When America was attacked by terrorists twenty years ago, and planes were flown into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and into that Pennsylvania field, men and women from every corner of our great nation raised their hand to serve and fight in our United States military.
Hi, my name is Mark Stillion, and I am one of those people. I am one of the many, who signed the dotted line, before I even turned 18 years old to go and serve and protect something that I felt was worth fighting for: my freedom. Throughout the many years of the Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF), Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF), the Gulf War, and the Vietnam War conflicts, our military saw things and did things that no human being should ever have to experience.
The effects that this combat exposure had on us was great.
When we returned home, many of us came back to the United States feeling alienated and alone. The effects of our combat trauma set in, and with many veterans across the country, the pain and suffering of our invisible wounds of war was just too much to handle.
According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, the number of veterans who served in OIF/OEF, the Gulf War, and the Vietnam War who returned home with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) varies anywhere from 11% - 20%.
These invisible wounds of war are often crippling to the veteran and can lead to things such as severe depression, anxiety, isolation, substance use disorders, homelessness, loss of vocational or educational opportunities, discrimination and even suicide. I am one of those veterans who fell into the grips of addiction after my fourth and final deployment to the Middle East.
RETURNING HOME – A NEW BATTLE
Within six months of returning home from Afghanistan, for the first time in my life, I began using heavy illicit street narcotics in an attempt to self-medicate myself from my night terrors, flashbacks, and feelings of loneliness and hopelessness. This behavior may have numbed me emotionally and physically for the time being, but in the long term, it exacerbated my symptoms to the highest degree.
After several years of struggling, I began to seek serious help. I was diagnosed by the Department of Veterans Affairs with PTSD and was admitted into the West Los Angeles VA Healthcare system for addiction and PTSD treatment. After I left that program, I went into a more intensive addiction recovery treatment program in New York, and then immediately following that, I entered into a yearlong program at the PTSD Foundation of America in Houston, Texas.
While I was there, I was able to work through my trauma and my substance use disorders simultaneously with professional counselors, psychologists, and fellow combat veteran mentors who had been through similar things that I had been through and who had learned of ways to heal from their trauma. I graduated from the PTSD Foundation’s Program in 2019.
Since then, I have not only been clean and sober from all mind-altering substances, but I have learned how to properly manage, openly talk about, and cope with the symptoms of my traumatic experiences.
A FRESH BEGINNING WITH KENT STATE
After returning to Ohio in 2020, I applied to 鶹ѡin hope of finishing my bachelor’s degree which I had started several years prior while I was deployed to Afghanistan. This was a very intimidating decision for me as an adult learner and as a veteran with a diagnosed mental health disorder.
As an adult learner, when I first came to Kent State, I was extremely nervous as to what it would be like for me, at 33 years old, to be going back to school. I knew that I wanted to be an advocate for veteran’s mental health and that I wanted to use my benefits to go to school, but the anticipation and anxiety of what that was going to be like was enough to deter a person away from following through with a decision like this.
Thankfully, 鶹ѡis rated one of the most veteran/military friendly universities in Ohio.
Since day one here, I have felt more welcome and accepted than I could have ever of imagined. Unlike most other colleges, 鶹ѡhas an office solely dedicated to the welfare and success of our military connected students.
Kent States Center for Adult and Veteran’s Services (CAVS) office has been my saving grace since I began studying here. The CAVS office has helped me through every step of this journey with everything: from benefits and payment, to classes and programs that are tailored to suit my needs both in the classroom and out.
I have always felt like I belonged here and I could not be more proud to call myself a Golden Flash.
Since returning home to Ohio, I have earned my bachelor’s degree in educational studies and an undergraduate degree in addictions counseling. I am currently in my second year of graduate school here at 鶹ѡworking towards my master’s in and I am working full time as a licensed Substance Use Disorder Counselor in Columbiana County.
Since I have been at Kent State, I have accepted numerous requests to share my story with the world. Some of these opportunities include a FOX 8 News segment titled “Veterans Voices” with reporter Roosevelt Leftwich, Good Morning America’s GMA3 morning talk show, The DD-214 Chronicle Newspaper, and others.
ADVOCATING FOR COMBAT VETERANS
Now that you have learned a little bit about who I am, I want to talk about what has become my most passionate endeavor in life... helping other combat veterans find hope and healing from their battle-borne traumas, and the consequential effects that those traumas have left them with.
First and foremost, I would like to say that the reason I have decided to share my story with you is because I want any veteran out there who might be reading this and who might be dealing with similar struggles of their own to know that it IS possible for you to heal from your trauma and it IS possible for you to regain control over your life and to be able to once again live a happy and fulfilling life with a true purpose and meaning.
You are NOT alone and there are resources out there for you that can help you with this battle.
If you are a veteran who is considering returning to school, or if you are in school now and do not know what benefits are available to you, I highly encourage you to reach out to our CAVS office for more information.
Aside from the CAVS office, the 鶹ѡCARES Center (which stands for Crisis, Advocacy, Resources, Education, and Support) is an excellent resource for all our students to take advantage of whether it be for homelessness, food assistance, financial insecurity or other critical needs.
The 鶹ѡCounseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) Center is open to all students and offers professional counseling services for issues surrounding mental health services. If you are a veteran who is struggling with life in general, or if you think you have symptoms from PTSD that could be interfering with your everyday life, here are some organizations that I would like to bring to your attention that have had a huge impact on either my life or on the lives of other veterans that I know.
1.
100% free to any combat veteran, the PTSD Foundation of America can help you get your life back, and set you on a path toward success. 1-877-717-PTSD(7873)
2.
100% free to any combat veteran, Wild Ops exists to help fellow combat veterans find support hope, and healing in the battle of transitioning back into civilian life, through Wild Ops excursions all over the United States. 1-877-851-8650
3.
100% free to any veteran, Mighty Oaks Provides peer-to-peer resiliency and recovery programs to our nation’s veterans dealing with challenges related to the struggles of daily military life, combat deployments and the symptoms of post-traumatic stress. 1-832-521-7323