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Illuminati­ng military mental health

General fighting to destigmati­ze issues among soldiers

- By Jennifer Steinhauer

WASHINGTON — Brig. Gen. Ernest Litynski has received numerous awards and decoration­s during his nearly three decades in the Army. But he is best known among soldiers and his superiors for his campaign to illuminate mental health issues among troops, scraping away bit by bit at the stigma that often leads to tragedy.

In meetings with new formations of Army Reserve troops, he might first talk about physical fitness and training before moving on to the story of his own unraveling after he returned from Afghanista­n, when he would sit in his darkened basement, ignoring his family and staring into nothingnes­s.

“I removed myself from everybody between 2007 and 2010,” he recalled. “I wouldn’t go to family parties, events, wouldn’t go out with my family to eat. I would turn the TV on just for noise. I would not go up to bed with my wife. The burden I put on my wife and 12-year-old daughter had to be the worst.”

His daughter did not speak to him for years, he said. He tells his story at ceremonies and gatherings and made a video that the Army has posted to some of its Facebook accounts, generally a repository for war remembranc­es, vaccine informatio­n and images of cold weather drills. “There’s a shame if you show weakness,” he says, voice wavering as he recounts his struggles with post-traumatic stress. “That’s the way I felt.”

Litynski’s campaign is a striking one within the military, where resilience is not just celebrated but part of the job descriptio­n.

After two decades of war, the military has yet to make significan­t progress on what many experts, lawmakers and service members say are among its most persistent problems: unaddresse­d mental health issues and rising suicide rates among troops.

“The needle has not moved much at all in this,” said Mark Russell, a former Navy commander who is now a professor at Antioch University in Seattle with expertise in military trauma. “So it’s rare when someone with a star on his lapel is speaking out.”

The suicide rate among active-duty service members increased by more than 40% from 2015 to 2020, according to Defense Department data. The military had historical­ly lagged behind the general population in suicide rates but in recent years has caught up.

A report last year from the Costs of War Project at Brown University found that an estimated 30,177 activeduty military personnel and veterans who have served since the Sept. 11 attacks died by suicide, compared with the 7,057 killed in military operations during the two-decade war against terrorism.

While some service members, like Litynski, have suffered from combat-related traumas or injuries, others come into the military with mental health issues that are not revealed in medical screenings or that later become more intense.

The problem mirrors a larger crisis in the nation, with millions of Americans lacking access or not seeking mental health care.

“Members of the military have to function at a very high level, and that takes a toll,” said Sherman Gillums Jr., a retired Marine officer and a former senior executive at Paralyzed Veterans of America. “We are taught to mask anything that is wrong with us, to adapt and overcome. Military culture looks at asking for help as a liability, from recruitmen­t to training to the rest of one’s career.”

Litynski was born in Chicago and joined the Army in 1994. He has multiple advanced degrees and military awards over a career that has included tours in Iraq and Afghanista­n and has held a variety of active and reserve component command positions. He is now the commanding general of the 76th Operationa­l Response Command in Salt Lake City.

After he returned from overseas in 2009, Litynski said that his life at work seemed fine, but he would isolate himself in his basement when he returned home at night. “I didn’t do anything,” he said, other than “let time go by.”

His few interactio­ns with his family were generally stormy. When his wife, Jennifer Litynski, dented their minivan in a parking lot, he reacted by hitting the vehicle violently and repeatedly. “This was a 180-degree turn from who Ernie Litynski was,” he said.

In 2011, his wife said she had enough. “That is what sparked it for me. That moment, in essence, was an ultimatum, and rightly so,” Litynski said.

He sought help and began to reflect on the troops he had seen die overseas and the death of his younger daughter from a rare genetic disease less than a year after she was born.

His psychiatri­st at the Department of Veterans Affairs had an idea: discuss his struggles with his unit at the time in Milwaukee in lieu of giving the usual PowerPoint on post-traumatic stress.

Litynski worried that no one would understand and how it might affect his career. But ultimately, he said, “I went all-in.”

Some in the audience revealed experience­s they had previously felt too ashamed to share. “I had young soldiers talk to me afterward and hug me and cry,” he said.

The speech became his brand, of sorts. “When he first came to our unit, he told us about how he felt helpless and was ready to give it up,” said Scott Alsup, who served under Litynski in Iraq. “He helped get me into rehab, which probably saved my life.

In 2019, after speaking at an event in Florida for redeployin­g soldiers, Litynski caught the attention of Army brass, who encouraged him to make a video, which was posted on Army Facebook pages. While many applaud Litynski’s efforts, veterans who had mental health issues while serving said the military needed to do much more, like improve health screenings of new recruits. Training must change, and leaders must learn to address problems before they spiral, they say.

Members of the National Guard and the Reserve often lack medical insurance or do not have access to mental health resources. “We see so many stories when a mental health process ends in a tragedy,” said J. Roy Robinson, a retired brigadier general and president of the National Guard Associatio­n of the United States. “I truly believe a large amount of those issues are tied to access.”

Gillums noted that more troops were sharing their experience­s with sexual harassment, assault and mental health struggles on social media.

“This could be an intergener­ational shift,” he said, “starting with young people who see themselves as humans first beyond their uniform and weapon.”

 ?? KIM RAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Brig. Gen. Ernest Litynski is pictured Feb. 10 at the Stephen A. Douglas Armed Forces Reserve Center in Salt Lake City. Litynski’s efforts to publicize his mental health issues have struck a chord within the military.
KIM RAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES Brig. Gen. Ernest Litynski is pictured Feb. 10 at the Stephen A. Douglas Armed Forces Reserve Center in Salt Lake City. Litynski’s efforts to publicize his mental health issues have struck a chord within the military.

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