Posted on Aug 18, 2017
Debbie Pomeroy Cloud
4.68K
24
13
0
0
0
B6f55c0e
Posted in these groups: 78568930 PTSDD106ed79 TraumaAir combat art 0134 CombatRecovery
Avatar feed
Responses: 5
SPC Casey Ashfield
1
1
0
Not really sure what "Dark Man" dreams are. I have recurring dreams where my old squad leader sits down with me at my kitchen table wearing and looking exactly like I saw him last: kit, rifle, and part of his skull missing. It used to freak me out for the first couple years. Then I figured out that it was just my subconscious way of sorting things. "Talking" with him in my dreams were about present and past events.

I have worse ones but can't remember most of them. And the ones I do remember I haven't figured out yet.
(1)
Comment
(0)
Debbie Pomeroy Cloud
Debbie Pomeroy Cloud
>1 y
I hear you. I had dreams last night about my father in law who passed in the spring trying to talk to me from a very dead state. And too to help me process the struggles of today and the past as well. We are here to finish what he could not, that I know. The darker ones have processed. The Dark Man is a motif or archetype for a collective concept of an unresolved predictor coming for you that has not been processed and integrated by the conscious mind resulting in strength and action in any given situation. Sounds like your working dialogues helped you with that process. Good job.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
1
1
0
Nothing makes it better.
Because nearly everything is a reminder of another place and time.
Even happy memories give you a sense of loss for what isn't there anymore.
(1)
Comment
(0)
Debbie Pomeroy Cloud
Debbie Pomeroy Cloud
>1 y
100% truth...
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SPC Ted Heath
1
1
0
I've talked to a lot of WWII Vets over my lifetime. I had 5 great uncles who survived it,one was stranded by a Japanese Zero from angle to his head. I lived in the house with him until I joined the Army. I don't remember any of them displaying signs, although I'm sure they had PTSD. The things they saw and did. how could they not? I often wonder how the Greatest Generation dealt with PTSD, when it wasn't recognized, and practically all surviving WWII vets had it, and we are talking about millions of them. makes them an even Greater Generation, in my opionion. I grew up idolizing them, and still do.
(1)
Comment
(0)
SPC Ted Heath
SPC Ted Heath
>1 y
Oops. Meant to say "straffed by a Japanese Zero "
(0)
Reply
(0)
Debbie Pomeroy Cloud
Debbie Pomeroy Cloud
>1 y
We need more of what they had!! Greatest Generation!
(1)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close