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Field Exercises

How Veterans Are Healing Themselves through Farming and Outdoor Activities

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

How connecting with nature is helping veterans reintegrate into civilian life and recover from PTSD.

There are nearly twenty-five million veterans and active-duty soldiers in North America. Some experts estimate that more than one quarter of these men and women suffer from post-traumatic distress, and many other military persons experience difficulty reintegrating into civilian life. While conventionally prescribed treatments primarily involve medication and therapy, many people are discovering additional ways to manage their injuries and reduce their suffering.

Field Exercises: How Veterans Are Healing Themselves through Farming and Outdoor Activities shares the compelling stories of men and women who are finding relief from stressful and traumatic military experiences, while also establishing community networks and other peer support initiatives. Stephanie Westlund examines:

  • The deep and far-reaching connections between nature and human health
  • The tremendous impact of stress and trauma on survivors' lives
  • Resources and groups providing opportunities in the emerging field of "Green Care".
  • Field Exercises offers hope for veterans searching for methods to ease the transition to civilian life and recover from military stress and trauma. This book will appeal to millions of North American soldiers, veterans, and their loved ones, doctors, psychiatrists, social workers and other caregivers, other groups struggling with high rates of stress and post-traumatic experience, and all those interested in the relationship between nature and human health.

    Stephanie Westlund holds a PhD in peace and conflict studies. She has been conducting research with veterans since 2009, and continues to be inspired by their courage and personal resolve to move through pain toward recovery, and their unrelenting desire to serve their communities.

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      • Publisher's Weekly

        June 16, 2014
        Peace and conflict expert Westlund explores the complex repercussions of warfare on the minds of combat veterans and the ways in which gardening, contact with nature, and work in the air and sunshine bring about measurably positive effects on their psyches. She makes the case for “green care,” which she uses as an umbrella term for health care that combines traditional medicine “with agriculture, therapeutic horticulture and gardening, landscape conservation, wilderness activities, animal-assisted therapies.” The book’s individual chapters highlight the healing of a veteran through the type of green-care under discussion. Westlund asserts that contact with nature is not emphasized enough in the rehabilitation of the war-wounded and makes a case for it, both anecdotally and through a variety of studies. “Both the empirical research and the stories I have gathered here point overwhelmingly to the fact that when a person finds and/or remembers her/himself in ecological relationship with their surroundings, their human psyche is changed, and sometimes transformed,” she concludes convincingly.

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    • Kindle Book
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    Languages

    • English

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