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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. Re-entering society and home life after returning from war is a challenging proposition for many soldiers who bring with them the horrors they experienced in combat. That people are said to receive only the amount of hardship they can effectively handle speaks to the overflow of emotional suffering thrust at war veterans while on duty and the tremendous weight the human capacity for coping must digest. Five articles/stories expound upon the struggles inherent to post-war adjustment, noting the grand variances that can play a role in how much or even whether a soldier is able to deal with the trauma. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCpostwar.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
amount of hardship they can effectively handle speaks to the overflow of emotional suffering thrust at war veterans while on duty and the tremendous weight the human capacity for coping
must digest. Five articles/stories expound upon the struggles inherent to post-war adjustment, noting the grand variances that can play a role in how much or even whether a soldier
is able to deal with the trauma. Swofford points out the trade-off for "death, heinous injury, [and] long-term psychological disorder" is helping to protect national interests, however, dislodging the horrific
"scenes of combat" (Swofford) is a haunting that may remain with the veteran forever. Daily life is a constant struggle to push out the atrocious memories that continue to
replay themselves in a veterans mind; sleep becomes a futile effort of fits and starts, physical maladies appear in direct correlation to the stress and mood swings begin to tear
down relationships. The post-war saga of physically and psychologically injured American soldiers is nearly always a bureaucratic sinkhole...The soldiers family must give him time-allow him to share his experiences
at his leisure, or never. But the government must act immediately on his return from battle. This responsibility is not just to the soldier, but to his family
and the citizens in whose names he fought (Swofford). The author notes how those who fight in wartime are prone to
inherently inordinate levels of stress over and above any other qualifying factors; as a result, extremely traumatic or overwhelming situations are responsible for spawning damaging psychological reactions that typically compel
the veteran to attend intensive therapy sessions in order to diffuse some of the internal emotional buildup caused by Post Traumatic Stress Disorder; however, sometimes that is not enough to
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