Dusty on PTSD
For me the most difficult part of being a woman Vietnam veteran with PTSD has
been the unremitting sense of isolation. After returning from Vietnam and leaving the
Army, I simply didn't encounter any other women who had been in Vietnam. I thought my
feelings were unique. Trying to be just like everyone else seemed to be the culturally
accepted and expected thing to do; it was the only way to re-enter society and try to have
a life after Vietnam. It was the only way to escape the vilification that was being
endured by my brother veterans.
Over the years I was afraid to contact other nurses I had known in Vietnam. In the first
place, the sense of camaraderie we had felt hadn't been about dissecting our emotions with
each other; it had been about working as a team, being able to count on each other
absolutely. What if they rebuffed me and didn't want to talk? What if they were worse off
than I? What if I was the only one who hadn't merely resumed her prewar life? Those
conflicting but equally depressing possibilities made reaching out too risky. Male
veterans either didn't recognize me as a real veteran or assumed they already knew what my
war had been like. They were willing to joke about the nuoc mam, the jungle rot, and the
Saigon tea, but they weren't willing to exhume the pain. I felt only partially connected
to them: we shared the same esoteric vocabulary and arcane geography, but it seemed we
didn't share the same emotional terrain. They knew how it felt to kill the enemy with a
gun, but they didn't know how it felt to kill one of our own with a syringe or simply by
running out of time. They knew how it felt to see a buddy maimed by a booby trap; they
didn't know how it felt to look into the eyes above the mangled legs and tell that buddy
he would never walk again. They had nightmares about being overrun; they didn't have
nightmares of crying out, 'I'm wounded, too!' to male medics who never heard.
Likewise, society's silence about the war strangled me emotionally. I found that members
of the Vietnam generation were expected to be either baby killers or war protesters. I had
been neither. There was no niche in anybody's mental cupboard for whatever I was. Even
when PTSD became the diagnosis of the month and Vietnam became a fit topic of conversation
in polite circles, I was still invisible. Veterans were invariably referred to as 'he' or
'the men' or 'troops'--at one of the newly-opened Vet Centers, I was politely informed
that women don't develop PTSD. If I wasn't a real veteran, then I couldn't possibly suffer
any real consequences of the war.
The irony of my situation is that through my attempts to deal with PTSD I have, in fact,
met some quality people who are willing to reach out to me in my pain; yet the PTSD
compels me to keep them at a distance. Ever since Vietnam I've been wary of letting anyone
get too close. I feel like a runner caught between bases--I want only to be safe, but I am
expending all my energy getting nowhere, just trying to escape being tagged out. I can't
ever get back where I started, much less make any forward progress. My dilemma is, I
believe, common in Vietnam vets. I believe my ultimate healing from the trauma of the war
will be found in reconnecting to the human family, but my trauma itself lies partly in the
rejection I experienced, and causes me to flee all connection. I complain bitterly about
the isolation, yet sometimes the only comfort I am able to tolerate is the silent
companionship of my cats.
I often feel that there is no one out there like me, no one with whom I can experience
that wordless, intuitive kind of sharing that to me connotes true intimacy and
understanding. The war and its aftermath have left me stranded between the past and the
present. The war diminished my possibilities for growth as a person. I sense that I have a
lesser future than I would have had had I not gone. I don't even fully remember what kind
of person I was before Vietnam. What kind of person am I now? Can I ever be a whole person
again? The war took something important from me, but I can't even define it, much less
begin to get it back.
©1994 by Dusty
Back to Dusty's Prose or Poetry

My Vietnam Related Websites:
Women in Vietnam
~ Not only nurses served . . .
Dusty's Home Page
~ Poetry and prose by a woman who was a nurse in Vietnam
Emily's
Poetry ~ By a Red Cross Donut Dolly
Battle Dressing ~ The Journey of a Nurse in Vietnam
Tim O'Brien's Home Page
~ National Book Award Winner and Americal Vet
Shrapnel in the Heart
~ The most moving book you will read on Vietnam
The
Irish on the Wall ~ An effort to locate the Irish who died in Vietnam
Project
Hearts and Minds ~ Help put Viet Nam back together
All About Vietnam
~ An annotated bibliography of books about Vietnam for sale thru Amazon
Worldwide!
Photos from a Holts' Military History Tour
~ My trip to
Vietnam, February 1998
Illinois
Vietnam Women's Memorial ~ Honoring all the Illinois women who served
My Other Websites:
Chicago
Theatre Z - A ~ This is the best theater town in the country!
Writers
Theatre of Chicago ~ And this is the best theater in town
Literature
of the Korean War ~ Don't let the literature be forgotten
Poetry
of the First World War ~ Owen, Hardy and others
Samuel
Pepys ~ One of my favorite authors
Gil
Thorp ~ THE Coach
Maybe
Later . . . ~ My Creative Nonfiction
Chi-COW-go
~ Cowz plus Commentary (this used to be a cow town)
Graham
Fulton, Scottish Poet ~ Charles Manson Auditions for the Monkees
Soccer
Literature ~ I'm a fan and I read
O'Leary
Lantern ~ Fire! Fire! Fire!
Other Important Websites:
PreviewPort.com
~ Connecting Authors and Writers Worldwide
Remember
Oklahoma City ~ Civil Service and Military Employees will never forget
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| Page last updated September 19, 2002 |