After Years Of Struggle, Veteran Chooses To End His Life

Tomas Young was paralyzed from the chest down during his deployment to Iraq. Since then, his health has only deteriorated. He has decided to refuse care and end his life, and his wife, Claudia Cuellar, says she respects his wishes.Enlarge image i

Tomas Young was paralyzed from the chest down during his deployment to Iraq. Since then, his health has only deteriorated. He has decided to refuse care and end his life, and his wife, Claudia Cuellar, says she respects his wishes.


Frank Morris for NPR

Tomas Young was paralyzed from the chest down during his deployment to Iraq. Since then, his health has only deteriorated. He has decided to refuse care and end his life, and his wife, Claudia Cuellar, says she respects his wishes.

Tomas Young was paralyzed from the chest down during his deployment to Iraq. Since then, his health has only deteriorated. He has decided to refuse care and end his life, and his wife, Claudia Cuellar, says she respects his wishes.

Frank Morris for NPR

After a dozen years at war, an estimated 2 million active-duty service members will have returned home by the end of 2013. Some reintegrate without much struggle, but for others it’s not so easy. The psychological wounds of war can sometimes prove to be just as fatal as the physical ones.

For injured veterans such as Tomas Young, life is a daily struggle. But this Iraq War veteran, who says his physical and emotional pain are unbearable, has decided to end his life.

At War

Before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Young was an athletic, rambunctious 22-year-old. Now he’s a man at the very end of his rope.

Young enlisted two days after the attacks. He wanted revenge against the Taliban in Afghanistan, but was deployed instead to Iraq, a country that he believed had nothing to do with the Sept. 11 attacks.

Days later, a sniper’s bullet left him paralyzed from the chest down, impotent and very angry. His terse, powerful way with words propelled him to the forefront of the anti-war movement.

The documentary Body of War follows Young’s activism and physical struggles.

Tomas Young in 2008, before his health took another dive.Enlarge image i

Tomas Young in 2008, before his health took another dive.


Frank Morris for NPR

Tomas Young in 2008, before his health took another dive.

Tomas Young in 2008, before his health took another dive.

Frank Morris for NPR

“I’m glad that it came out, and people saw the reality of war,” he says. “But now, I can’t even watch it, because it serves as a reminder of what I used to be able to do.”

Young now spends much of his time lying flat on his back, smoking, in his dimly lit bedroom in Kansas City, Mo.

His life got progressively worse after returning home. A blood clot lodged in his lungs months after the film came out. That damaged his brain, twisted his hands and left his speech impaired. His mother, Cathy Smith, says it’s been a long, hard fight.

“To be a paraplegic, deal with that, and then wake up and you’re a quadriplegic, and you can’t use your voice, which is what you were learning to use,” she says. “So many people wanted him to speak, and he couldn’t speak anymore.”

Families In Battle: Seeking Help Soon

After her own loss, Kim Ruocco began working to help others. Her husband committed suicide eight years ago, three months after returning from Iraq. He was 40, and they had two boys, 8 and 10 years old.

“My initial struggle was: What do I tell my children? How do you tell two little boys that their dad made it home safely from a combat zone and then took his own life?” she says.

Ruocco found her way to the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors. Now, she is the director of the organization’s postvention programs, which provide care for family members after a suicide. She says her husband’s suicide reflects the struggles of other veterans. There were 349 suicides across the military in 2012.

“As in most suicides, there’s multiple issues that contribute, and for him it was years of untreated depression and post-traumatic stress and the stigma of help-seeking within the Marine Corps,” she says.

Much has changed since he died; resources are more widely available. Advocates still have to tackle stigma, though.

“We’re still having a lot of trouble getting people to believe that asking for help is not going to adversely affect their career,” Ruocco says.

An essential part of treatment is getting help at the first signs that something is wrong, she says.

“If I could do anything different, I would have really forced my husband to go and get help to process some of those early traumas 10 years before his death, really,” she says. “I think he’d be alive today if he would have really gotten help.”

On Tomas Young’s Story

Ruocco says that while Tomas Young’s experience is an exceptional case, she does see similarities with other stories. As for how his decision to end his life may influence other veterans, Ruocco says:

“I think what we hope for people is they can find something to hold onto and some hope, and that they can decide that they want to live, but in the same hand, never tell anybody that they must live if they’ve come to the point where that’s not their wish.”

Calling For Help

For service members in need of confidential advice, call the Veterans Crisis Line at 1-800-273-8255 and dial 1.

For the families of veterans who have died, call TAPS at 1-800-959-8277.

Love And Loss

Young spent months in rehab; last spring he married a woman named Claudia Cuellar, a Buddhist with a sunny disposition. Young is a devout atheist, but they both love music and literature, and share a keen understanding of the hardships of war.

“He is, of course, my No. 1 hero,” she says. “Along with all … Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam — all veterans.”

They settled in for what they hoped would be a few good years together. But last summer, a horrible, new chronic pain hit Young. Doctors cut out his colon, hoping to ease his suffering. That worked for a while, but the pain came back.

“I decided that I was no longer going to watch myself deteriorate,” he says.

In February, Young announced he was going to remove his feeding tube and stop taking the nearly 100 pills a day. Cuellar says she understands.

“His body’s been mutilated. I mean, he had the injury, but then there’s all the surgeries they’ve done on top of that,” she says. “It feels dehumanizing.”

In the nine years since Young was shot, his mother’s had a lot of time to contemplate losing him.

“I’ve mourned the son that I sent to war, that didn’t come home,” she says. “I’ve mourned the grandchildren that I’ll never have. The worst part about all of this for me is that none of this had to happen.”

‘He’s Just Stopping’

Hearing of Young’s plight, activist Ralph Nader suggested he write an open letter to former President George W. Bush and Dick Cheney — one final broadside against the war and its chief proponents.

“So I went along with that and wrote my letter, and I guess that thing’s taken off like wildfire, too,” he says.

Bobby McKinney, 29, hugs Becky Bunnell, an instructor at the Chastain Horse Park with its therapeutic program.

Young’s “Last Letter” from a dying veteran went viral. But he insists that, while the letter is political, his impending death is entirely personal.

“There are people who want to frame it as a political decision, or a political issue, that’s their prerogative, yay for them,” he says. “But I myself don’t see it that way.”

U.S. troops from the 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment patrol at dawn in Kandalay, Afghanistan on Aug. 4, 2011. A worldwide stand down for troops to take part in suicide prevention training Thursday is part of the Army's response to an alarming suicide rate of nearly one per day.

Young sees it as a solution to intractable suffering, but he knows that other veterans also suffer mightily and choose to live. He’s also aware that many people abhor suicide; in fact, his mother is one of them.

“It’s not a suicide. He’s not killing himself, he’s just stopping,” his mother says.

The Patient Self-Determination Act of 1990 allows competent adults to refuse care, says Sandra Silva, director of graduate studies at the Center for Practical Bioethics in Kansas City, Mo.

“A health care provider can follow the instructions of a patient and not provide or withdraw medically administered nutrition and hydration,” she says.

Young says he’ll stop talking to the media on April 20, his wedding anniversary, and likely end his life a month or two thereafter.

Article source: http://www.npr.org/2013/04/07/176509136/after-years-of-struggle-veteran-chooses-to-end-his-life?ft=1&f=1001

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