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I will never forget the day I opened my Facebook to find a message from my best friend saying good-bye. He had been struggling since his last deployment but asking for help wasn’t even an option in his mind. He thought he should just be able to “suck it up” like he did after every other deployment. He did for a while, and the world moved on around him, until he just couldn’t anymore. As luck, or fate, would have it, we were stationed in Korea when “sucking it up” turned to crisis and I saw the message almost instantly. But for a single, terrifying moment I thought I lost the person who was more a brother to me than my own blood. The one who interrogated me about the soldier I was dating, then wordlessly settled the check over ‘rock, paper, scissors’ the first time they met. The reason I am even in this field today.
This single moment shaped both our lives and handed us each a new fight. His started with getting help and challenging what he thought he knew about toughness. Mine was going to school to become a military social worker so I could help break the stigma that almost took my friend. Despite the strides we have made, we still lose too many in our community to the wounds of war. Inside I question, WHY WON’T YOU GET THE HELP YOU NEED?
The challenge I put to those I speak with is this: What would you do if you broke your leg? Go to the doctor. Your child has a tooth ache? Go to the dentist. Your wife has postpartum depression? Go to behavioral health. These are perfectly acceptable and reasonable decisions most people make. Yet when it comes to the wounds that we feel but cannot see, we call it weakness. We shove it down. We suffer in silence. We don’t follow our own advice. So, I ask, WHY WON’T YOU GET THE HELP YOU DESERVE?
In the military community we hear a lot about readiness and resilience, but I think it is time we add wellness to this conversation. It is incredibly difficult to transition out of active service, find employment, raise a family, earn promotions, have a happy marriage, or just enjoy life if our mental health is suffering. Our wellness impacts every part of our life. So, I challenge, WHAT IS KEEPING YOU FROM THE LIFE YOU EARNED?
While prepping for this post, I asked my husband what he does as a senior NCO to shift the perception of mental health in his unit. He said, “The days of suffering alone are over. It isn’t about weakness but strength. You can be physically fit but that doesn’t mean you are mentally fit. I need mentally fit soldiers. So, I tell them about my experience and how it helped me.” This is my final challenge. As leaders, we need to lead from the front by sharing our stories, shifting the language, and supporting our friends, brothers, sisters, and communities when we are struggling. Suicide prevention is all our responsibility and we are in this fight together.
If you or someone you know in the Washington State area needs support for their mental fitness, please reach out to my team by calling us at [login to see] or emailing us at [login to see] We are veterans and military family members ourselves. We get it and are here to help you get back to better. Learn more about our local services at https://rly.pt/ValleyCitiesCohenClinic
If you, or someone you know, is in need of confidential counseling and therapy in an additional location, you can find a clinic here: https://rly.pt/CohenClinics
If someone is in need of immediate or emergency care, please stop now and call 9-1-1.
Please contact the VA Veterans Crisis Line at: [login to see] Press 1
This single moment shaped both our lives and handed us each a new fight. His started with getting help and challenging what he thought he knew about toughness. Mine was going to school to become a military social worker so I could help break the stigma that almost took my friend. Despite the strides we have made, we still lose too many in our community to the wounds of war. Inside I question, WHY WON’T YOU GET THE HELP YOU NEED?
The challenge I put to those I speak with is this: What would you do if you broke your leg? Go to the doctor. Your child has a tooth ache? Go to the dentist. Your wife has postpartum depression? Go to behavioral health. These are perfectly acceptable and reasonable decisions most people make. Yet when it comes to the wounds that we feel but cannot see, we call it weakness. We shove it down. We suffer in silence. We don’t follow our own advice. So, I ask, WHY WON’T YOU GET THE HELP YOU DESERVE?
In the military community we hear a lot about readiness and resilience, but I think it is time we add wellness to this conversation. It is incredibly difficult to transition out of active service, find employment, raise a family, earn promotions, have a happy marriage, or just enjoy life if our mental health is suffering. Our wellness impacts every part of our life. So, I challenge, WHAT IS KEEPING YOU FROM THE LIFE YOU EARNED?
While prepping for this post, I asked my husband what he does as a senior NCO to shift the perception of mental health in his unit. He said, “The days of suffering alone are over. It isn’t about weakness but strength. You can be physically fit but that doesn’t mean you are mentally fit. I need mentally fit soldiers. So, I tell them about my experience and how it helped me.” This is my final challenge. As leaders, we need to lead from the front by sharing our stories, shifting the language, and supporting our friends, brothers, sisters, and communities when we are struggling. Suicide prevention is all our responsibility and we are in this fight together.
If you or someone you know in the Washington State area needs support for their mental fitness, please reach out to my team by calling us at [login to see] or emailing us at [login to see] We are veterans and military family members ourselves. We get it and are here to help you get back to better. Learn more about our local services at https://rly.pt/ValleyCitiesCohenClinic
If you, or someone you know, is in need of confidential counseling and therapy in an additional location, you can find a clinic here: https://rly.pt/CohenClinics
If someone is in need of immediate or emergency care, please stop now and call 9-1-1.
Please contact the VA Veterans Crisis Line at: [login to see] Press 1
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 103
Many Veterans don't get help right away and if they do they are often pushed aside like our Vietnam Veterans who suffered from PTSD and were told to suck it up...when our Veterans returned home from Vietnam there was no name for what they were suffering from and it wasn't til later (the first Gulf war) when it was finally addressed as PTSD...now many of our Vietnam Vets are getting the correct help for this.. Many of our now returning Vets try to solve their problems with either alcohol or drugs before looking into getting help at their local VA's...I work at a local VA in my hometown and I have spoken to many of our returning hero's as well as many of our Vietnam Veterans and they know that they can always count on me to be there if just to listen and not judge. I have a few on Facebook that I am friends with and if I don't see them up at the hospital or haven't seen them on line for a month or so then i will message them and ask them how they are doing. They always respond back to me and always thank me for checking on them, they know they can count on me for moral support no matter what.
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I know several veterans that are affraid to seek help because their state has the Red Flag law and all it takes is a mad ex or even a neighbor to report you for anything to do with guns and the police raid your home and seizes your guns. It has happened to one veteran we know from church and becuse he did'nt know who was bangging on his door he was armed. They took him to jail on a Saturday and he had to withdraw from his pain meds that he desperatly needed. There is no easy fix to this problem but we can't keep losing all these great troops because they saw the horrors of war while protecting our country. IT HURTS losing someone you love that gave so much. These 3 and 4 deployments are more than anyone can handle but their affraid of reprisal if they seek help.
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It's all about the labeling... missing out on training because you have an appointment with psych and team leader, squad, section whatever has to make that up. Range time, rock March, e.t.c... its all the Army's way of saying shut up or get out
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Because the VA is the culprit and they are not friendly when you protest or hold them accountable!
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I have a Less Than Honorable Discharge from 1984 and An Honorable Discharge from !972. Am I S.O.L. with the VA
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When one breaks a leg and go es to the doctor the reaction is fine. When it is in your head - you are watched- criticized - evaluated/invalidated(the worst of the list) and drugged out of your mind. as if you are the cause of the Blast that blew away your friends. Yes, it is hard to ask for help because I grew up in the shadow of Eli Lilly plant as a child where Ruiomer had it they were cooking monkie brians at night. leave a smell. I know where the meds come from. and it ant good people. The opioid crisis was designed to destabilize the weaken the warier. Instead of real help like a good talk a good cry and a dam good hug.
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Im glad some folks got help, Me Im sick and tired of the VA Just pushing pills off on me. The commands could have done something with us when we were all still together instead of just working us until the day we went home and now our families have to do what the military should have. Im tired of being asked do you feel like hurting yourself or others? Shit yea-on a daily basis but you know what will happen if you say it. Just because you feel it doesn't mean your gonna do it. Until they make a pill that makes you happy again I dont think there is any help.
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People deal with things in their own way, some good, some not so good. Due to the profession we have chosen do not allow for weakness. As a leader you should know the troops you are leading well enough to know when they are acting out of the norm. Talk with the squad and team members to narrow down the cause for the change and then talk to the individual to get the help they need. But it would be easier for a peer or friend to approach the individual and bring the situation to light. During my 20 years of service I still have things that bother me with different triggers that may set me off. I have not been to the point of needing help but if someone I trusted approached me about my actions I would ask for help. I have had to deal with way too many suicides in both my military career and my career in corrections after the military, one is too damn many for me.
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PTSD
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