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The Haunting Truth Most Veterans Face After their Enlistment Service

In 2003, Robert Carter returned from service in the Navy to Portsmouth, his hometown. What his family did not know that he was a changed man, not for the good reason though- he went back home as a broken man. He had difficulty leaving his home and later diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

 

A tragedy crippled him during his time with the Navy. He saw how his crewmate on the USS Nassau, Dwayne Williams died in front of him. The accident left a deep cut in Carter’s heart and in his mind. He suffers from nightmares almost every time he slept how his friend died. To escape his inner demons, he found a group of people making illegal pill mills which comes in cheap and readily available methamphetamine. As a stimulant drug, meth produces a powerful high that can keep him awake for days. This makes it a perfect drug for Carter.

A very high price to pay

 

However, never having those nightmares comes in with a very high price to pay. The harsh chemical in meth damages the brain causing the person to hallucinate according to the vice president of medical services at A Renewed Mind, Julie Weinandy. People with meth addiction usually suffer from severe paranoia in which a person can no longer differentiate between “fantasy and reality”.

 

 

“PIKETON, Ohio – Robert Carter returned from four years in the Navy in 2003 to his hometown of Portsmouth a broken man. He had two to three nightmares each time he slept, many about his time while enlisted and the death of a friend and crewmate on the USS Nassau, Dwayne Williams.

 

 

“I watched Dwayne drown right in front of me [in the Atlantic Ocean],” Carter said. “I was told not to jump in because the Navy had people to do that job. I [see his death] every night and even through the day.” He struggled to leave his home, and he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. In Portsmouth, he found a community ravaged by illegal pill mills and cheap, readily available methamphetamine.

 

Meth, a stimulant, gives users a powerful high that can keep them awake for days. That was the attraction for Carter. “I didn’t want to go to sleep; I was afraid of the nightmares,” Carter said. “So, I self-medicated. And then I became everyone’s nightmare.”

 

 

Read the rest of the story here.

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