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Gail Sheehy

The Sensitive Soldier

BS Top - Sheehy Rhonda Cornum J. Scott Applewhite / AP Photo Can U.S. troops be rewired to be impervious to trauma? In the wake of Fort Hood, Brigadier General Rhonda Cornum launched a groundbreaking program to eliminate PTSD.

“How am I going to get people to focus not on tragedy, but on resilience?” Brigadier General Rhonda Cornum asks rhetorically as we sit in her Pentagon office. The question is now Gen. Cornum’s mission: She is charged with teaching the Army’s warriors—even in the wake of the homegrown tragedy at Fort Hood—to persevere in the face of any crisis.

Cornum’s program represents a historic shift in the Army’s training philosophy. Instead of lavishing resources on those warriors who have succumbed to post-traumatic stress, depression, drug dependency, DUI, or sought the ultimate escape of suicide, the Army this week began training its “healthy” soldiers in emotional and spiritual fitness.

“We’re devoting a great deal of effort to treating pathology, but 99 percent of people in the Army have normal reactions to fear and trauma. And we have done nothing for these people.”

Cornum is uniquely qualified to be the nation’s new director of Comprehensive Soldier Fitness. In 1991, as a flight surgeon during the first Gulf War, she was taken prisoner when her helicopter was shot down in Iraq. After three days of beatings and humiliations, this mother of a then-14-year-old daughter was released from Iraqi prisons. Her resilience and heroism as a prisoner of war convinced many in the Pentagon that women could indeed serve on the frontlines. And unlike former POWs, Cornum stayed in the military.

The new training program offers soldiers a tool kit of psychological techniques based on years of research. They can be just as useful in facing the fear of battlefield combat as in living room flare-ups. Senior military officers say the chief stressor in our current wars—when spouses and parents can call their warriors on cellphones at any time, day or night—are the fights that lead to family breakdown. But at a much deeper level is the emotional fallout from the nonstop cycling of soldiers through several deployments.

And while Cornum acknowledges there are many hidden traumas for soldiers, she dismisses dwelling on the impact of the Fort Hood shootings. “I don’t think one individual act of murdering tells me anything about the fitness of the 1.1 million people in the force. It’s a terrible tragedy. But there’s no need to engage in catastrophic thinking,” she says brusquely. “Just move on and think about what you can do to make it better.”

As a doctor meeting with other generals in the day-after crisis meeting at the Department of Defense, Cornum did not recommend that any of the soldiers present in the killing room at Fort Hood be given a postponement of their overseas assignments.

“It’s not as if there’s a choice,” she says. “Somebody else would have to go.”

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As of this Monday, Cornum and University of Pennsylvania psychologists Martin Seligman and Karen Reivich began a rigorous 10-day course for 150 mature drill sergeants. These men and women will, in turn, train others who will eventually teach the entire force how to reframe their reactions to the horrors of war. At present, it is estimated that about one-third of soldiers returning from Iraq or Afghanistan have symptoms of post-traumatic stress. The Army’s new fitness training will emphasize that the same trigger events can actually be an opportunity for “post-traumatic growth.”

Clearly the Army did not stress this kind of emotional fitness training when Cornum joined back in the 1980s. But one suspects she would not have needed such preparation in the first place. “I have always been a daredevil with a disciplined mind,” she says. Fifty years old and still a compact 5-foot-5 and 120 pounds, encased in a digital-patterned combat uniform, the general plants one boot on her other knee, leans back, and boasts, “I’ve been jumping off barns and climbing trees since I could walk.” She is also a veteran steeplechase jockey who had to put weights in her jodhpurs to keep her mount on the horse.

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November 11, 2009 | 11:09pm
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dooreen

This sounds like another sensible person who has a really good sense of framing a positive mind set. With all that said, everyone has to remember to keep their eyes open, when terrified, and then we might have a chance to win this war, I mean these two wars.

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1:23 am, Nov 12, 2009

Yukon1

Great Advise - Rhonda Cornum "I went out and bought a new bright red Dodge Stealth," Given here experiences and advice from a urinary specialist - lets all buy fast cars for our returining soldiers. I wonder if Rhonda Cornum has every spent any time understanding the term empathy.

I am a three tour "trigger puller"

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7:55 am, Nov 16, 2009

dooreen

I avoided watching 911 footage on anniversary, I took advantage of cheap airlines tickets, and went on holiday that day :).

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1:27 am, Nov 12, 2009

mcesarey

I'm currently in Iraq and I think it's ridiculous to think that training can lessen the psychological effects of long deployments. I think it's a mindless approach to gloss over a major issue that adversely affects soldiers' lives. I'm only here for 6 months, but even that feels like something I never, ever want to endure again.

I feel like this sort of training is an effort to suppress human emotion that should be natural. And it's a direct contrast of the Army's current effort to reverse the old culture that says "Be tough, don't seek professional help even though you're considering killing yourself and others around you."

Many soldiers out here are going through personal turmoil (most stress is from the potential break-up of their families back home) and don't need more rhetoric from the Army telling them to be tough.

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3:09 am, Nov 12, 2009

BasPos

We need to start to support real soldiers, not the FOX rejects and cowardly neocons.

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3:24 am, Nov 12, 2009

ThinkAgain

Stretching a bit to get your Fox attacks in today don't you think? What time do you robots get reprogrammed?

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6:52 pm, Nov 12, 2009

DakLak

How did the soldiers of World War 2 survive **years** of war without 'rotation'? Keeps on making you think that the fighting men have changed and not necessarily for the better.

BTW, why can't soldiers have regular uniforms for office duty in the U.S.? Whilst the U.S. isn't the safest place, these high-tech digitally decorated baggy pants offer minimum camouflage in our cities and serve no useful purpose.

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7:00 am, Nov 12, 2009

Ethanolic

There's more to a uniform than functionality. There's also a reason that we don't wear AOC insignia on the combat uniforms.

One team. One fight.

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8:21 am, Nov 12, 2009

magoo363

The men of WWII, WWI, Korea and all other conflicts prior to Viet Nam did not believe that PTSD existed. Even if they were "shell shocked" they were stigmatized to the point that they didn't want to report it to superiors or tell their brothers in arms because of the problems they could face with their units. The soldiers have not changed over the years, the support system has.

As for the uniforms, being a veteran myself, I welcome the one uniform for all standard, even while in the office, no matter the rank. Do you think the Army needs to where a camouflage in the office that is made up of coffee pots, paper and filing cabinets? The point is not to blend into everything to make every soldier feel as one unit. And the camouflage DOES work in a multitude of urban settings.

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8:35 am, Nov 12, 2009

Shakker

WW 2 soldiers were brought back mostly on troop ships. This gave them time to talk to one another and get their mind straight. Also the whole country was at war and most people knew the soldiers went through hell so they didn't have to jump back into a society that doesn't follow the war and is unwilling to sacrifice. My father a decorated and wounded WW2 vet said that (usually anonymous) people bought meals in restaurants and drinks in bars for any soldier in uniform, everywhere, especially if you were heading in or just back from action.
Also, Japan and Germany were REAL threats that most thought HAD to be opposed. Finally, the general rules and public proclamations by politicians did not support torture or abuse of prisoners. We drew a line and made some effort to not cross it. Not always successfully.
My father opposed all wars after WW2 and had some trouble with the justification for many of the actions in WW2. He regretted the destruction of the average person's property and death and injury of non-combatants. He had nightmares and didn't talk about most of the war, except with his war buddies. At his funeral he was buried with military honors reflecting the bronze star he was awarded but never told anyone about - even my mother.
I think the society support and shared sacrifice helped with PTSD.

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12:49 pm, Nov 12, 2009

AlanD2

DakLak: America's fighting in World War II only lasted 4 years. Even then, I doubt there were any U.S. soldiers who were actively fighting all that time.

In the European theater, fighting was in broken bursts: the invasion of North Africa in 1942, the invasion Italy in 1943, the invasion of France in 1944. Each lasted less than a year, and few soldiers would have been in all three battles.

In the Pacific theater, fighting was in short bursts, capturing one island after another, with periods of rest in between while U.S. forces prepared for the next invasion.

In contrast, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have been going on for seven years now, with no breaks in the fighting. And these are guerrilla wars, which are much harder on soldiers than a conventional war with another country. Remember Vietnam?

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1:03 pm, Nov 12, 2009

MatKen

The soldiers of WW II had the same problems as the soldiers of today, some were much worse. You can actually find propaganda films from that era where they show "shell shocked" troops in mental hospitals that comes to the happy conclusion of their cure. Sadly, many of these men were certainly not cured nor did they ever lead productive lives. Society at that time pushed these people to the margins and didn't deal with them in any real way. Who do you think populated the biker gangs and other criminal elements that sprouted up post WW II?

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1:37 pm, Nov 12, 2009

magoo363

Many of the biker gangs were started by pilots who craved the adrenaline rush that they missed from piloting their fighter planes, not combat soldiers on the ground.

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2:08 pm, Nov 12, 2009

Fresca-Brown

She tells it like it is, no nonsense...personally I think she rocks. Furthermore, I'd feel more comfortable with more military leaders like her. Thank you General Cornum.

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8:50 am, Nov 12, 2009

lsdres

she is a urologist not a neurologist, i doubt she had patients in an neurology waiting room on 9/11

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9:18 am, Nov 12, 2009

singlemom

@DakLak
The military do have regular uniforms to wear in the office, but since the nation is at war, we often wear our battle dress or combat uniform (camo) regardless of where we are and what we are doing in support of that war. It is appropriate. I am retired now, and didn't like wearing the camo over the "office" uniform for a number of reasons, but NOT because I didn't think it was appropriate.

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9:37 am, Nov 12, 2009

raindogtoo

>>"It all sounds too perfect. But Cornum appears to have been born an "invulnerable," a personality type that psychologists find is rare but somehow protected, perhaps by brain chemistry, from breaking under almost any stress."

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10:28 am, Nov 12, 2009

raindogtoo

*** "It all sounds too perfect. But Cornum appears to have been born an "invulnerable," a personality type that psychologists find is rare but somehow protected, perhaps by brain chemistry, from breaking under almost any stress." ***

I'm curious as to how an "invulnerable" would be a good choice to lead a program improving the psychological fitness of soldiers who aren't so lucky.

The profile of Cornum paints her as someone with emotional reactions to trauma that are well outside the norm.

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10:45 am, Nov 12, 2009

Resolute

"The profile of Cornum paints her as someone with emotional reactions to trauma that are well outside the norm."

That "outside the norm" thing is why she's a good choice. They want someone outside the norm to figure out how to teach other soldiers to respond "outside the norm" as well.

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1:15 pm, Nov 12, 2009

alphaa10

Sheehy comments, "Cornum's program represents a historic shift in the Army's training philosophy. Instead of lavishing resources on those warriors who have succumbed to post-traumatic stress, depression, drug dependency, DUI, or sought the ultimate escape of suicide, the Army this week began training its "healthy" soldiers in emotional and spiritual fitness..."
---

Wonderful-- but where does that leave the soldiers who do end up casualties, despite their ostensibly greater fitness?

Are they left to bludgeon themselves with the implicit notion they have failed in their official mission to Move On? After all, they have been trained to be more resistant to stress, haven't they?

The ugly fact of the matter is the Army, like the rest of the military, never lavishes much on enlisted personnel. Greater attention is invested in officers, Congressmen on the Right Committees and defense contractors.

So, can we conclude the new policy is small loss to PTSD victims, anyway? If they never got the attention needed to prevent several thousand each year from contemplating suicide (while Bush asked us to support the troops), why should even less official attention matter now?

But it does matter, because ignoring the problem has human consequences. If there is logic behind the new Army policy, it is not obvious. If anything, the new official Army policy is like the unofficial old Army policy.

And while we contemplate repeating our mistakes in Afghanistan, no congratulations are due to the Army for any "new" policy founded on old thinking, old habits, and mythology from brass-- not medical science.

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10:55 am, Nov 12, 2009

dooreen

The point of the article is she is appearing to create her own framework to protect her mind from breaking under conditions which could break it, if a person did not prepare themselves, and she is also saying more should be done for ordinary people.

There are all kinds of programs here to for people who are alcoholics, drug addicts, and seriuosly mentally ill, but for ordinary people, there is very little support until the load gets too heavy, and then a person breaks.

that is the way the doggy eat dog world is.

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11:11 am, Nov 12, 2009

simplicity

Cornum reminds me of the thousands of, "motivational speakers," who step outside of human nature and self-promote a personal belief system.

War is hell ... there is no way to avoid the internal conflict of most who are sensitive to humanity yet must go to war.

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11:12 am, Nov 12, 2009

al-nafs

Having a positive outlook, reminding oneself of your purpose and motivating yourself to action are not activities that are outside of human nature.

War is hell, fighting an external conflict doesn't mean that you can't also deal with the internal conflicts that this produces simultaneously.

At the moment, soldiers are only trained to fight the external enemies, and they often deal with the internal conflict when they get home. Cornum is aiming to have them deal with both so that they are not internally devastated when they return.

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4:25 pm, Nov 12, 2009

Aerangis

"she is a urologist not a neurologist, i doubt she had patients in an neurology waiting room on 9/11" I'm unclear what you point is with regards to 9/11? She is a Ph.D. and M.D. who has treated more than 5,000 battle wounds as a surgeon and yes a urologist.

I applaud her efforts to focus on resilience.

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11:22 am, Nov 12, 2009

BainsAR

Sounds like a well grounded military person - good head coupled with 'boots on the ground' experience.

Her perspective on current young folks seems right on regarding their life experiences in their young lives. I would caution her a little to consider the following factors...
%u2022 A disproportionate share of young recruits come from poor/rural areas. Most states require drivers training classes which require $$ to take. Additionally all states require liability insurance which all parents of teenagers will tell you costs $$$$$. Finally, there are concerns of safety by many parents. Taken in total, it not surprising that the recruit population has a high number of individuals that do not have drivers licenses.
%u2022 The cultural climate has changed substantially over the past several decades. Cultural awareness and other forms of 'touchy-feelee' dialogs and mantras are now the norm. Recent studies tend to stigmatize any aggressive behavior and teach instead sensitivity in all situations.

Clearly we need to prepare these individuals for an environment that is different than their existing norm.

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12:00 pm, Nov 12, 2009
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The Sensitive Soldier

by Gail Sheehy

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