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Clint Eastwood's lonely vigilante of Dirty Harry days lives in
American Sniper but now the killings have taken a toll and he has Post
Traumatic Stress ~ which virtually all combat veterans have to some degree. The
VA has been reluctant to tackle soul damage from veterans participating in
military combat but my own extensive experience as a heart centered counselor
and consultant with combat veterans with PTSD as well as recent studies have
conclusively shown that it is a significant risk factor in the rising military
suicide rate and it most certainly cannot be eliminated with drugs: Allen L
Roland, Ph.D
I
saw Clint Eastwood's American Sniper yesterday and I saw Dirty Harry in Khaki
(Bradley Cooper) who by dehumanizing the
enemy and eliminating them one by one as America's
most lethal sniper eventually became dehumanized himself, was diagnosed with
PTSD, and ironically eventually was killed
at home on a firing range by a troubled fellow serviceman with PTSD ~ who he was teaching how to shoot.
The
subtle signs were all there in Eastwood's film that Iraq was an unjust war at
the cost of approximately 5000 American lives and close to 500 thousand Iraqi
lives as well as millions of displaced civilians; His departing fellow soldier
and younger brother telling him as he arrived in Iraq on his fourth tour "This
is Fucked" ~ His
therapist having him visit a VA hospital to experience the walking and
permanently wounded ~ but he was still in
denial and convinced himself he was a hero who saved lives and that eventually
cost him his own.
The
movie deserves an Oscar as much as Hurt Locker in 2010 and in many ways was
more powerful than Hurt Locker. Bradley Cooper captured the inner torture of
killing others, even the so called enemy, as well as the obvious growing onset
of PTSD with each of his four tours of duty. Cooper deserves an Oscar for
his deeply moving performance where his combat company became more important
than his immediate family in that he was almost fatally consumed in the adrenaline rush
of combat before he finally realized he was ready to come home. Sienna Miller co-starred as Kyle's wife, Taya and
fully captured the anguish of living with someone you deeply love as they begin
to slip into the grey zone of PTSD ~ where they are seemingly no longer
there.
In an interview, Navy Seal author Chris Kyle admitted that he needed to dehumanize his
victims in order to kill them, calling them “savages” ~ but in
the process he lost his soul and his humanity.
Is there a better way, besides drugs, to treat PTSD in our
returning soldiers?
The answer is yes, according to myself
as well as Saybrook
University Psychology Professor Dr. Stanley Krippner. Krippner is the
author of two major recent books in the field: "Haunted by
Combat: Understanding PTSD in War Veterans" and the "Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder" series
in the "Biographies of Disease" series, among many other books.
Krippner was also mentor for my Master's
Thesis in 1975 ”Conscious Love, The Ultimate
Energy" and second reader for my
PhD dissertation in 1998 the Unified Field which identifies and
demonstrates a psychic energy field of love that exists not only beyond time
and space but also deepest within each one of us.
Stanley eventually wrote the forward for my book "Radical
Therapy, Surrender To Love and heal Yourself in Seven Sessions (Not Seven
Years)" which is used as a guide in my highly successful ongoing
Healing the Wounded Heart workshops in Northern
California ~ where I act as a volunteer
consultant, advisor and mentor for these transformation sessions.
Krippner says, that “American
Sniper” can usefully be seen as an anti-war movie.
What it doesn’t have is any of the clear instances of how to help someone like
Chris Kyle that we know how to do ~ but that the military health system is
unfortunately slow to adopt.
Saybrook
University has a strong history of research supporting veterans with
PTSD. Graduate Bart Billings, a colonel in the military, helped
organize the world’s longest running conference on combat stress, and has
testified before congress on the military’s overuse of anti-depressants to
treat mental health issues. Drugs are not the answer but are far too
often seen as the answer as Colonel Billings, a Clinical Psychologist with a 34
year military career as a Clinical Psychologist, explains ~ 8 minute video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F02HElsg8uI
A current Saybrook PhD Student,
Jason Frye, is currently conducting research on the psychological impacts of
being a sniper. In a recent study, he interviewed two demographically
similar men who had received sniper training ~ one of whom had confirmed kills
in the field, one of whom had never taken a life.
The sniper who had killed in the
field showed significant scores for PTSD, meeting 9 of the 13 criteria for
diagnosis, and showing “significant numbers in major depression with
suicidality, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder,” and numerous other issues.
An American
soldier dies every day and a half, on average, in Iraq or Afghanistan while
Veterans kill themselves at the rate of one every 80 minutes. More than
6,500 veteran suicides are logged every year ~ more than the total number of
soldiers killed in Afghanistan and Iraq combined since those wars and
occupations began.
A bag filled with violence inducing
psychotropic drugs are not the answer for treating our returning veterans, such
as Chris Kyle, especially since for every US soldier killed last year, 25 veterans
commit suicide. The US military has lost more troops to suicide than to combat
for the second year in a row and a better cause
versus symptom based understanding of combat-related risk factors for suicide
is now critical.
So let’s
take a closer look at the bagful of drugs (Care of big Pharma) that are
currently being thrown at Veterans as well as their adverse effects.
A new
SFVA study strongly suggests that soldiers who experience killing experiences
are twice as likely to attempt suicide ~ which strongly supports
the reality of soul damage as a contributing factor for veteran’s suicide as
well as the obvious need for a proven soul centered approach toward veteran
rehabilitation
In an important April
13, 2012 research study abstract entitled ~ KILLING
IN COMBAT MAY BE INDEPENDENTLY ASSOCIATED WITH SUICIDAL IDEATION ~ the SFVA released the following abstract which indicates
the possibility of soul damage with combat veterans who by dehumanizing the
enemy and killing them ~ become more dehumanized and suicide prone:
BACKGROUND:
The United States military has lost more troops to suicide than
to combat for the second year in a row and better understanding combat-related
risk factors for suicide is critical. We examined the association of killing
and suicide among war veterans after accounting for PTSD, depression, and
substance use disorders.
METHODS:
We utilized a cross-sectional, retrospective, nationally representative
sample of Vietnam veterans from the National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study
(NVVRS). In order to perform a more in depth analysis, we utilized a subsample
of these data, the NVVRS Clinical Interview Sample (CIS), which is
representative of 1.3 million veterans who were eligible for the clinical
interview by virtue of living in proximity to an interview site, located within
28 standard metropolitan regions throughout the United States.
RESULTS:
Veterans who had higher killing experiences had twice the odds of
suicidal ideation, compared to those with lower or no killing experiences, and
substance use disorders were each associated with higher odds of suicidal
ideation. Endorsement of suicide attempts was most strongly associated
with PTSD.
ONCLUSIONS:
Killing
experiences are not routinely examined when assessing suicide risk. Our
findings have important implications for conducting suicide risk assessments in
veterans of war. See Report:
These
findings offer even more justification for offering soul centered workshops for
combat veterans as well as other heart centered therapy. We’re
talking about soul damage here and only a heart centered intervention can
effectively treat that psychic despondency ~ as I have consistently demonstrated with combat veterans, over
the past five years, who have virtually all participated in killing
experiences.
And
therein lies my point ~ there are most definitely effective and proven ways to handle
PTSD other than throwing a bagful of drugs at them and one of them is the
heart centered Healing The Wounded Heart workshops we are facilitating with
Veterans with PTSD in Northern California.
I have
long felt and have now proved that PTSD is really Post Traumatic Heart Disorder
for a common symptom of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder is the inability to give
or receive love ~ which can obviously apply to non-veterans who have also
suffered significant loss or emotional childhood and/or adult pain.
I have also clearly
demonstrated that only after the soul is
activated through gratefulness can true self-healing occur for only then
does the client (veterans or otherwise) truly want to heal.
Using the premise that what is deepest within us is love (not anger) and
utilizing an action oriented approach to face and go through their heart felt
fears ~ these veterans, soon discover that beneath their pain, anger and shame
is not only love and joy but most importantly their true authentic self.
The
purpose then of the Healing the Wounded Heart Workshops i is to penetrate the
grey zone of guilt, aloneness and unworthiness, that many
combat War Veterans diagnosed with Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) experience,
and this is accomplished within a
supportive group setting through heart centered self-exploration, group
sharing, guided visualization and action oriented homework ~ where love,
gratefulness and joy eventually overcome inner
fear, anguish
and separation.
We call
each one of these 6 week (once a week) workshops Band of Brothers and 14 of
them have already been completed since early 2010 and Band of Brothers #15 will
commence later this month.
Using
Band of Brothers #5 as an example ~ 21 PTSD symptoms were included on the
evaluation survey and the veterans were asked to rate their level on the 1-10
scale ( with 1 being “ Very Poor “ and 10 being “ No Problem” for each of the
PTSD conditions Before and After the workshop. Here are the after workshop
results ~ with an average symptom improvement of 59%.
Symptoms
/ After workshop % Improvements
Sleep
Problem
67%
Nightmares
62%
Trouble
breathing 15%
Avoidance
63%
Isolation
69%
Emotional
Numbing 74%
Irritability/Anger
70%
Anxiety
53%
Depression
65%
Suicidal
Ideations 41%
Intrusive
Memories 58%
Super
alert issues 58%
Concentration
issues 55%
Energy
57%
Feeling
Joy
75%
Fear of
intimacy 63%
Physical
pain
36%
Emotional
pain 65%
Love
59%
Peace
69%
Compassion
41%
Gratitude
75%
The
figures speak for themselves but the ones that leap out are the 75% improvement
in Joy and gratitude. These combat veterans have not only
survived the ultimate firefight of battling fear on the journey to their heart but
are now experiencing the delight of not only being themselves but the joy and
gratitude that they are truly healing themselves and can finally begin to give
and receive love.
Here
are two participants comments from their workshop evaluation; “I
have progressed farther in the workshop’s 6 weeks than I have in 25 years of
on-and off private therapy. I’ve been given a very informative look at myself.
I understand much more about my own experiences. So many answers to so many
questions. I feel alive! Gaining a different perspective on life helps me
to see my true self. It’s nice to feel love and a sense of self-worth”
“My
quick temper and bouts with anger are gone. My dreams are no longer violent and
I have not flown out of bed since the workshop. I am able to fall asleep and
remain asleep. My relationships with my wife and family have improved
immensely. The comradeship that grew with the other participants was wonderful.
I feel very strongly that the “ Healing The wounded Heart “ workshop should be
added to the VA’s inventory of most effective tools used in re-adjustment
counseling to combat the life destroying effects of PTSD.”
Three years ago General Peter Chiarelli,
the Army’s No. 2 officer, acknowledged there are more effective ways to treat
PTSD than just drugs ~ a fact that
we have have been proving for over five years with our heart centered Healing
The Wounded Heart workshops for combat veterans with PTSD in Northern
California.
“There’s
no doubt that we’ve changed. We’ve totally done a 180. But have we done enough?
No. I want to do more, quicker. I want to have more of these secrets unlocked
faster. I want to understand what drugs we should use to treat these
symptoms, if we should use any drugs at all. I want
to look into alternative pain management. We are
finding there are other ways to handle pain that are more effective and allow a
person to feel a lot better than throwing a bagful of drugs at them.” General
Peter Chiarelli
“If having a soul
means being able to feel love and loyalty and gratitude, then animals are
better off than a lot of humans” ~ James Herriot, All Creatures Great and Small
Allen L Roland, Ph.D
Heart
centered spiritual consultant and advisor Allen L Roland can
be contacted at allen@allenroland.com Allen is also a
lecturer and writer who shares a weekly
political and social commentary on his web log and website allenroland.com. He is also a featured columnist on Veterans
Today and guest
hosts a monthly national radio show TRUTHTALK on www.conscioustalk.net