So needed right now, men's personal perspectives on healing collective war trauma instead of glorifying, numbing or rationalising war as inevitable... rather than seeing it as a failure of human relationship
Eimear, thanks so much for your comment. You name the numbing and rationalising so clearly. I feel the clarity in your framing of war as a "failure of human relationship." So true.
For what it's worth i like the first title. ; ) What an important voice, as veterans' healing journeys are rarely witnessed outside of veterans' circles. In order to stand for the sanity of choosing alternatives to war, we need to hear the long term impact of these human misadventures. Thank you Matthew for posting, as always.
So needed right now, men's personal perspectives on healing collective war trauma instead of glorifying, numbing or rationalising war as inevitable... rather than seeing it as a failure of human relationship
Eimear, thanks so much for your comment. You name the numbing and rationalising so clearly. I feel the clarity in your framing of war as a "failure of human relationship." So true.
For what it's worth i like the first title. ; ) What an important voice, as veterans' healing journeys are rarely witnessed outside of veterans' circles. In order to stand for the sanity of choosing alternatives to war, we need to hear the long term impact of these human misadventures. Thank you Matthew for posting, as always.
thanks Kathryn! thank you for your encouragement, and I have integrated your feedback and chosen an alternative title for the next post. Many thanks!