For the first time since Vietnam, more than
a million Americans have served in overseas combat zones. Studies reveal that one in three of the men and women who return
from Iraq and Afghanistan will suffer emotional problems. This site is devoted to helping them and their families
recognize and adjust to the lingering trauma of their war experiences.
Many of today's veterans, especially those
engaged in Afghanistan and Iraq, are on an emotional path already walked by those of us who served in Vietnam. Both
generations of veterans share the fact of having served in a controversial war. Both
wars engaged a largely unidentifiable and unseen enemy. Both wars shared the intense violence of close-quarter
combat among small units. And finally, in both wars young volunteer soldiers shouldered the burden of
combat duty disproportionately.
The lessons learned by my generation of veterans
during our difficult years of readjustment can be used to help those of you who have most recently stood in harm's way.
One generation of veterans should never neglect the opportunity to help their fellow veterans who served before or after them.
This site acts on that opportunity.
In addition to providing free basic information
to veterans, this site is intended to serve as a clearinghouse for practical ideas to help them and their families. War forever changes those who survive. Perhaps
Edwin Starr's angry 1969 pop song “War” described it best: “War
[has] shattered many a young man's dreams. Made him disabled, bitter, and mean."
“Why?,” “Why me?,”
“Why not me?,” and, “Was it worth it?” are just some of the questions war survivors ask themselves.
In their war experiences, and in these questions asked by all survivors of trauma, germinate the seeds of PTSD.