aTmAg
I posted this reply on the History forum also just in case there are people who are interested, but don't normally check out both forums.
My apologies up front because this is kinda long. I am an active duty Combat Engineer in the Army. In case you don't know what a Combat Engineer does, we do route clearance missions, and are trained to use explosives. I have been on 5 major deployments since 2001. In 3 days, it will mark 20 months since I returned from my last deployment in 2009. This 20 month period is the longest period of time that I have not been deployed since 2001. The only reason I am not currently deployed is because they are still evaluating how I am responding to the most recent psych meds that I have been prescribed to help control my PTSD.
PTSD has been around for centuries. One of the first descriptions of PTSD was made by the Greek historian Herodotus. In 490 BC, he described an Athenian soldier who suffered no injury from war but became permanently blind after witnessing the death of a fellow Soldier, during the Battle of Marathon.
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quote: I don't have numbers with me or anyway to prove it right now, but it is my understanding that an unusually high portion of those reporting PTSD issues after WWII were from Urban areas while those living in rural areas were under-represented.
You then replied: Perhaps this has more to do with the fact that people in rural areas typically grew up hunting a lot. So they are used to shooting, gutting, etc. animals. By the time they are adults, the stigma with that is gone.
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Alvin York suffered from PTSD for years after WWI; Likewise, Audie Murphy suffered from PTSD for years after WWII. They both grew up in rural areas and hunted their whole life, so that debunks the whole grew up shooting, gutting animals theory to some degree. Or, at least, it does to me. Neither one of these Medal of Honor Recipients was ever officially diagnosed with PTSD, but you can see the signs when you read about their post war years.
I grew up in a rural area southwest of Houston along the coast and the first time my Dad took me hunting, I was 4 years old. From the age of 4 until after I graduated from college, I was an avid hunter. No amount of shooting, gutting animals truly prepares somebody for being in combat, especially the type of combat that today's warriors face. The wildlife isn't trying to shoot you or blow you up. That makes a Hell of a difference. Growing up shooting animals only gets you used to the sound of gun-fire, the site of blood, and generally improves your marksmanship. No matter how much hunting or shooting you have done in your lifetime, if you spend enough time in high-stress combat situations, you are at risk of eventually getting PTSD!
In my opinion, one of the biggest reason that our warrior Fathers, Uncles, Grandfathers, Great-Grandfathers, etc had less PTSD after their combat experiences is the fact that they never sought any kind of treatment from psychiatrists, psychologists, or other types of counselors because it JUST WASN'T DONE back then. My Korean War Combat Veteran Dad personally thought that those kinds of doctors were pretty much the same as witch doctors, and he would have never even entertained the notion of going to one for counseling.
Based on the advances in technologies over the years, modern warriors end up spending a significantly higher percentage of their "war-time experiences" in close proximity to where the combat actually happens; where you have to be hyper-vigilant and have your head on a swivel to look for danger that can suddenly come from anywhere. Warriors from ancient civilizations, on the other hand, had to spend great periods of time just getting to the place where their "war-time experiences" were going to take place.
AGGIE12B
JC '88
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