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-   -   Tina Malone's husband killed himself (https://www.thisisbigbrother.com/forums/showthread.php?t=391252)

arista 20-05-2024 10:30 AM

Tina Malone's husband killed himself
 
https://static.standard.co.uk/2024/0...webp&width=960
[Malone and Chase had been together since 2009]


https://liveblog.digitalimages.sky/l...67ef6145d5.png

[Malone met Chase in 2009 at a boot camp and started
a relationship despite their age difference.
She has said she wants to launch a charity called
Paul’s Flame on May 28,
which would have been Chase’s birthday.
When he got drunk he’d ramble about the army
and I’d tell him, ‘You have depression,
you have emotional issues because of what
you’ve seen’. But he’d sweep it away.
He’d say, ‘How will I get a job if I have that?’
He admitted it in the end but by then things
had gone too far.
“This is a man who served his country.
The only way I can get through is by fighting for change,
addressing the issues facing veterans
and soldiers, trying to help others.”]

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/s...-b1158721.html

user104658 20-05-2024 11:24 AM

It's tragic and a lot more support needs to be available, and a lot more focus and awareness right from the point of entry that it's normal and perhaps even crucial to understand that you WILL be affected by some of the things you do and see and that help will be available.

It is effectively impossible for anyone to see active combat/war and NOT have some degree of PTSD without significant debriefing work being done. The levels of functional alcoholism in those who fought in WW2 (and survived it) was massive. It was a generation where people "just got on with it", "stiff upper lip" and all that but that doesn't mean they just carried on unaffected. My maternal-side grandparents were both in France for most of WW2 (my grandad saw years of active duty, my grandmother was a field nurse and honestly, the unimaginable horrors in some journals she wrote...) and they went on to have great, successful, functional lives ... BUT ... old letters etc. I found when my mum died makes it very clear that her dad (who died before I was born) had a significant problems with alcohol and depression, and my gran who was a lovely little old lady, had a decades-long diazepam prescription "for her nerves" (i.e. PTSD) and in hindsight drank a LOT of sherry.

The message needs to be that "military aftercare" is an expected part of service, not something that only some will need, because like this poor man himself said - that leads to an idea that there will be a stigma if they admit to struggling.

arista 20-05-2024 11:29 AM

[The message needs to be that "military aftercare" is
an expected part of service]

Starmer should bring that in

user104658 20-05-2024 11:34 AM

I'd also add I suppose that the same is true for many emergency professions - police, paramedics, fire brigade etc. I have a friend who was in the police for less than a year in his early 20's and at this point (15+ years later) I think it's safe to say that it's messed him up for life. Stumbled upon a dead body in a pretty messed up state. He's had alternating cocaine/gambling problems ever since and now has significant debt/family issues. 6 months and he came out a totally different person.


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