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Sufferer Soldier Looking For Someone To Talk To

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Chaz Kindred

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It's been over 3yrs since being released from the military. I was given PTSD, Anxiety and depression. I have recently found out that there was a process of things that shoould have happened while I was in theater after the blast, and more of which I guess I seem to have "missed" out on from the military before my honorable discharge.

Someone to relate to PTSD and this massive feeling of emotional numbness and feeling like everyone is attacking me in every sense and/or stuck in a corner. Even when I know they aren't I am not sure exactly where to begin on this as it's the first time I have really branched out to talk to someone. I do go see a VA doc but it's not a head shrink, it's one who right now is still "focusing on my PTSD symptoms and memory loss and anxiety ETC. I am married and am not exactly sure of even how to effectively communicate with my wife. I sincerely have no idea where to start on all this but ask for help and start from scratch. I have attached a paper I wrote for a composition class of mine if it helps.

FYI the paper shows more emotion and direct quotes almost.

It is close to three years now since being back from war for me. I am dealing with things that I never thought I would ever delt with. A person who I seek out every day is someone who I used to be. Finding back “the Chaz” as my friends would say, finding myself once again. So many different things waking up each day and wondering that maybe it had all just been an extremely long bad dream.

Issues I have confronted and have started to encounter in my process of life are PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder), a condition affecting people who suffered severe emotional trauma such as combat, Anxiety and Depression. I am the expert in being able to communicate effectively and reach out for help to doctors and family. Like Armstrong landing on the moon for the first time in his saying “one small step for man, one giant leap for man-kind.” I took one small step forward and made a giant leap in being able to open up.

Maybe it was a story I had read in a book once. Maybe I will be that same person who I once used to be. It’s a tough reality though in understanding that I have a problem. Once I do even after going and talking to all the doctors and dealing with all the paperwork and government process. It’s a struggle to be able to even talk to anybody about my feelings and emotions. It’s a huge battle to not feel like I am stuck in a corner trying to battle my way out into the light and be seen again. It’s a process that I re-learn to live each day as a new beginning

One thing I have learned to accept is all of the things that have happened in my life and the roughest part of it all is moving on. So many people are able to handle major events that happen to them. In the light of what happened to me was a series of major events that had taken place in a short amount of time. I took on more than my body had been able to and in my body’s own defense shut down everything to where I needed to rebuild it all over again emotions, communication and your day to day living.

It’s not an easy process and takes time of by which I am still dealing with multiple things and situations but a process none the least. I want to give a sense of light from the perspective of my point of view of what someone returning from war goes through. The flashbacks that happen in the blink of an eye, the constant nightmares that don’t seem to go away, and the daily stress of it all with little sleep a night. I am lucky if I get more than 5 hours. It’s something that requires a great deal of patience and persistence on the parts of the one person and all of those around them.

My wife looked into my eyes and said it’s like looking into emptiness, like I’m not really there. My parents can see that I’m not the same person I used to be. I become distant from everything in my surroundings. Basically sticking to myself and surviving on bare essentials including eating. Most of the time skipping meals, or eating so little that it barely covers enough nutrition to get me by. I dropped from weighing 186 to 154lbs.

I wasn’t interested in doing anything. I basically crawled into a hole inside my body that I never knew was there. I was constantly on edge. I showed little to no emotion to anything in my surroundings. Life for me as I knew it had stopped and I was living a non reality life. During this period of time my wife had seen me at my deepest darkest hours. Something I wish I had never wanted her to see. My thought process isn’t right, I thought of so many things I wouldn’t normally be thinking. It’s a pure reality that I was not the same person at all. And I felt like I had no control over my life anymore.

I have described is only a mere slight perspective brought into the light of what one person will go through. True there are so many different variables and situations that come into play and different people deal with very different things. But this is my life, and this is what I deal with each and every day. I have quit my smoking and have gained back my weight and then some. But the stress of everyday life is all too real and I don’t like it.

I have also started to better express my feelings and take into accountability of life in general and started to once enjoy it all over again. I even took on going to college for the first time too. So learning new things and dealing with all of life’s special moments can be more rewarding in everyday rituals, it’s more becoming of a life than before. I’m learning to get the Chaz back and it’s a new me, one for the better. One who can once again share his life with his wife and son.
One who has the time to spend with his family, one who enjoys things all over again. It’s beginning to be a new high in life. I’ve begun my process of looking into the lighter side of things. I have help in seeing things that were present that I couldn’t see brought to me from before. I’m one soldier who went outside the box, as they say in the Army, and asked for help. That’s one thing most soldiers aren’t geared for and taught how to do.

Asking for help is a good thing and with more and more soldiers starting to slowly ask for help the government is beginning to realize how strong and how real this problem really is. It affects more than just the soldier; it affects everyone who that one solder deals with each and every day. The events that most soldiers cannot talk about are the hardest to confront.

It all starts from taking that one small but giant step forward and making the initial contact for help. It’s a cold reality when thinking about it that something is wrong, but one that could save lives. I do call this a battle only because each day I learn to live with something new. I learn each moment all over again. I am basically re-teaching my life how to handle situations.

The most powerful advice is solid communication. Learning to openly talk to someone and have the ability to tell them what’s going on is the best I could do. I couldn’t just hold everything thing inside. If I were to keep everything inside me and never let anything out, eventually it would just erupt later down the road. Or some scientists or so I have heard, thought this to even have lead to Schizophrenia.

Now you have a sense of what I am talking about.
 
Welcome Chaz...
There are lots of great people here to talk to.
PTSD here too, not combat/military. But all the same issues, my own combat/hell.
Asking for help is a big one, took me 39 years and a few more traumas picked up along the way. Still struggling with it, not sure if I will ever get it all out. Good place to be, good place to start to learn what this is all about.
Like you said, basically re-teaching my life how to handle situations....like basics, eat, sleep, take meds.
Not to many people "out there" understand what a struggle it is just to get on with the basics of life, never mind all the extra stressors that come along with trying to live out there with others.
 
Wow, very impressive.
I'm a person who has had PTSD in some way shape or form since I was a toddler. Sometimes worse than others, sometimes tolerable, many times not. To hear you speak about who you once were and finding yourself again is truly inspirational. I'm 46 this year, hope I don't die this way, not knowing anything but pure horrific survival.
 
Chaz my Brother We walk the same mile. Look into psychdog.org I came back from the zone in 05 after a successful engagement. I didnt even know I was invited to the party. Shit happened so fast All I ever think about is that poor SOB had a family too. What makes life so bad you want to kill a perfect stranger? Then i went through blast trauma and it took em 3 years to diagnose a TNI. Now I'm looking at the board for Ortho injuries- Neck Shoulder rt elbow and my PTSD , Depression and Anxiety. Take care take it slow and one day at a time. This is not teh end of a journey just another hill to climb. Hit me up anytime if you want to talk.

Tim
 
Chaz
Think of this as planning a long road journey in that truck of yours, you need a full tank to get there:

Empty tank = Suffering in silence not knowing what is causing the problem
Quarter full = Diagnosis

Half full = Recognizing the need and asking for help

Three quarters full = Getting help

Full tank = Taking back full control of your life

So from what you have said in your post and using the above analogy you only need to top up the last ¼ of the tank because you have already come a long way. Spending time in the military is like being in the same job for many years, you become part of an institution and if you leave and start again the adjustment process is not easy even under very normal circumstances.

In the time before my diagnosis and getting help was the most destructive and non productive time in my life so I guess your story is similar in that respect. When you are touched by a life changing event that results in PTSD things can never be the same again, therefore to wish for the old days is going back when you should be looking forward, this is not to say you can’t have those things back just that you have to reengineer your thought process to achieve
those happier times.

My PTSD will never leave me but I accept it is now part of the person I am and just as the Phoenix raising from the ashes I now recognise that I am made stronger. Once you come through the other side of this darkness you will never be phased, triggered yes but broken no. What I have come to know is if something bad can happen it will to somebody somewhere because that’s life. When I was later diagnosed with cancer the first trigger was not again and why me? My answer was why not. Don’t get me wrong when I get an idiot driver cause me a problem I get so angry I want to take a claw hammer to their skull, but then I tell myself the world is full of idiots so why am I letting this anxiety pull me back down because that will be the only result and then I am left to deal with these uncomfortable feelings which the idiot and the rest of the world is oblivious to.

You have two people in your live who are depending on you and if your wife can still look you in the eye and read you than you have a good one so open up to her. You have already made a massive improvement toward the quality of your life by getting out there and learning new skills, and in my opinion you need this challenge. Remember PTSD will take away your enjoyment of life if you let it, so don’t let it take control by mastering it and you will be surprised how positive the outcome can be.

Keep fighting the good fight as I think you already know that’s the only one worth fighting.

Regards,

Steve
 
Welcome! Chaz. I was married to a soldier for twenty years. He served twenty-two years in the British army. And you're right they don't talk about their experiences. I admire you so much for being so open on here. I hope you find what you are looking for.
 
I thank you all for taking the time in relating to my initial thread. I was a little skeptic on posting something that I had written. As for all things I know that i must take a step forward in order to fall back on my butt again. I do struggle daily on things that I have no control over and wonder why I am more of a blank stare and in reality I am in such a deep concentrated thought that I don't even realize what I am thinking about. Usually that's when I get hit the hardest with my most intense flashbacks. My re-occuring nightmares are more of a nussasnce now. I've come to just figure this is how it's always going to be.

I have found out one thing recently though and i wanted to know how many other have this as well. Only way to describe it as that feeling you get in your stomach when your excited about something awesome or scared? Anybody else how is suffering from this NOT get that feeling anymore about doing anything at all no matter how extreme?

I take a lot of my frustration and anger out on myself for suffering through this alone and not talking about it or where to even begin. Just reply events over and over again. Bascially playing the "what if" game. Since my suffering one thing I have noticed is that like checking the locks and the consistant people watches, quick exit routes from any location, and observing my surroundings at any given moment, is that I have a massive new phobia about being late for anything and I'm so predicable it can be timed almost like a clock.

I agree with steve when he said "you become part of an institution" considering I spent 12 years honorably in the military. I became institutionalized, to where now being in school and civilian life, I'm almost lost. The military is pretty much all I know how to do.

So do I keep going on and talk here or how does this typically work?
 
Hi Chaz

I think we all get that fatalistic feeling of not being in control which can get applied to everything you know and do. You have been conditioned as a fighter and nobody has prepared you for civilian life, a bit like being left in the desert with no Sat Nav or compass to get you home. You have to reassure yourself you are no longer in theater and are now safe and the flashbacks will hopfully diminish. The killing and survival skills you needed in the military are now redundant and have to be replaced with a new skill set. This can be no easy task because if it were easy there would not be so many ex military going through the prison system. People on civi street just find it hard to relate to your situation I know this because I have known and worked alongside many ex military personnel, some of which have ended up as mercenaries or in private security because they can’t get out of the military mode, however there are just as many who break the cycle and find their niche in life.

You recognise there are no short cuts to where you need to be and as for using this site you take whatever you need from it, however your thread will probably me be moved under a different heading more appropriate to the topic. By putting your feelings on here you are helping yourself and others who are reading but have not made the leap of posting their selves. You will get there because you want to and need to if you are to ever get any real purpose and happiness back to your life. You should also confide to people who are close how you are feeling so they know how to best support you because if you don’t tell them they will not recognise your need.

All the best,
Steve
 
I came on here because I actually don't confide or talk to anybody about anything. I have mainly kept it inside only small amounts have come out enough to keep me from overload. A fault I know, BUT I am trying to figure out the general idea on how to confide or have my "support"
 
Hi Chaz

Welcome to the forum.

There is no need to quote the full post directly above, when you are replying. If you are unsure, check out the links below.

[DLMURL]http://www.ptsdforum.org/c/threads/use-of-the-quoting-reply-feature.15746/[/DLMURL]

[DLMURL]http://www.ptsdforum.org/c/threads/how-to-quoting.14329/[/DLMURL]

Thanks.

Amethist
 
Hi Chaz

You no longer have your buddies in the field to confide in but you have a wonderful resource within your family. Try taking clips from your posts along with others you may find and put them in a scrap book and maybe share these with your family if you are not quite ready to speak out. You could also get some books on PTSD and leave them where your family can get access to them as this may help them gain a better understanding of your condition. Keeping a diary is another good way to mark your personal progress as it is good to see how far you have come along your journey, say six months from now because we all need a tangible point along the road to mark our successes and sometimes our setbacks.

Steve
 
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