Attention A T users. To access the menus on this page please perform the following steps. 1. Please switch auto forms mode to off. 2. Hit enter to expand a main menu option (Health, Benefits, etc). 3. To enter and activate the submenu links, hit the down arrow. You will now be able to tab or arrow up or down through the submenu options to access/activate the submenu links.

Veterans Health Administration

Attention A T users. To access the combo box on this page please perform the following steps. 1. Press the alt key and then the down arrow. 2. Use the up and down arrows to navigate this combo box. 3. Press enter on the item you wish to view. This will take you to the page listed.
Menu
Veterans Health Administration
Quick Links
Veterans Crisis Line Badge
My healthevet badge
 

She Needed Someone to Listen. VA Did.

Female counselor comforting a female patient.

Suicide prevention is a top priority at the Department of Veterans Affairs.

By Tom Cramer, VHA Office of Digital Media
Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Melissa, 45, said she was not in a good place, emotionally speaking, when she retired from the Army in 2013.   After all, she had experienced her share of trauma during her 20 years of service, which included deployments to Bosnia, Iraq, Afghanistan and other hot spots.

Then there was the personal stuff, including a divorce that left her confidence and self-esteem at a low.

“I had a lot of things going on,” she said simply. “I was stressed out.  I was beginning to think about taking my own life.”

She made a decision to move from Nashville back home to Huntington, W.Va., where she was born and raised. “I knew I had to do something, and do it quick,” she said.  “So I moved home.  About a week after I got home I went straight to the women’s clinic here at the VA and asked for help.”

Melissa said that moment marked the beginning of her journey out of the darkness. She was promptly assigned a counselor, began therapy, and even acquired a canine companion named Lilly who helps her stay calm in crowded public places.

“They taught me coping skills here, and they taught me how to relax,” she said. “Best of all, they’re good listeners.  There’s a program support specialist here, her name’s Diania, who’s always there for me to talk to.  She always listens.”

“There’s people out there who are worse than I was. I want to help them if I can.”

Melissa said a major turning point in her recovery was her decision to enter the Huntington VA’s Compensated Work Therapy program.

“That was a big step for me, going back to work,” she said. “I wasn’t sure I could do it. So I asked my counselor if she thought I was ready.  And she told me I was.  Her confidence in me made all the difference.  It made me believe in myself again.”

And so Melissa went to work for the Huntington VA’s suicide prevention program, where she did a lot of “odds and ends” work, as she called it. This included helping out with various projects including going to outreach events where she distributed suicide prevention literature to fellow Veterans.  She found the work satisfying.

“It gave me a purpose,” she said. “I came to realize I’m not working because I need money.  I’m working so I can give back to Veterans.  There are people out there who are worse than I was.  I want to help them if I can.”      

“She did a great job for us,” said Deanna Stump, a suicide prevention coordinator at Huntington. “She was so enthusiastic and jumped right into everything, especially when it came to outreach.  She went with me to two different health fairs and did such a great job talking to the Veterans about the services we provide.  She’s a natural at it.”

She’s a Veteran, she could relate.

“She sure is,” added Julie Brawn, another of Huntington’s suicide prevention coordinators. “Unlike Deanna and me, Melissa’s a Veteran; she could easily relate to other Veterans at these outreach events.  She could share her experiences with them.  She could connect with them.”

Melissa has since moved on from the Compensated Work Therapy Program and is now employed full-time with Huntington’s Mental Health Department. The Army Veteran said choosing a career with the VA is, for her, a good way to continue helping her fellow Veterans, a way of ‘paying forward’ the help she received when she needed it.

She said the work she does is nourishment for her soul.

“It’s a good feeling,” she said. “I haven’t felt this way in a long time, maybe 10 years.  I’m not worried about myself now.  I don’t have any worries at all.”

To learn more about health care and other resources available to women Veterans, visit www.womenshealth.va.gov 

Need to talk with someone about how you’re feeling? Call the Women Veterans Call Center at 1.855.VA.WOMEN.  All the representatives there are women, and many are Veterans themselves. They can connect you with the resources you need to start feeling better again.

Need immediate help? Call the Veterans Crisis Line at 1-800-273-8255 (Press 1) or visit www.veteranscrisisline.net