Veterans
Related: About this forumMy continued struggle with PTSD, depression, and suicide
I don't know how many people remember me, know who I am, or even noticed that I wasn't around much over the last several months. However, for anyone who cares, I figured I'd at least check in and give an update to anyone interested. I posted the following thread back in July after I was released from the psych ward the first time: [url]http://www.democraticunderground.com/11795677[/url]
However, a few days after updating the above thread, I checked myself back into the psych ward after I had a couple of really rough days. I finally was released on 2 October and returned to work on 7 October. Since then, I've been having a very hard time dealing with daily life. I'm starting to feel more and more distant from my wife and kids - like I did before my suicide attempt in June and I continue to feel increasingly depressed, anxious, and jumpy. Work is getting harder and harder for me to do and I believe that HR and my boss are trying to figure out how to get rid of me as I'm almost totally incapable of handling my job.
If I didn't have a wife and kids that needed me for their emotional well being and for their financial security, I'd be out of here in a heartbeat and spend the foreseeable future in the VA psych ward. I liked the psych ward and miss it tremendously. I hate being out of there and I hate having to trying to be "normal" all the time.
I shake, I constantly jump at everything, I have a hard time focusing on what I'm doing, I'll walk 3 steps from the refrigerator to the microwave and forget what I was doing. I'll take a shower and forget if I even just washed my hair. My wife yells at me for being incompetent and not being able to get simple things done. I forget to pay bills. My wife tells me to do or not do something and then 30 seconds later I'm doing exactly what she just told me not to do as I've completely forgotten what we just talked about. At work I forget steps in things I've been doing for years, I zone out and don't hear anyone, and I feel like a total freak and I constantly have memories of Iraq playing in my head. I really don't think I'm going to be holding on my job for much longer.
I know I'm on the verge of the last phase of my life. I'm 34 years old and I honestly expect that this time next year my wife and kids will have left me, I'll be unemployed, and I'll be sitting for the rest of my life in a VA psych ward. Honestly, I feel like that isn't that bad of a place to end up and is probably the best and most realistic way my life could play out. As long as I have a piano I could play and some jigsaw puzzles to do I could be comfortable for the rest of my life.
My dream would be to get out on disability, set up a small wood shop, and make furniture at my own pace for a living. I'd go play the piano for a couple of hours at a retirement home and maybe dabble with some volunteering at our local nature museum. If the disability thing pans out like HR is telling me it will, I'll be making just about the same I'm making right now without having to work. I'm hopeful, but I just don't think it'll be that easy. I'll have to see. My guess it'll be about january-ish by the time I get the paperwork figured out.
To anyone who was curious, I'm still here. I'm not posting much these days, but I do quite a bit of reading every day.
femmocrat
(28,394 posts)I clicked back to your July post. You have a lot of support here. Please keep posting. We are here to listen and support.
Wishing you better days and restored health.
Botany
(72,494 posts)Please talk to some people who can help you today.
BTW making to do lists help because when you cross something off you
will feel you have gotten something done.
DustyJoe
(849 posts)I'll be sitting for the rest of my life in a VA psych ward. Honestly, I feel like that isn't that bad of a place to end up.
My dream would be to get out on disability If the disability thing pans out like HR is telling me it will, I'll be making just about the same I'm making right now without having to work.
The above excerpt seems to lay out your plans and your planning so far. How does your HR know what you will get in disability ? I assume they are only looking at SSDI. The fact that you are being admitted to the VA psych facility should fast track any VA disability claim. There are a large percentage of vets getting 100% total and permanent disability for life from the VA for PTSD only with no other injury or claim to injury. If your VA psych hasn't started a VA disability claim you need to file online. The SSDI you can file after your VA is approved. SS will send you to a SS psychiatrist for evaluation, but with your constant admissions to the VA facility should get a fast track too. But, you can't get on the disability train unless you file, so if you haven't yet, the VA online process is pretty painless.
Victor_c3
(3,557 posts)like you mentioned, I will get SSDI.
I also am currently rated by the VA at 70% for PTSD and I put in for an increase recently. The doctor that rated me for my current ongoing claim at the VA flat out told me that he doesn't recommend that I keep working. The people at the VA are telling me that I might get a n answer about december or January or so.
In addition to that, I'm also a federal employee and I get a third disability pension from FERS (federal employee retirement system) which is basically worth about 40% of my current federal salary offset slightly by how much I get from SSDI.
With all three benefits, if it all works out, I'd make almost exactly the same as I do now if I don't work. One of the guys that works in our HR department did exactly the same thing I did in Iraq in Vietnam. He was an infantry platoon leader in Vietnam and I was an infantry platoon leader in Iraq. I think the HR department, for the most part, has my best interest in their heart.
My feeling come and go in waves. I was feeling very down when I wrote my OP. Now, I'm actually feeling kind of optimistic.
Thanks for the thoughts.
misterhighwasted
(9,148 posts)Well, my friend, DU is sort of like a psyche ward. So pull up a comfy chair of your choice & join in whenever you like.
Best part is, someone will always hear what you have to say..about anything you want to throw out there.
Some will take part, some will offer an opinion or link to verified source to their statement, some will agree..or not, and others may just sit quietly & listen, taking what they need from the conversation.
We have moments of disagreement or unity, & be sure there's always someone who will disrupt the intensity with humor.
Its all good here & politics & policy, good & evil, the just & the unjust in our lives will be presented by some of the most dedicated fighters for the well being of our human race.
That's why we are all here. We are all connected by the desire to have something better for humanity, no matter the scale.
Whatever you hand out to this group comes back in ways that tells me "we all seek the same for our personal, private, or public lives.
I have learned much from your posts victor_c3.
Your story tells me that I am now not so alone with my own struggles.
Thank You.
Thank You again.
lunasun
(21,646 posts)Why are you back to work while you are still having so many factors? You need the disability.maybe not for ever,but now.
This is how it is now and try to get the paperwork in ASAP
Just my opinion which counts for beans. So before I give it I will just say peace to you
The Va is a refuge you may need right now but don't make it permanent if you can help it
I knew too many who stayed in the VA hospitals because they thought this best. But once a new worker or something came in and helped them get out on disability they realized they had stayed there too long. Some needed to go back it is all individual no formula or plan.Just don't give up or give in to demons.
I mean stay at the VA if you need it now but think about the future and keep on it as a goal if you think you can right now. Everyone is different a few years for some 5+Life for others. The jumpy anxiety is common but I have seen over time people conquer it ( or time dissipate it) but it can still lurk with a trigger at any time. A new part of life is just beginning ,the next phase.maybe not how you dreamed but what it is. Be disappointed but never give up.dream of possibilities like the wood shop.
See a lawyer if you can re:disability or soc worker for help with paperwork if you think you can function well enough with out full time hospitalization imo
Wife isn't in the same place as you but you can ask one more time for her support but realize somethingare not in your control
I know Tues is Veteran's Day ,you will be in my thoughts Victor along with many others alive and survivors all. (Some old men now long journey)
A Little Weird
(1,754 posts)And that things improve for you and for your family.
applegrove
(123,150 posts)know that treatment gets better and symptoms subside when you get away from triggers. I have had ptsd for years and I am pretty happy these days. You'll get there too. Vibes to you.