Everyone asks questions. We question things in our daily lives that confuse us, or make us think. With these questions, there must be a way to categorize them. That's where type 1 and type 3 questions came from. The types of questions differ because of the way they can be answered. Type 1 questions have straight answers, they are objective questions. Type 3 questions make you think a little harder. They do not have a straight answer, and cause you to think about allot of options. They are even more reflective than type 1 questions.
Many veterans live life after war in fear, in fear of themselves, and their issues. They live without realizing they can get help for their problems, get help for their PTSD. One of the biggest reasons PTSD has not been widely treated is because not many soldiers who have it come forward. This is due to the fact that in the military, those who seek help are considered weak and unfit. This leads to the question What can be done to reach those soldiers who feel scared to reach out for help? In other words, when soldiers realize they have a problem, they don't want to get help in fear of being ridiculed, so what can be done? I ask this question because it is really important that the soldiers receive help. In the video "A Soldiers Heart" we saw many examples of people who were putting themselves and even others in danger, or even hurting themselves because of PTSD. That is why it is important to seek a way of reaching those who need help.
Sometimes coming back from war can be worse than actually being in war. This is because the added stresses of war can really get to a soldier, and cause them to get what is called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). PTSD changes a soldier, it makes them unable to function normally in daily life. We can't have our soldiers living in fear of this disease. This leads to my question: What can be done to prevent and stop PTSD from effecting a soldier? In other words, Is there any process, or way of training a soldier so that PTSD does not become a factor? I ask this question because soldiers deserve to have us find the implications and consequences of the answers. They fight for our country, so we should fight for them by fighting this disease for them. Soldiers should not live in fear of this disease, that is why we must find a way to prevent it.
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