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Former soldier walking across the country aims to bring ‘a tsunami of attention’ to PTSD

Army veteran Stephen Meyers holding a map of his route across the country. Meyers hopes to be in California by Thanksgiving.

 

Breaking down the stigma and misunderstandings about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is the goal of a retired U.S. Army veteran walking through the Wabash Valley on U.S. 40 this weekend.

Stephen Meyers has been traveling this past week through Illinois, talking to people he meets along the roads, at restaurants and stop-overs. He wants to bring “a tsunami of attention” to the issue of PTSD as he makes his way from Kansas City, Missouri, through the eastern and southern United States.

He arrived in Terre Haute on Sunday, and was continuing his walk to Indianapolis, then turn south through Cincinnati, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia and reach the coast in Florida.

“I thought I was going to be walking and occasionally people would be talking to me,” Meyers said Friday afternoon as he left Effingham, Illinois. “But people want to talk to me everywhere.”

Meyers making his way through St. Louis, Missouri.

 

Meyers began walking Feb. 15. He plans to be in California by Thanksgiving – meaning he will turn around and walk back across half the country so he can reach the West Coast.

Meyers is inspired by his personal experience with PTSD. He served in Iraq from 2005 to 2007 and in Afghanistan in 2013.

In 2008 when he sought help for PTSD for his anti-Islamic sentiments, he said, he felt betrayed when his therapist turned out to be a person of Middle Eastern heritage, so he did not go back for counseling.

He also found that prior to 2008, the Army was not helpful to soldiers who sought assistance with mental health issues.

“You didn’t talk about it because you wanted to keep your job,” Meyers said.

He found out that his high security clearance would be jeopardized if he requested counseling.

It was his girlfriend who eventually got Meyers to seek PTSD counseling in 2015 due to his ongoing issues.

He turned to a veterans center because he had lost confidence in the Army, he said.

“People do what their leaders do,” Meyers explained. “I did 20 years of active duty and two years of National Guard, and in that time, none of my commanding offers got any help, or let it be known if they did. So, in my mind, I was following in their footsteps by not getting help.”

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