PT511 – The Other Side of Veteran Healing: Secondary PTSD and Post-Retreat Family Dynamics, with Allison Wilson & Dr. Grace Blest-Hopley
May 10, 2024
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Allison Wilson and Dr. Grace Blest-Hopley discuss The Hope Project merging with Heroic Hearts Project to support spouses of veterans. They explore secondary PTSD, family dynamics post-healing retreats, involving family in the healing process, and the need for more research on PTSD and psychedelics effects on women. They highlight the importance of addressing issues beyond just veterans and the transformative impact of psychedelic therapy on families.
Spouses of veterans benefit from their own psychedelic experiences and community support for healing.
Secondary PTSD in military spouses is a real issue due to trauma from their partners' experiences.
Involving family in the healing process post-psychedelic retreats is crucial for positive outcomes and integration.
Deep dives
The Importance of Research in Understanding Psychedelic Effects on Mental Health
Research focusing on the effects of psychedelic experiences on mental health outcomes, including measures such as pre and post -retreat data collection, EEG data collection, and markers of post -traumatic stress disorder, is crucial. The research aims to measure the impact of these retreat programs on participants' mental health, functioning, and other related markers.
Supporting Veteran Spouses and Families through Healing Programs
The Heroic Hearts Project focuses on supporting veteran spouses, veteran women, and Gold Star spouses by providing coaching and retreats tailored to their needs. By extending support to the entire family unit and merging with the HOPE Project, they offer spouse retreats and conduct research on secondary PTSD among spouses and family members.
Understanding Secondary PTSD and Compassion Fatigue in Military Spouses
Secondary PTSD in military spouses refers to experiencing symptoms due to traumatic events encountered by their partners. This experience can lead to compassion fatigue, affecting emotional well-being. Isolation, hypervigilance, and emotional strain are significant factors contributing to secondary PTSD in military spouses.
Empowering Spouses to Heal and Integrate Post-Psychedelic Journeys
Helping spouses navigate their reactions post-psychedelic journeys is vital. Providing tools for integration, coaching support, and creating a community for spouses are crucial steps in facilitating healing and promoting a safe environment for emotional expression and growth.
Community Building and Ongoing Support for Veterans and Families
Establishing local networks and peer support systems for veterans and family members following psychedelic experiences is essential. Ongoing group calls, coaching sessions, workshops, and meetups aim to foster a sense of community, provide tools for integration, and support long-term healing and connection.
Impact of Psychedelic Healing on Traumatic Brain Injuries and Women's Health
Exploring the healing potential of psychedelics for veterans with traumatic brain injuries and delving into women-specific research are key priorities. Understanding the effects of psychedelics on menstrual cycles, menopause, and mental health symptoms is crucial to enhancing treatment efficacy and addressing gender-specific therapeutic needs.
In this episode, Joe interviews two members of the Heroic Hearts Project team: Director of Donor Development and founder of The Hope Project, Allison Wilson; and Director of Research and founder of Hystelica, Dr. Grace Blest-Hopley.
They discuss how The Hope Project – a nonprofit that supports spouses of veterans, Gold Star Wives, and female veterans with scholarships to psychedelic healing retreats, integration, community, etc. – merged with Heroic Hearts Project, and why this is such a necessary part of the veteran healing story: How does a family hold space for a vet returning to a suddenly alien civilian life (especially after a psychedelic journey)? How does a spouse deal with their own trauma from constant worry and isolation? Wilson and Blest-Hopley are learning that, for many spouses, having their own experience (and with other spouses) has been incredibly beneficial.
They talk about:
The concept of secondary PTSD (often referred to as ‘compassion fatigue’) and the many ways it can manifest
How Heroic Hearts is working with Imperial College London to use veteran retreats as real-world observational research
The importance of involving family in the healing process, and how positive outcomes can trickle down to children
The need for more research into how PTSD and the effects of psychedelics are different in women based on their unique physiology (as most studies have focused on men)