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PTSD 70% VA rating for obsessional rituals.

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  • Опубликовано: 29 авг 2024
  • Many veterans have obsessional rituals that interfere with their daily lives. These symptoms show that the veteran should receive a 70% VA rating
    Get your FREE case evaluation here: www.hillandpon...
    The content of this RUclips channel is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended to constitute legal advice. You should not rely upon any information contained on this RUclips channel for legal advice. Viewing this RUclips channel is not intended to and shall not create an attorney-client relationship between you and Hill and Ponton, PA. Messages or other forms of communication that you transmit to this RUclips channel will not create an attorney-client relationship and thus information contained in such communications may not be protected as privileged. Hill and Ponton, PA does not make any representation, warranty, or guarantee about the accuracy of the information contained in this RUclips channel or in links to other RUclips channels or websites. This RUclips channel is provided "as is," does not represent that any outcome or result from the viewing of this channel. Your use viewing of this RUclips channel is at your own risk. You enjoy this RUclips channel and its contents only for personal, non-commercial purposes. Neither Hill and Ponton, PA, nor anyone acting on their behalf, will be liable under any circumstances for damages of any kind.

Комментарии • 61

  • @popopthepatriot
    @popopthepatriot Год назад +21

    How do you only have a handful of views on this? Should be over a billion. This needs to be told. “Insomnia” is number one complaint from veterans at VA I bet you! I can attest to a few, at least.

    • @user-user-user-user.
      @user-user-user-user. Год назад +1

      @@backscratches5926
      Nightmares from what? My guess is that you are one of the thousands and thousands of people gaming the system. Give us your MO and tell us where you’ were stationed. Statistically you are likely one of those “in the rear with the gear.”

    • @mordakie3805
      @mordakie3805 9 месяцев назад

      @@user-user-user-user.tbh I wouldn’t call my dreams nightmares…but I do dream that I’m deployed still and I been out 10yrs

  • @Joe-mr5ub
    @Joe-mr5ub 9 месяцев назад +10

    I do this all the time... I thought it was normal 😕 🤔

    • @yanique0138
      @yanique0138 7 месяцев назад +2

      same lmao. ive cleared my own house before with my firearm

  • @backscratches5926
    @backscratches5926 Год назад +20

    another problem is we complain about our symptoms to these VA psychiatrist and psychologist and they don't put it in our medical records. I complained I had sxd thoughts, the doctor put that my mood was okay and I didn't have any more anxiety. this is crazy. I will record all my VA appointments from now on and transcribe everything that's said.

    • @pski2515
      @pski2515 Год назад +3

      Write them a personal statement that way they will have it with the paperwork.

    • @musiclife5158
      @musiclife5158 11 месяцев назад +1

      This happens a lot even with private doctors. Sickening

    • @TheHales
      @TheHales 5 месяцев назад +1

      I always write a message to my va doctor so it automatically uploads to my medical records.

  • @TheHales
    @TheHales 5 месяцев назад +4

    This is me daily 😔

  • @keeplifemoving
    @keeplifemoving 9 месяцев назад +3

    It's ocd, a medical side effect to ptsd... ptsd from trauma we had no control of, so ocd comes into play to control as much as possible..

  • @backscratches5926
    @backscratches5926 Год назад +8

    I encourage all veterans to record every VA appointment. audio record every one

    • @mordakie3805
      @mordakie3805 9 месяцев назад

      I use a screen recorder on my Mac they whole video session records

  • @BassNinja
    @BassNinja Год назад +7

    I can watch this all day

  • @MPBADASS90
    @MPBADASS90 10 месяцев назад +4

    I check the 3 door locks on my house multiple times a night with my gun in my hand 😬😬😬😬😬.

  • @suddenlyslimmeru
    @suddenlyslimmeru Год назад +3

    This topic is not discussed nearly enough. Veterans suffer through these symptoms of PTSD and do not recognize the association and often feel uncomfortable discussing them with their Dr.
    Thank you for taking the time to discuss them.

  • @KonaOffGrid
    @KonaOffGrid 8 месяцев назад +2

    Check the Perimeter....👌 Situational Awareness.... Hypersensitivity.
    Hiding Weapons 👈 Yuppers 😁

  • @NeoSoulCrew
    @NeoSoulCrew Год назад +3

    Rachel is a star

  • @jayfree1799
    @jayfree1799 9 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for this information

  • @backscratches5926
    @backscratches5926 Год назад +3

    tell doctor I have back pain, doctor will put in medical records that I said my back was fine and I don't have any more issues.

  • @sem4502
    @sem4502 Год назад +3

    I never sleep more then 1 hour to 1, 1/2 hours before i get up and pace house checking doors and windows. I'm not sure if it's not my back pain making me get up or being careful. Drives the wife nuts. Sometimes I just stay up and put a pot of coffee on at 2am.

  • @TravisG-lj9dz
    @TravisG-lj9dz 2 месяца назад

    I'd be content with 30 percent disability which I know I qualify for with my PTSD. It's unfortunate I made the decision to join the military believing it was a passage into a better life. I seriously thought and believed their propaganda about free college, housing, etc, and when I got in, they just were totally against my future! I sometimes blame myself for not being physically ready for the challenges, but then I see and hear other people's experiences and believe I was just cheated by abusive drill sergeants, their mind and attitudes still stuck in a war, and during that time it would've been Desert Storm. They unleashed all that hatred and war mongering on recruits and unfortunately I got physically injured in the process and couldn't continue my service, they cheated me out of a future in the military.

  • @charliewilson85
    @charliewilson85 Год назад +1

    Thank you Counselor

  • @kkroyu
    @kkroyu Месяц назад

    Me as well 😢

  • @anthonyprice1784
    @anthonyprice1784 9 месяцев назад

    This sounds like what I do daily.

  • @Rick-vg2pz
    @Rick-vg2pz Год назад +5

    Why won’t you help veterans with complicated claims? You only help Easy claims you don’t know anything about AA caregiver claims

    • @elinino5275
      @elinino5275 Год назад +3

      The only help unemployed vets also. If you earn 10 bucks an hour you ain't worth their time

    • @Rick-vg2pz
      @Rick-vg2pz Год назад +1

      Hill and Pontin don’t know anything about AA and caregiver claims or SMC. They will only help on easy claims. I know more about va claims than they do

  • @furtrapper11
    @furtrapper11 Год назад +7

    So fine

  • @russell311000
    @russell311000 7 месяцев назад

    Beautiful eyes.

    • @robbyers7614
      @robbyers7614 6 месяцев назад +1

      Beautiful EVERYTHING...LOL

  • @oldwarriorlife
    @oldwarriorlife Год назад +1

    Is it still possible to get a rating for an obsessional rituals claim if you already have a 30% rating for PTSD?

  • @rafagee1
    @rafagee1 Год назад

    I go through this and was declined my claim. I was told my insomnia and obsession ritual or locking the doors and windows was not “related” to my time in service . Even though I’ve had this problem since my time in service .

  • @helenbelcher295
    @helenbelcher295 15 дней назад

    What are the other PTSD ratings? My husband is home bound because he can’t handle people and stuff triggers him ect . I think he only got 70% because of what you’re describing but he also sets booby traps at night also near window and doors .

  • @joeyholthusen6495
    @joeyholthusen6495 10 месяцев назад

    Arguments with city council about why I'm not aloud to install hesco barriers around my house! Wtf. I say it's no difference between that and a regular fence!

  • @zyruemusic
    @zyruemusic 7 месяцев назад

    THATS ME 10,000%!!! 😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥

  • @greenbean3755
    @greenbean3755 3 месяца назад

    I thought that was common, lol!

  • @josephtucker7397
    @josephtucker7397 Год назад

    ¡Guau! Eres múy Hermosa!!

  • @aussieboyzz
    @aussieboyzz 7 месяцев назад

    Fire watch 😂

  • @comodice905
    @comodice905 10 месяцев назад

    Superstar supermodelo dua lipish perfecto. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @hihaters2004
    @hihaters2004 Год назад +2

    What a baddie

  • @nobody3120zX
    @nobody3120zX 7 месяцев назад

    Bro this is me

  • @steverogers7601
    @steverogers7601 Год назад

    I thought this was Monica from Silicone Valley

  • @hotspanglish
    @hotspanglish Год назад +3

    I want to marry you lol

  • @KristinaUSA-x5n
    @KristinaUSA-x5n Год назад

    There is a problem when my abusive ex has been hacking me over a decade and increasing privileges to the point that he cloned and SIM swapped my phone and hijacked my accounts and reported Balfour Beatty for military police assault and war crimes and harrassment and intellectual property theft and identity and Veterans Benefits theft and being libeled with abuse photos posted online.

  • @CG-ld6xg
    @CG-ld6xg 9 месяцев назад

    First off tho, why is this even part of criteria for depression? A person can be suicidal, and maybe successful on that, without having OCD.

  • @nobody3120zX
    @nobody3120zX 7 месяцев назад

    Well in the state America is in this obsession is legitimate.

  • @user-user-user-user.
    @user-user-user-user. Год назад +1

    We really need to have a critical documentary that explores the V.A. issue with the hundreds of thousands of suspicious PTSD claims that are clogging the system. By one estimate over 70% of (awarded) PTSD claims (that result in disability benefits,etc.) are made by people who did not serve in a combat role. Sebastian Junger did a lot of research on this. Truck drivers, logistics officers, petroleum technicians and others who may have worked on forwards bases but never stepped outside “the wire” are claiming PTSD and collecting hundreds of millions of dollars in benefits as well as receiving support from veterans charities.
    Only 10% of the US armed forces serve in a combat role, and the % of claimed PTSD cases far outstrips the number of actual soldiers who fired a gun and stood in harms way. Why is this important? The false PTSD claims mean that the veterans that really need help often do not get it, or they get less than what they should. Either due to jealousy, an inferiority complex or just plain opportunism, some veterans are gaming the system.
    I would love to know in the comments the other veterans in this forum have seen or experienced this. List your unit and MOS in the reply so we can weed out the fakes.

    • @reed510
      @reed510 Год назад +5

      Kinda makes sense… but I see a lot of holes in your logic. For instance… what do you tell the female or male 42A that was sexually assaulted at an off post party? What about the 88M that was hit by an IED? What about the 15T crew Chief that watch his buddies bird go down because of mechanical failure? Everyone has a story to tell… just keep that in mind. 11’s and 12’s put in work… but they’re sure not the only ones that make the war machine move. If you got out honorable, go get your benefits!

    • @user-user-user-user.
      @user-user-user-user. Год назад +1

      @@reed510
      You are listing the anomalies and exceptions. Of course people who witness or are in close proximity to tragedies deserve counseling and support. What I’m talking about are the tens of thousands of spurious claims. If you dig down, you’ll find veterans designated with PTSD, just because they could *hear* enemy mortars, or because they saw someone wounded in the infirmary, or because they worked a checkpoint for a few days. In fact you will find entire RUclips channels (and Discord severs) dedicated to guiding people on how to game the system. If you worked in a forward area whether you slung a weapon or not, you undoubtedly experienced some level of stress and discomfort. To those vets I say “thank you for your service.” However the idea that someone should receive partial of full disability for life because they maintained communication equipment or fixed HVAC systems or stacked boxes of Snickers at the PX is ridiculous. And unfortunately that is exactly the type of people who are sucking up the money. When you think about the numbers floating around (70+%) you are talking about billions of $. Because our culture and our society has been hardwired since the end of Vietnam to never again turn our backs on vets (a good thing) while simultaneously celebrating victimhood, we now have the mess we are in and the people who need help aren’t always getting it. Final thought -a study was done in the 70’s that countered the popular image of Vietnam vets being damaged (or homeless). Combat vets in Vietnam, post service, were less likely to abuse drugs or alcohol, were less likely to become homeless, were less likely to be arrested for domestic violence and were more likely to own their own business than their non combat counterparts and indeed the larger society. Contemplate that.

    • @marcusbennette8454
      @marcusbennette8454 8 месяцев назад +2

      I maintained communications equipment and I have PTSD. You're being extremely ignorant and biased. Every person in the military primary job is infantry and secondary is your MOS.
      And does your Vietnam veterans study take into account all the black veterans that were discriminated against and screwed out of any benefits?

    • @user-user-user-user.
      @user-user-user-user. 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@marcusbennette8454
      You maintained communications equipment…and you have PTSD? Thank you for your service but by your logic literally everyone who serves in the military would have PTSD.
      Let me pose this question to you, do you think it’s fair, as someone not even in operational communications (assigned to a combat unit) but someone who maintained equipment (“in the rear with the gear”) you should take money from veterans who saw combat? Should you take money from someone active duty involved in an accident with military equipment? Because that is exactly what you are doing. The problem is that in the 80’s the VA redesigned its disability compensation guidelines and this blew the door wide open for anyone serving, under any conditions to claim PTSD. I met a former Navy JAG lawyer, now in private practice, explain to me how he was retiring from his law firm early to collect VA benefits because he had PTSD…from prosecuting military cases.! In what other arena would this be acceptable? If the VA were a private company it would have run itself into the ground decades ago. Instead of pulling ourselves up by the bootstraps people are not only playing the sympathy card, they are trying to get paid while they do it (and the statistics confirm this). Ironically the African American vets who served in combat units in Vietnam were less likely to abuse drugs or go to prison post service than than non combat white veterans. The notion of homeless, disturbed and perpetually shell shocked Vietnam Vets is mythology. People think this is all a joke but anthropologists have been documenting and researching this for decades. Your own claim of PTSD from fixing radios shows just how far we have sunk as a nation. The Chinese and Russians are building solders who are disciplined and willing to sacrifice. We’re building soldiers looking for a shoulder to cry on.

    • @marcusbennette8454
      @marcusbennette8454 8 месяцев назад

      @@user-user-user-user. Where did I say I have PTSD from fixing radios? I said I maintained communications equipment.
      And by my logic, and every branch of the United States of America's military, your primary job IS infantry...Which is why you go to Basic Training before anything else. Everyone that has ever been in the military knows this. And since you didn't know that, then I'm guessing you were never in.
      I'll also guess that you're no psychologist or psychiatrist either, let alone ever even picked up a Psychology book seeing as how you think you should only get PTSD one way.
      The arrogance of you "red-blooded American" types and your go-to "pull yourself up by the bootstraps" line. You're talking about people with PTSD. What makes you think it's so easy for them to do so? You must work for the VA.