Healing Veteran Moral Injury highlights the importance of story and metaphor in the change process and in trauma-related work.
Healing Veteran Moral Injury highlights the importance of story and metaphor in the change process and in trauma-related work.
Grounded in evidence-based practice and replete with clear, down-to-earth examples that foster empathy and understanding, Healing Veteran Moral Injury illustrates the ways in which building a sense of community can help restore trust and meaning-making. Chapters illustrate the power of stories and metaphors and help Veterans identify strategies for healing moral injury and posttraumatic growth. Clinicians and Veterans will come away from this book with tools for building connections, accepting what they cannot change, and developing a more accurate perception of responsibility.
Healing Veteran Moral Injury is intended both for mental health professionals and Veterans themselves as a tool for breaking the silence, pointing other Veterans toward hope and healing, and telling stories of moral pain with fortitude and courage.
1. Moral Pain and Moral Injury
2. PTSD and Moral Injury: Overlapping
Symptoms and Different Meanings
3. Meaning-Making Through Story and Metaphor
4. Dealing with the Spiritual in Moral Injury
5. Forgiving Self and Others
6.
Models of Healing for Moral Injury
7. Beginning the Journey of Acceptance and
Forgiveness
8. Processing the Impact of Moral Injury
9. Rethinking Guilt,
Blame, and Responsibility
10. Practising Confession and Forgiveness
11. The
Healing of Sharing Your Story
12. Stories and Metaphors for Restoring
Wholeness
13. Post-Traumatic Growth and Continuing the Journey
14. Conclusion
with AFT Program Data
Pat Pernicano, PsyD, holds a doctorate in clinical psychology from Baylor University. Her writing, teaching, and clinical work reflect her passion for trauma-informed healing with children, families, and Veterans.
Kerry Haynes, DMin, is retired, having worked as a mental health chaplain at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, an Army Reserves chaplain, and a pastor. His doctor of ministry work focused on group services for Veteran moral injury.