Friday, December 1, 2017

Best Battle Buddy Wears Wedding Band

WE GOT THE POWER!
Combat PTSD Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
December 1, 2017

They were willing to die for each other, but too many of the families they come home to discover just how hard it is for them to want to live for us.


We see the sadness in their eyes, hear them talk in their sleep, (when they do manage to sleep) and deal with the mood swings, never sure what we'll say wrong, or someone, manage to get right.

It is all so easy to feel lost but all more common to feel lonely. Sure, we read all the news reports about how many veterans have PTSD, but that gives us little comfort when we don't read enough about anything where we are the subject.

We sit on the side of the street if they march in a parade. We sit in the VA waiting room waiting for them to be seen, and then waiting for them to come out. We see other wives there, but we don't say a word to them. We are too focused on what the ride back home in tense silence will be like.

Either they will snap at us, or have absolutely nothing they want to say.

When our parents were dealing with their the wars of their generation, their parents told them to do their duty as a wife. When we were faced with problems, our parents told us to get divorced. Some of us did, but most of us, contrary to all the rumors, became their best battle buddy. 

If you thought that our hubbies did all the managed to do when the rest of the country wanted nothing to do with them, you are missing the most powerful weapon you have. That is the courage to stand up to the bully called PTSD because our love is a lot stronger than she is.

If you already walked away, do not blame yourself. If no one told you anything, and you didn't even think there was anything to learn on your own, it isn't your fault. It wasn't his either. Most of them have no clue what PTSD is, what it does or the simple fact that PTSD hits survivors with a very strong emotional core. 

Had it not been for two veterans in my life, the rest of my life would have been just like everyone else's. I would have not imagined doing anything other than being a "normal wife" like my husband used to wish I was, a Mom and going to work everyday for a paycheck. Oh, for the days when I could just go home, catch up with friends and actually watch a TV show that was on instead of having a lousy hour to watch something he recorded for me.

But that life was not meant to be for me. 

My Dad was a Korean War veteran. When I brought my at-the-time Vietnam veteran boyfriend home to meet him, Dad used the words "shell shock" without being able to explain what it meant. He sent me to the library to find the answers.

I knew what trauma did to a person. I had been through it enough times by the time I was 23 and wanted to know what I was getting into, so I sat at the table in the library with a stack of clinical books, and a dictionary to look up most of the words. I lost count how many books (and weeks) I had to go through before I saw the words that made it all click.


Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
I ended up with a pamphlet from a Vets Center that was based on Vietnam veterans coming home, and it explained most of what I did not learn at the library, or living with my husband.
It was based on the Forgotten Warrior Project and as you will see from the link, there were 500,000 Vietnam veterans with PTSD back then while it was also predicted that those numbers would rise. They did. So when you hear the famous commercial saying that "today it is called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder" on the radio with "1 out of 5" remember that it was called that because Vietnam veterans came home with it and a rate of "1 out of 3."

Something else no one told us was that even after being home for over 40 years, Vietnam could still end up with one more casualty. Our husbands.

What most people still don't talk about is the fact that our generation is the largest group losing our husbands to suicide. 65% of the veterans committing suicide are over the age of 50, but no one wants to help us. 

I've tried for over 3 decades, to not just help the younger families learn a lot easier than I did, but to get our generation to pay attention to what they never expected would happen.

We're in this alone. None of the new groups even want to talk to us. It just took an act of Congress to actually manage to decide that our generation should also be included in as Caregivers, since we've done it all without any one helping us.

The first thing to do is learn all you can what PTSD is, especially if your husband/wife is retiring. They get slammed with what they kept trapped in their mind and never saw it coming. They think they're going crazy.

If you see changes in them, you need to respond to make sure they understand what it is and then support them just before you put on your battle armor and fight for them.

If we do not change what has been happening, it will be even worse when the generation everyone is talking about gets older. What will we as their parents tell them when they begin to see while they survived combat, coming home is harder without a battle buddy by their side? 

Are you going to let anything stop you from fighting for them now?





UPDATE December 3, 2017 Here is yet one more reason to explain how a spouse is the best battle buddy.
Widow Barbara Rodgick has attended two coffees and plans to attend more. She’s made it her mission to try to teach others about the benefits available to veterans, widows and dependents, both from the Department of Veterans Affairs and the state.
She has a website called Stand Up for Bill. “This is how I try to make sense of my husband’s death, my way of honoring him,” Rodgick said.
Her 27-year marriage to Bill Meehan ended when he died from his exposure to Agent Orange. Her husband joined the Army in 1962 and was honorably discharged in 1966. In March 2015, he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, and he died 15 months later at age 72. 
He was reluctant to apply for benefits through the VA, but she was not. He thought it would probably take too long. “He thought other vets deserved it more,” she said, choking with emotion.

Thursday, November 30, 2017

Put Knowledge Where Your Heart Is

Good Intentions Meaningless Awareness
Combat PTSD Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
November 30, 2017

Let us assume the folks raising awareness have good intentions. They probably do not know they are doing more harm than good. Now, let us assume they have no idea they are not even close to the truth. Considering they probably didn't read the reports they keep quoting, it is doubtful they have studied the results of their time.
None of the new groups are interested in older veterans, even though veterans over the age of 50 are 65% of the suicides. Set that fact aside for the moment. 

They seem to think that the suicides they do acknowledge are only among the War on Terror generation. After all, that is all they managed to learn.

So, we'll take a look at what those results have produced.


This is from the report on suicides from the VA that was released last year.

That is the outcome of all the "awareness" folks getting the attention while they truth was silenced. These are the veterans they pay attention to, talk about, post about, take walks for, do pushups for and all the while, this proves it got worse for those veterans.

Just with the numbers from 2012 and 2014, it shows a rise even just from veterans in the VA system. 

18-24 2012 66.3 2014 110.3
25-29 2012 55.9 2014 56.3
30-39 2012 50.8 2014 51.2
40-49 2012 23.5 2014 28.0
50-59 2012 21.8 2014 22.9

If everyone is saying the same thing, then when you tell them the truth, they think you're lying. No matter how hard you try to prove what the truth really is, they won't admit they had no clue or even apologize for the agony it caused.

Awareness "efforts" started about a decade ago. By 2009, more and were doing research. It was not until the VA released the first study putting the number of veteran suicides at 22 a day that it seemed as if everyone wanted to be the one to change the outcome. As this chart shows, it actually got worse, because while the number does not seem changed by much, we lost millions of older veterans.


The next time you are asked to donate to any of these groups or join in on the "effort" think about all that.

If you want to change the outcome on anything, then you need to have some knowledge first or you'll just add to the problem. 

You may want to start to ask some questions.

What are they doing with the money?

Are they focused on all veterans or just some?

Do they know what the real numbers are?

Do they know why some veterans are not included in the studies?

Do they know the percentage of veterans not going to the VA?

Do they know the difference between discharges or how they effect death certificates?

Do they know which states were not part of any of the studies?

The last question to ask is perhaps the most important one of all. If they did not know any of this, then how important were any of these veterans to them? 






Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Several Deaths Under Investigation?

What is going on with non-combat deaths and does any reporter care to put them together?
Army


Fort Bragg 

Fort Bragg soldier died Tuesday after collapsing during physical training. Sgt. Robert Thornton Jr., 29, of Cairo, Georgia, was assigned to the 528th Sustainment Brigade.

FORT BRAGG, N.C. (WNCN) — Army officials say two soldiers were found dead in their barracks at Fort Bragg in the last few days.One soldier was found dead Thanksgiving while the second soldier died over the weekend.

A paratrooper from Florida died in his barracks on an Army base in North Carolina. The Miami Herald reports 22-year-old Spc. Carlton Butler of North Miami Beach died Saturday evening at the base in Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

Fort Bliss
The Defense Department on Monday identified Cpl. Todd McGurn as the latest American service member to die in Iraq this month. Cpl. McGurn, a California native, died while conducting support operations for the U.S. coalition, according to a Pentagon statement. His death was tied to a “non-combat related incident” that took place in Baghdad. 
Fort Campbell
Sgt. Justin LaJoie-Grosvenor watched after her kids like he watched after his country. Two weeks after returning from Baghdad, Kaitlin said Justin took his life on November 18.

Marine Corps
Corporal Edwin Estrada, a Marine helicopter mechanic, died early Monday morning following what the Marine Corps called "an incident" in Wilmington. 
Navy 
Sailor found dead on USS John C. Stennis in Washington state Kitsap Sun Julianne Stanford Nov. 28, 2017
A 22-year-old sailor was found dead on the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis on Saturday afternoon with "no obvious and apparent cause of death," according to Stennis spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Frederick Martin.
The Navy has identified the sailor as Akiree Pointer, an engineman fireman recruit from Arlington, Texas.
The command is investigating his cause of death, Martin said.read more here linked from Stars and Stripes

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — A 31-year-old sailor was found dead in an Oceanfront hotel room a day before she was scheduled to report aboard the aircraft carrier George H.W. Bush, authorities said Friday.Petty Officer 3rd Class Amanda Simmons’ body was discovered in a room at the Ocean Beach Club Resort at about 3:20 p.m Wednesday, according to Virginia Beach police. 

Less Than Honorable Way to Treat Veterans

If you are in the "awareness" business talking about how many veterans you think are committing suicide, this is something you really should read. Especially if you are still using a number and only mentioning it as if it is just veterans of Afghanistan and Iraq. 

If a veteran does not receive an "honorable discharge" they cannot even call themselves a veteran. It does not go on their death certificate, no matter how many times they were deployed, how many countries they risked their lives in because this country sent them or how heroic they were.

That includes those who have been in combat, risked their lives for this country, suffered because of it, and then, instead of being helped, they were kicked out.

The numbers are into the hundreds of thousands when you consider it has happened to all generations, including the ones that "awareness" folks never seem to mention. 

Steve Kennedy, Army veteran and Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America- Connecticut Team Leader (left) speaks about U.S. Senator Chris Murphy's proposed legislation, Honor Our Commitment Act, to ensure combat veterans discharged with an other-than-honorable discharge are given access to mental and behavioral health care during a press conference at New Haven City Hall on 4/3/2017. Left to right are Kennedy, Murphy and Tom Burke, Marine Corp veteran and President of the Yale Student Veterans Council. (Arnold Gold - New Haven Register.)

Chris Murphy: How our country is leaving veterans with mental health injuries behind

Jasper Farmer, a Norwalk resident and Vietnam veteran, recently shared his story with me. 
Jasper served in the Marines during the Vietnam War. He returned to Camp Lejeune over a year later, clearly struggling with PTSD. 
Because of conduct resulting from his diagnosis, he was given a bad paper discharge.  
For the next forty years, he was denied care at the VA, preventing him from adequately addressing his war injury.
Luckily, Jasper found the Connecticut Veterans Legal Center (CVLC). Their staff fights tirelessly on behalf of veterans, and finally this past April, with the help of CVLC, Jasper gained access to VA health care. 
But it shouldn’t have taken smart lawyers and almost four decades to right this wrong.

White House VA Hotline Now Staffed?

White House VA Hotline Now Fully Staffed and Operational Around the Clock to Serve Nation’s Veterans
Department of Veterans Affairs

WASHINGTON — Today the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced that the White House VA Hotline, first launched in June as part of President Donald J. Trump’s commitment to reforming VA, is now fully staffed with live agents working to serve Veterans 24-hours a day, 365 days a year.

The hotline, which became 24-hour operational in mid-October, is now staffed by a team consisting of 90 percent Veterans or employees who have a Veteran family member, and is in response to Veterans’ requests to talk to agents who could relate to their experiences.

“The White House VA Hotline provides our nation’s Veterans with a direct, dedicated contact line that allows them to interact with highly trained, live agents to answer their needs and concerns,” said VA Secretary David J. Shulkin.

“Since the initial launch of the hotline in June, we listened to our Veterans, who indicated that they prefer speaking with other Veterans and Veteran family members, and we adjusted our hiring based on that feedback,” added Shulkin.

“We’re proud that the hotline is now staffed 24/7 by a team of mostly Veterans or Veteran family members who have direct knowledge of their particular concerns and can use their experience to address them in the best way possible with the resources of the VA. This represents a true win-win for Veterans and their loved ones.”

Since 24/7 coverage began in October, the hotline has served more than 10,000 callers.

Hotline agents answer inquiries, provide directory assistance, document concerns about VA care, benefits and services, and expedite the referral and resolution of those concerns. Agents undergo regular updates and training on VA services based on hotline trends and are assisted by newly implemented tracking software to help VA capture and improve its response, referral and resolution processes to best support Veterans.

The hotline can be accessed at 855-948-2311 and is VA’s first non-clinical, non-emergency around-the-clock call center. It provides Veterans a supplemental option to report issues if they are not being addressed through VA’s normal customer service channels.

The hotline’s agents are located at a VA facility in Shepherdstown, West Virginia. Agents have access to a multitude of resources and contact information to help Veterans. The hotline also generates real-time reports to VA experts who can help address the specific issues of Veterans as well as make better-informed decisions on where program improvements are needed.