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The Soldier's Guide to PTSD

Par : Virginia Cruse
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Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN978-1-393-36874-8
  • EAN9781393368748
  • Date de parution29/01/2021
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurRelay Publishing

Résumé

Finally, a book that plainly explains Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Moral Injury, and how Service Members can reclaim their lives step-by-step. Your life is at stake, my friend, and I will not beat around the bush with fancy euphemisms and positive affirmations. I know how serious PTSD is. We're going to touch on all the symptoms invading your day-to-day life. Trauma and Triggers Flashbacks and Hallucinations Substance Abuse and Alcoholism Irritable and Angry Outbursts Shame, Self-Loathing, and Self-Destructive Behavior Avoidance and Doom Scrolling Addictive Behavior Once we've shined a light on how PTSD and Moral Injury have disrupted your life, we're going to cover the top clinically proven, evidence-based treatment options to get you on the road to recovery. As a therapist, Virginia Cruse was becoming frustrated with the rumors her clients heard about PTSD that kept them from getting better.
Why did so many of them believe that PTSD had no cure? That they couldn't have PTSD because they were not in direct combat? That they didn't "deserve" to have PTSD, or didn't "deserve" to get better? The answer hit a nerve with Cruse: no one had taken the time to explain PTSD to Service Members in a way that made sense. Soldiers were losing their resiliency and optimism in a culture that propagated misinformation and went against the facts about PTSD, facts that are necessary to know in order to recover good mental health and salvage important relationships. Told in the voice of a Soldier-turned-therapist who struggled through her own debilitating PTSD, The Soldier's Guide does not waste time cutting through the bull and getting down to brass tacks.
It is a call to arms, offering facts, empathy, and direction, while urging Service Members to get the help they need, helping family members to understand the battlefield, and connecting civilians with a Warrior culture.