Invisible Wounds
“I understand that it’s not sexy to talk about treatment. But the maddening thing about PTSD is that it’s completely fucking fixable.”
Invisible Wounds
“The military is mostly filled with people who genuinely desire to do the right thing.”
Invisible Wounds
“We met in college. Mark had long hair and a beard. He was class president so there were posters of him hanging up around campus.”
Invisible Wounds
“I don’t feel good about it. It will bother me for the rest of my life and honestly I’m happy about that.”
Invisible Wounds
“I have professors at Columbia who view me as a terrorist for fighting in Iraq.”
Invisible Wounds
“I don’t think it’s possible to be a medic in a conflict zone and not have something stay with you.”
Invisible Wounds
“I was inside an armored carrier with my platoon commander. He tried to open a pressurized fuel container and it sprayed across the vehicle and hit a camping stove that he was using to make hot chocolate.”
Invisible Wounds
“Everyone who comes back from deployment fills out a form. It’s a standard psychological evaluation.”
Invisible Wounds
“I was in charge of 250 Marines during my second deployment. We were assigned to a district called Sangin.”
Invisible Wounds
“We got called out one day to assist a fuel convoy that was being pinned down by gunfire.”
Invisible Wounds
“I didn’t fit in too well in training. I came back from drinking one night and I was three minutes after curfew.”
Invisible Wounds
“My father was a platoon sergeant in the Pennsylvania National Guard. But nobody ever thought I’d join the military.”