Your point is very interesting. Earlier we were talking with Mr. Stoffer about the possibility that people might fake PTSD, but we know that there are also people who hide their PTSD. Both extremes are possible, meaning that there are people who are exaggerating their symptoms in order to get compensation and there are people who refuse to admit that they have it. In general, we feel there are many more people hiding their PTSD, for an important reason.
First, we have said it over and again, it is a source of shame, it has a very bad reputation in the Canadian armed forces. But there is another reason: if someone suffers from PTSD and they are therefore a veteran, this means they are no longer in the army. For many, this means the end of their lives. For many soldiers no longer being able to wear the uniform, carry a gun, no longer belonging to that great big family... Many people sign up because it is a corps, there is team spirit: you can die beside someone else, and they can die for you. For many people, the CF fills graps they experienced during their childhood. They didn't have that family, that discipline, that confidence in others, that motivation that comes from the feeling that they are doing good.
What we see, when they come to therapy, when we tell them that they are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, is that they think this means they have to leave the CF. But the CF is their whole life. They don't want to think of themselves as civilians because civilians are "losers", they're dummies. Being in the military means being associated with pride in your country and pride in yourself.
What you said was extremely important: how can we ensure that they can remain in the forces, keep that identity, continue to serve their country and feel good about themselves?
As far as I know, there is no room in the forces at present for people who are sick. However, if we were talking about police officers, I would tell them that they are not currently fit to return to mobile patrols, but that they can find an administrative job or part-time work. This is not possible in the armed forces. We cannot tell soldiers that they will do administrative work on a part-time basis. Their regiment may be deployed. This means that they may be sent on a mission. Many of them believe that having PTSD means giving up everything that gave their lives meaning, it means forging a new identity for themselves. They were soldiers, with all the ranks, the hierarchy, the team spirit and the uniform, and now they are civilians. The army doesn't think much of civilians.