Sunderland Echo

VETERANS IN CRISIS

Wednesday’s Echo told how the Government was urged to do more to prevent a future “epidemic” of cases of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) among military veterans. Today a former soldier discusses how he finally confronted his mental health issues

- By Gavin Ledwith gavin.ledwith@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @GLedwi

Northern Ireland veteran Chris Batty walks into an empty pub and immediatel­y decides to sit in the furthest corner away from the entrance.

“It is just something you are conditione­d to do from your time in the Army,” says Chris 46.

“It is part of your military training so that you can keep an eye on what is going on and it never goes away.”

Next year will mark 20 years since the former lance corporal with the 1st Battalion of the Light Infantry quit the forces.

Yet, very much like the training, the memories of what he witnessed during two tours of the then troubled province have never disappeare­d.

Memories which he has only finally started to discuss at the end of last year after hitting in his own words “rock bottom”.

“As a soldier you are told to crack on, have a couple of pints and get on with it,” he reminisces over a soft drink.

“You bottle things up and use alcohol as a coping strategy when you are feeling low. That was the culture in the Army at the time.”

Like many veterans back in civilian life, Chris was able to secure regular work with security companies guarding merchant vessels from pirates in the dangerous Indian Ocean.

While this provided him with a well-paid living in an alcohol-free environmen­t, drink began to dominate his spare time when he returned home and a short spell in jail followed for violence.

Chris, from the Seaburn area of Sunderland, continues: “I would say I was a binge drinker, not an alcoholic, but at my worst I could drink 1015 bottles of wine a day. It was chaotic”

With the downward spiral ruining relationsh­ips – he omits further details out of respect for those concerned – and the overseas work gradually disappeari­ng, it was a former Army colleague who convinced him to seek profession­al help last Christmas.

Chris, a former pupil at the city’s Monkwearmo­uth School, adds: “He knew something was not quite right and that I needed help.

“The mental health crisis team in Sunderland gave me medication and monitored me with day-to-day community care.”

“Since then I have not looked back and I think one of the biggest barriers for a soldier to overcome is to admit they need help.”

Diagnosed with chronic Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), depression and anxiety, he was referred to mental health veterans charity Combat Stress, which was set up after the First World War to tackle shell shock, and began seeing a community psychiatri­st.

He continues: “They taught me not to worry about the past, worry about your health and learning how to speak your feelings.

“You would learn how to control your breathing and to go for walks instead of using alcohol to control your mental health.”

His progress has continued during a six-week stay at its Hollybush House Treatment Centre, in Ayrshire.

Chris adds: “It was very intensive. You record your one-to-one discussion­s about your life and listen to them over and over again so that you can come to terms with your problems and learn how to lock them away.”

Having not touched alcohol since Boxing Day, he is also receiving help locally from the newly-formed Veterans in Crisis Sunderland community interest group.

Founder Ger Fowler, 48, another Northern Ireland veteran from the same area of Sunderland, accompanie­s him on regular morning walks to introduce a new routine to his life.

“It has helped just talking to someone who knows what you have gone through because they were there as well,” said Chris.

Ger, who considered ending his own life while at his lowest ebb, has helped nearly 60 veterans across the city tackle mental health problems as well as other issues such as addiction and homelessne­ss since founding his not-for-profit company.

“The difference in him since Christmas is almost like a miracle,” he says.

“He has had to undergo torture discussing his life, the Army, the gun boats. I

spoke to him every day on the phone when he was up there and he is making rapid strides.

“Even things like helping him get hearing aids have helped. He spent years without them after going deaf from the Army and we were able to get them in a fortnight once we realised there was a problem.

“Now he can understand what people are saying to him far easier and that is helping him improve too.”

Settled in a new relationsh­ip, Chris’s hope is that he earn mental health qualificat­ions and begin passing on what he has learned to other ex-servicemen and women.

He fears he will be needed.

“We have a generation of lads who have seen some horrendous things. First of all there was Northern Ireland and then Iraq and Afghanista­n,” says Chris.

“It took me 18 years to say something, so there will be an epidemic of people after me who need help.”

VICS holds weekly surgeries on Tuesdays at the Gunners Club, 10-11 Mary Street, Sunderland, from 10am to 1pm.

Further informatio­n is also available from (07398) 916590 or at its Veterans in Crisis Sunderland Facebook page.

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 ??  ?? Former soldier Chris Batty.
Former soldier Chris Batty.
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 ??  ?? Chris Batty with Ger Fowler, left.
Chris Batty with Ger Fowler, left.
 ??  ?? Chris Batty aged 22 while receiving an award for best recruit.
Chris Batty aged 22 while receiving an award for best recruit.

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