Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT)

 - Class of 1945

Page 29 of 64

 

Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 29 of 64
Page 29 of 64



Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 28
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Page 29 text:

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Page 28 text:

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Page 30 text:

GDITORHSLS l-I-ow We Corn I-lelp The Returning Disorbled Soldier CAROL BALLOU, 1945 Every soldier coming back from the battlefields has had some experience which he will never forget, which has changed him in some way. Every soldier has been affected by this experience and therefore may be, to some extent, maladjusted in civilian life. We must adjust ourselves to his different actions when he comes home, expecting him to be somewhat edgy and unpredictable. In the army no one says thank you or uno . He gets so accustomed to giving and to taking commands that many times he forgets how to make his own decisionsg but he rebels against those who make them for him. Shakespeare noted that the soldier was jealous in honor, sudden and quick in quarrel. So far I have written only of some of the things which we should expect from a returning veteran. Now I will touch on the more important factse-how we should treat him. First of all, I think the most important thing to learn is to be casual, naturally casual. Let him talk if he wants to, and permit him to be silent if he prefers to do so. Some sympathy from you is to be expected, but don't harp on his misfortunes. If you can see that he really wants to break down and have it out, cry with him. Let both of you get it out of your systems, for this will break the strain and tenseness. Be hard' boiled-to his face at least. If the man understands the reason for this attitude, he will regard it as a service provided you do not overdo it. Be on the alert to help him get away from any inferiority complex he might start to develop. Encourage him to go on and try to be the useful citizen he would have been if he had not been wounded. Make him realize that whatever his physical infirmities may be, he is still the same per' son that he was. I know that the closer one comes to such a man, the harder it is to overlook his disability. I think that an employer should discuss it with him frankly. A wife or a mother can hardly avoid a strong emotional reaction toward it. They must help him to take up his life, and to make the most of it in spite of his handicap. They must induce him to assume his full share of responsibility in family relationships. I think that the most workable solution will be to accept the disfigurement, grieve over it until you both feel better, refer to it when necessary, and never let it get to the point where it cannot be referred to. Then it will slowly melt away from consciousness and you will forget it in a healthy way. Community programs help a great deal in assisting the disabled soldier to become adjusted to civilian life, especially veteran organizations. Soldiers are bound to feel banded together after the war, for they have shared experiences which they, and only they, will ever be able to understand. Psychiatric facilities of some sort should be made available in every community as a part of the health program. We should help veterans eligible for schooling. We should encourage them to take advantage of the opportunity of a free college education, which is a provision of the G.I. Bill of Rights. Professional help for soldiers involved in tangled marriages and in family troubles should be made available. So you see that there are many ways in which we can help our wounded men to gain happiness and to find a place where they will be needed in our postwar world.

Suggestions in the Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT) collection:

Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Chester High School - Flamstead Challenge Yearbook (Chester, VT) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959


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