What I'm trying to explain, ma'am, is that when the soldiers come back, the medical staff have to be trained to recognize the visual effects of PTSD. You get a man who's loud and boisterous and all of a sudden he's quiet and withdrawn, that man is suffering from something. Or it could be just the opposite; it could be a man who's withdrawn and quiet who all of a sudden becomes outlandish, does stupid things for attention, gets adrenalin rushes, that shows that he's craving for something, that he's missing something in his life. Normally it's the adrenalin rush that coincides with battle.
On November 23rd, 2010. See this statement in context.