
By Ph.D. Paula J. Caplan
A psychologist's impassioned name to prevent labeling our traumatized conflict veterans as mentally ailing and a consultant to how each citizen may help returning vets
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17 Daniel, a Vietnam vet, said that in order to survive his time in combat as an infantry sergeant, he had to “become a machine,” program himself to do the strategizing and decision making and barking of orders for which the stakes were—relentlessly—nothing less than the lives of his men and others. On one occasion, his platoon was surrounded by the enemy, and he knew that either some or all of his men would be killed. He was supposed to call in the artillery to help, and to do that, he had to give them the coordinates to inform them of the infantry’s location and say where he wanted the artillery to fire.
Most people are probably less aware that therapists’ lobby groups and Big Pharma (major drug companies) may not have soldiers’ best interests at heart (see chapter 3). Thus, in our society, although we rush to call suffering vets mentally ill, we do not take the obvious next step of saying, “If we are going to say all these suffering vets are mentally ill, then that means that war is causing mental illness on a massive scale, so we had better consider the implications of that. ” In the meantime, that definitely is not happening, so for the most part, each veteran (and, for those who are lucky to have loved ones, this applies to the loved ones as well) is left to feel, “The problem comes from within me.
In addition, there are the physical conditions under which the wars are fought. What does it do to one to try to function in unbearable heat and humidity, as in Vietnam’s rainy season, or in unbearable heat and with fierce sandstorms hitting one’s eyes and lungs, as in the desert wars? ”25 The Eight Plagues of Combat Putting together what vets from various wars have told me with what they have written or spoken about publicly, at least eight sets of feelings and experiences are common consequences of fighting in a war: • • • • • • • • trauma grief and sadness fear and anxiety guilt and shame rage conflicts of values and crises of meaning betrayal and mistrust isolation, alienation, and numbing These are often present in various combinations.