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Here I Am.

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rickyfinch

Bronze Member
This started small and kept growing. First time that I have put most of this into words.

This is one of the first times I’ve said this. I have killed, and it haunts me. I have faced the fact I have PTSD, but every day is a struggle. If not for a supportive wife, I’d be dead, either by my own hand or stupidity. If not for her I wouldn’t have a job, house and the bills wouldn’t get paid. I am totally dependent on her to do all the tasks to keep me going. It is everything I can do just to get to work and home again. Everything else is lost in the fog.

Firstly, saying that I have killed implies that I have done it more than once, but that simply isn’t the case. I have only killed one; an Iraqi female national. She ran out in front of my PLS (truck) and her head bounced off my bumper. I cleaned off her brains and blood off with a bottle of drinking water as if it was dirt on a windshield.

Between two tours I have see multiple dead bodies, a .50 cal destroy a human body. War isn’t pretty, that’s just the damn truth.

I suffer severely from many triggers, loud noises and anything unexpected and the main two. I within the last month have thought I was dead, done, or about to die probably 8 times. Just from these two triggers. The VA has given me medication that hasn’t taken off the edge at all from these.

I have deployed twice with less than two years between deployments, I never slowed down. Now it’s over two years since my last tour and everything I have seen and done has came back to haunt me, hyper-vigilance is a daily routine. Simple tasks like grocery shopping, or running down to the corner store seems out of reach due to the simple volume of people there, it’s overwhelming. I feel the need to scan all of them as if they were threats to me or my family and I simply cannot do it so it normally ends in a panic attack where I run home like a child.

I recently had a daughter, I watched my wife struggle for three days in labor, and not only was I detached and numb from what was happening as if my emotions are shut off, I was jittery because I couldn’t carry my handgun into the hospital. I have a dependence to carry a weapon at all times and sometimes illegally as if I was in a combat zone.

Nightmares, the ones that I remember ruins my entire day. I wake up in a pool of sweat most nights screaming as my wife wakes me. At times I have been violent in my dreams causing, in reality my wife harm.

I don’t expect to live past today; I have seen death all around me. I have friends that never came back. I can’t help but think that if I could’ve done something different they might still be on this earth. Having said that, I live each day as if it was my last, often self medicating, and seeking thrills. I normally on my way to work reach triple digit speeds, and the bad thing is and it doesn’t even bother me. One false move or jerk of the wheel and I’m dead, one essential part failing on my car, and I’m dead. This doesn’t bother me because I know that this moment could be my last.

I haven’t been able to turn my deployment off. I feel like I’m still there. I feel like at any moment I could be dead, and that because of that I don’t do anything in halves. It’s full on, or not at all. 0 to 100 and then back, this goes for the small things (that in the past wouldn’t have bothered me) that I get upset about and it seems anger is the only emotion that I can produce readily. My children and wife pay for that.
I want to be normal; I want to be the husband that my wife remembers and needs. The Father that I need to be to my children. I however, don’t think that I will ever be able to reach this goal. I think PTSD is here to stay. I am simply trying to survive. I hate it, but it seems to be the truth.
Sergeant Finch,
Florida Army National Guard
Transportation corps.
OIF, OEF vet.
 
Welcome, Brother.

Yep. PTSD is here to stay, but not at the level you're running hot at right now. Not gonna blow sunshine up your ass, it f*cking sucks, and is more painful dealing with this BS than it has any damn right to be. But you work your ass off, and keep moving, and you'll find your balance again. Mostly. Triggers will get blunted, emotions come back (some you might rather wish wouldn't, but the good ones, too), you'll learn to manage your stress. Know when to keep a short leash on the Beast, and when to let the sucker have some play.

Dive on in.
 
Hey Ricky, that sounds like me a couple of years ago, so I know what you are going through. The noise triggers, the dissociation. I had some bad hallucinations, no nightmares, though I couldnt sleep at all. The most important thing you can do right now is start therapy. Find one that specializes in PTSD. You might cycle through a few until you find one you connect with. I say this because I went three years before I saw a therapist, and only did that after my wife threatened to leave me. Now after all this time, I am much much better, but my marriage did not survive and my kids don't say a whole lot to me. If I could have done anything different it would be to get therapy immediately after wheels down in CONUS. After that, I suggest you get your wife to a therapist. PTSD wrecks everyone in your immediate environment, and your wife is your best friend. But even that has limits.

Some things that helped me:

EMDR- eased the intensity of the triggers
SSRIs: For Depression
Sleep meds: Ones that knock you out cold for eight hours. I've been taking some over the counter stuff, though I was prescribed a low dose anti-psychotic which worked great. I just didnt want to be on anti-psychotics since I still carry a gun for a living.

I really wish you the best of luck Ricky. See someone ASAP and stick with it. You really can learn how to live again.
 
Hi Ricky;I have lost everything more than once with the help of PTSD.Wife,kids,family,friends,jobs everything.I got out in 83 and dident look for help till 07.All i can tell you is get some good drs ,meds if you have to and you will,get in to a combat ptsd program and go into it to find out all you can about it.Full bore 100%,it wont go away but if you wait it will only get worse.Do this for yourself bro.and your life.
 
Thanks guys, for the welcome. I'm going to try to get to the vet center maybe set up something with those guys. See where that goes, I just know something has to change. I've been taking Zoloft for about a month and I feel worse now than I did drinking. I also have a va appt soon to see what can be done with that.
 
Ricky,

I'd like to add a little to what already been said. You didn't loose the feeings and values you once had. You set them aside cause they got in the way of your survival in a place where pain and death could be a part of any day.

Spend time with your wife and new daughter. Watch and listen closely when you're with them even though it may not feel like much at the time. Just being there will begin to make a difference over time. There are things about a baby's smile and a mother's tenderness that can lead you back to what you had to turn away from in the killing fields.

Don't beat yourself up when you feel detached cause there were times when detachment saved your sanity. Give yourself time to find the little things that will lead you to a better place.

SD
 
Mate, welcome to the forum. Firstly, your among friends who understand, you sound like you are doing it tough right now.

With your medication, the problem we have in the world, let alone the USA, is that psychs and other medicos are renowned for just dishing out a standard dose of antidepressants without monitoring it. How much Zoloft have they got you on. I ended up on 200 before changing to another.
You see mate, what one medication does for one person, might not work on another person, it's a long hard road and it might take 2 or 3 different ones before you find one that suits your needs.

The other factor that people don't take into account is that drugs are only a band-aid fix, you are only meant to take them till you are stable and have worked through your traumas. In the civilian world, they might deal with 'one' trauma, for instance seeing a friend die in a car accident. Usually they see a psych regularly (weekly), are on antidepressants for a bit, then they get back to life and can usually function fairly well if done properly.
The problem we have with us veterans, is that we might go through three traumas in just one day and by the end of the deployment, this might mount up to hundreds of incidents, and with the wait time at the VA, you could go your whole lifetime and not deal with all your traumas, so it's important to find the right med to work with.

We have a medications section here, so by all means ask someone.

Just my opinion
 
Man, I have gone through nearly nine months of hell. Here is me, someone who used to dish out advice and support could not handle his own life, I got too cocky and when I fell, I fell hard, it goes to show the beast is a prick. I am still coming out of it though, I have weaned myself down to one tablet in the morning and one tablet in the night, I used to be on about six different medications topping about 17 tablets or more a day. I am also off the Mary Jane. One day, when they legalise it here I will experiment again. Not worth the risk atm.

Anyway, will chat more mate, maybe during GTA 5. I think Steam release it mid this month.

Sorry Ricky for sidetracking your thread.........
 
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