PTSD Spirituality

November 19, 2008

PTSD and Prayer a New Category and Voyage at PTSD Spirituality

Filed under: PTSD and Prayer — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Dr. Z @ 11:00 am

I am happy to inaugurate PTSD and Prayer as a new category at the PTSD Spirituality Blog.  Learning more about how prayer heals PTSD is a voyage I wish to embark on.

PTSD seeks to kill those who are afflicted with it.  It severs our relationships.  Among them it severs our relationship with God.  PTSD drives us into isolation.  When those relationships have been sufficiently damaged and we have been sufficiently isolated, suicide is a natural, horrible outcome.  This applies to PTSD from military service as well as from other forms of trauma such as rape.

In as much as PTSD destroys our identities, prayer is a major way to restore our identities.  We have been afflicted with a PTSD-Identity.  Our souls need to be healed in order to recover and enhance our identities.  Many of us wish that we could be that person we were before we served.  And, many of those who have become alienated from us wish we were that pre-PTSD person as well.

Prayer is one of the ways we can re-discover and restore our souls.  PTSD seeks to destroy our ability to pray. Rediscovering prayer keeps us alive instead of dying. While there are many types and intensities of prayer, deepest prayer requires attention to God, PTSD destroys our ability to keep that particular sustained focused attention.

Hence, I have started this new category, “PTSD and Prayer,” for this blog.  In it I intend to explore prayer as its own topic and to explore prayer as a means of PTSD soul healing.  A healing that will allow us to diminish the PTSD-Identity and enhance the identity, the soul, which God blessed us with.

I have survived much of my PTSD due to the prayers of others and rediscovering prayer.  PTSD is a complex condition which attacks us in multiple ways.  Thus, it needs to be healed in multiple ways.  One of those ways is prayer.

November 14, 2008

Two Great Veteran’s Groups that Help with PTSD: Guitars for Vets and Dry Hootch

Filed under: Initial Concerns — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Dr. Z @ 10:03 am

Hello All,

Since my last post I have been through the health industry again.  I am still in the game.  Just makes things tough and painful.  My hands are still hard to use and my voice processing software remains a challenge.  I can still teach and from time to time write, for which I am grateful. 

That all said, I would like to mention two groups that many of you are probably already aware of, but if not, please check them out.

Guitars for Vets, can be found at http://www.guitarsforvets.org/home.html  They provide guitars for veterans.  I can attest that music is one of the things which saved my life when the PTSD was devastating my soul.  The joy of music, the joy of creation, and the joy of being identified with something as wonderful as music has done my soul a lot of good.

DRY HOOTCH, can be found at http://www.dryhootch.org/  They understand how veterans need to connect to one another and the real value of peer to peer dialogue.  They also understand that veterans are conditioned by our service to use alcohol as a coping device, especially with our PTSD.  As you can, take a moment and visit them and see the great work they are doing to help veterans cope with PTSD and the spider web of secondary problems that come from it.

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) continues to ravage our ranks.  PTSD ravages our souls.  I have benefited immensely from the love, patience, and prayers of others.  I have also benefited from the forgiveness of others - sometimes as the results of a PTSD behavior and other times because I can be a selfish dork.  As you can, please pray, forgive, love and be patient with each other, and also with our own individual selves.  We all have value and we can keep the PTSD dragon from destroying that.

Semper Pax, Dr. Z

April 4, 2008

80,000 (more) lose their jobs as unemployment continues to rise. Not a rosey environment for PTSD Healing.

Filed under: Initial Concerns — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Dr. Z @ 8:00 am

As a follow up to my previous post on how unemployment can magnify some of the effects of PTSD:

We have the most recent report on unemployment indicating an additional 80,000 Americans who have lost their jobs.

This moves the current unemployment rate from 4.8% to 5.1%.  Thankfully this is not a Depression Era unemployment rate.  However, the real rate is higher than that reported because the government does not count those workers who have dropped out of the labor market due to despair.

 Please recall that the unemployment rate for recent Iraq and Afghanistan veterans is 18 percent.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke predicts additional rises in the unemployment rate will occur over the next several months.

Unemployment causes the sense of personal worthlessness, it damages one’s self value.  This is also a feature of PTSD that leads people to despair and self-destruction.

As I noted in the previous post, the creation of jobs is a moral issue.  We save lives, we save families, and we provide positive treatment of PTSD by allowing our veterans to have meaningful work.

Semper Pax, Dr. Z

April 1, 2008

Iraq/Afghanistan Veterans Experience 18% Unemployment. Forced to Feel Worthless Encourages PTSD.

Filed under: Initial Concerns — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Dr. Z @ 8:44 am

The Washington Post reports that 18% of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are unemployed.  While the Veterans Administration has stepped up programs to help vets find work, 18% remains a staggering number.  I can always look at this as a glass half full (fooled?) possibility and imagine that without the VA programs (for example, the Coming Home to Work program), it would be dramatically worse, maybe 36%.  I’ll let your own personal experiences with the VA be the lenses through which you view it.  Either way, nearly one out of five American Veterans, cannot find work.

 One of the characteristics of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is afflicting the victim with a sense of worthlessness.  This is connected with a characteristic  common to all of us: We need to have meaning in our lives.  Most veterans, peace-time or war time, had experienced significant meaning in their roles as service members.  Whether it is combat, humanitarian missions, keeping a flight-line clear of obstructions, or being called out to fight forest fires (or called way to late to offer assistance in a hurricane), the man or woman has given of themselves to a cause that is much greater than themselves as individuals. 

In these acts veterans had found intense personal meaning (and sometimes that is discovered only upon further reflection).  What they do really matters.  What their buddies do really matters.  And they all put it on the line to ensure the mission is done.  This is why soldiers protect their buddies in an almost feral way.  They had bonded in something that provided great meaning.  Surveys have repeatedly shown that most front-line troops don’t fight for a national foreign policy or vague terms like victory.  Rather they fight for each other and it promotes extraordinary caring and heroism, it promotes mean.  We pray that the missions they are used up on are those which promote the common good.  And, thanks to the U.S. Constitution we can debate that point and not be deemed as non-patriotic or not supporting the troops.

 Where does unemployment mean in regards to PTSD?  Men and women come out of an environment in which they constantly had meaning and worked for goals greater than their individual selves.  Military service will do that to a person.  For all of its other traits, it does give a person a sense of meaning and purpose, a chance to put others before themselves, something which popular American Culture abhors. 

 A soldier returns from meaningful experiences where lives and high value equipment turned on their performance to one where they can’t get a job selling tires, hot dogs, and other mundane essentials to American life.   They go from being a worthwhile member of the Team to an individual who cannot find work.  The system tells them they are worthless because no one will hire them.  It is made even worse by the persistence of our current recession.

 PTSD inflicts a sense of worthlessness on its sufferers.  This is further exacerbated by unemployment.  The human person goes from being incredibly relevant and necessary to being incredibly irrelevant and shown to have no value in American society.  This sense of worthlessness will promote depression and isolation.  These are an ugly spiral that destroy one’s own appreciation of their self-worth.  If the PTSD monster gets you in that situation it becomes even harder to climb out and attempt to readjust to “normal” life.

Veterans Unemployment is a Moral Issue.  Creating jobs for veterans is not simply an economic necessity with the happy by-product of lower welfare rolls and a wider tax base, but it is a moral issue where the people we trained and deployed need to know they will not end up homeless (20,000+ homeless Iraq war vets), on welfare if their lucky, and made even more vulnerable to the soul killing effects of PTSD.

The Washington Post Article can be viewed at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/31/AR2008033102586.html?hpid=sec-business

 Information on the Vets Coming Home to Work program can be found at http://www.vetsuccess.gov/cominghome/

Semper Pax, Dr. Z

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