The only place to start, is at the beginning, right?
My first entry isn’t about the “now.” It was written long, long ago, and quite frankly, it was written by a different person. I mean, it was “Me” but that life, that person and that world don’t exist any longer.
I wrote this letter to accompany my husband’s Med-Board in 2007. Little could I have known at the time, that things would only get worse.
It’s long….so thank you in advance if you stay with me until the end.
To Whom It May Concern:
My first entry isn’t about the “now.” It was written long, long ago, and quite frankly, it was written by a different person. I mean, it was “Me” but that life, that person and that world don’t exist any longer.
I wrote this letter to accompany my husband’s Med-Board in 2007. Little could I have known at the time, that things would only get worse.
It’s long….so thank you in advance if you stay with me until the end.
To Whom It May Concern:
This letter is about my husband, how much he has changed due to his service in Iraq and my fears about his future. I understand this may be long, but it is very important to me that you see the human side of this and not just what is written in medical records. I wasn’t sure if it was appropriate to go into detail about how much this has affected our family. Our 6-year-old son is seeing a therapist and has frequent outbursts of rage or crying. My 2 year old has become violent. I have started to see a therapist. I believe all of those things are important, and worth mentioning, but they are not the main issues I wish to convey.
Hubby has always been a very ambitious man. He sets his mind to something and he achieves it, and expects the same from others. If he ever had a flaw, it was only that he couldn’t accept mediocrity in himself or others. Since the day he joined the Army his superiors have gone out of their way to tell me what an exemplary soldier Hubby was. He has always been an attentive husband and father, easy going and fun. His sense of humor and giving heart has always ensured friends surrounded him. Three rotations to Iraq have turned him into a man that doesn’t resemble the man I met and fell in love with.
I think the best way to explain my fears for his future is to take you through the transformation. When my husband returned from his first rotation to Iraq he had already begun to change, although it was equally good and bad. He found humor in things that had happened in Iraq that I found inappropriate, although I saw that in all of the soldiers we were friends with in the platoon and I believe it is probably just a coping mechanism. On the other hand, he showed an appreciation and love towards the children and myself that was extraordinary. He saw what he could have lost and cherished us even more. As the year progressed, the things he and his friends had found humor in slowly began to wear at him and before he deployed again he left with a healthy amount of fear and realization about what he was again returning to face.
On my husband’s second rotation to Iraq I noticed a change in him during our phone conversations within months. Honestly, I was surprised about how forthcoming he was with me. If the things he told me about were so bad, and I know (and often find out from other people) there are things he hasn’t told me, I can’t imagine how horrible those things are. He worked as a sniper that tour and he told me about being in a hide and how close the Iraqi’s were to him, or that they found him and then he was in danger waiting to get picked up. He told me about capturing insurgents and how much it bothered him that one of them resembled our oldest son. With each of those things I noticed subtle changes, maybe him withdrawing from me a bit more, being more cautious, but nothing major. The thing that seemed to have the most impact on him was when he told me about a HMMWV that was hit by an IED; a soldier was trapped inside and burned to death. This was the first of two major turning points. After this time my husband became very argumentative. He harbored an anger that wasn’t quite rational, but wasn’t out of control either. I spent the next several months worrying about his return home and if he was going to continue to behave the same way.
I was sure when my husband returned home things would get better; surrounding him with our love had to have that effect. At work he threw himself into his job even more than ever. At home, he was withdrawing and becoming moodier by the day. He got to a point where he was so angry he was afraid he would hurt someone and felt he needed help. He went to the Chaplain who suggested all he needed was to pray. Less than a month later in a fit of rage he had a seizure. The doctors and his superiors danced around calling what was going on PTSD. In the end, everyone decided to avoid damaging his career, they would say he was suffering from stress. Of course, I’m not trained in anything, but living with him day to day, I was sure he had PTSD from my research. Still, though, he would get angry and come down from it. He was able to go to work and do his job effectively. Most importantly, I wasn’t afraid for the safety of my children or me at that time.
In March, 2007 Hubby deployed again to Iraq. He was edgier than the other times, again, because of everything he had seen and what he knew he had before him. The weeks leading up to it were more difficult than in the past because he was more distant and angrier. Upon arriving in Iraq things started getting worse almost immediately. This was during the surge, and the op-tempo was extremely high. He was living on 2-3 hours of sleep each night and becoming more and more irritable. After a while the unit tasked him out to work, again, as their sniper. I had talked to my husband right before his “fall off the edge”. ((THIS ISN’T ACTUALLY ACCURATE, BUT MY HUSBAND DIDN’T WANT ME TO DISCUSS THE WAY IT REALLY HAPPENED AT THAT TIME, I’LL TELL THAT STORY ANOTHER DAY)) Hubby was sent out on a sniper mission to clear a route. When he arrived back at the FOB they told him he was going to need to go out with the platoon on a mission on the same route. He called me to check in and tell me how tired he was but that he had to go back out. The next time I heard from him was after the incident. Hubby was inconsolable. He kept telling me how he had just cleared that route and the soldier stepped on an IED. He told me over and over again that they didn’t have any body bags with them and the soldier was put in his Bradley to go back to the FOB. He repeated several times how the solder stared at him the whole way. Finally I asked him why he had never closed his eyes. He sounded shocked when he told me it had never occurred to him. That was the end of normal for us. My husband has been a different person since.
The army sent him home a few weeks later on R&R because he was doing so poorly recovering from the trauma in theater. While he was home he had a massive breakdown. He had already been to the Army hospital here at Ft AnyPost begging for help, but the woman he went in to see fell asleep while he was speaking to her. We were traveling as a family in the car and he went “nuts” for lack of a better way to put it. He was punching and kicking the car, he was screaming like nothing I’ve ever heard before and hope to never hear again. We approached our Congressman for help and he referred us to Naval Hospital Florida. From there we returned home and my husband was hospitalized. Although things are not as bad as his first few weeks home, I would still describe his condition and our lives since this occurred as awful. He is not the same person he was when I married him, or even before he went on his last deployment.
The man I live with now is in his own world. The thing is, when left alone to do menial things it seems the only time he is at any peace, but only because he’s distracted from having to function in a normal capacity. Leave him in front of a game of solitaire or working on a car and he doesn’t have to care about anything. Put a real issue in front of him, as small as working out the logistics of who is going to pick up our child from day care and he is stressed to a point where he may explode in anger. He sleeps 6-7 hours a night, but I don’t believe he’s ever well rested because of the severity of his nightmares. He acts out scenes of being chased or fighting, he yells, he pulls weapons on those who are chasing him whenever he falls asleep. One night I woke up and he wasn’t in our bed. I found him crying in our living room. When I tried to talk to him about what was wrong all he could say was “I just can’t go back to Iraq again.” I tried to hold him and console him and assure him he wasn’t going back. He replied, “Baby, you don’t understand. I go back every night.”
I can’t imagine what his future holds, how he is going to deal with this from day to day. I can’t see a situation in which he would be able to keep a job when he leaves the army. Each morning he gets up for formation, and then comes home. He may have a meeting or appointment throughout the day, and then an evening formation. Other than that, he sleeps because of his lack of sleep at night and due to his medications. If he was able to work and stay awake, I can’t imagine anyone would be able to tolerate him. He doesn’t hear anything anyone is saying to him. While you are speaking he seems to be staring right through you. He doesn’t comprehend things in full the way they are presented. He forgets 90% of what I tell him, and if he doesn’t forget, he confuses the details. If you disagree with him or just say something he perceives is wrong, he blows up. My biggest fear is he is going to go back into the work force and end up being arrested for harming someone because he is so volatile. He has told me on many occasions he is afraid he is going to hurt me or himself in a fit of anger. He is not a well person.
My children and I walk on eggshells every day. We never know what will trigger his anger or depression. We can’t count on him to accompany us on family outings. We see his pain and it pains us. Despite everything, he remains the love of my life. My children and I will continue to learn how to live with someone with PTSD and my husband will continue to learn how to be someone who has to live with PTSD. When you send your spouse to war, you are afraid. Afraid they could be injured or killed. What you do not prepare yourself for are the injuries you can’t see. My husband was wounded in Iraq the same as any soldier with visible wounds.
I appreciate that you have taken the time to read this through your review.
Thank you,
ME
ME
Thank you for sharing - I think it's very important for people to understand what PTSD is doing to our troops and their families.
ReplyDeleteI think it's great that you've started blogging. This is going in my Google Reader.
ReplyDeleteI realize your post was written several years ago but i couldn't help but comment. Here i am searching the internet for something that doesn't exist.. a solution to my family's problems. My husband also served in Afghanistan and Iraq as a sniper. The job of a sniper brings out an entire different form of PTSD. I've sought help from the VA and other sources dedicated to helping veterans but have felt lost in the masses. PTSD is a term that is thrown around so loosely anymore. But when someone spends years looking through a scope and studying the details of the faces of those whose lives they personally take.. it is not something easily forgotten. Your description of your husband's struggles really hit home. My husband has to work so that we can pay our bills but can't hold a job for very long. It seems as though he is constantly searching for a new job. When he is not working he is sleeping. Not well however.. he has horrible nightmares and flashbacks. He was hit with an IED and grenade on two separate occasions. He has undergone major back surgery. Because pain medication makes him have flashbacks and also turns his already bad temper even worse.. we limit his intake. He is in constant pain. I attend most family affairs alone. We spend a lot of time at home. We have a 1 year old son. I worry about him growing up in the angry atmosphere of our home. My husband is a strong believer in tough love.. sometimes too tough. Anyway quoting you.. he IS the love of my life. And as hard as all of this is, I can't imagine life without him. Your blog helped me realize I'm not alone. I hope you know that you aren't either.
ReplyDeleteIt's amazing how that always works...I really needed to hear today that I wasn't alone in this...and here it is =) Thank you for your reply...I'm sorry you are also dealing with this, but one thing I've learned is with the support of the disabled veterans community we can not only get through this, but learn and grow from each others experiences.
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