Lost in the Desert

It's like 'dessert,' but with one 's,' because it sucks.

six foot skinny

six foot skinny
Location
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Birthday
July 28
Title
First Chief Layabout in charge of Lounging
Company
The Man
Bio
Six Foot Skinny recently returned from his second (and last) tour in Iraq, where he was stationed in Baghdad as a squad leader in a bridge company. He writes about his tours and life on the other side of them.

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Salon.com
Editor’s Pick
FEBRUARY 9, 2009 4:05PM

Boom

Rate: 28 Flag

March, 2004.  We all heard it.  I like to think that that one particular explosion, a few clicks off to the west, stood out in my mind.  I always tell people it did, but the reality is probably closer to the fact that in Baqubah, in the spring of 2004, there were a lot of explosions.  There were big ones and little ones, gunfire, car horns, music.  Just a general cacophony of third world noise.  We got to where we could distinguish, by ear, five or six different American weapons and of course an AK-47 is totally distinct.  We even got pretty good at judging distance based on those sounds.

That day, maybe that one was different.  Maybe, if I thought about it, I knew somehow that the boom came from the vicinity of main Forward Operating Base in town.  Maybe I had some subconscious inkling that we had a convoy on the road.  Probably though, I didn’t think anything of it until a three vehicle convoy came through gate of our little outpost an hour later.  I might not have given that a second thought either, until our first sergeant got out of one humvee, and the battalion chaplain got out of the other.  You never want to see the chaplain and the first sergeant together unannounced.  It only means one thing.  They gathered us in the auditorium and told us that B had been hit by an IED and killed.  One week before we left that town and drove south for Kuwait.  Twenty-five meters from the gate of the FOB.  He was in his early twenties.  A gentle giant with a big mouth and a bigger wad of chew in his lip.  He was from Ellsworth, Wisconsin, loved brandy, and had a seemingly endless library of Ole and Lena jokes.  He was also in my squad.  B was our fourth fatality from enemy action.  

On April 6th, we rolled into the small town that is home to our reserve unit.  We had a brief ceremony, there were some cameras and hugs and happy tears, B’s parents were there, and we got into cars and went home.  That is one of the challenges for reserve component Soldiers.  When you come home from Iraq and Afghanistan, you come home.  There’s no military base or hospital, no built in support network.  Your buddies aren’t in the bunk under you or down the hall.  They’re across town or in another state.

Over the course of the next six months, I moved in with my fiancé, broke off the engagement, moved out of our apartment and into a one bedroom by myself, and didn’t leave the house much.  When I did leave it was to play two or three consecutive rounds of disc golf alone.  The rest of the time was spent online, surfing aimlessly.  In September I was with one of my Army buddies on a long car trip.  He described his symptoms and I realized that we were doing a lot of the same things and feeling the same way.  He said that he was to the point where he felt like he could have just curled up under a bridge and waited to die.  That’s different from being suicidal – more like extreme apathy.  His wife told him if he didn’t seek help she was leaving, and he went to the VA hospital.  Said it had helped him a lot, so I did the same thing.  

My assigned psychologist gave me the usual battery of questions.  Are you suicidal? Have you lost pleasure in normal activities?  Are you eating and bathing regularly?  Were you ever afraid for your life?  Was anyone close to you killed or seriously injured?  Did you witness the event?  I was still functioning, but the mindset was “Hey, I’m still here, right?  I made it back in one piece, right?  What do I have to complain about?”  So we lost four people, so we had twenty-odd Purple Hearts, so your relationship disintegrated.  So what?  You’re still upright and ambulatory.

He told me I had seasonal affective disorder and gave me a happy light.  Really?  I was so confused and angry that I didn’t know what to do.  I know they saw a lot of guys from my unit because we used to see each other coming in and out of the mental health department at the hospital.  A happy light?  You have got to be kidding me.  I also saw a psychologist who put me on anti-depressants, but even that was pretty nonchalant.  “Umm, why don’t you try these?”  OK.  Thanks.  

The pills helped, and I am once again a functioning member of society, but it was hard.  I have a lot of friends who still haven’t come all the way back.  A is probably in prison now, if he’s lucky.  The lure of meth was too much for him after we got back.  J has been battling with the VA to get rated for PTSD for three years.  He pulled B out of that humvee.  B also asked him to switch seats before the convoy left.  If anyone deserves it, he does.

The good news is that the learning curve is steep.  The briefings we are getting as we prepare for this deployment are light-years better than what we got the first time.  I work with veterans in my government job and I know VA is making strides to correct these problems, but there is a long way to go.  The key is to keep talking about it.  Thank you OS for inviting these stories, and thank you all for reading and caring.

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open call, iraq, veterans, war, homecoming

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Hey all! Sorry it's been awhile. I am in sunny CA for three weeks of training and I have been pretty focused on getting my troops ready for this deployment. I'll try to get back in the swing, so keep looking!

-SFS
I'm about to leave, but I've bookmarked this to read when I get home. Great to see you back :D
Oh man, that is alarming. At least you possess amazing self-awareness. Hope you won't need more extensive help, SFS, but if you do, don't go back to that joker.
Thanks Kerry! I now know what resources are available for me and my troopies. All the rest of you, please make your veteran friends aware of the VetCenter program administered by VA. It's a walk-in center for combat vets staffed primarily by combat vets. Thank you so much for the Open Call and your work on PTSD and Soldier suicides. The stories need to be told.

-SFS
As someone who has a Master's in Liberal Studies I just want to say that your description of it is wonderful. I've often felt that my degree isn't taken seriously, yet it fits me perfectly and I worked damn hard for it.

I also like what you've just written. As someone who's had dealings with docs myself and on behalf of family members, I am saddened, but not surprised by what happened to you.
Thank you for telling your story.
Please keep posting after you deploy.
Didn't know about the Vet Center Program until now. Here's the page with the locations http://www2.va.gov/directory/guide/vetcenter_flsh.asp
Thanks for sharing your story SFS. I wish all soldiers would have the guts to talk about this.
Thanks for your stories SFS. Good to see you back. Good luck at NTC.
MJ
Hey, skinny! Nice to hear from you. Take care of yourself and your troops.
Thanks for sharing your story.
SFS: Hope you're enjoying sunny CA. We've had temps in the 4o's in the Land of Delight and think we can smell spring every now and then. We know you're doing you best to get ready and hope you know we're all thinking about you. Take care.
Goddamn it, I hate the sort of "patriots" who ask you and your friends to die for us and then don't demand that you get EVERYTHING you need to come home again.

God damn them.

I would gladly add 25% to my personal income tax bill every year to see VA funded the way it should be funded.

And anybody who wouldn't be glad for that is no patriot.
I am glad you shared this-know that back home we'll be keeping you and your troops in our thoughts and prayers.
Yes! The Vet Center. 40 years later my Vietnam Veteran husband has begun going there. And they see all family members too! They help with paperwork, appointments and benefits, not to mention how much it helps my husband to go talk with other combat veterans.
The VA in Austin, only a clinic really, was using brain wave bio-feedback to help veterans recover. It seems that alpha waves are extremely restricted by the body's ongoing stress response, keeping the person in a constant state of hypervigilence with difficulty relaxing. The biofeedback helps to train the person to first recognize alpha when it occurs and then practice maintaining the alpha state. This then leads to recovery. I've seen no long-term studies and I don't know if the treatment is still used.

PTSD has similar effects on folks who experience childhood sexual or physical trauma and people who've endured Amerika's prison system. Incidentally, Sigmund Freud first described the disorder among young women in Vienna, describing them as "hysterical," but his colleges -- no doubt some of whom were the perpetrators of incest and sexual abuse -- threatened to censure him if he pressed forward to publication. So Herr Freud, not wanting to sacrifice his career in medicine, rewrote his findings, attributing the "hysteria" to fantasies his female patients were having regarding sex with their fathers and other male family members. What he was describing was Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, biased by the sexism of Post-Victorian Europe.

I wish you health and long live. Thank you for sharing your life's narrative. Metta.
It's a national disgrace that any combat vet would have to battle with the government to get rated for PTSD.
Thank you for sharing and I'm glad you're doing ok. This is scary stuff. Why we can't treat and take mental health seriously is a crime against our veterans who put their lives on the line for us. I really hope there is more media coverage and outcry and that it brings about change.
Thanks again for reading everybody! I wish I could offer easy solutions for the many problems in bringing our veterans all the way home. If you're looking for ways to get involved and you live in the Twin Cities, check out the Warrior to Citizen Campaign at the U of M's Humphrey Institute. The rest of you, volunteer at your local VA hospital or check out Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America.

Cheers,

-SFS
skinny, I'll tell you this - as a worn, greybeard Vietnam dude; for you and your friends today to have the means to write and report on your experiences, practically in real time, to make the connections you're making here and elsewhere, and (as no small thing) to have the freedom as an American soldier to do it, is something to be grateful for.

Good luck. Stay safe. Protect your troops. Focus, focus, focus. And keep writing.
a happy light. jesus shit that's pathetic. thanks for what you do and for letting us know about your experiences.

i'm waiting for the day when ak47 means #47 andre kirilenko of the utah jazz.
SFS...just thinking about you today. Great writing - makes me want to read the "one that got away" after your visit to the Big House!
Blessings
thanks skinny for your generous words and saying what needs to be talked about. Let's keep putting pressure on Obama and his staff to assertively taken action with coalitions build to end all wars..let's build schools and hospitals in stead (ie Greg Mortensen's three cups of tea) mimi
Thank you so much. This helps me understand what my son did/does go through as a two-timer, now back stateside.