Dr. Judy Halliday

Life Lessons, Coaching, and Consulting from a Psychological Viewpoint

SUSTAINABLE FOCUS

Although I should be ecstatic that my son is now home after serving almost fifteen months in Iraq, I can’t begin to describe how parents, wives, siblings, friends, and others who continue to have loved ones overseas feel. I can anticipate the effects of PTSD because of my field. However, how can those without the pedagogy of psychology assist those returning home? Each day I prayed that no troops were hurt or killed (each day I continue to pray until our last troop comes home). To this day more than 4,000 military members have been killed and that doesn’t count those who are permanently wounded, both physically and mentally. If each military member has four family members in their inner circle (this is just an arbitrary number - mother, father, sibling, or child) that is 160,000 individuals who have been negatively affected. If each of those 160,000 has four more family members, the total becomes 640,000. Exponentially, it becomes mind-boggling. This number is conservative. I have no tacit knowledge of how many lives have been affected. I do however know that military psychologist (APA division 19) are doing everything they can to gather information about how to help our soldiers and families.

 

     Although I am a Psychologist, I have no barometer to measure how my son has been troubled by the loss of more than 144 members of his unit (The Big Red One, Infantry Division from Fort Riley, Kansas). His best friend Cpl. William D. O’Brien was killed in action just days before they were due back home. I have no barometer to measure how his psyche was affected when he was involved in the roadside bombing last year. This makes several times he has escaped death. I have no barometer to measure how he can overcome the constant gunfire, explosions, raids, and loss of life that will forever remain in his conscious and subconscious. I have no barometer to measure how he or others who have walked in those shoes will adjust. Some adjust well, some do not. The military is served well by sharing information and training Chaplains, Army Community Service, and leaders about transition strategies.

 

I do appreciate the saliency of sustainable focus. Sustainable focus is how you get through the good times and the bad times. Sustainable focus is how you can conceptualize and begin to understand the unexpected loss of a dear friend (RIP Gregory Cross, you were always a beacon of light  http://www.savannahmenu.net/info_pages.php?pages_id=553 ). Sustainable focus is how you can maneuver the nuances of life whether they are negative or positive. Sustainable focus is being able to see the smile on my son’s face and the smile on his wife’s face. You too can have sustainable focus because there is always something that is positive in this world.

 

 

Cheers,

 

Dr. Judy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

April 14, 2008 - Posted by Dr. Judy | Lessons Learned | , , | No Comments

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