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Tuesday, 10 November 2009

  • This quote says a alot

    I really like this intro by david brooks of the ny times; it saysa lot about how all of us view the world, history, and all things big and small (Inlcuding the meaning of life and death)

    We’re all born late. We’re born into history that is well under way. We’re born into cultures, nations and languages that we didn’t choose. On top of that, we’re born with certain brain chemicals and genetic predispositions that we can’t control. We’re thrust into social conditions that we detest. Often, we react in ways we regret even while we’re doing them.

    the rest of the essay can be at the NYtimes.com

Saturday, 07 November 2009

  • PTSD

    The Forever War of the Mind By Max Cleland

    “EVERY day I was in Vietnam, I thought about home. And, every day I’ve been home, I’ve thought about Vietnam.” So said one of the millions of soldiers who fought there as I did. Change the name of the battlefield and it could have been said by one of the American servicemen coming home from Iraq or Afghanistan today. Wars are not over when the shooting stops. They live on in the lives of those who fight them. That is the curse of the soldier. He never forgets.

    War is haunting. Death. Pain. Blood. Dismemberment. A buddy dying in your arms. Imagine trying to get over the memory of a bomb splitting a Humvee apart beneath your feet and taking your leg with it. The first time I saw the stilled bodies of American soldiers dead on the battlefield is as stark and brutal a memory as the one of the grenade that ripped off my right arm and both legs.

    No, the soldier never forgets. But neither should the rest of us.

    Veterans returning today represent the first real influx of combat-wounded soldiers in a generation. They are returning to a nation unprepared for what war does to the soul. Those new veterans will need all of our help. After America’s wars, the used-up fighters are too often left to fend for themselves. Many of the hoboes in the Depression were veterans of World War I. When they came home, they were labeled shell-shocked and discharged from the Army too broken to make it during the economic cataclysm.

    So it is again, with too many stories about veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan ending up unemployed and homeless. Figures from the Department of Veterans Affairs show that 131,000 of the nation’s 24 million veterans are homeless each night, and about twice that many will spend part of this year homeless.

    We know of the recent failures at Walter Reed Medical Center, where soldiers were stranded in substandard barracks infested with rats while awaiting treatment. I was in Walter Reed myself at that time seeking counseling for post-traumatic stress disorder, which, ignited by a barrage of Iraq headlines and the loss of my United States Senate seat, had simply consumed me.

    I never saw it coming. Forty years after I had left the battlefield, my memories of death and wounding were suddenly as fresh and present as they had been in 1968. I thought I was past that. I learned that none of us are ever past it. Were it not for the surgeons and nurses at Walter Reed, I never would have survived those first months back from Vietnam. Were it not for the counselors there today, I do not think I would have survived what I’ve come to call my second Vietnam, the one that played out entirely in my mind.

    When I was wounded, post-traumatic stress disorder did not officially exist. It was recognized as a legitimate illness only in 1978, during my tenure as head of the Veterans Administration under President Jimmy Carter. Today, it is not only recognized, but the Army and the V.A. know how to treat it. I can offer no better testament than my own recovery.

    Weeks before the troubles at Walter Reed became public in 2007, my counselor put it to me simply. “We are drowning in war,” she said. The problems at Walter Reed had nothing to do with the dedicated doctors and nurses there. The problems had to do with the White House and Congress and the Department of Defense. The problems had to do with money.

    When we are at war, America spends billions on missiles, tanks, attack helicopters and such. But the wounded warriors who will never fight again tend to be put on the back burner.

    This is inexcusable, and it comes with frightening moral costs. There are estimates that 35 percent of the soldiers who fought in Iraq will suffer post-traumatic stress disorder. I’m sure the numbers for Afghanistan are similar. Researchers have found that nearly half of those returning with the disorder have suicidal thoughts. Suicide among active-duty soldiers is on pace to hit a record total this year. More than 1.7 million soldiers have served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Imagine that some 600,000 of them will have crippling memories, trapped in a vivid and horrible past from which they can’t seem to escape.

    We have a family Army today, unlike the Army seen in any generation before. We have fought these wars with the Reserves and the National Guard. Fathers, mothers, soccer coaches and teachers are the soldiers coming home. Whether they like it or not, they will bring their war experiences home to their families and communities.

    In his poem “The Dead Young Soldiers,” Archibald MacLeish, whose younger brother died in World War I, has the soldiers in the poem tell us:“We leave you our deaths. Give them their meaning.” Until we help our returning soldiers get their lives back when they come home, the promise of restoring that meaning will go unfulfilled.

    Max Cleland, the secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission, was a Democratic senator from Georgia from 1997 to 2003. He is the author, with Ben Raines, of “Heart of a Patriot: How I Found the Courage to Survive Vietnam, Walter Reed and Karl Rove

Friday, 06 November 2009

  • Medicare or bust

    I guess I would be happy with Medicare....would you? would 50 million uninsured Americans?

    Moreover, there is one American health statistic that is strikingly above average: life expectancy for Americans who have already reached the age of 65. At that point, they can expect to live longer than the average in industrialized countries. That’s because Americans above age 65 actually have universal health care coverage: Medicare. Suddenly, a diverse population with pockets of poverty is no longer such a drawback.

    Know Hope

    MB (Publius)

Monday, 26 October 2009

  • A dose of motivation.

    I hope to do some blogging one of these days. MB


    Zig's top 20 Quotes ...

    Each of us will one day be judged by our standard of life, not by our standard of living; by our measure of giving, not by our measure of wealth; by our simple goodness, not by our seeming greatness.~William Arthur Ward

    Faith is taking the first step even when you don't see the whole staircase.~Martin Luther King

    The message is clear: plan with attitude, prepare with aptitude, participate with servitude, receive with gratitude, and this should be enough to separate you from the multitudes.~Krish Dhanam

    A winner is big enough to admit his mistakes, smart enough to profit from them, and strong enough to correct them.~John Maxwell

    You don't have to be great to start, but you have to start to be great.~Joe Sabah

    Regardless of your lot in life, you can build something beautiful on it.~Zig Ziglar

    Decision is the spark that ignites action. Until a decision is made nothing happens.~Wilfred A. Peterson

    You might not be what you say you are, but what you say, you are.~Zig Ziglar
    When I was young I observed that nine out of every ten things I did were failures, so I did ten times more work.~George Bernard Shaw


    If you don't think every day is a good day, just try missing one.~Cavett Robert

    Never lose sight of the fact that the most important yardstick of your success will be how you treat other people.~Barbara Bush

    What I hear I forget. What I see I remember. What I do, I know.~Chinese Proverb

    I bring you the gift of these four words: I believe in you.~Blaise Pascal

    The quality of a person's life is in direct proportion to their commitment to excellence, regardless of their chosen field of endeavor.~Vince Lombardi

    It is a funny thing about life; if you refuse to accept anything but the best you very often get it. ~W. Somerset Maugham

    He who sows courtesy reaps friendship, and he who plants kindness gathers love. ~Saint Basil

    Life is like a game of tennis; the player who serves well seldom loses. ~Anonymous

    Dreams get you started; discipline keeps you going.~Jim Rohn

    Unless you try to do something beyond what you have already mastered, you will never grow. ~Ronald E. Osborn

    You can have everything in life you want if you will just help enough other people get what they want.~Zig Ziglar

Tuesday, 20 October 2009

  • waiting to fly and having faith in the unknown

    The nest of young eagles hung on every word as the Master Eagle described his exploits. This was an important day for the eaglets. They were preparing for their first solo flight from the nest. It was the confidence builder many of them needed to fulfill their destiny.

    "How far can I travel?" asked one of the eaglets.

    "How far can you see?" responded the Master Eagle.

    "How high can I fly?" quizzed the young eaglet.

    "How far can you stretch your wings?" asked the old eagle.

    "How long can I fly?" the eaglet persisted.

    "How far is the horizon?" the mentor rebounded.

    "How much should I dream?" asked the eaglet.

    "How much can you dream?" smiled the older, wiser eagle.

    "How much can I achieve?" the young eagle continued.

    "How much can you believe?" the old eagle challenged.

    Frustrated by the banter, the young eagle demanded, "Why don't you answer my questions?"

    "I did."

    "Yes. But you answered them with questions."

    "I answered them the best I could."

    "But you're the Master Eagle. You're supposed to know everything. If you can't answer these questions, who can?"

    "You." The old wise eagle reassured.

    "Me? How?" the young eagle was confused.

    "No one can tell you how high to fly or how much to dream. It's different for each eagle. Only God and you know how far you'll go.

    No one on this earth knows your potential or what's in your heart. You alone will answer that. The only thing that limits you is the edge of your imagination."

    The young eagle puzzled by this asked, "What should I do?"

    "Look to the horizon, spread your wings, and fly."
    Copyright 2001, Tom Reilly

    Tom Reilly wrote this beautiful short story that I share in The Power of Attitude. I thought that it was an unforgettable way to communicate that our potential in life is only limited by our heart and our dreams.

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