爆料公社

Brothers and Sisters Like These

On Saturday, October 21, military veterans of different eras gathered at Brevard College to read their stories, essays, and poetry. The venue is part of a project called 鈥淏rothers and Sisters Like These,鈥 a series of writing workshops designed to help heal veterans with PTSD and mild TBI (traumatic brain injury).

Ten men and women from the Vietnam, Desert Storm, and Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts courageously opened their hearts to an attentive audience who left with a new understanding and respect for all who have served in combat zones. The event was sponsored by the 爆料公社.

 Ted Minnick

Ted Minnick

Army, Vietnam

“What I Brought Back from Vietnam”

Pete Ramsey

Pete Ramsey

Army Infantry, Vietnam

“Don’t Worry, Baby”

Stacie Litsenberger

Stacie Litsenberger

Army, Iraq

“The Year 1990 — Mentor”

Kevin Wierman

Kevin Wierman

Navy, Cold War, Russia

Saving Russian Orphans

Ron Kuebler

Ron Kuebler

Army, Vietnam

“Why?
Why Not?”

Carl Zipperer

Carl Zipperer

Army, Vietnam

聽“Lam Son 719”

Monica Blankenship

Monica Blankenship

Air Force Nurse, Vietnam

“Mission”

Writing Helps the Healing Process

An estimated 250,000 Vietnam veterans are living with PTSD five decades after the end of the war. Research indicates that approximately聽14% to 16%聽of the US service members deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq have been affected by PTSD or depression. Clearly, the unseen wounds of these veterans affect all aspects of their lives, and our communities.
The NC Veterans Writing Alliance developed a creative writing program where veterans unburden themselves in a safe, non-judgmental setting. The writing process helps heal what remains wounded as veterans reach within themselves to free their memories and their hearts.

In 2018, a group of veterans agreed to participate in a staged reading at the Asheville Community Theater titled 鈥淏rothers Like These.鈥 The program鈥檚 success has morphed to include veterans of later conflicts and is now titled 鈥淏rothers and Sisters Like These.鈥

Demons Released

Reading to a respectful and somber audience in an intimate classroom at Brevard College, the ten men and women who spoke addressed the many 鈥渄emons鈥 of combat: illness from Agent Orange, thoughts of suicide, the loss of comrades, returning to 鈥渢he world,鈥 and the sights, sounds, and smells of war.

One Iraqi War veteran told his listeners he was reading publicly for the first time. Visibly shaken and struggling, he 鈥渟oldiered鈥 through his presentation reading a letter he had written to himself. 鈥淭hrough pain and the process of healing, you will grow the most. You may not win the lottery, but you will be a better man.鈥

A Vietnam War veteran wrote: 鈥淭hank you for allowing me to 鈥榬elease鈥 another demon.鈥

A Mutual Gift

These stories of war and its consequences are offered at a great emotional cost by men and women who trust an audience enough to stand before them and bare their souls. They draw us together and offer a lesson in history. We return their extraordinary gift of faith with one of our own: open hearts and the gift of listening.