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.