Overcoming Moral Injuries | Joshua Mantz | TEDxSantoDomingo

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  • Опубліковано 25 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 33

  • @corbyvinson1175
    @corbyvinson1175 7 років тому +43

    You go Josh!!! He was my platoon leader when this happened. It was a terrible day to lose him and our beloved senior scout. SSG Harper. I will never forget it.

    • @willbo6530
      @willbo6530 5 років тому +3

      @Corby Vinson
      Much love from a fellow Mustang. Mantz is a great guy and was a great XO when he redeployed to our Cobras. RIP SSG Harper and all our other 1-8 brothers.

    • @adamdalson
      @adamdalson Рік тому

      Vinson mortars are
      Hung brother. I always loved this guy and envied his leadership style. You guys got a good one. Josh was and is the man. So was Harper. I miss that man everyday

  • @rgcamsf
    @rgcamsf 8 років тому +7

    Powerful talk. Critical to understand that 19 year olds are confronting monumental moral dilemmas while trying to survive. So glad that this topic is gaining traction in our society.

  • @savvybytes3748
    @savvybytes3748 4 роки тому +13

    Just wanted to share that in addition to knowing that you’re not alone, there has been huge strides in understanding and rewiring deep trauma/moral injuries. It’s called somatic experiencing. Peter Levine, Stephen Porges and Diane Poole-Heller are some leaders in the field☮️❤️

  • @MshAhmxiO1
    @MshAhmxiO1 6 місяців тому +1

    Thank you endlessly.

  • @Rock_Girl_Daze
    @Rock_Girl_Daze 7 років тому +9

    Great info. I just have to say that the one person who ‘saved’ me was a counsellor who said ‘I got you’, meant it, and proved it.

  • @AleEusse22
    @AleEusse22 3 роки тому +2

    This is incredibly touching

  • @karenjaenke9574
    @karenjaenke9574 7 років тому +3

    Lovely to hear your TED talk message, Josh! Look forward to further conversation and connection.

  • @marcusanderson140
    @marcusanderson140 7 років тому +3

    Wow what a powerful and important message Josh! Thank you for all you're doing to help remove the stigma and help others overcome their moral injuries.

  • @jennyhughes4474
    @jennyhughes4474 7 років тому +16

    Yes: he's right: MORAL injuries cut the deepest, far far worse than physical injuries - although of course these need treating in tandem at same time. But why isPTSD recognised but not other types of moral injury = probably far more common?
    In my own life ('case') the psychological MORAL injuries were caused by CHOICE - and that REPEATED CHOICE hurt/s very very deep: betrayals, lies, cover-ups and prevention of ANY remedial physical & emotional care plus NOT BELIEVING ME = me treated as guilty/greedy for money/making a fuss about nothing (life-threatening severe injuries caused in 2005 in operating theatre in Brighton, UK) then being made to BEG for MY medical information and for the TRUTH for years, ME wrongly branded the guilty one = punished without trial (let alone a FAIR one, equality of arms), immediately. NO ACCESS TO JUSTICE = that's a MEGA moral injury inflicted on so very many people. 'Rights'? Ha ha: only if you can ENFORCE them - which without help (threats, arms, top solicitors, The Law for the elite/governments = using OUR money to protect themselves from us - without our consent) NONE of us can.
    Of course therapies have their place but MOST IMPORTANT are the BASICS first: safe secure home, 100% health and social care covered, enough money to lIVE on (not just barely survive), inclusion, respect, info and choice, access to politics, education, hobbies & sports, transport... EQUALITY but sometimes we need a bit more or a bit different slice of the pie (resources) for our NEEDS and ABILITIES.
    PREVENTION is far better than trying to fix people or things which are broken. Might look fixed (and smiley mask on) but always scarred and never the same after, not ever, carry it always...
    Too much to say, hate typing but talking hard too (my brain injury) and everything relates to everything else. Must stop. Have I got the message over or too scrambled?
    Any questions = do ask.

    • @jennyhughes4474
      @jennyhughes4474 3 роки тому

      ​@45 fottuto stronzo Thank you - but NO: not a psychiatrist - I make art, am a visual 'artist' (of sorts)! Funny though: at school I thought I'd keep art as a hobby & was going to do Developmental Psychology, luckily I saw sense (only just in time - after 1st year 6th form in UK) & swapped maths for art & then did graphic design. What about you? NHS can be good (paid for through taxes & free at the point of delivery = no insurance papers!) but not when THEY caused our injuries, then all they care about is themselves & their reputations so they lie, deny, cover-up, fake med records & wilfully neglect the injuries they knew they'd caused = extreme cruelty & criminal really. If only they'd been honest & open (as they promise to be but aren't) right at the start; will they learn/change? I sincerely hope so. Best to you.

    • @kellyodowd3949
      @kellyodowd3949 2 роки тому

      Understood everything you said and agree 100%. Take care of yourself :). Keeping encouraging thoughts for you not to give up and to keep speaking your truth.

  • @Schwabian
    @Schwabian 6 років тому +2

    You’re a courageous hero, never forget that ❤️

  • @Rusty_shackleford
    @Rusty_shackleford 4 роки тому

    Thank you

  • @klattalexis
    @klattalexis 7 років тому +5

    "Blessed are the peace-makers, since they shall inherit the earth." We were never created to kill one another. "Thou shalt not kill" (10 commandments)

    • @rayk5598
      @rayk5598 5 років тому +3

      Yes, it only applies to "murder" between your own kind. "God" has waged many wars and ordered the Israelites to kill many times in the Old Testament. I guess it's okay if it's done in the name of His "religion".

  • @brianjones6500
    @brianjones6500 2 роки тому +3

    I saw what we did from the top down and it looked a lot like what he describes only I saw what the other side took day-to-day and I can't un look that. Josh that day needed goggles and galoshes. I've seen many days where goggles and galoshes were necessary. - That's moral injury.
    - WSB

  • @BenWeeks
    @BenWeeks Рік тому

    "...we combine with all of the emerging modalities...rekkei" .. ok thanks.

  • @BuddhatheRockstar
    @BuddhatheRockstar 4 роки тому

    💟💛💜💜💛💟

  • @markgeraty8558
    @markgeraty8558 Рік тому

    Had me until the Reiki part. PTSD is a DSM V diagnosis that can come from moral injury (which is not a DSM diagnosis). So called non-traditional or alternative therapies like Reiki being endorsed in such a high profile way opens the door to untold unproven modalities and experimentation. Folks with these problems are among the most vulnerable people and the wild west approach to assisting them is fraught with problems. Nothing is off the table. Anecdotal accounts of success don't cut it with stakes that are so high.

  • @pjhogie
    @pjhogie 8 років тому +4

    I am disheartened by this officer's story particularly his comments regarding PTSD emotional distress, resiliency, preventative maintenance (mental health) etc... This officer was relieved of duty for his disregard for fellow injured Soldiers at the Warrior Transition Battalion, FT Riley in 2013. His misconduct was a serious violation of Army Command Policy as determined after a UCMJ hearing with the 1st ID Commanding General in 2013. I was one of many Soldiers disrespected and humiliated by this man during my recovery from my combat injuries and PTSD. My personal opinion is that this was a disgrace to the Army and our fellow Wounded Warriors. CPT Mantz was intentionally destructive to our mental health and our careers in the Army while he was a Commander at the Warrior Transition Battalion Ft Riley, KS. It was humiliatingly apparent that CPT Mantz disrespected Soldier's who were not as resilient as he stated he was.

    • @CharlieHoehn
      @CharlieHoehn 8 років тому +10

      +paul hogie Thanks for the comment, Paul. I'm sorry you're disheartened and had a negative experience. I have found Josh to be one of the most caring individuals, especially regarding this topic. He's done more than 200 free speaking events (including this TEDx talk), and personally served countless soldiers and veterans who struggle with PTSD. After being friends with him for a few years, I cannot imagine him being "intentionally destructive" to anyone's mental health, or their careers. I do know he experienced compassion fatigue for awhile, due to overextending himself, being on the road for most of the year, feeling burned out. While you may have had a negative experience, consider some compassion. Josh is trying to help. Would you prefer that he do nothing?

    • @KFWP-bc7rp
      @KFWP-bc7rp 8 років тому +7

      +Charlie Hoehn Thank you so much for this comment! Josh is my half brother and he is truly an amazing person who has inspired me to do many things!

    • @victoriabruner1347
      @victoriabruner1347 7 років тому +3

      your comments are untrue. He never was in disregard of any of his duties. If you have made these allegations you need to contact Josh himself and discuss with him

    • @KFWP-bc7rp
      @KFWP-bc7rp 7 років тому +1

      Victoria Bruner thanks for saying that!

    • @Rock_Girl_Daze
      @Rock_Girl_Daze 7 років тому

      It’s all garble unless you can give examples. I’m not seeing what he did to harm you. Pts here, just saying...