By Helping Others, Vets Can Save Themselves
Grass roots service organizations are giving some veterans renewed purpose.
I learned from experience that the best way to deal with the experience and aftermath of the Vietnam War came from looking out -- not in -- and helping others.
Joe Klein wrote a powerful piece today in Time that focuses on Iraq and Afghanistan vets who had the same experience, focused on grass roots vet service outfits such as St. Louis-based group the Mission Continues, which performs community based service projects, and Team Rubicon of Los Angeles, a 7,000-strong veterans group that responds to disasters.
Klein reported that 800 vets, many of them wounded, have gone through the Mission Continues. Eight-six percent reported having a positive, life-changing experience from trading a bottle of booze for a paintbrush, hammer or a cleaning rag.
Simple, yes, but simple is often better than shrinks, Xanxax or booze.
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