PTSD sufferers helped by farm work

Maggot

"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood"
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Minuteman
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  • Jul 27, 2007
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    Virginia
    Having suffered from that malady, non combat related, I can testify that raising living things and getting your hands in the dirt is one of the best things you can do to get whole again. Hopefully this link will work.


    About Veterans Farm | veteransfarm.org
    veteransfarm.org/?page_id=10






    One of the toughest parts of being a combat veteran may come as a surprise to some of us out there. It actually can be the period when a soldier retires and returns home to everyday life as a civilian – essentially another “battle” for someone whose identity was previously in uniform.

    Fortunately, there’s someone out there who cares, understands, and is working to help. Road Trip host Marc Istook headed out to Jacksonville, Florida to visit Adam Burke’s Veteran’s Farm, which was started in 2009, and helps these soldiers in a uniquely suited manner, offering opportunities for growth and transition.

    Burke explains that when soldiers come back from war, they struggle with seemingly simple things, such a being able to sleep at night or find things to keep themselves busy around the house, as well as reoccurring thoughts of past combat.

    Burke knows all too well about this: He himself is a decorated Army Veteran -- and one who has adopted the concept of horticulture therapy to help his peers. “Getting your hands dirty” is a “healing lifestyle,” he notes. His resulting idea of a place to help soldiers refocus after retirement earned him the 2012 Presidential Citizens Medal, the nation’s second-highest civilian honor, awarded by President Obama.

    To date the Farm has helped about 30 struggling combat veterans rebuild their lives, using farming as a therapeutic tool for recovery. The soldiers grow crops ranging from peppers to blueberries, work with livestock, and even take on duties such as writing business plans.

    Veteran Steve Ellsberry, who is the farm manager for the establishment, claims the Farm has, essentially, reshaped his post-combat life. “I took shrapnel from the head all the way down to my ankles,” he explained of his service in Afghanistan. “I didn’t realize the toll it took on my body. The Veterans Farm has brought more stability to me than I ever thought it would do.”

    If you’d like more information about the Veterans Farm, visit here. And be sure to tune in for our next episode in the ongoing Road Trip series on Ram Country!
     
    I find some forms of gardening to be extremely frustrating. But, then again, I never developed PTSD.


    I can agree with the occasional frustration part, like when the squirrels strip the husks of you carefully tended Silver Queen corn and eat holes in all the tomatoes and peppers to get to the seeds. But still, just the work and getting dirty is very peaceful.
     
    Nothing like parking the tractor at the edge of a field just as the sun is going down to take a long look at what was accomplished.

    Man, that's my dream. No better place to raise kids. I wish I had more time on a farm growing up. When I get out of here, I'm going to try to break into the small farm business. Just don't know where to start...I think I m going to start a thread...
     
    Man, that's my dream. No better place to raise kids. I wish I had more time on a farm growing up. When I get out of here, I'm going to try to break into the small farm business. Just don't know where to start...I think I m going to start a thread...

    How do you make a million dollars small time farming....start out with three million dollars.
     
    How do you make a million dollars small time farming....start out with three million dollars.

    Come east, buy you a patch of land, go out in middle of field and take a dump, put up a sign that says in big bold letters "ORGANIC", plant regular yellow corn, put cash in bushel basket as BMWs, Audis and Lexus drive buy and throw money at you.

    I know its not that easy but its close to that easy when you have the right customers.
     
    I think it is great if it can help these men out with PTSD. That being said, I've done the farm gig for just under 30 years. It can be a piss poor place for stress relief in my book. I guess doing it and running it are two different things. Around my parts if you had enough money to start farming don't. Take the 3-5 million and retire. More power to them if it is working out.


    R
     
    Me and a few of my friends have been looking at farming since we all got out of the Army, and all we hear is that there is no way in hell we can get a farm loan.


    The thought's nice and all, but when there is literally no way that I can afford to buy a farm without some kind of loan, and no bank wants to take that kind of risk anymore, it's just another episode of being taunted by false opportunity.

    Which makes my degree focused on Advanced Agriculture absolutely goddamned worthless when I graduate.

    Peachy.