GamerzVoice
02-17-2015, 09:29 PM
I cried for days after my good friend was wounded in front of me. That night in Baghdad I felt overwhelmed. I felt like I was going to lose control of my bladder. My body tightened up. Head, arms and legs all pulled into my core. I felt extremely helpless. It was at that moment one of the scariest times in my life. The night draped on us like a heavy blanket. The stars shone and city lights gleamed. It was beautiful and terrifying.
My God, what is this? What is going to happen? Please protect me. Please protect us. Please God. Please protect us. Please protect us..... Whispering this under my breath I looked down through the turret porthole and saw my buddy looking up at me. I felt disappointed in myself. He looked disappointed. Man up he's thinking! Harley just saw me cower in my boots. I thought I was more of a soldier than this. Why the fuck am I being so soft right now? I have a job to do. I am a machine gunner on this vehicle and it is my duty to protect these guys. Get back to work Brandon. Get back to work. Don't think about it.
I grasped the M2 Browning machine gun handles and gently placed my thumbs on the butterfly trigger.
William was a good friend. Williams arm was hit by shrapnel from a roadside bomb. It almost took his arm off completely. Blood was everywhere.
Later in the tour....
We were driving South of Taji, Iraq. A car full of Iraqis pulled in front of my truck. After a bit of confusion of what we were going to do to get them away from our truck we ended up ramming the front end of our MRAP right up their tailpipe. It knocked the vehicle off the road. We hit the gas pedal as hard as we could to catch up to our platoon. About an hour later my truck was tasked with over watch and security on a bridge in Baghdad called Vile Executioner. As I was sitting there scanning the city I hear Truck 2 yell out of the radio "IED DET on truck 1, IED DET on truck 1!!!" A few moments later I hear a huge explosion. We rolled up to the hot zone to conduct our battle drills. Truck 1 was on fire, flames shooting from the side. The driver opened the door and fell out on the ground. He then got up and started stumbling around. The truck commander was laying on his back in the middle of the road. Blood and debris were everywhere.
The sounds of war. Screaming and yelling, explosions, hissing of flares launching into the air and popping in the night sky. It seems like a movie. It was quite the opposite, reality. I paused for a second with I saw Sgt. Fletcher laying on the ground. I thought he was dead. How the fuck would he survive such a blast. It looked like his legs were gone. I looked down through the turret porthole and saw my truck commander leaning forward praying before he opened the door to the truck. He got out and went to help.
I said to my driver, holy shit man, Fletch is dead. At that moment everything clicked in for me. What seemed like an eternity was only a couple of seconds. We loaded our wounded in the medic truck and left the hot zone. My truck took lead, the medic truck behind us and then a rear security vehicle behind them. We drove through Baghdad by ourselves. Everyone else behind. I was scanning every inch of the road and all of the four story houses over looking us. Ready to kill anything in our path that attempted to take our lives. We ended up arriving a BIAP and unloaded our casualties and took them to the hospital were they received treatment. Everyone in the truck survived fortunately.
My soul was stripped from my body that night. From the time we left the hot zone to when we arrived at BIAP I heard the wounded screaming in my ear through my headset. They hot mic'd the entire way. I was 21 years old. Just a kid trying to survive hell.
Much more happened on our deployment. An IED blew up right in front of my truck. And a few more Joes were hurt. By the time I got home I was a changed human. I went from being a naive kid to a cold hearted man. I had no emotions. I didn't care whose feelings I hurt. Five years went by and then boom! I lost my mind.
PANIC, PANIC, PANIC PANIC, PANIC EVERY SINGLE FUCKING DAY.
At first I had no idea what it was. I thought I was dying. I thought I was losing my mind. I thought I was going to lose control, run down the street, scream and start punching people. I was in and out of the doctor for almost a year and a half. All test results came back normal other than vitamin D and Potassium. They were low. No doctor gave me a good answer as to what was happening to me.
Here's a list of some of my symptoms.
- Dizziness
- Vertigo
- Fear of loss of control
- Fear of going fucking crazy
- Fear of it going to the next level
- Pins and needles in lips, hands, legs.
- Tight chest, can't breathe
- Racing heart, pounding heart
- Burning skin sensation
- Difficulty swallowing
- Nervousness
- Fear of tomorrow, month, year, life
- Fear of everything
- Super excited feeling in entire body- would last for days on end. Even weeks. 24/7
- Felt like the hulk was inside me and just wanted to explode out of my skin and smash stuff
- shakiness, light headed, blurred vison
- Not able to focus
- Brain fog
- Tight band feeling around my head
- Tingling sensation on top of my brain
- Fear of every little skin lesion, mole, anything healthwise scare the fak out of me.
All of this would happen randomly. I was never able to find triggers. It started in 2012 and I am still dealing with it. The panic/anxiety has gotten a bit better since the beginning but it's still there. I can't make it completely go away. It started out of no where too. Just one day it popped up and has been a pain in my ass every since. I lost everything because of it. I lost my jobs, marriage, friends and my sanity. I am now this lonely, panic stricken veteran who sits in his basement every day with no life. Nothing to look forward to anymore. I use to love life, I was full of life. Not anymore.
Somethings that helped me feel a bit better. I started to run around my block everyday. I also started drinking Kefir. When I began drinking Kefir I felt a million times better. But I am still disabled and unhappy.
Even if you don't agree with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan there are people who fought for you. Who wanted to do the right thing and protect our country. And just know that so many of us are dealing with such a heavy burden. I am not looking for a thank you, I just want you to know the hell that has been paid for this country.
My God, what is this? What is going to happen? Please protect me. Please protect us. Please God. Please protect us. Please protect us..... Whispering this under my breath I looked down through the turret porthole and saw my buddy looking up at me. I felt disappointed in myself. He looked disappointed. Man up he's thinking! Harley just saw me cower in my boots. I thought I was more of a soldier than this. Why the fuck am I being so soft right now? I have a job to do. I am a machine gunner on this vehicle and it is my duty to protect these guys. Get back to work Brandon. Get back to work. Don't think about it.
I grasped the M2 Browning machine gun handles and gently placed my thumbs on the butterfly trigger.
William was a good friend. Williams arm was hit by shrapnel from a roadside bomb. It almost took his arm off completely. Blood was everywhere.
Later in the tour....
We were driving South of Taji, Iraq. A car full of Iraqis pulled in front of my truck. After a bit of confusion of what we were going to do to get them away from our truck we ended up ramming the front end of our MRAP right up their tailpipe. It knocked the vehicle off the road. We hit the gas pedal as hard as we could to catch up to our platoon. About an hour later my truck was tasked with over watch and security on a bridge in Baghdad called Vile Executioner. As I was sitting there scanning the city I hear Truck 2 yell out of the radio "IED DET on truck 1, IED DET on truck 1!!!" A few moments later I hear a huge explosion. We rolled up to the hot zone to conduct our battle drills. Truck 1 was on fire, flames shooting from the side. The driver opened the door and fell out on the ground. He then got up and started stumbling around. The truck commander was laying on his back in the middle of the road. Blood and debris were everywhere.
The sounds of war. Screaming and yelling, explosions, hissing of flares launching into the air and popping in the night sky. It seems like a movie. It was quite the opposite, reality. I paused for a second with I saw Sgt. Fletcher laying on the ground. I thought he was dead. How the fuck would he survive such a blast. It looked like his legs were gone. I looked down through the turret porthole and saw my truck commander leaning forward praying before he opened the door to the truck. He got out and went to help.
I said to my driver, holy shit man, Fletch is dead. At that moment everything clicked in for me. What seemed like an eternity was only a couple of seconds. We loaded our wounded in the medic truck and left the hot zone. My truck took lead, the medic truck behind us and then a rear security vehicle behind them. We drove through Baghdad by ourselves. Everyone else behind. I was scanning every inch of the road and all of the four story houses over looking us. Ready to kill anything in our path that attempted to take our lives. We ended up arriving a BIAP and unloaded our casualties and took them to the hospital were they received treatment. Everyone in the truck survived fortunately.
My soul was stripped from my body that night. From the time we left the hot zone to when we arrived at BIAP I heard the wounded screaming in my ear through my headset. They hot mic'd the entire way. I was 21 years old. Just a kid trying to survive hell.
Much more happened on our deployment. An IED blew up right in front of my truck. And a few more Joes were hurt. By the time I got home I was a changed human. I went from being a naive kid to a cold hearted man. I had no emotions. I didn't care whose feelings I hurt. Five years went by and then boom! I lost my mind.
PANIC, PANIC, PANIC PANIC, PANIC EVERY SINGLE FUCKING DAY.
At first I had no idea what it was. I thought I was dying. I thought I was losing my mind. I thought I was going to lose control, run down the street, scream and start punching people. I was in and out of the doctor for almost a year and a half. All test results came back normal other than vitamin D and Potassium. They were low. No doctor gave me a good answer as to what was happening to me.
Here's a list of some of my symptoms.
- Dizziness
- Vertigo
- Fear of loss of control
- Fear of going fucking crazy
- Fear of it going to the next level
- Pins and needles in lips, hands, legs.
- Tight chest, can't breathe
- Racing heart, pounding heart
- Burning skin sensation
- Difficulty swallowing
- Nervousness
- Fear of tomorrow, month, year, life
- Fear of everything
- Super excited feeling in entire body- would last for days on end. Even weeks. 24/7
- Felt like the hulk was inside me and just wanted to explode out of my skin and smash stuff
- shakiness, light headed, blurred vison
- Not able to focus
- Brain fog
- Tight band feeling around my head
- Tingling sensation on top of my brain
- Fear of every little skin lesion, mole, anything healthwise scare the fak out of me.
All of this would happen randomly. I was never able to find triggers. It started in 2012 and I am still dealing with it. The panic/anxiety has gotten a bit better since the beginning but it's still there. I can't make it completely go away. It started out of no where too. Just one day it popped up and has been a pain in my ass every since. I lost everything because of it. I lost my jobs, marriage, friends and my sanity. I am now this lonely, panic stricken veteran who sits in his basement every day with no life. Nothing to look forward to anymore. I use to love life, I was full of life. Not anymore.
Somethings that helped me feel a bit better. I started to run around my block everyday. I also started drinking Kefir. When I began drinking Kefir I felt a million times better. But I am still disabled and unhappy.
Even if you don't agree with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan there are people who fought for you. Who wanted to do the right thing and protect our country. And just know that so many of us are dealing with such a heavy burden. I am not looking for a thank you, I just want you to know the hell that has been paid for this country.