The guy is a fantasy writer who is also Iraq vet. What his point is that PTSD is not a disease. It's a world view. The last paragraphs were especially interesting.
http://mykecole.com/blog/2013/03/what-ptsd-is
__________________
Into terror!, Into valour!
Charge ahead! No! Never turn
Yes, it's into the fire we fly
And the devil will burn!
- Scarlett Pimpernell
Quote:The root of the treatment has to come from meeting those who suffer
where they are. It isn’t just hard operators. It’s clerks and
phlebotomists and chemical engineers. It’s people who thought they
were fine, only to wake up one morning and realize that the last few
years have changed them in ways they don’t quite understand. It isn’t
just soldiers and cops and ER nurses. Life in poverty can bring on PTSD. An abusive parent can have the same effect.
We need to treat the fear, address the world view, acknowledging
that these aren’t things you cure, maybe aren’t even things you change.
We need to tip our hat to the trauma, and look instead at what the life
after it looks like. We have to find a way to construct
significance, to help a changed person forge a path in a world that
hasn’t changed along with them.
And if you’re a vet, or an EMT, or a cop,
or firefighter and you’re reading this, I want you to know that you
can’t put the curtain back, but it’s possible to build ways to move
forward, to find alternatives to the rush of crisis. There are ways
you can matter. There is a way to rejoin the dust of the world, to find
your own space on the dance floor.
I know this.
Because I did it, am still doing it, every day.
Don’t give up.
http://mykecole.com/blog/2013/03/what-ptsd-is
__________________
Into terror!, Into valour!
Charge ahead! No! Never turn
Yes, it's into the fire we fly
And the devil will burn!
- Scarlett Pimpernell