus. His actions may be unconstitutional -- and dangerous to soldiers.
August 7, 2010

Many Christians believe faith in Jesus Christ can cure almost anything: alcoholism, cancer, homosexuality, even the Son of Sam. But can it cure post traumatic stress disorder in troops returning from Afghanistan and Iraq? The Army Reserves' top chaplain for military policemen believes so, and published his prescription on the Army Reserves' official Web site for everyone to see, in an act a watchdog organization argues is unconstitutional and dangerous when soldiers continue to kill themselves at an alarming rate.


In a nearly 11,000 word essay, "Spiritual Resiliency: Helping Troops Recover from Combat," Command Chaplain Col. Donald W. Holdridge of the 200th Military Police Command at Fort Meade, Maryland, argues belief in Jesus Christ and Bible reading, particularly King David's Psalms, can help cure a soldiers' PTSD. "Combat vets need to know that most of these [PTSD symptoms] do fade in time, like scars," writes Holdridge, a professor at the Baptist Bible College, as the Army Reserves banner hangs from the top of the Webpage. "They will always be there to some degree, but their intensity will fade. What will help them fade is the application of the principles of Scripture."


The tone of Holdridge's essay only gets more unapologetically evangelical as the chaplain's initial wading in a Christian sea slides into more brackish waters, evangelizing soldiers with PTSD that their service was part of a larger theological plan and dangerously merges church and state. "Military and law enforcement personnel bear the additional burden of contending with evil by acting as an arm of the state to punish those who have no respect for human life (Rom.13:4)," he writes.
Army Chaplain Tries to Cure PTSD With Jesus

Wounded soldier heals with comedy

Wounded soldier heals with comedy
By Scott Huddleston - Express-News
It's open-mike night, when anyone with the guts to go on stage can try to be funny for five minutes.

Army Staff Sgt. Bobby Henline steps under the spotlights. Everyone can see his amputated arm, disfigured face and some of the burns that cover 38 percent of his body.

“Go Bobby!” a couple of his fans shout in the crowd at the Laugh Out Loud Comedy Club. Henline starts his shtick by explaining his injuries — a source of curiosity for many in the audience.

“I went to Iraq four times. The last time was a real blast,” he deadpans.

On stage, he's the polar opposite of the soulful war vet who gives motivational talks to burn survivors and anyone who'll listen. As a comedian, his job is to make you laugh, and there are few boundaries.
read more here
Wounded soldier heals with comedy

Family of wounded soldier shocked by support from community

Mo. community rallies around wounded soldier

By Dennis Rich - The Sedalia Democrat
Posted : Thursday Aug 12, 2010 12:30:40 EDT

SEDALIA, Mo. — Darren Ross started setting up the fish fry at 8 a.m. in the morning — a $5 a plate fundraiser for Sedalia native Army Spc. Joe Yantz.

Weeks ago, it was an ice cream social hosted by St. Paul's Lutheran Church, which raised $2,358 for the Joe Yantz Support Fund. More recently, it was members of the 40 & 8 and Smith-Cotton High School Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps selling hot dogs.

Other groups and individuals have donated time or resources as the community has rallied around the 21-year-old Yantz, an airborne infantryman who was injured in June by a bomb while on a combat patrol in Afghanistan.

Contrary to preliminary reports of the incident, Yantz received only minor wounds to his neck, face and hand, but his right leg was amputated above the knee. A surgery to repair a perforated eardrum is scheduled for September.

His parents, Jerry and Diane — on hand at the recent fish fry before a planned return to Washington D.C.'s Walter Reed Army Medical Center where their son is recuperating — said they have been "shocked and floored" by the outpouring of support for their son.

"When this happened, the most we hoped for was that people would understand we wouldn't have time for some things. I expected close friends and family would be supportive, but we never expected this," Diane said. "If we weren't sold on Sedalia before, we certainly are now."
read more here
Mo. community rallies around wounded soldier

Father of Marine killed on motorcycle was hit by drunk driver on his motorcycle too

Friends, family share stories of hometown hero
Marine from Rosenberg allegedly killed by drunken driver
By SHAMINDER DULAI
HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Aug. 12, 2010

Rain clouds blanketed the sun to trickle out a smattering of rain drops Thursday afternoon as Dwayne Stidman carried the ashes of his son out of a Rosenberg funeral home and toward a row of motorcycles.

"Today is a time of saying goodbye," Stidman said.

With military hymns in the air and a slideshow of his son behind him, Stidman stood up to thank the nearly 100 friends, family, Marines and complete strangers as they paid their respects to Marine Cpl. David James Stidman, who was killed last week when an alleged drunken driver struck his motorcycle.

Guests wearing red, the 23-year-old's favorite color, made an effort to turn the funeral into a joyful day of sharing memories to honor the son who survived two deployments to Iraq and one to Afghanistan, and recently finished a five-year commitment to the Marines.




Affinity for motorcycles
But there was sorrow.

One by one, Marines and friends stood up to share stories about one of Rosenberg's hometown heroes. He had built a gym out of found wood because he was bored, had coached his fellow soldiers to get up to speed and had shared stories from home of how much he loved his father.

Like his father, David Stidman became a Marine and a motorcyclist. The two also shared an affinity for fishing, so much so that they'd bought a boat. They were still planning their first trip to the open sea when the son was killed. Dwayne Stidman plans to take his son's ashes to the Gulf of Mexico.

The young Marine came home four months ago after a drunken driver hit his father, who was on his motorcycle. He broke his legs, a shoulder blade and his skull was severely cut.

Dwayne Stidman slowly recovered with the help of his son and soon bought another motorcycle so the two could continue riding together.

"I know how it can get and I didn't want him riding alone," Dwayne Stidman said
go here for more

Friends family share stories of hometown hero


Marine survived three tours of combat

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Disabled Vet Becomes Target Of Thieves and Heroes Stepped Up

When I read the headline, I got angry but as soon as I read the rest I wanted to cry because heroes stepped up. Police responded and arrested the creeps because a witness wrote down the license plate. People stepped up to donate to get this disabled veteran to the VA Golden Games and they were more upset because someone stole money from a disabled veteran. But that was not the end. The store ended up donating all he needed to get him to the games and the donations are still coming in.

Disabled Vet Becomes Target Of Thieves
Trio Arrested, Admits Using Stolen Money To Buy Drugs
WEST HAVEN, Conn. -- Police said a disabled veteran became a target of thieves after he was robbed of his fundraising money outside a grocery store.

Martin Lopez, of Colchester, said he has never been the type to just give up. Lopez is a Vietnam veteran and lost his ability to speak over a decade ago. He now uses a keyboard to communicate.

For several years, Lopez has been playing in the VA National Golden Games, which is an event like the Olympics.

Lopez said he raises money for his travel expenses by selling raffle tickets at local stores, like Stop & Shop. That's what he was doing when police said Lopez was robbed over the weekend.

State police said three men grabbed his cash box that had $280 and ran. Police said a witness wrote down the license plate of the car the trio drove away in, and police were able to track the men down and arrest them.

Several organizations, including Stop & Shop have pledged donations. In fact, Colchester Stop & Shop store manager John Riordan presented Lopez with a $250 check on Tuesday.

go here for more

http://www.wfsb.com/news/24582292/detail.html

Radney Foster Angel's Flight

get some tissues