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Polaris
Nascar
The King of
Nascar
Ski-Doo
Black Magic
Arctic Cat
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Profile of a Vet
These are
the thoughts of Don R. Catherall, a Ph.D. in psychology and co-founder
and executive director of the Phoenix Institute in Chicago, which specializes
in treating trauma survivors of all ages. He has counseled Vietname
vets suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and has been an advisor
to the Department of Veterans Affairs. He was a combat solider with
the Marine Corps in 1967-1968 and authored "Back From the Brink"
(Bantam Books, 1992), a family guide to overcoming traumatic stress.
Catherall
believes:
- Vietnam
vets are less likely to blindly accept the orders and perception of
others.
- They are
perhaps more likely to measure others by their reliability, i.e., is
this someone with whom I could share a foxhole?
- They are
less hung up on appearances, less esily fooled, and have had enough
bullshit thrown at them that they may see through it a little better
than others.
"I
think we share a sadness and a brotherhood that is rare," says
Catherall. "It may not be an active part of our lives most of
the time, but Vietnam bets are able to connect ina way that goes very
deep. Think about the guys hugging each other at 'the wall.' This
is the same thing that the current men's movement is trying to achieve,
and it's no accident that the foremost group has chosen the name 'warriors.'
I think those of us who were real warriors have found Rovert Bly's
(Iron John) 'wild man' in ourselves.
"Many
of us have volative tempers, seek adrenaline- rush-type activities,
are workaholics, alcoholics, and are maintaining but still sitting
on explosive energy," explains Catherall.
"We
know how to tae orders and give orders. We have shared our canteens
with all classes of people. We've seen death close up. We've experienced
big-time loss. We've faced our fears and found our own courage. As
a result, we are different in a way that the Indians understood and
prized, but which our society does not well understand and often fears."
"We
have had the experience of being judge, jury, and executioner. Many
of us were free to take life without having to account for our reasons.
We were all affected by having that incredible power of living through
an experienced in which there was no law...
WE WERE
THE LAW."
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