From a week ago: The Savannah Morning News had an excellent article, by Pamela E. Walck, called "One soldier's struggle: Sgt. fights anger, treatment system," linked here. (There's also video, but it's not as on target as the article is.)
Sergeant John Jones, now part of the Warrior Transition Unit at Fort Stewart, Georgia, is the subject of the article, and by any standard he has a lot on his plate.
He was deployed with the 3rd Infantry Division's 2nd Brigade's 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry as a gunner, serving his second combat tour at age 29, when he was injured by an IED blast in July of 2007. Less than six months later, doctors also discovered a brain tumor, and operated. Since then, though the difficulties you could anticipate from those incidents alone would be enough for one person to cope with, there's been more. Symptoms of PTSD, trouble with authority both on and off the base, difficulty sleeping, the sense in Jone's own words that his personality is not what it was before, a (fortunately) failed suicide attempt, etc. Really a painful story, of what sounds like a good man, having trouble coping with the after-effects of his injuries. The one peace in his life appears to be a rented cabin, where he goes for solace (and to fish!), yet is in danger of being taken away from him.
Walck does a great job reporting the story, and not settling for just the usual details. Through her work and Jones' own words, you're drawn into the story of what amounts to really a typically "wounded warrior." And while you find yourself pulling for Jones to survive and thrive, you can't help noticing that the "hope" held out for him is not much more than a handful of pills. Who he feels like he's lost, in his words -- echoing that of so many other combat vets with PTSD -- is "the old John," who he's now all but lost entirely. How he's going to get that guy back... is unfortunately anybody's guess. (As an additional difficulty, it's unclear whether his brain injury is making his behavioral issues worse -- it's likely that it is.) In the meantime, we can hope for peace and a healthy solution for Sgt. John Jones -- but for those who want a broader-than-usual, fully-developed "portrait" of one wounded warrior, struggling with the ravages of combat and PTSD, be sure to go here and read his story.




