We train soldiers for war. Lets train them to come home too Hector Garcia

Carlos,

the Vietnam vet Marine

who volunteered for three tours
and got shot up in every one.

In 1971, he was medically retired

because he had so much
shrapnel in his body

that he was setting off metal detectors.

For the next 42 years,
he suffered from nightmares,

extreme anxiety in public,

isolation, depression.

He self-medicated with alcohol.

He was married and divorced three times.

Carlos had post-traumatic stress disorder.

Now, I became a psychologist
to help mitigate human suffering,

and for the past 10 years, my target
has been the suffering caused by PTSD,

as experienced by veterans like Carlos.

Until recently, the science of PTSD
just wasn’t there.

And so, we didn’t know what to do.

We put some veterans on heavy drugs.

Others we hospitalized
and gave generic group therapy,

and others still we simply said to them,

“Just go home and try to forget
about your experiences.”

More recently, we’ve tried therapy dogs,
wilderness retreats –

many things which may
temporarily relieve stress,

but which don’t actually eliminate
PTSD symptoms over the long term.

But things have changed.

And I am here to tell you
that we can now eliminate PTSD,

not just manage the symptoms,

and in huge numbers of veterans.

Because new scientific research
has been able to show,

objectively, repeatedly,

which treatments actually
get rid of symptoms and which do not.

Now as it turns out,

the best treatments for PTSD use
many of the very same training principles

that the military uses
in preparing its trainees for war.

Now, making war –

this is something that we are good at.

We humans have been making war
since before we were even fully human.

And since then, we have gone
from using stone and sinew

to developing the most sophisticated
and devastating weapon systems imaginable.

And to enable our warriors
to use these weapons,

we employ the most cutting-edge
training methods.

We are good at making war.

And we are good at training
our warriors to fight.

Yet, when we consider the experience
of the modern-day combat veteran,

we begin to see that we
have not been as good

at preparing them to come home.

Why is that?

Well, our ancestors lived
immersed in conflict,

and they fought right where they lived.

So until only very recently
in our evolutionary history,

there was hardly a need to learn
how to come home from war,

because we never really did.

But thankfully, today,

most of humanity lives
in far more peaceful societies,

and when there is conflict,
we, especially in the United States,

now have the technology to put
our warriors through advanced training,

drop them in to fight
anywhere on the globe

and when they’re done,

jet them back to peacetime suburbia.

But just imagine for a moment
what this must feel like.

I’ve spoken with veterans who’ve told me

that one day they’re in a brutal
firefight in Afghanistan

where they saw carnage and death,

and just three days later,
they found themselves

toting an ice chest
to their kid’s soccer game.

“Mindfuck” is the most common term.

(Laughter)

It’s the most common term
I’ve heard to describe that experience.

And that’s exactly what that is.

Because while our warriors
spend countless hours training for war,

we’ve only recently come to understand

that many require training
on how to return to civilian life.

Now, like any training, the best
PTSD treatments require repetition.

In the military,

we don’t simply hand trainees
Mark-19 automatic grenade launchers

and say, “Here’s the trigger,
here’s some ammo and good luck.”

No. We train them, on the range
and in specific contexts,

over and over and over

until lifting their weapon
and engaging their target

is so engrained into muscle memory

that it can be performed
without even thinking,

even under the most stressful
conditions you can imagine.

Now, the same holds
for training-based treatments.

The first of these treatments
is cognitive therapy,

and this is a kind
of mental recalibration.

When veterans come home from war,

their way of mentally framing
the world is calibrated

to an immensely
more dangerous environment.

So when you try to overlay that mind frame
onto a peacetime environment,

you get problems.

You begin drowning in worries
about dangers that aren’t present.

You begin not trusting family or friends.

Which is not to say there are no
dangers in civilian life; there are.

It’s just that the probability
of encountering them

compared to combat

is astronomically lower.

So we never advise veterans
to turn off caution completely.

We do train them, however,
to adjust caution

according to where they are.

If you find yourself
in a bad neighborhood,

you turn it up.

Out to dinner with family?

You turn it way down.

We train veterans to be fiercely rational,

to systematically gauge
the actual statistical probability

of encountering, say, an IED
here in peacetime America.

With enough practice,
those recalibrations stick.

The next of these treatments
is exposure therapy,

and this is a kind of field training,

and the fastest of the proven
effective treatments out there.

You remember Carlos?

This was the treatment that he chose.

And so we started off
by giving him exercises,

for him, challenging ones:

going to a grocery store,

going to a shopping mall,
going to a restaurant,

sitting with his back to the door.

And, critically –

staying in these environments.

Now, at first he was very anxious.

He wanted to sit
where he could scan the room,

where he could plan escape routes,

where he could get his hands
on a makeshift weapon.

And he wanted to leave, but he didn’t.

He remembered his training
in the Marine Corps,

and he pushed through his discomfort.

And every time he did this,
his anxiety ratcheted down a little bit,

and then a little bit more
and then a little bit more,

until in the end,

he had effectively relearned
how to sit in a public space

and just enjoy himself.

He also listened to recordings
of his combat experiences,

over and over and over.

He listened until those memories
no longer generated any anxiety.

He processed his memories so much

that his brain no longer needed
to return to those experiences

in his sleep.

And when I spoke with him
a year after treatment had finished,

he told me,

“Doc, this is the first time in 43 years

that I haven’t had nightmares.”

Now, this is different
than erasing a memory.

Veterans will always remember
their traumatic experiences,

but with enough practice,

those memories are no longer as raw
or as painful as they once were.

They don’t feel emotionally
like they just happened yesterday,

and that is an immensely
better place to be.

But it’s often difficult.

And, like any training,
it may not work for everybody.

And there are trust issues.

Sometimes I’m asked,

“If you haven’t been there, Doc,
how can you help me?”

Which is understandable.

But at the point of returning
to civilian life,

you do not require
somebody who’s been there.

You don’t require training
for operations on the battlefield;

you require training on how to come home.

For the past 10 years of my work,

I have been exposed to detailed accounts

of the worst experiences
that you can imagine,

daily.

And it hasn’t always been easy.

There have been times
where I have just felt my heart break

or that I’ve absorbed too much.

But these training-based
treatments work so well,

that whatever this work takes out of me,
it puts back even more,

because I see people get better.

I see people’s lives transform.

Carlos can now enjoy outings
with his grandchildren,

which is something he couldn’t even do
with his own children.

And what’s amazing to me
is that after 43 years of suffering,

it only took him 10 weeks
of intense training to get his life back.

And when I spoke with him, he told me,

“I know that I can’t get those years back.

But at least now, whatever days
that I have left on this Earth,

I can live them in peace.”

He also said, “I hope that these
younger veterans don’t wait

to get the help they need.”

And that’s my hope, too.

Because …

this life is short,

and if you are fortunate enough
to have survived war

or any kind of traumatic experience,

you owe it to yourself
to live your life well.

And you shouldn’t wait
to get the training you need

to make that happen.

Now, the best way of ending
human suffering caused by war

is to never go to war.

But we are just not there
yet as a species.

Until we are,

the mental suffering that we create
in our sons and in our daughters

when we send them off to fight

can be alleviated.

But we must ensure that the science,
the energy level, the value

that we place on sending them off to war

is at the very least mirrored

in how well we prepare them
to come back home to us.

This much, we owe them.

Thank you.

(Applause)

卡洛斯

,越南海军陆战队

老兵,他自愿参加了三场巡回演出
,每次都被枪杀。

1971 年,他因身体内

有太多
弹片

而引爆金属探测器而因医疗原因退休。

在接下来的 42 年里,
他饱受噩梦、

公共场合极度焦虑、

孤独和抑郁的折磨。

他用酒精自我治疗。

他结过婚,也离过三遍。

卡洛斯患有创伤后应激障碍。

现在,我成为了一名
帮助减轻人类痛苦的心理学家

,在过去的 10 年里,我的目标
一直是 PTSD 造成的痛苦,

就像卡洛斯这样的退伍军人所经历的那样。

直到最近,PTSD 的科学
才刚刚出现。

所以,我们不知道该怎么办。

我们让一些退伍军人吸毒。

其他人我们住院
并进行了一般性的集体治疗,

还有一些人我们只是对他们说,

“回家吧,试着
忘记你的经历。”

最近,我们尝试了治疗犬、
荒野静修——

许多可以
暂时缓解压力的方法,

但实际上并不能
长期消除 PTSD 症状。

但事情发生了变化。

我在这里告诉你
,我们现在可以消除创伤后应激障碍,

而不仅仅是控制症状,

还有大量退伍军人。

因为新的科学研究
已经能够

客观地、反复地表明,

哪些治疗可以真正
消除症状,哪些不能。

现在事实证明,

创伤后应激障碍的最佳治疗方法使用了
许多

与军队
在为受训人员准备战争时使用的相同的训练原则。

现在,制造战争——

这是我们擅长的事情。

在我们还没有完全成为人类之前,我们人类就一直在进行战争。

从那时起,我们已经
从使用石头和肌肉

发展到开发可以想象的最复杂
和最具破坏性的武器系统。

为了让我们的战士
能够使用这些武器,

我们采用了最前沿的
训练方法。

我们擅长发动战争。

我们擅长训练
我们的战士战斗。

然而,当我们考虑
现代战斗老兵的经历时,

我们开始发现我们
并没有做好

让他们回家的准备工作。

这是为什么?

好吧,我们的祖先
生活在冲突中

,他们就在他们居住的地方战斗。

所以直到最近
在我们的进化史上,

几乎没有必要学习
如何从战争中回家,

因为我们从来没有真正做到过。

但值得庆幸的是,今天,

大多数人类生活
在更加和平的社会中

,当发生冲突时,
我们,尤其是在美国,

现在拥有让
我们的战士接受高级训练的技术,

让他们
在全球任何地方战斗

当他们完成后,

将他们送回和平时期的郊区。

但是请想象
一下这一定是什么感觉。

我曾与退伍军人交谈过,他们告诉我

有一天他们在阿富汗进行了一场残酷的
交火,在

那里他们目睹了大屠杀和死亡

,仅仅三天后,
他们发现自己

带着一个冰柜
去参加他们孩子的足球比赛。

“Mindfuck”是最常见的术语。

(笑声)

这是我听到的最常见
的描述这种经历的词。

这正是它的本质。

因为虽然我们的战士
花费了无数小时进行战争训练,

但我们直到最近才明白

,许多人需要接受
关于如何重返平民生活的训练。

现在,就像任何训练一样,最好的
PTSD 治疗需要重复。

在军队中,

我们不会简单地递给学员
Mark-19 自动榴弹发射器,

然后说,“这是扳机,
这是一些弹药,祝你好运。”

不。我们在射程
和特定环境中

一遍又一遍地训练他们,

直到举起他们的武器
并与他们的目标

交战是如此根深蒂固的肌肉记忆

,以至于

即使在压力最大的
情况下也可以不假思索地进行训练 想象。

现在,
基于训练的治疗也是如此。

这些治疗中的第一个
是认知疗法

,这是
一种心理重新校准。

当退伍军人从战争

中归来时,他们在心理上构建
世界的方式会

适应一个
极其危险的环境。

因此,当您尝试将这种思维框架
叠加到和平时期的环境中时,

您会遇到问题。

你开始沉浸在对
不存在的危险的担忧中。

你开始不信任家人或朋友。

这并不是说
平民生活没有危险。 有。

只是遇到他们的概率

比起战斗

要低上天文数字。

所以我们从不建议退伍军人
完全关闭谨慎。

然而,我们确实训练

他们根据他们所处的位置调整谨慎。

如果你发现自己
在一个糟糕的社区,

你把它打开。

和家人出去吃饭?

你把它调低。

我们训练退伍军人非常理性

,系统地评估

在和平时期的美国遇到简易爆炸装置的实际统计概率。

通过足够的练习,
这些重新校准会坚持下去。

这些治疗中的下一个
是暴露疗法

,这是一种现场训练,

并且是目前已证明有效的最快的
治疗方法。

你还记得卡洛斯吗?

这是他选择的治疗方法。

所以我们
开始给他锻炼,

对他来说,具有挑战性的锻炼:

去杂货店,

去购物中心,
去餐馆

,背对着门坐着。

而且,至关重要的是 -

留在这些环境中。

现在,一开始他很着急。

他想坐在
可以扫描房间的

地方,可以计划逃生路线的

地方,可以
拿到临时武器的地方。

他想离开,但他没有。

他想起了自己
在海军陆战队的训练,

克服了自己的不适。

每次他这样做,
他的焦虑都会一点点减轻,

然后一点点
,然后一点点,

直到最后,

他有效地重新
学会了如何坐在公共

场所享受自己。

他还一遍又一遍地听
他的战斗经历的录音

他一直听着,直到那些记忆
不再产生任何焦虑。

他对自己的记忆进行了如此多的处理

,以至于他的大脑不再需要在睡眠
中恢复那些经历

治疗结束一年后,当我与他交谈时

他告诉我,

“医生,这是 43 年

来我第一次没有做噩梦。”

现在,这
与擦除记忆不同。

退伍军人将永远记得
他们的创伤经历,

但通过足够的练习,

这些记忆不再
像以前那样原始或痛苦。

他们不会
像昨天刚刚发生的那样情绪激动

,这是一个非常
好的地方。

但这通常很困难。

而且,就像任何培训一样,
它可能并不适合所有人。

还有信任问题。

有时我会被问到,

“如果你没有去过那里,医生,
你能帮我做什么?”

这是可以理解的。

但是在
回到平民生活的时候,

你不需要
曾经去过那里的人。

您不需要
在战场上进行操作训练;

您需要接受有关如何回家的培训。

在过去 10 年的工作中,

我每天都接触到你能想象

到的最糟糕经历的详细记录

这并不总是那么容易。

有时我只是感到心碎

或吸收了太多东西。

但是这些基于训练的
治疗效果很好

,无论这项工作对我有什么好处,
它都会让我恢复更多,

因为我看到人们变得更好。

我看到人们的生活发生了变化。

卡洛斯现在可以
和孙子们一起享受郊游,

这是他甚至不能
和自己的孩子一起做的事情。

令我惊讶的
是,在经历了 43 年的痛苦之后,

他只用了 10 周
的高强度训练就恢复了生命。

当我与他交谈时,他告诉我,

“我知道我无法回到那些岁月。

但至少现在,无论
我在地球上剩下多少日子,

我都可以平静地生活。”

他还说,“我希望这些
年轻的退伍军人不要

等待获得他们需要的帮助。”

这也是我的希望。

因为……

这一生很短暂

,如果你
有幸在战争

或任何创伤经历中幸存下来,

你应该好好
地过好自己的生活。

你不应该

等待获得实现这一目标所需的培训。

现在,结束
战争给人类带来的苦难的最好办法

就是永远不要参战。

但我们只是还
没有作为一个物种。

直到我们成为,当我们送他们去战斗时

,我们
在我们的儿子和女儿

身上造成的精神痛苦

可以得到缓解。

但我们必须确保将他们送上战场的科学
、能量水平和价值

至少反映

在我们如何准备好让他们
回到我们身边。

这么多,我们欠他们的。

谢谢你。

(掌声)