Good points Dan & glad you gave it another shot, frankly this forum is much like group therapy too, If this group let's you down again, just keep looking for one you feel comfortable with, you'll be a valuable mentor for the new chaps.I initially thought 'group' face to face support wasn't for me; seems I may have been a bit hasty with my decision and put my defenses up. Spent the last two hours chatting to guys who served 15-35 years before me, quite nice to listen and be listened to, in person. Baby steps and force yourself to do little bits, it might just come good.
Now that it has been about 8 yrs since my combat, I'm starting to see some separation from the initial completely hopeless survival mode to understanding how baby steps lead to progress. I know why some of the newer guys, especially fresh to the beast, can't see hope beyond just being here and able to vent. They at least know they aren't alone and have a legit combat injury.
I was in group yesterday and I know I've moved to a new phase with all the study and effort. I saw how I used to be but tried to offer them positives. When they explained they see no hope and have no expectations beyond feeling numb & overwhelmed, I understood that as well and can only offer the baby step approach we push here. There was no use explaining too much for them until they had taken enough baby steps to be ready to see more options. I know when I was in the outpatient program I just decided I was gonna try as many therapies as they could throw at me and see if any stuck. I thought none of them really seem to do much at the time but now I think just the effort of it: listening, venting and thinking on it helped me develop new skills to use on the beast.
:ROFLMAO::LOL:...Edit: there's me being serious but 'happy', scroll up on my phone and see a big dick on a car. Haha.