A SOLDIER'S PERSPECTIVE
THE WEB'S LEADING MILITARY BLOG SINCE 2004
In the last post I wrote some suggestions to help with a veteran or soldier diagnosed with PTSD and charged with a crime, today I want to touch on some additional suggestions to those persons involved and separated from their loved ones. This information could apply to anyone in a position of adversity and great change.
During times of great turmoil and adversity such as a loved one struggling and succumbing to the ravishing effects of PTSD, this will release devastating effects on the person and sometimes can reap outrageous and deleterious consequences to others. During times such as the later, we may have our loved one incarcerated due to their actions under extreme duress due to triggered stressors leading to abominable repercussions to all involved.
This tragedy will lead to a host of emotional states, starting a whole cycle of sensations you will be going through, similar to the grief cycle that goes with a loss of a loved one as if they had passed away. Realize this and begin your passage through it, without doing this you will not be able to weather the oncoming issues.
The first issue needing attention more than anything; take care of yourself first. This will be a long journey that you find yourself in, it has just begun. I’m sure your loved one wants you to be happy and to do that, you need not put your life on hold during this ordeal.
I went through a long custody battle for my children and put everything on hold for 8 years and as this court battle went on, to the detriment of my mental and physical health. I won custody of my children in my state, but she moved them to the next state that did not recognize my states proceedings or my court order for custody. Long story short, I DID NOT THINK OF MY SELF FIRST and lost everything, my kids, house, my second marriage and eventually my sanity. I let the whole ordeal define me; I was the case and the case was me, there was nothing else, and I was consumed by the whole process.
Self-care is not being selfish, since I have learned that by thinking about myself and meeting my needs first I was able to take resume my responsibilities. I learned the concepts of personal boundaries where boundary concepts and identification gives you the ability to not let life and situations overwhelm and control you; your feelings of discomfort will alert you of boundary intrusions.
Self-care is loving yourself so you can love others, helping yourself so you may help others as long as no harm has come to you. When I figured this out I was able to function at a level I had never before achieved. By not taking care of self we begin to loath self and think only in terms of failure, a development of self-loathing and negative perspectives will warp our reality and doom us to fail; a self fulling prophecy. Extremely important to my peace of mind, praying and meditating.
It seems counterproductive to issues of great importance to you today, this process will be a long and drawn out trial and ordeal for all concerned. You have to accept that, it is of utmost important that you accept this, right now. It will alleviate quite a bit of anxiety and stress just by accepting that you have been committed to a long process that may take years to resolve.
It may feel as if you will be betraying your soldier or veteran by trying to let go of some of the feelings that you have been clinging to. It only feels like this, you have to let go of these feelings to get through it. By holding on to the emotions and not letting go we stay stuck in the moment and cannot grow. The ability to grow in personal development during times of extreme adversity will be the ONE thing we need to begin toward a forward momentum, without it we will fail.
Now, with our acceptance of personal self and our life situation our load will lighten, as we now have the ability to spontaneously interact with our environment instead of only reacting. We can begin to trust our own judgments in the moment without having to try and think of every possibility and contingency in exchanges between individuals. By doing this we loose sight of the subtler interactions in life and miss out on important exchanges that effective interpersonal communication requires.
List of Self-Care Contingencies:
- self-care, by taking care of self we can navigate life successfully
- personal boundaries, with self defined boundaries we can assert ourselves effectively
- Grief-cycle, by accepting our situations and self we can grow as our life situations require
- Acceptance, self validation and self examination allows change and forward momentum
- Interpersonal communication, allows for effective exchanges; a give and take interaction necessary for negotiations that dominate most social situations, business networking and judicial settings
I wish you well on your journey, it will be difficult and can be an opportunity to advance and advocate the cause by shedding light on the plight our veteran and soldiers face due to the consequences of inadequate funding and lack of mental health services.



julie
Hello,
I’m so glad you’re validating my grief. My 26 yr old son has a trajic stary & is currently incarcersted. I am starting a support group for family/friends who have a loved one incarcerated. Any tips?
Julie Eggebraaten
CJ
Julie, would you be willing to share some of your son’s story? Where was he deployed and why is he incarcerated? Thanks much. I think RG has some good advice.
Roman General
Julie,
Thank you for being willing to share. I want you to know that I appreciate your sons continuing sacrifices for our country. People do not realize that our soldiers becoming caught up in the criminal justice system is a reflection of the combat mentally wounded reaction to their inability to reintegrate and the inundation of veterans needing mental health. We are not doing enough to meet the needs of our veterans and they are suffering for it.
I would suggest to go to other support groups and see what goes on there. You could use another support group as your template. Talk to as many people as possible who have done what you want to do and get some advice from them. This all depends on whether you are going to do this online or an in person gig. Online would add some technical aspects to the mix and an in person support group would require some formalities, guidelines and a physical space. Research, research, research.
Jamie
Calling all family members! We are currently organizing a group of families and organizations to go to Capitol Hill (all expenses paid) to tell your story about your incarcerated vet and rally congress to make some needed changes. Anyone who wants more info please email me at bullymom59@yahoo.com. This event will be in July 2009