Feral Jundi

Monday, September 5, 2011

Medical: Security Issues–A Top Five, By Angela Benedict

The other day Angela wrote me to ask about some of the issues that contractors are having to deal with in the war and at home. Stuff that get’s us into trouble on the job or with our personal lives. It’s a good list, and a good start. I am sure there are other issues we could talk about and hopefully this will get the mental juices flowing out there. A big thanks to Angela for putting this together.

I also forgot to give her one more area that really messes with guys, and that is the money issue. Sometimes people get into contracting against their wishes, all because they are desperate. You have scenarios where guys are extremely burned out on anything to do with the war or the military, but they have a family they need to feed and jobs are scarce at home.  So they begrudgingly get into contracting, and introduce this bitterness to the work place. They might not have any respect at all for contracting and the very basic guard duty jobs they are doing, and this attitude gets them in trouble with their co-workers and management.

The other reason why I like posting this stuff is that this gives those out there that are suffering, more tools and ideas on how to cope. Angela is the only one out there that has reached out to this community with a helping hand, and I think she is an awesome person for doing so. As a result, I send folks her way all the time.

I also get the hard emails now and then, and all I can do is listen and try to channel them to persons and places that can help. I definitely do not want to see another Danny Fitzsimons scenario where a contractor is suffering and yet they keep going after jobs to stay employed. But these are the guys that are walking time bombs in the contractor workplace. We need to find these contractors and help them before they hurt themselves or others.

Which by the way, and I mentioned this to Angela, I do not know what the suicide statistics are for contractors. I imagine there have been quite a few suicides, just because many contractors already come from a past filled with trauma–either as a cop or veteran of a war. But there are no studies at all about this area of contracting. If I were to speculate, the rates of suicide would be similar to that of the military or police. But this is just speculation….

I am also interested in all and anything that will help to create mental resiliency for war zone work. Because we all deal with some kind of personal demon or issue which can have an impact on our work, health, or relationships, and it is important to create a personal battle plan on how to work through those issues. You need to be constantly learning about yourself and continuously improving upon what makes you strong and resilient mentally. The pay off is the ability to work in this industry for the long term and still maintain a life at home.  The other pay off is that your mental state will not interfere with your job, and your decision making process will be enhanced and focused on winning the fight. –Matt

Security Issues – A Top Five.
By Angela Benedict
August 30, 2011
Five of the most debilitating issues in security disciplines are; addictions, relationships, PTSD, physical pain and suicide. Addictions are tied to relationship problems.  Alcohol and women get many personnel into serious, life-altering trouble.  Alcohol is especially problematic as it has such an engrained historical place and therefore acceptance within military settings.  It is a cultural norm.  The devastating effects of its status are seen as unfortunate, but not serious enough to curtail the place it holds in the culture.  If this happened, the positive ripple effect would be immense.

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Cool Stuff: Angela Benedict–A Walk For The Troops 2010

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Medical: An Extension Of Tactical Trauma Counseling Equals Training, By Angela Benedict

   Some more food for thought for those out there that are interested in mental resiliency training.  Angela has guest authored before and it is always a treat to hear what she has to say.  Feel free to make a comment here, or contact Angela direct at her Military Healing Center website.

   One thing that I keep thinking about with her articles is that it would be interesting to get her in the same room as Dave Grossman and have them chat about the subject of mental resiliency.  His website called Killology, as well as his books, are a fascinating study on the mind of warriors.-Matt

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An Extension of Tactical Trauma Counseling = Training

By Angela Benedict

Tactical Trauma Counseling is a recent ideological development that suggests military and law enforcement personnel require specialized counseling due to their specialized professions. Fortunately, the current reality is beginning to recognize that TTC is a requirement for operational effectiveness.  Beyond counseling, efforts are being made to ensure that Protector Professionals are getting a much more comprehensive training regime.  It is clear that knowing how to use a gun is not sufficient to surviving volatile situations.  Mental and emotional preparedness training is critical to wellbeing and long term career potential.

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Friday, March 26, 2010

Training: EDCD And Mental Resiliency Training For High Stress Operations

   This is a project that Angela and company have been working on, and I wanted to get the word out about it.  I like the concept and think that this is the kind of stuff that will allow anyone in this field, or any high risk field, to continue working and effectively dealing with mental trauma when it happens.

    EDCD gives you the tools necessary to deal with the tough stuff.  Things like deploying to disaster zones like Haiti where thousands of people have been killed, surviving IED’s and ambushes in wars like Iraq or Afghanistan, or having co-workers killed or wounded in these war zones. The idea of having the tools necessary to work through these traumatic events, or even help others who have gone through these traumatic events, is something that should be in everyone’s mental kit, and there just isn’t a lot out there that goes over this stuff. The modern militaries of the west have attempted to provide these tools of coping to the troops, but for private industry, there isn’t anything.  And we have talked about that here before and Angela has wrote some great stuff about the subject.

   Also, if you look at cases like Fitzsimmons, or with some of the suicides this industry has experienced, resiliency training might be something the companies could look at.  At least have something set up to direct contractors too if you have some contracts that put people in high stress positions.  The military is constantly trying to reach out to their soldiers in order to put a stop to any mental suffering out there.  Wars and disasters can mess up a brain pretty good sometimes, and civilian contractors are experiencing some of the same war time traumas as soldiers.  Yet there is nothing being done to deal with that fact.

   Now for a disclosure. I have never been through this course and I have not read any feedback about it. So I cannot give it the thumbs up or down.  But what I would like to do is promote it and get the readership to think about this stuff.  If you have gone through the course, I would love to hear your thoughts on the matter in the comments section.  I am sure Angela will pop up too if anyone has any questions.  –Matt

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Dear Colleague,

Resiliency has become a buzz word for all of us working within security and safety professions.

TRAINING personnel to adapt and prepare for high stress operations is a priority within all sectors.

EDCD TRAINING will help your teams to achieve higher levels of operational effectiveness.  What is EDCD?

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Monday, November 2, 2009

Medical: Resiliency As Positive Deviance–Rethinking Counseling and the Military, by Angela Benedict

   This is a treat.  Angela has been an active reader of FJ and of PMH, and definitely has done a lot of work on PTSD issues at her Military Healing Center. She is one of the few out there in her industry that actually care about the mental health of not only soldiers in the war, but of contractors as well. So it is a pleasure to showcase some of her work as a guest author on FJ.

   You can see the theme with today’s posts, and we really need to be thinking about the mental health aspects of this industry.  In order to continue doing this kind of work, you need to arm yourself with the mental tools for longevity. Angela is a great person to talk to, if you want to assemble that mental tool kit. –Matt

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RESILIENCY AS POSITIVE DEVIANCE: Rethinking Counseling and the Military

By Angela Benedict

We live in a world that functions in a myriad of negative deviances. Child abuse and sexual trafficking, domestic violence and condoned incest, corruption and extortion, rewarded dishonesty and extreme poverty, torture of war criminals and sexual partners, embedded violence and jealousy, materialism and isolation.    We live in fear of our neighbours, foreigners, family members and ourselves.  We are on guard, awaiting the next attack from our boss, our co-worker, our spouse, to be projected at us by the news, the internet.  We often see power misused.  Most of us feel powerless.

It is not surprising that over the last 30 years there has been a steep incline in the cases of mental illness.  Depression is ranked highest followed by spikes in schizophrenia, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, and other psychotic illness.  Stress is cited as the cause.

Out of this incline another trend has appeared, that of the trauma counselor.  Trauma has begun to define us.  We are not our accomplishments as much as we are a society identified by our ailments.  We are a depressed society living in disastrous times where our expectations are that things will only get worse.  This is a tough perception.

Currently, the field of trauma counseling is receiving harsh criticism from within the ranks of psychology where it is being viewed as a reinforcement to not only illness, but to negative deviant behaviours.  Given the high stakes of the epidemic status of post traumatic stress, a solution must be found soon. Resiliency training can become the counter to the negative and be used to reinforce positive deviance.

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