Well, the latest PTSD incident (which occurred this past Thursday) has been added to the PTSD Timeline project housed at ePluribus Media.
Allow me to introduce you to a 20-year old Army private based out of Fort Hood, TX. His name is Jacob Hounshell. And he’s made it into the PTSD Timeline. If the past is any indication, the national media won’t spend too much time telling you about the tailspin this young man’s life has taken ever since he returned home from a year’s deployment in Iraq. No one wants to hear those ugly details do they?
Well, I would like you to meet him. Read his story, learn more about post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD] at my new blog, and then follow me below the fold to see the breakdown of the 72 incidents now awaiting this young soldier’s arrival…
Introduction
What is the PTSD Timeline?
It’s a collection of online news reports listing incidents related to returning combat veterans coping with PTSD. These are the most tragic of all incidents, of course, as mild cases of PTSD are hardly given a mention in our media. As a matter of fact, if it weren’t for smaller media organizations and local outlets, we’d probably never even hear about these violent cases, either.
- Can you remember the last time you heard of a soldier who’d recently returned from combat committing suicide? In the traditional press?
- Can you remember the last time you heard of a marine committing armed robbery just so he didn’t have to return to Iraq?
- Can you remember the last time you found out that a recently returned soldier killed himself and his wife in a fit of uncontrollable rage?
- Can you remember the last time you heard about a soldier going AWOL rather than return to the combat zone?
- Can you remember the last time you ever even heard or saw a public service message on this mushrooming crisis?
If our national media fails to report on this issue, does that mean it’s not important? Or do the people in pain and in harm’s way of a soldier or marine spiralling downward still exist? Is their pain relevant? Do we as a nation have a responsibility to ensure that the VA is properly funded to help meet the needs of our military families hurting the most?
Pro war or against, a helpless child or spouse abused due to the the undiagnosed or untreated pain of a veteran returned home from battle should resonate with us all. And it should compel us to act in their defense.
The purpose of the PTSD Timeline is to:
- Aid in our understanding of the magnitude of this all-encompassing problem
- Record the incidents for future study and evaluation
- Allow reporters and researchers to find OEF and OIF PTSD incident data quickly and easily
::
The Silence is Deafening
No traditional news organizations are tracking returning veteran PTSD-related incidents. The Pentagon isn’t doing it. And neither is the cash-strapped Veterans Administration (VA).
Fortunately, most soldiers, sailors, aviators, and marines return to civilian life without any major hardships — at least the type that can be seen from the outside. They fold back into their home lives, into their communities. And the fickle public happily moves on and forgets about them. They’re no longer warriors met with parades; they are simply citizens.
Then again, that’s what they really were all along, anyway. Merely citizens of our country. Our brothers and sisters. Husbands and wives. Mothers, fathers, children, or cousins. How well they cope with PTSD affects not only their own future, but that of the loved ones who surround them. Their ability to function fully and well after their return home from combat also has an immediate and real bearing on the fabric of their local community. Their health also affects our larger society as a whole.
We leave them alone to deal with their wounds (either visible or invisible) at our own national peril.
::
The Incidents
Now might be a good time to add my usual disclaimer:
The aim of this research is to shine a sliver of light on yet another burden placed on society by war. It is not to lay blame or demonize our veterans. In my eyes, they are victims, too.
I’m not interested in singling out our soldiers as if they are the only ones in society who commit crime. They’re not. Violence exists in the general population — not only amongst those suffering from combat-related PTSD. Additionally, not everyone with PTSD suffers to the same degree. Most return, folding back into society and family without harming themselves or others.
In an attempt to show respect for the veterans, I chose not to include names in the final list and database because this isn’t about their individual acts. Rather, it’s meant to bring about a fuller understanding of what happens to the fabric of society when a nation sends another generation to war. And what can and should be done to make sure that those we’ve sent are well taken care of upon their return — for their own good and ours, too.
Current # of PTSD-related OEF/OIF incidents reported via online sources, fact-checked, and presented in ePluribus Media’s PTSD Timeline:
- Murder/Manslaughter: 26
- Suicide/Overdose: 35
- Faked/Attempted/Suspected Suicide: 3
- Aggravated Assault/Resisting Arrest: 5
- Assault/Domestic Assault: 6
- Burglary/Armed Robbery: 4
- Weapons Violation/Instrument of Assault/Police Standoff: 6
- Conspiracy/Obstruction: 2
- Rape/Statutory Rape: 3
- Attempted Murder: 5
- AWOL: 3
- Kidnapping: 1
- Drug Charge: 1
- Reckless Endangerment: 1
- Wife Abandonment: 1
- Felony Child Abuse/Sexual Assault on Child: 4
Notes:
There are more charges (106) than total incidents (73) due to the fact that some incidents resulted in more than one charge (for example a murder/suicide) brought against one individual. Unfortunately, these figures are the tip of the iceberg; many incidents go unreported.
By May 2004, one year after we began our war efforts, there were already 24 reported combat-zone suicides. Since the Pentagon refuses to release data or track suicides — and while many more suicides take place during post-deployment and are not counted as casualties of war — it’s difficult to determine what the true suicide figure really is. The majority of the above 33 suicides cases occurred stateside, not overseas.
Please see the PTSD Timelines for full descriptions of the incidents above.
::
Many of you are familiar with my coverage of returning veteran PTSD. Inspired to increase exposure on this topic I’ve created a new blog called PTSD Combat: Winning the War Within.
I invite you to bookmark it and share it with others who may be returning from service overseas.
Soldier’s Heart
PTSD Education Page
Infinity Publishing
Military Veterans PTSD Reference Manual – comprehensive online book
Journal of Clinical Psychology Expert Clinical Guidelines Series
Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder – [795K pdf]
Guide for Patients and Families – [118K pdf]
National Center for PTSD
Veterans Resources Index Page – extremely important page, lots of info
Veterans with PTSD Fact Sheet
Managing Stress Fact Sheet
The Iraq War Clinician Guide, 2nd Volume
A Brief Primer on the Mental Health Impact of the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
A Guide for Military Personnel and: A Guide for Families
MSN Groups
PTSD – Iraq Discussion Forum
PTSD Support Group for Family Members
Aftermath of War – Coping with PTSD Forum
THRIVEnet
Guide to Listening to War Veterans for Family Members
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
Seamless Transition – resources for OEF and OIF vets
PTSD Counseling Centers
Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) – formerly Operation Truth
Resources for Vets
Vietnam Veterans of America
PTSD Benefits Guide
Veterans for Common Sense
PTSD Resources Page
Health Issues Page
National Gulf War Resource Center
Self Help Guide for Post Traumatic Stress
US Marine Corps
Leaders Guide for Managing Marines in Distress
Deployment Health Clinical Center
Operational Stress Page
The Australian Centre for Posttraumatic Mental Health
Research, Training, and Policy Page
Patience Press
FREE downloadable PTSD pamphlets/newsletters
Not sure what took me so long. Saving the best for last? :o)
It’s good to see you here, ilona, and thanks for all your great work.
Appreciate the welcome, and looking forward to being a part of the community over here as well. I’m still waiting for 48 hour days, though. I could have sooooo much more fun with 48 hour days! :o)
…in your sig line I agree is awesome, powerful, must-listen to. I’m glad to see some artists who aren’t worried about appealing to everyone and simply stand up for their convictions and let the chips fall where they may.
In essence, isn’t that what we all public bloggers do, too?
This is excellent work, Ilona. And these are the soldiers we count as ‘surviving’ the war. I wonder why we never seem to think about the effect on our society of those people we train to kill and torture returning home.
Please continue to post here.
I’ve submersed myself in this issue since September, and you speak the truth. To me, for war or against, our soldiers are still people. As wrong as the policy may be and as real as the fact may be that some troops went too far (their actions sanctioned and made ‘legal’ by the proclamations against the ‘quaint’ Geneva conventions by this administration), they’re still our neighbors and friends and family members. I want us to do right by them, and I’m asking that others join in this cause in whatever way they can.
I appreciate your support, Alice, and will most definitely continue to post here. I’ve been active at many other blogs for the past couple of years, never quite signing up for an account here. [Shaking head in disbelief!] Now that you’ve got me, though, there’s no way you can shake me. :o)
Have a great week…
Thank you for this diary ilona.
It took me a while to find this story again but I finally did. This is a local (to me) Long Island soldier who got national attention when he carrid an Iraqi child to safety during a firefight. His photo was used as an example of proof of the righteousness of our war against Iraq. Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Two years later he is no longer a hero. In fact, he’s no longer anything to anyone except his family. He’s no longer usefull to the propagandists because he succumbed to the stresses of war.
I didn’t see his story listed in the archive above so I’m linking it here.
Peace
He was a hero
Correction.
I did just find his story in the linked list in your diary.
Sorry and thanks.
Another guy, a marine this time, also made headlines around the world with a photo of him — cigarette dangling from his mouth. He’s now also come forward and spoken out against the war (and has PTSD). I wrote two diaries on this marine; the first explaining his experience coping with PTSD, and another listing the reaction Freeperville had to him first when he was a ‘hero’ to them, and then what they had to say about him and his PTSD. It wasn’t pretty.
If anyone’s truly interested in this topic, you can find all of my diaries since September here. I’ve been writing about combat-vet PTSD nearly exclusively since then.
Thanks for your comments, supersoling…and for bringing this local soldier’s story into the diary. It’s a good place for it to be.
trust us again after this. I think the kids over there are the most vulnerable. They trust their commanders and they trust this nation and most of it is nothing like they have been brainwashed to believe, and we all know it isn’t about what they/we were all told it was about now too. They all die for the big lie….American or Iraqi or other.
I think those in the Pentagon realize that there are plenty of poor minority kids out there still, and with the economy the way it is, plenty more being bred/bled, to fill their need for the most part. If that fails then we’ll see another “Pearl Harbor” event just to remind the rest of them to get their patriotic groove on and join up.