A soldier back from Iraq with brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder battles suicidal thoughts. For veterans like him, intervention is crucial."Military service is not simply a job; it is an identity," writes Shannon P. Meehan. "We survive near-death experiences and make the strongest of bonds, all as soldiers. And then, on returning to civilian life, that identity is ripped away." (Michael Morgenstern / For The Times )
August 30, 2012 - July saw a record number of suicides in the Army and among recent veterans. I was nearly one of them.
I suffer from both traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder, the two most common conditions of suicidal veterans. Sometimes life becomes overwhelming.
This summer, as has happened often before, I experienced severe depression, which leads to isolation. Then, when I was feeling most hopeless, I also started feeling tremendously reckless. I found myself feeling aggressive and impulsive, feelings that fuel erratic behavior. With each passing week of the summer, as I pushed yet another friend or family member away, it became easier to envision suicide as an option to break this insufferable tension. read more>>>
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