War fever

It used to be called "war fever." Now it is called PTSD-Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. There was no cure for a while, only short-term relief. Today, this may be changing, because war-torn veterans have endured for decades without answers, only symptoms. There is no chemical relief for this disease, but this has not prevented thousands of people trying to solve this problem. It is everywhere on this stage.

Science and psychology are merging in a new way to unlock places that have caused such trauma to these former soldiers. We still have soldiers who have lived in their journey from the Second World War, and few have escaped the anger of war. Every survivor in every war faces the same distortion. We pull out for a while, change all the rules about what it means to be a decent person, then change the rules and expect no rebound. from

War fanaticism is the kind of strong oppositionfrom

. It is wrong to kill one day. The next one is worth celebrating. The more conducive to the motto of war. Genocide. Take away the enemy. It is expected to cause collateral damage.

Top figures in science, physics and chemistry are used to create "enemies" that kill us on a massive scale. Einstein discovered a technique that would well end human walking on the planet. However, no one has ever invented a mindset that humans can buy, and can prove that they can accept another life, not to mention many other lives. We have no programming to destroy ourselves. Some people [our soldiers] must be taught their thoughts from

Burn up from

 The idea from it.

A soldier flying with a cotton tail during the Second World War returned to the Medina of Ohio when he returned. He is my grandfather Ralph Warren Hisey. Dive down in Ploesti, Romania, and he met a dead British soldier while hiding in the brush. He changed his clothes and wore uniforms from the Royal Air Force [RAF] flyer, fooling the Germans into thinking he was British. It remained in effect until he was taken to the prison camp, his 'boy' shouted: "Hisey, here!"

Fast forward for decades, I woke up at dawn and watched my grandfather standing in the field. I thought he was waving something so I went outside and stood by the fence. I realized that he was throwing things.

He saw me and called me, saying that he was in the barracks all night, practicing his tone in the dark and staying sane in prison. "Hitler didn't own this!" he said, pointing at his head. "The Nazis never owned my thoughts," the soldier claimed. He practiced his pitching style over and over and performed all exercise exercises on those concrete floors until he became too weak.

When he returned to the United States, he was the shadow of his former self and had little power to work. His dream of playing professional baseball has become a long and lost idea.

For the rest of his life, war enthusiasm took him away. The nightmare nightmare in the hands of the Nazis was passed on to him casually. He said that his unhelpful sense of helplessness would take over. Sometimes, just the smell of cabbage brings it. For the rest of his life, he fought against the Germans in his mind. from

They never let him freefrom

.

Now, through the combination of drugs and a guiding meditation/talk therapy, a variety of new "technologies" have been introduced. Going back to the scene and re-experiencing the damage has been going on for years, and the results are mixed. Going back to a controlled but changing state, you can find better answers and solutions from the experience. This can only be done through the guide.

Our current battles in distant places are producing a new brand of post-traumatic stress disorder that leads to additional loss of life. Returning to the land of the United States, at home and at home, the soldiers still kill in the name of war. When they fight for life, they are killing their immediate family members.

Perhaps these new technologies will bring comfort and peace of mind to generations of veterans who live among us and will continue to do so in the coming years.

War fever was originally published on Spring

Leave a comment