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Special Guest Column
I'm at School, My Friend's at War
By: David Onestak, Ph.D.
Director, Eastern Illinois University Counseling Center
As we approach what seems to be an almost certain conflict with Iraq, an
increasing number of students approach me with their concerns about high school
and college friends who have been (or may soon be) deployed for military
service. These students, like the young adults of previous war-time generations,
express feelings commonly associated with the trauma of military deployment
(e.g., fear, anxiety, sadness, anger, etc.), with particular apprehension about
what they will experience if actual combat occurs.
These students are describing completely normal responses to an acutely
troubling situation. Nevertheless, they face the issue of how best to cope with
the deployment and possible combat involvement of their friends. From my
perspective, perhaps the single most critical challenge for these students is to
sustain a focus not on their fears (no member of your campus community can alter
the path of even one bomb or bullet if fighting ensues) but on what does remain
under their control.
To you students, I suggest that it is important to take care of yourself and
to attempt to go about "business as usual." Some students may mistakenly
conclude that, given the risks being faced by their friends in the military,
their own personal needs and academic pursuits are insignificant. This is not
true. If you allow yourself to decay intellectually, physically, emotionally,
and spiritually, you will soon be of no use to yourself or anyone else. In fact,
you may actually become a source of concern for others, adding to their existing
burden and making it more difficult for them to cope.
It is best to:
- Take it day by day. Stick to the academic, work, and social schedules that
give structure to your daily life. There is comfort in these routines.
- Try to eat well and get enough rest.
- Exercise regularly.
- Avoid excesses in alcohol and other drugs.
- Limit your exposure to the emotionally draining impact of television war
coverage. The demands of the twenty-four-hour-a-day news cycle encourage the
media to inflate even the most minor events into "breaking news." Is it
really going to benefit you to watch the same bomb footage over and over
again?
- Spend time with people that you care about and do things with them that
you enjoy.
- Seek support and comfort from spiritual leaders and others in your faith
community.
- If you are struggling, talk about your feelings and ask for support from
friends and family. If things become more overwhelming, contact the
Counseling Center and request an appointment to discuss these issues.
While the previously listed suggestions are all important to coping effectively
with deployment/combat issues, perhaps the best thing that you can do for
yourself is to reach out and find meaningful ways to be helpful to others,
especially your friends in the military. For example, just like freshman at your
school, service members are overjoyed to get a letter, card, or package from
home. Consistent efforts to communicate with your friends who have been deployed
can do wonders to raise their morale and strengthen them for the challenges that
they face. In fact, some incredibly moving and courageous compositions have been
written between soldiers and their friends and loved ones (if you are
interested, do a Google search for the 1861 letter written by Sullivan Ballou to
his wife Sarah during the American Civil War).
However, communicating with deployed military personnel can be complicated,
especially during times of war, so a couple things you should consider are:
- The frequency is probably more important than the length of the
communications.
- The military services will not provide you with contact information for
your friends. Their parents and/or spouses should have the required
information.
- While all service members will have email accounts, it is unlikely that
electronic communications will be "instant." Due to variables such as
mission activity and the availability of computers, a soldier's response may
be delayed for a week or more. Technological advancements have led some to
speculate that, similar to the old practice of waiting in long lines at a
phone booth to call home, soldiers will now be standing in long lines
waiting to use computers for e-mail.
- Snail-mail letters and cards are still one of the least expensive and most
satisfactory ways to stay in touch with military personnel. Their advantage
is that they can be reread during lonely moments or at times when other
forms of communication are not available. Military postal systems will be
set up near units, and estimates are that delivery times will average about
ten days. Letters composed on a computer can be saved and collected in a
book to be presented upon your friend's return.
- If you are sending a package, check out the United States Postal Service
website (www.usps.com) for information
about what can and cannot be shipped to various locations. Be creative with
your packages. Send photos, silly toys, newly released CDs, and interesting
home newspaper and DEN articles. Make sure any food items are not
perishable. Because of the high cost of calling home, phone cards are an
especially welcomed and valued gift to include in letters and packages. Be
sure to research the rules and restrictions of phone cards before your
purchase.
- Your friends may not be able to share much information about their
location or mission. At the same time, they may talk passionately about
their unit and their desire to serve their country. This enthusiasm is
essential to your friends' success and safety in combat, and it is important
for you to recognize and honor this part of their experience.
- Even if you have feelings to the contrary (e.g., "The French are right;
you shouldn't be there anyway"), it is important to keep your communications
positive, upbeat, and supportive. Humorous stories about family and/or
shared friends can transcend geographical distances and help service members
feel close and connected to the important people in their lives.
- If you decide you would like to extend your good will efforts beyond your
friend, you can inquire if there is anyone in his or her unit who is not
getting mail and request contact information for that person. The National
Military Family Association (www.nmfa.org)
can provide additional information about more general efforts to support our
service men and women.
In closing, while it may seem premature at this point, you should begin to
contemplate and prepare for your friend's return to the States. Friends and
loved ones of military service members frequently have fantasies of what the
reunion will be like, often harboring a strong desire to return to "the way we
were." However, the passage time and the experience of being deployed, not to
mention the potentially life-altering impact of armed combat, can result in
dramatic changes both within and between people. It is important to be willing
to spend the time necessary to slowly reacquaint with one another and to
reestablish the relationship on both old and new terms.
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