Showing posts with label Dr. Edward Tick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. Edward Tick. Show all posts

Monday, August 15, 2016

Dr. Ed Tick: Healing PTSD New-Song

Decades later, a Troy veteran of Vietnam heals
Reconciliation tours of Vietnam aid veterans who served in war

Albany Times Union
By J.p. Lawrence
August 14, 2016

Vietnam veteran Dan New of Troy met with Viet Cong veteran Tam Tien, as part of a reconciliation tour led by psychotherapist Ed Tick and his organization Soldier's Heart. 


IMAGE 1 OF 8 Vietnam veteran Dan New of Troy met with Viet Cong veteran Tam Tien, as part of a reconciliation tour led by psychotherapist Ed Tick and his organization Soldier's Heart. (Photo: Ed Tick).
Troy
The heat of the night enveloped Dan New as he got off the plane. The 68-year-old man was back in the city he had known as Saigon. New marveled at how much had changed in what was now known as Ho Chi Minh City.

Waiting for him at the airport was another veteran of the war that ended 40 years ago. That man, Tran Dinh Song, had served in the South Vietnamese Air Force.

Over the next two weeks, New and Song would learn more about each other's story. In the years after coming home from Vietnam, New had sealed an intense feeling of guilt within him. In the years after his country lost to Communist forces, Song of South Vietnam had spent three years in a re-education camp. In December, the two men's winding paths after the war intersected in Ho Chi Minh City.

Song, 67, was New's guide in a two-week reconciliation tour of a dozen American veterans and researchers arranged by the Soldier's Heart, a Troy-based organization that helps veterans heal the psychological wounds of war.
read more here

Sunday, January 31, 2016

Veterans Plant to Paper Project Inspired by Ed Tick

Military and vets make art from plant to paper
Hi Desert Star
By Daniel Strasberger
The Desert Trail
January 30, 2016
“I read a book by Ed Tick, ‘War in the Soul,’ that said PTSD is more of a soul wound than anything else,” she said. “When you are in a situation that is beyond your wildest, sometimes your soul cannot take it all in, it’s too much and creates anxiety and all the symptoms that PTSD creates.”
Military and vets make art from plant to paper
Lt. Col. Frank Marilao and Donald Burton, from Marine Corps Community Services, join Mil-Tree founder Cheryl Montelle at informational meeting for the Plant to Paper Project Thursday at Copper Mountain College.
JOSHUA TREE — Joining Forces: Plant to Paper is a new art and writing project catering to veterans and people on active military duty.

Mil-Tree joined forces with Arts Connection from San Bernardino to create the project.

This multifaceted art project, spanning from February through May, is paid for by a Veterans in the Arts Initiative grant from the California Arts Council.

The goal is to clear invasive plants from the desert, make them into paper and pulp and create works of art and writing that will displayed in a show in May.

Cheryl Montelle, Mil-Tree founder, is excited about bringing the project to the Morongo Basin.

“Mil-Tree’s mission is to bring veterans into the community through arts and dialogue,” Montelle said. “Communication and arts is what we are about, to create bonds and connections where there haven’t been.”
read more here

This is a great video from 2010
War and the Soul: Healing our Veterans, Families, and Communities from the Wounds of War

Dr. Edward Tick is a practicing psychotherapist who has worked with veterans with Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) for more than 30 years. For Tick, the key to helping veterans heal lies in how we understand PTSD.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Vietnam Vet returns to Vietnam to heal

Vet will be among 20 people, including seven other veterans, who will be in the country on Veterans Day


By Paul Fattig
Mail Tribune
MEDFORD — When Michael Phillips returned from Vietnam in 1971, the Army veteran didn't exactly march back into society.

"When I got back, I didn't associate with my family, I didn't join the VFW or anything," said the Medford resident. "I came close to getting married several times but each time managed to mess it up. I partied a lot but it was very hard for me to get close to anybody.

"I thought I was invincible because I had survived the war," said the former Army specialist fourth class who drove in a combat convoy in Vietnam and into Cambodia. "But my PTSD was causing severe depression."

His diagnosed post-traumatic stress disorder, which he and counselors say led to drug abuse and homelessness over the years, also is the reason he is returning to Vietnam on Nov. 3.

"I'm not going back there with a lot of feelings of guilt or anger," he stressed. "I'm going back there to learn how to help other veterans heal, although I anticipate there will be moments when I have my issues."

Phillips will be among 20 people on the trip, including eight veterans, their spouses and several others with ties to Vietnam or the war.

The trip is the result of Phillips attending a Soldier's Heart presentation by noted psychotherapist Ed Tick in Medford in February of this year. Phillips later attended a retreat for veterans on Orca Island in Puget Sound conducted by Tick, who is known nationally for helping veterans with PTSD. He leads groups of veterans back to Vietnam each year as part of the healing process.
read more here
http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20091027/NEWS/910270312

Thursday, July 2, 2009

The warrior returns, PTSD and Soldier's Soul

For anyone out there that still thinks I'm nuts talking about the soul and PTSD, you really need to read this and listen to Dr. Tick. He's not the first one to talk about it, but it will give you some clue what I've been talking about all these years.


This week's story
The warrior returns
Dr. Edward Tick, author of the groundbreaking book “War and the Soul” and founder of Soldier’s Heart, is a practicing psychotherapist specializing in veterans with PTSD. Ed received his Master’s in Psychology from Goddard College, Vermont and his Doctorate in Communication from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY. Ed has been in private psychotherapy practice since 1975 and began focusing on veteran’s issues in 1979. His pioneering work with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) or, in his words, ‘loss of the soul’, is the basis for his recent book War and the Soul . He continues his healing work with veterans and other trauma survivors with innovative yet time-honored methods. Ed has extensively studied both classical Greek and Native American traditions and successfully integrates their methods into modern clinical work.
More information about Soldier's Heart can be found at www.soldiersheart.net.

You can listen to Ed's story on our story site here.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Warriors Journey Home Ministry


This is what a church can do when they are willing to step up and do the work of a true believer. All religions demand action, not just attending worship services or putting in money in the collection plate, but actually doing the work the needs to be done to help heal their communities.

I traveled locally for several months trying to get local churches in Central Florida to step up to help the veterans heal from what they had to go through. Only one responded and the pastor of the church happened to be a Chaplain as well.

Houses of worship, no matter what faith they belong to, have a responsibility to go beyond just spreading a weekly message from the pulpit. When a warrior returns from combat, they need help to heal and when they do not receive it, they suffer, their families suffer, relatives suffer, friends suffer and the community as a whole suffers. This is a time of great need for communities across this nation. Too many forget that while they do not have a military base, they do have National Guards and Reservists serving or have served in Iraq or Afghanistan along with veterans from other wars.

When you think that at a time when all houses of worship should be growing, far too many leave them because the need is not being met. If houses of worship refuse to address the needs of their communities, they are not serving God.

When the spiritual needs of the veterans are being tended to, there are miracles happening everyday. Veterans are able to reconnect to God, find forgiveness for whatever they feel they need to be forgiven for, awaken their spiritual core, heal marriages, rebuild relationships with their families and most will then turn to help others heal with the peace they have found inside.

This wound has been documented throughout history from ancient Greek and Roman writers and from the Bible itself. All cultures have had ways of healing after combat with rituals for "cleansing" the spirit. If you think that God wants nothing to do with them, think again. Here is just one example but you can find more when you read from the Old Testament Judges and Kings along with the writings from King David.

When God was about to create the souls of man, He first created a warrior. The need to protect because of the freewill God would be enabling would take a great warrior to accomplish this. God created it in the Archangel Michael. Michael is acknowledged through the major religions. The people who serve, willing to lay down their lives for the sake of others, hold Michael as their Patron Saint. While God created a warrior before He even created mankind, how could anyone, especially members of the clergy, forget that defending others is one of the most noblest calling of all?

In our core, there are established abilities from God's hand. Some are called to serve as preachers, others are called to serve their communities. When it comes to those who serve in the military or in the police and fire departments, again there is the ability within their core. When they choose to enter into the military, they do so willing to risk their lives for the sake of others, but they are also enabled to take a life when necessary. It is the same with members of the police forces. They are enabled with bravery and commitment to do all that is required.

When people enter into the National Guards and Reservists ranks, again they are enabled within their core to be able to save lives. They are willing to risk their own lives in order to save someone else, but in their core, they are not as able to take a life. It is the same thoughts of those who enter into the fire departments and emergency response groups. At their core is the same bravery as the military but when they have to take another life or see the deaths in combat, they have a harder time. The thought of having to kill is absent when they enter into the National Guards. The ability to do it and cope after is not within them as much as it is within those who enter into the regular military. Events have penetrated their core. They need extra help to heal as they return to the civilian world.

While all need help to heal, some need it more than others. This is a time when the psychiatric community and the spiritual communities should be mobilizing their efforts to address the needs of the mind-body-spirit since these three elements are within each human. One by one, churches are stepping up but it is a slow process and still the vast majority of them remain ignorant to the needs of their own congregations. If you attend a church, contact your own pastor and make them aware of what this church is doing and what the need is. Convince them to do something to help those who serve all in this nation.

Senior Chaplain Kathie Costos
International Fellowship of Chaplains
Namguardianangel@aol.com
www.Namguardianangel.org
www.Woundedtimes.blogspot.com
"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation." - George Washington




Programs to focus on stress disorder from war
Stow Sentry - Stow,Ohio,USA


Warriors Journey Home Ministry (WJHM) of First Congregational Church of Tallmadge will be host to a week of activities focused on the community's response to post traumatic stress disorder resulting from war.

Dr. Edward Tick, founder of Soldier's Heart in Albany, N.Y., is an international speaker and author of "War and The Soul" will be present at all events as the workshop leader, retreat leader and speaker.


Psycho-spiritual Approach to the Treatment of PTSD




Soldier’s Heart Has Gathered a Community!
By Kate Dahlstedt, co-director of Soldier’s Heart
Community plays an integral part in healing our veterans. Just as “it takes a village to raise a child,” it also takes a village to transform a soldier into a warrior. When a nation is at war ideally the whole community is involved - not just soldiers and their loved ones. Otherwise we risk alienating and isolating the very people who are making the greatest sacrifice.
As Soldier’s Heart has unfolded people from all over the country have reached out to ask, “What can I do?” Many of these are helping professionals offering their skills and devotion. Others are concerned and compassionate citizens. The outpouring of gifts, services and monetary support for our Veterans Return Retreat last January exemplified the desire of citizens to give back to military service people.
There are innumerable ways we can contribute to helping veterans reintegrate well on their return from the war zone and support their families while they are gone. These can be as diverse as vendors giving free or discounted goods and services (car repair, child care, gasoline, tutoring, hair cuts, household services, etc.) to military families. People from the community can volunteer to do household chores such as shovel the walks and mow the lawns of military families living in our neighborhoods.
Beyond this kind of giving, church groups and community organizations can offer emotional and spiritual support. This doesn’t require professionals or specialists. All of us are able to lend a compassionate ear. A hallmark of the healing arts teaches us that storytelling is essential to healing; storytelling to those who can really listen, feel the truth of what is shared, refrain from judging and agree to help carry the story in their hearts.
Over and over again we hear from veterans that their healing became possible when they could finally let out the truth of their experiences and have it received by the rest of the community with love and respect. Once a community agrees to carry the stories and the emotional burden they evoke veterans can release the shame, guilt and horror of what they have been through. Honored as chief witnesses to the realities of war, our veterans can transform from wounded soldiers to embrace the identity of the True Warrior.
Ed’s work in the last year has spread this message to communities throughout the country. These communities have, in turn, begun to address the soul needs of their veterans with a better understanding. As we prepare to celebrate Soldier’s Heart’s first year anniversary, we feel gratitude for all of the wonderful and inspiring people we have met along the way, people who have led us, one to another, to form a great circle. People from all walks of life are coming together in a united mission to help our veterans return and claim their true identities as warriors.
These newsletter pages are a gathering place. All of you are welcome to submit articles about what you are doing in your own towns and cities. Together, from all over our nation, we support and encourage, challenge and inspire each other. Together we are “the village.”
for more information, go here
http://www.soldiersheart.net/Newsletters/SHNewsletter-4-07.pdf