Wow Tactman, welcome to the forum!! I am so glad that you found us and that you are posting.
You are so strong and brave for coming here and talking about your situation. Do you realize that?

It is a damn hard thing to do.
Ever since my own critical incident (a series of 5 explosions rocked my small town, killing 2 and injuring many others) I have often wondered how our soldiers are dealing with this kind of thing abroad. What you are seeing is as bad or worse than what I saw. (I saw it
all as an emergency responder) And unlike me it is not just a one-time thing... it is over and over again. I actually feel remorse when I swat a fly, or squash a spider... I
cry when I hit a squirrel with my car... how do you guys do the things you do over there? It is completely boggling to me. When you say "
The things I am ordered to do, while in the greater good of our country, is eating me up morally as a human and a soldier." -- that is what I would
expect, Tactman. You are not a robot. You are a normal, good person. Being upset by the things you witness is entirely reasonable and expected!!!
Your comment:
Quote:
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They tell me I need to learn to lock these events away and never think of them again. Im not wired that way and it is literally eating me up on the inside.
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Your inability to lock it away, the fact your are wired to be more sensitive and perceptive, the fact it is eating you up on the inside -- I have read these are all common traits of PTSDers. We are, by nature, sensitive, considerate, and caring. PTSDers are often characterized as people who "care too much," and it is in that extra caring that we get burned.
Regarding your unwillingness to give up all you have worked for... Oh, do I understand that!!!!! Totally and completely. I had grown my own bricks-and-mortar retail shop for 10 years, and had been an EMT for 12 years, every ounce of me was about those 2 things. One was my pride, the other was my life's passion. The hardest thing I ever had to do was cut back on my calls... then cut back shop hours... then cut back business operations... finally when I got to the point where the PTSD had made me a completely stupid bumbling idiot (seriously, it stole my brain, I could not figure out how to vacuum the floor!) I had to face the fact that I might have to give up my business and being an EMT
forever. That was a
horrible struggle. I blamed myself for being weak, I couldn't figure out why I was so broken, my self-esteem was ZERO. I had lost everything... my business, my love, and my intelligence.
(More on this later, hang on...)
My point here Tactman, is that you don't have a magic button to push, or a magic switch to flip, that will make this PTSD go away. You have what is very likely a lifetime illness that you must now manage. It
is possible to manage it.
Everything I have read (specifically, the docs from the VA are very good) agrees that successful treatment involves being removed from the stressor (war zone) and embarking in therapy (sessions, reading, meds, whatever). A basic tenet to PTSD treatment is that you have a "safe place" that you can retreat to physically or at least mentally. If you are re-submerging yourself in the traumatic environment, I don't know how that can work towards recovery? I know I certainly was not able to return to the location of my trauma for many months... and even so, it's not with a clear mind. To this day I am still swallowing hard and using grounding techniques, just to
drive through.
I understand completely how it feels to face the possibility of losing everything you've been working for for so long. It is a nasty feeling.
However, I finally came to realize this: I am no longer a person who is well-suited to do the things I used to do. That is, to try to stay with the old game plan is counter-productive. It's like trying to stick my foot in a glove. It's a bad fit and it's only going to result in my becoming
very sick,
and I am going to grossly fail the task at hand (and maybe hurt other people!).
I tried for months and months to become the person I used to be. Oh how I pined to be that energetic, bright, beautiful girl again! I have finally accepted, sadly, that she is gone. Her core spirit and goodness is still there, way deep down ;) but she has matured and changed into someone else now.
No one can make themselves be someone they are not.
Tactman, I also found someone that I could model my behavior after, while I was suffering. I find it interesting that we share that commonality too.

I knew I was sick and "broken," and I could not figure out how to feel right again, and I happened across this fellow online who writes like I think. He has a delightful blog, a wicked sense of humor, and he was proof to me that a person could look at life the way I used to and succeed. He was an incredible inspiration for me for a long time. For me, it was a helpful coping strategy. If it helps you to get through the tough spots, that's great! Do what works.
But when it stops working, either you have to come up with a new system, or you have to remove yourself from the situation. I think that you as a good and reasonable man knows that. Ultimately you are going to have to get your PTSD treated. It is not going to go away. It will only get worse. That's how it works. To get better, you have to consciously work at it. And yes, that may cost you your current position in the military. That's not a bad thing if you are a different person who is not perfectly suited to that position. People change. There is no judgment and no failure there. You are changing due to something which makes you uniquely strong in other ways... you have a gift, an ability that some of your team members do not have. Right now that gift feels like a curse, because it's opening the door for PTSD, which is trying to screw up your plan here. However when you are in the right job, the right position, doing the right thing, that gift thrives and shines and it HELPS people. You can use it to amazing good.
Tactman, I hope I have offered you some hope and perspective from my own struggles. I am
so proud and happy that you are here. That's awesome!! :)
Don't give up!! We need you and we care about you... yes, complete strangers

believe me, you and your fellow soldiers are on our minds ALL THE TIME. We are saying silent prayers for you ALL THE TIME. And, you always have friends on this board. This is a warm and welcoming place.
Take care, Tactman. I will keep you in my thoughts. And I will try to dig up some URLs of materials that really helped me a lot.
:) Bailey