Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Normality is Just a Word

Tonight, I heard a pretty poignant thing in a commercial for a new movie coming out. 

“Don’t go to men who are willing to kill themselves, looking for normality.”

It got me thinking about my experiences and how much things have changed.  I’m going to admit it; there is a higher level of adrenaline rush found in combat that can be found in no other arena.  And it’s VERY addictive.

Sure, you hear about it all the time.  Vets either participating in the most extreme of sports or going off the deep end looking toward crime just to feed the addiction.

Some of us however, go another route.  I have little want or need to participate in anything that would give me that rush, ever again.  Just as smells or songs can recall memories, adrenaline rushes remind me of a time in my life that has affected me in ways I’d rather not remember. 

I’m not even aware that I’m remembering most of the time.  I just flash back and a few hours later, I’m asking my wife what the hell happened and praying to a God I no longer believe in that I didn’t hurt anyone.

But, indeed, men and women who are unlucky enough to have survived the war no longer have what can ever be considered “normality”.  We’re all broken in one or more ways.  We even sometimes envy the ones who died.

Simple things aren’t normal anymore.  That “night out” isn’t relaxing or fun.  It comes at a cost.  That cost is normality.  We go out to dinner and scan for the exits.  We set where we can see the exits and watch everyone coming in or going out. We formulate a plan of escape and scan the perimeter for cover. 

We look hard as we approach crowds; access the situation, look for possible unfriendlies, scan for potential targets, and reach for a weapon that isn’t there.

We spend hours ramping up for that “night out” knowing we’re going out naked with no intel, no briefing, no plan, no backup. We’re still fighting.  In our minds, we’re all still putting on our rattle and going into the shit.  Only this time, and every time, we’re alone.

In the years following my return from deployment, I’ve come to find that “normality” is subjective.  One man’s “normal” is another man’s “crazy”.  It’s finding ways of dealing with our own construct of normal that matters.

Once, I told the doctor I was afraid of being crazy.  He chuckled and told me that truly crazy people don’t care that they’re crazy.  Therein, caring proves your sanity.


I’ve struggled with what is now normal for me and have come to terms with the fact that I must continue to deal with my version of normality until the day I die.  It’s just who I am.  I’m broken, but not destroyed.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

I was a Combat Medic

Originally posted December 14, 2010 on my wife's blog.  

It's taken me a long time to commit to writing about my life with PTSD, and sometimes I just don't have the energy to put the words down, so when my wife told me she'd like me to post some of my older writings on this blog, I jumped.  It's been a rough couple of weeks; I'm just barely making it.  But the fight goes on, and will continue...

-

I was a Combat Medic. My guys called me 'Doc'. I died in Iraq.

I don't remember the exact day and time, but somewhere in the dirty rural streets of Iraq I met my fate. What exact circumstance or series of events had finally caught up to me eludes recollection, but I can say with all certainty, at that very instance time ceased to be linear and became a chaotic mess.

There were no letters home.  No sharply uniformed soldiers knocking on a loved one's door. There was no drill team toting my flag-draped carcass off an airplane.  No flag was handed off to my grieving mother by my commander. None of that. Those guys are the lucky ones. They did their job then left it behind to go to heaven or to be reincarnated or whatever construct they had made for themselves in the afterlife. I've held the hand and brushed back the hair of countless men and tried to comfort them as they left my futile struggle with God.  Is it wrong that I harbor a great deal of resentment for not having the same luxury?

I may not have died in the literal sense but I died none the less.  The person that came home was not me. All that remains of that person are faded photographs of some kid with no clue and little motivation for anything. I've never thirsted for innocence as I do now. I envy children. What bliss they must have in innocence.

-
The trip home was blur and all I can really remember is waking up in Germany, waking up in Baltimore, and my sphincter biting a hole in the seat of that GSA van as we entered the on-ramp leading from the airport onto the highway. And me with no weapon, no hoards of heavily armed men covering my nearly naked ass.

I remember waking up sweating and freezing in my parents' house. Not really sure where I was, I reached for my Kevlar. It wasn't there. I fumbled for my Level 4. Not there either. Nothing was there, no weapons, no noise, no nothing.

The first cognitive sight I had was of the ceiling fan beating the air above the bed. It looked like home. But there was an oppressive atmosphere that hung over everything. I felt like I was frozen. I couldn't move. Not one muscle. It wasn't easy to chew at the time but I was absolutely terrified for the first time since my first intimate encounter with live rounds.

Rolling out of my rack, I all but low-crawled to the bathroom. Regaining some composure, I turned on the faucet, filled my hands with water and splashed my face, a novelty I had not had for quite some time. Rubbing my eyes vigorously to clear my blurred vision I caught a glimpse of myself. It took a while to sink in, a couple of hours really, but something didn't seem right about my stare. I had noticed it once before when I was in theatre.  I reckon, something inside of me at the time was either fucking busy or subconsciously I had denied it. Anyway, it was there... again.

We've seen it before. That 'ocular emptiness,' if you will. I remember seeing this look on countless faces before. Patients with massive head injuries, those who had an altered mental status, the same look which accompanies the 'passion that kills'. Totally devoid of emotion, compassion, anything. I remember not feeling anything.

As if those notions weren't alien enough, I then embarked on what I can only call a residual haunting. Unlike the ghosts that go about moaning and moving stuff or showing up on surveillance cameras, my apparition only appears at the most inopportune times.  My ghostly embodiment changes but most of the time I become a poltergeist. Throwing things around. Hitting things. Breaking stuff. And immediately after one of these episodes it feels like I'm duct-taped to a flagpole in the town square naked. People all look at you in disgust and everyone is too afraid to try to improve the situation. You try to scream through the tape on your mouth but no sound comes out.

Somehow the whole world has changed. I left my country safe and sound. I left it in good hands. I went off to do the things that would ensure that it would be there when I got back. Hell, that was the only thing that really kept me going. 'One day, I would be back and pick up like nothing had happened.'

No, the world I returned to was totally FUBAR. I remember cursing out loud and commenting on how fucking stupid all these people back here had become. I remember listening to folks talking about things they thought were important with my mouth gaped open. And I remember my first altercation with someone whining about their infantile issues which I thought were little more than a cold pile of bullshit. I'm sure in their safe little stick house they had built for themselves, their 'problems' seemed like a big deal but I wasn't hearing it. There's a lot of sadness in this world and no one really gives two shits that you have to wait in the line for an hour or think your job is too hard. Give me a fucking break. Really?

Since then, the world continues to plummet out of control. It seems like the lunatics are all running the asylum. Hell, I'm waiting for some dickhead to nominate Charles Manson for President in the upcoming election. That would seem perfectly normal in this alternate universe I now live in.

I want my life back. I want my world back.

-
My only saving grace, the ONLY thing I wouldn't change, the singular reason that I haven't run hot lead through my brain before now is my wife. She's not your run of the mill wife. No, she really does sport a big red and yellow 'S' on her chest. And for some unbeknownst reason, she loves me.

Oh sure, we've had fights. We've struggled. I've broken things and acted a complete ass, made her cry over nothing. At the end of the day she still hugs and comforts me. Sometimes, just as now, when I think about the raw deal she was dealt when she drew me, it makes me cry. She deserves so much more than I can ever give her but I pray that somehow I never do anything that would make her go away. I need her. I don't just need her for emotional support and love, but my very existence hinges upon her. Without her, I am nothing.

I can tell the years of dealing with this has caused her to become weary. I can hear it in her voice and see it on her face. I ask her what's wrong and she just replies 'nothing' but I know all too well how taxing taking care of someone else can be. She tells me I'm paranoid for thinking she would ever leave. I dunno, maybe something in me is and I use that as a defense to keep myself in check. After all, fear keeps you sharp.

She shrugs often and just smiles when I speak about her just as a religious zealot would speak about his or her perspective deity. And the notion of someday saying or doing something to cause her harm is a sobering thought. I know within myself lies a monster but unlike most people that carry this specter, as of yet I have not directed my aggression solely onto her. For that is a path taken by a fool. I may be fucking nuts, but I am no fool.

One can go crazy trying to figure out why our situation is so much different than others. Maybe it's the fact that I was a Medic trained to care for people. Maybe it's the fact that my grandfather always insisted that under no circumstance was it appropriate to strike a woman. I can't say exactly and I don't really want to know. All I want is for her to be happy and know that she is loved.

Monday, May 13, 2013

Bad days and Freedom


Sometimes, the things that need to be said are unpleasant to hear.  Sometimes we need to know someone else is feeling those same desperate thoughts.  Frustration and anger cave in and direct the words that are sometimes frightening for those who love us and sometimes just writing them out is cathartic and lets us breathe long enough for it to pass.   I’m posting this because of that.  It was a bad day, and this is how I felt.

 _

What is freedom?  Is having it the driving force behind why we enlisted?  Is it what we wrote that "blank check" to defend?  Is it not being incarcerated? Please tell me, I want to know, because freedom is a little more than a fleeting thought to me as I am trapped in this prison that is my head. 

We really don't have "freedom" in the literal sense.  We're NOT free to go to the mall naked.  We're NOT free to punch the people who really deserve it.  Hell, we're not even free to smoke a cigarette in a restaurant that sells food that has been proven to contribute to all sorts of health problems.

But I will tell you what freedom isn't.  It isn't something you have once you take that step and ask for help.  Especially if you were serious about your attempt to end your life.

It's quite the opposite actually. The very moment you seek help and admit that you have had the notion of hurting yourself, your freedom is GONE.  Completely.  Shit, they even take away your clothes. 

They dress you up in maroon "look at me I'm nuts" pajamas and medicate you well beyond the "jello" state.  And once you get used to the medication, it's MANDATORY that you go to the day room for a few hours throughout the day.

Ah, the day room.  Where the old Vietnam vet is talking to himself whilst shuffling his slippered feet until he hits the wall, staggers back and repeats shuffling into the wall for hours.

The day room.  Where you're free to play checkers...  With yourself.

The day room.  Where the puzzles are all 100 pieces or less.

The day room.  Where the air smells like medicine, urine and feces.

The day room. Where the condescension from the staff runs rampant as they hand out plastic model kits of cars and airplanes that are not snap together. Oh, and don't even ask for glue because then, you know, they alert the doctor because they think you want it for huffing and not for its intended purpose. 

You're at their mercy and if they're having a bad day, you are too.  They look at you with their judgmental eyes not knowing what you've seen, what you've smelled, what you've caused. And as they stand there with relaxed yet guarded body language, you know in your heart that they have never done anything but take a few classes and a civil service test.  You hate them.

You hate them so much.  Your inner destructiveness turns to images and thoughts of knocking them down or holding them against the wall, wrapping your hand around their trachea and squeezing until the life in their eyes fades. You hate them until the newest round of mandatory meds kick in and you fall off into a subconscious fog.  Minutes, hours, days all go by without solid memory and it feels like time has betrayed you.

Once they feel comfortable enough to let you go, they then monitor EVERY aspect of your life.  Yup, you my friend are under the microscope and nothing is left to secrecy not even your finances as they tell you how and when to spend your money... For the rest of your life.

Freedom my ass!  Those Soviets had it good compared to us my friend.

I'm not free.  No sir, not me. I'm forever stuck in that god damned day room... the only difference is, it's in my mind now.  Every day I'm a prisoner to this sick, twisted, demented side effect of giving a shit and trying do something worthwhile.  My only crime is, I cared.

But there is one tiny sliver of "freedom" I have.  I am not incarcerated by the VA currently.  And I'll be god damned if I EVER allow them to lock me up again.  One tends to learn the "correct" responses to the questions they ask, even if its all a lie.  I've always been honest, it's the way I was raised.  But, the VA has made me into an outright liar at times.  I know exactly what they want to hear to keep me off that ward and out of the "real" day room.

I looked it up once...  The word "freedom".  But, I have a different definition than Webster.  Freedom is locking yourself up to keep others safe.  Freedom is within the safety of your own personal compound. The only thing that has changed in my mind is that it isn't me that I want to do harm to anymore. It's the stupidity that is allowed to openly graze upon the earth. 

Everyone is safe as long as I stay self-incarcerated in my own personal day room.  And they don't know how lucky they are.

Monday, February 11, 2013

I have...


I'm Chris and I have PTSD.  

Why the hell does that sound like I'm supposed to be ashamed of it?  Why does that feel like something I'd say after I lit a candle in front a group of others who are unwilling but remanded to be rehabilitated?

I didn't want to be this guy.  I didn't want to be the "crazy old vet down the street".  I didn't even want to be a vet yet.  I was a Combat Medic.  I was supposed to finish my career.  I was supposed to endure years and years of dry, poorly written correspondence courses.  I was supposed to add chapters to my training folder and make sure all the boxes were checked. I was supposed to keep my CEU's current.  I was supposed to add a third and fourth volume to my shot record.  I was supposed to set and wait for promotions and better than average TDY's.  I was supposed to mold the minds of my junior enlisted and make competent Medics and leaders out of them.  

I had never even given thought to "retirement".  No, not me.  I was in for the long haul. I was one of those guys that made sure the rank wasn't waiting on me.  I was the guy that knew the uniform reg down to the letter and was always fresh pressed and sharp.  I was the guy that came in early and left late.  I was the one that had discipline, drive and aspirations of one day being that jaded E-09 with the grizzled squint and the gruff voice that everyone feared and admired. Hell, I even had plans to commission and go on to Physicians Assistant training. 

None of this was in the cards I suppose. I was destined to be the one that shone brightly then burned out quick. The one that disappeared into obscurity.  The one that people in the unit would later ask "what ever happened to".  The one whose job ended up costing him more than just hard work.  The one who wasn't strong enough to get over the things he saw and did.   The one who got broken and couldn't be fixed.  The one that was discharged.

I don't know how much of the things I'll write about will help any of you.  But if just one person finds any comfort or help from the things I put into words, then it would have all been worth it.  I guess I'm predisposed to help in any capacity I can. Once a medic always a medic I guess.

I'm Chris and I have PTSD.