Category Archives: Veterans Events

Southern Arizona special events, concerts, conventions. town halls etc.

Overview of Tonight's Mindfulness Class Noticed In Previous Posting

Program Description
A Brief History and Overview
The “Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction” Program (MBSR) is a well regarded
mind/body skills training protocol that has been used successfully for over 30
years to help people deal with stress, pain, and illness.
Pioneered by Jon Kabat-Zinn at the University of Massachusetts Medical
Center, what was once a small clinic has become the “Center for Mindfulness in
Medicine, Health Care, and Society”. In addition to qraduatinq over 15,000
people from their program with many successful results, the Center provides
professional training and conducts research. Their training programs have
helped make MBSR available throughout the US and internationally; and, their
research initiatives have helped create a body of evidence regarding the
efficacy of MBSR for a variety of health conditions, as well as interest in its
application beyond health care.
What is unique about MBSR is of course the emphasis on “mindfulness”- which
can simply be defined as non-judgmental, present moment awareness. As true
mindfulness can only be experienced, the program emphasizes experiential
practices- both within the classroom and at home, for the duration of the course.
It is through these practices that participants learn to harness the power selfawareness
and skills of self-regulation. Experiential practice, a strong didactic
foundation, and a highly supportive environment are the 3 pillars of MBSR. For
many participants, it is a unique and life-affirming educational experience that
has enormous practical value.
More’ about Mindfulness and the Stress Phenomena
Mindfulness simply means present moment awareness. When we are being
mindful, we are aware of what is happening in the present moment. Likewise,
when we are mindless, we are not aware of what is happening in the present
moment because our thoughts and attention are somewhere else.
The term “mindless” is problematic because it seems to imply that we are being
stupid. Really, mindlessness is more a state of mental agitation. Our attention
and awareness is moving around haphazardly and without realizing it, our
thoughts and feelings ignite stress physiology. Our system then prepares itself
for imminent danger- our heart rate will elevate, blood sugar levels will
increase, the breath will get faster and shorter, our body will tense, our
perception will narrow. We are unconsciously preparing ourselves to fight, flee,
or freeze. This innate ability to deal with danger is a sign of health, but if it is
chronically activated and repeatedly inhibited, it results in many of the
symptoms we associate with stress: high blood pressure, anxiety, moodiness
and irritability, body tension, aches and pain, isolation and emotional

Annual Base Camp Gatering of Arizona Veterans

Band of Brothers
Band of Brothers

BASE CAMP 2010

Veterans and friends are cordially invited to attend Base Camp 2010 to be held April 2, 3, 4 (Friday, Saturday, Sunday) 2010.  The purpose of Base Camp is to provide a location for veterans and friends to assemble and share camaraderie.  Live music and entertainment is provided on Saturday night.   ADMISSION IS FREE.

Base Camp is an area lined with bunker/fighting positions simulating a firebase or a line unit’s perimeter defense camp.  Military apparel and military vehicles are welcomed to add to the ambiance.  All veterans are encouraged to attend.  There is a 90-foot high flagpole with a large American flag and the Republic of South Viet Nam flag.  There is also a 35-foot high observation tower and other military type structures, water and two flush toilets, a stage for live entertainment on Saturday, and a shooting range dug into the ground at the base of a mountain as a backstop for target shooting.  Camp out Friday and Saturday nights.  Bring your own food, beverages, drinking water, and firewood.

DIRECTIONS TO BASE CAMP

Traveling south on I-10 from Phoenix, exit I-10 at Wild Horse Pass.  Take the first left turn (Maricopa) to go past Firebird Lakes on your left.  Proceed past the fire station on your right to the T intersection with the stop sign.  Turn right.  Now you are on the road (Highway 347) to Maricopa.  Go through Maricopa, cross the Railroad tracks by the big RR water tower and continue 2 miles to Ak Chin Casino.  Highway 347 is also called John Wayne Highway. Go 2 miles past the casino to Papago (you will see a large Santa Rosa Cooling sign) where you turn right (west).  Go west 4.5 miles on Papago until you curve left (south) on to Warren.  Go about .9 miles south on Warren until you reach Val Vista where you turn right (west).  Go west .5 miles on Val Vista through the wash and past the canal to the first street on your left—Deer Trail.  Turn left (south) onto Deer Trail, and go .5 miles to where it Ts into Quail Run.  Go right (west) on Quail Run for 1/10 of a mile to the entrance of 9014 North Wealth Road and Base Camp.  The house phone number is 520-868-6777 and my cell phone number is 602-509-8763.

SCHEDULE:

April 21200Set up camp

April 3—1000—US and RVN flag-raising, Betsey Bayless and other dignataries                                      1200—1800–Open Time

1800–Entertainment

April 4–Break camp—go home

THERE ARE A FEW SIMPLE, FAIR RULES TO FOLLOW WHILE AT BASE CAMP.

  1. You WILL have fun.
  2. Shooting range use—SAFETY FIRST—and police all brass and ammo.
  3. NO ILLEGAL DRUGS.

4.   HOLD HANDLE DOWN until toilet flushes completely as a courtesy to others.

5.  POLICE your areas of ALL TRASH and respect other people’s rights and property.

We’ll see you at Base Camp 2010.  For further information, call Joe at 602-509-8762 or 602-253-2378 or 520-868-6777.

Sand Jam Now A Reality

This past Friday, the owners of Hotel Congress met with a collection of veterans to launch Tucson’s first, “Sand Jam” concert in recognition and support of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of War.

The Concert will be held at Club Congress on Sunday, May 30th, 2010 the day prior to Memorial Day. David Slutes of Hotel Congress is the lead promoter of the event and will be selecting a variety of bands to perform that day. All parties involved are open to suggestions for performing acts. The event is scheduled from noon to 8pm.

The newly remodeled patio of the Hotel can accommodate approximately 1500 attendees with room for outdoor performance stages. Maynards and the Cup Cafe will be serving food.

Suppliers and vendors are welcome for this inaugural event.

Tucson has a tremendous history of support for our veterans. I am certain this will be a smash hit and a catalyst for a gathering place for vets to share stories and find community support.

For further details and sponsorship opportunities call Scotty Scotton/ Iraq Veteran. 520-272-7031. email; “carsforvets.webs.com”

The Daughters Of The American Revolution, El Presidio Chapter, Host Carden of Tucson Essay Contest Winners

The Carden of Tucson is to be lauded for its educational focus on pivotal life changing events in American History, as was the development and construction of the first Transcontinental Railroad.

Railroads have been embedded in the American imagination since the early 1800’s. The proverbial iron horse traversed lands that horses and riverboats could not venture.

Our government knew well how vital the railroads were to the settlement of the West and the growth of a young economy. It was our government that made huge land grants and loans to entrepreneurs that were ultimately the force behind Manifest Destiny. You might say that these grants were one of the first “Stimulus Programs.”

No one beefed about government money in those days, at least not the rich.

This years Essay Contest, sponsored by the El Presidio Chapter of the Daughters Of The American Revolution, first organized in 1890, with a Tucson presence for 95 years, posed the following scenario to a group of middle school children.

Imagine you were living at the time of the building of the Transcontinental Railroad. Describe how you felt on May, 10th, 1869, when the golden spike was driven at the Promontory Summit, Utah, to celebrate the completion of the first transcontinental railroad. Pretend you are either settler planning to use the train to travel to your new home in the West, an Irish or Chinese worker who helped build the line, or a Native American whose way of life was greatly affected by the railroad.

The DAR ceremony began with great decorum including the posting of colors by the Flowing Wells Jr. ROTC.

As the children read their essays covering the time, travails and geography of the movement west, I could feel the romance that engaged a nation in the first long distance travel chock full of adventure and new starts for many Americans. These kids did a wonderful job capturing not just the romance and unpredictable tales of daily life, but also at what expense the railroad worker had to subject himself for a paycheck. Their lives were bleak and the conditions were harsh. The Central Pacific Railroad hired many thousands of Chinese would could otherwise not be employed, while the Union Pacific employed Irish immigrants, famished and starved from the Potato Famine, and desperate out-of-work Civil War Veterans to lay track across some incredibly dangerous terrain that was populated by hostile Indian warriors. Illness and injuries took the lives of nearly 20.000.

Our student essayists chronicled these history making laborers with their award winning narratives. I plan to attach the essays to this blog sometime this weekend.

The 2010 Carden Academy of Tucson winners of the DAR American History Essay Contest are:

Tatianna Sierra 5th grade

Kristiana Weaver 6th grade

Nathaniel Unruh 7th grade

Blake Tanner 8th grade

Congratulations young Americans! And, thank you to the teachers of the Carden of Tucson.

A special thank you to the Daughters of the American Revolution for keeping our history alive and meaningful to our youth.

The Movie, "The Messenger"

“The Messenger brings us into the inner lives of these outwardly steely heroes to reveal their fragility with compassion and dignity,” says the Loft reviewer.

I am not a movie reviewer of any sorts, and should not even make a dilettante’s attempt. But I am a combat veteran, and I do know pathos when it strikes. The Messenger strikes with a tour de force that penetrates all polite feelings in the first five minutes.

For a numbed out vet like myself, when feeling comes along I am usually heading to the hills. In this flick the hills will surround you.

Woody Harrelson and Ben Foster,(3:10 To Yuma), are so well cast for this production that you would think they were both lifer’s in the Army.

Be prepared for some heavy reality of the aftermath of war…being the reporting to the next of kin of those killed in action. Sort of a brick in your lap type of reality but one that will enlighten the un-initiated to the full spectrum of war.

The Messenger plays this week through Thursday. Check the showtimes at 795-7777.

It could be one doozy of a project for our veteran readers to attend one of the showings allowing us all to engage in an online group review.

A glass of wine at the Loft is in order for this one.

Happy New Year Veterans of America!

Happy New year to all of our veterans and their families. Soldier, Sailor, Air Force, Marine and Coast Guard. You all are the ones that allow us to use the word pride in our dedication to our Country and its system of governing. With all of our travails we still have more liberty and opportunity than most nations on earth. It is you the veteran who paid the dues as a guardian of those sometimes delicate but enduring freedoms.

Since this site was launched in July, we appear to be well received by the readers. It looks like we have the building blocks to be a continuing and reliable source of useful information and a solid connection to the community.

I do hope that Veteran Veritas has lived up to its mission of advocacy to veterans and their families. A ton of dialogue with our local population of vets has its genesis in this Blog, and I look forward to maintaining that trust and helpfulness.

I start every new year with the Parade of Roses in Pasadena. Its embodiment of Americana is unsurpassed anywhere. And the overall purity of the entire event, schmaltzy as it may be, brings the old Boy Scout out of me and a cart load of Hope at the same time.

Everyone of those floats commemorates something good and decent about our people and our common house called America.

Possibly we would all do well to build a float in 2010 to something good and decent and then emulate that throughout the year.

God bless your heartfelt intentions and may the light of the Holy Spirit guide your every decision.

HAPPY NEW YEAR Mike Brewer/USMC

Veteran Retreat Schedule for 2010

January marks the fifth year of our free retreats at the Merritt Center in Payson Arizona. These workshop weekends are the vision of the retreat founder, Betty Merritt. The entire weekend, food and lodging and workshop material is free to all combat veterans of all wars.

While the original outreach efforts were targeting just the men and women returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, the directors and veteran mentors discovered in the third year that the mixture of the very broad demographic base of veterans, meaning WWll, Korea, Panama, Bosnian, Desert Storm, Vietnam, afforded a rather magical setting. War is war, and its psychic residue does not change much through time. Much of what Shakespeare and Steven Crane wrote about could be laid upon the soldier from Baghadad or Kabul.

The Soldier, Sailor, Marine, will not find anything like the Merritt Center in the conventional world of transition programs. One vet tagged this set of workshops as “a very fine dessert, after a superb meal.” I concur, having had the honor of participating for the past four years.

Warriors simply leave this place as a new and improved version, with tools in their psychological and spiritual arsenal that they heretofore did not even know they had available.

The mentors are not third party helpers either. They are all men and women who have been steeped in combat and have an uncanny ability to bond with others. Frankly, they just know the meaning of love.

This is not a Church program, and no one need fear any messy evangelizing. While many of us are affiliated with our own churches, we are not in the conversion business. This program is, straight away, focused on leaving the veteran with a healthy life soul and healthy life style and does so in ways where cognitive therapy leaves off. And did I say it is FREE?

Thanks to a stable of benefactors and grants the Merritt Center Board has been able to maintain this gratis offering. We pray that remains, and are always open to other grant and philanthropic opportunities.

The 2010 schedule is as follows:

January 15-17

March 5-7

May 14-16

July 9-11

The veteran may enter at session #2, after that it is closed. For applications go to the website at “MerrittCenter.org” or call Mike Brewer/USMC at 520-360-6933

Merry Christmas to all and to all a good nights sleep!

Merritt Retreat Center For Veterans of War

The following was sent to me by our Earth Mother, Betty Merritt who owns and operates a little slice of heaven known as the Merritt Center in Payson, Arizona. Many a man and woman have completed her tailor-made curriculum for healing from that ravages of war. There is simply nothing like it in all the 50 States. It heals. It works. It brings contentment,where there was once psychic pain. It brings love where there was once bitterness and rage. It brings intimacy where there was distrust.

I have had the great fortune to be part of this program for the past 5 years, and currently serve as a mentor and outreach contact for Southern Arizona.

The free retreats start up again in January. Let us know if you know of someone who may want to attend. We can arrange transportation too.

Payson Roundup

One-stop help for vets available at Web site
By Alexis Bechman

November 24, 2009

When soldiers return home from war, they leave behind one battlefield but often find themselves thrust onto a new battlefield — this time fighting enemies in their mind.

The last thing a veteran should have to worry about is where he will get medical care, housing, food or support. But after a recent veterans discussion at Gila Community College, a small group of veterans, therapists and counselors decided Payson combat veterans need more support.

Following that Nov. 12 panel discussion, 13-year Army veteran Miles Hanson, who only moved to town six months ago, stepped up and started a Web site, www.paysonveterans.org. The site gives local information pertaining to employment, housing, medical care, veteran groups, current events, self-help and most importantly, a place for support.

“A one-stop shop for returning veterans and those already here is a great benefit to local veterans and the community as well,” Miles said.

Betty Merritt, founder and owner of the Merritt Center, put on the discussion and said Payson needs to offer its veterans more assistance after they return home from war.

“There isn’t anywhere enough services that you deserve,” Merritt said.

Iraq and Afghanistan veteran Joseph Robinson and Vietnam veteran Kevin Whitaker said they have both dealt with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) since returning home from war and found the bureaucratic process for getting help frustrating.

PTSD affects approximately 30 percent of soldiers who spend time in a war zone, according to the National Institutes of Mental Health. PTSD develops after exposure to a terrifying event or ordeal and can often last years.

Whitaker said he spent the last 22 years living alone in Pine dealing with his own version of PTSD.

“I avoided anything dealing with veterans,” Whitaker said to the group. “I didn’t even tell people I was a veteran. But now I would like to help other veterans.”

Beyond the Web site, the group agreed a bricks and mortar location for assistance would be great along with a veterans advocate for Rim Country veterans.

Miles said he would also like to create a business card with basic information about services that could be placed in businesses around town.

Most importantly, veterans need to feel that the community supports them and there is a place to go for help, Merritt said.

“There is a sense that the community expends little energy at the individual level with veterans,” Merritt said. “There is a need to expand the therapeutic community’s understanding and support of the needs of veterans.”

When people go off to war, they are programmed to be soldiers. When they come back, they need to be deprogramed, she added.

“If we don’t recognize that these people need help, we have reactive outbursts,” she said, pointing to the recent shooting at Fort Hood.

Another case hit closer to home, a February standoff involving a veteran and Payson Police.

On Feb. 1, Gulf War veteran Michael Gene Robinson, 52, began a nine-hour standoff by barricading himself inside his home and shooting at police officers.

Talking with police negotiators, Robinson said that the officers in front of his house were Iraqis and therefore his enemy. Robinson eventually told negotiators he was suffering from PTSD. Eventually Robinson surrendered and no one was injured.

Although Army Reserve sergeant Ken Moorin was never violent like Robinson, he was diagnosed with PTSD after he returned from Baghdad in 2004. Moorin suffered panic attacks that were especially debilitating during thunderstorms. Seeking release, Moorin attended Merritt’s free retreat for veterans in Star Valley.

“I felt a sense of peace being with other veterans,” Moorin said. “Talking was so helpful because there is so much anger and sadness.”

“It has to go somewhere so it might as well be health,” he added.

Merritt founded the non-profit Merritt Center in 1987 to offer renewal and empowerment workshops.

Spread over four weekends, veterans work through a series of activities including trauma-release exercises, which allow veterans to release tension stored in the sciatic nerve during combat.

Merritt was inspired to start the Merritt Center after experiencing her own release during a massage. At the time, Merritt was a successful executive with a large corporation.

“An hour into the message I started breathing differently and I felt a white light in my body,” she said. “It said ‘Let go’ so I quit my job the next week.”

Not knowing what she was going to do, Merritt meditated on an answer and saw fields of pansies. In August 1986, Merritt started a cross-country drive looking for the field of pansies she had envisioned. After 36,000 miles, Merritt ended up at the lodge in Star Valley, where she found a field of Johnny jump-ups blooming.

At the time, a doctor was using the center as a retreat for cancer patients. In 1987, Merritt took it over.

For the last five years, Merritt has offered retreats free for veterans.

“So often they come back and try to numb the pain through either alcohol or other stuff,” she said. “We don’t just shake it off so we need to learn how to release it.”

The first two weekends of the retreat involve bonding with other veterans who have gone through the program.

“A talking circle is introduced in the first session and used throughout the program to provide the foundation for creating trust. With others in the circle acknowledging their traumatic experiences the vet is willing to explore his/her own and before the circle ends or definitely before the first weekend ends, the vet is willing to share a piece of the experienced trauma,” she said.

At the end of each weekend, veterans are given activities to practice at home.

During the third weekend, veterans let go of the traumatic event during a Native American sweat lodge ceremony. During the sweat, Merritt said she keeps the door open more than it is closed.

At the end of the sweat, some veterans exit the lodge feeling reborn.

After letting go of the trauma, veterans replace it with something positive, Merritt said.

During the final weekend, veterans create new life goals. In the past, one veteran expressed a desire to write a book and another wished to give whale tours.

Whatever the dream, Merritt encourages veterans to follow through.

“I am living proof of making your dreams come true,” she said.

Visit the www.merrittcenter.org for the free online workbook, Basic Training for Life, a self-help program for returning veterans.

Originally published at: http://www.paysonroundup.com/news/2009/nov/24/onestop_help_vets_available_web_site/

Upcoming Veterans Forum/ Himmel Park Library

On Thursday, November 19th, 2009 from 5:45pm to 7:45pm at Himmel Park Library, located at 1035 N. Treat Ave, near Tucson Blvd. and Speedway, there will be a Forum for dialogue with the community about veterans of war returning home. The topic is:

VETERANS OVERCOMING TRANSITION ISSUES OF EXITING WAR AND ENTERING POLITE SOCIETY

Join us in a “Coming Home” dialogue that intends to inform and engage the whole community in learning new ways of viewing the veterans you know and love. This is the first in a series of panel discussions and is intended for veterans of all ages and families from all generations. An extensive question and answer session is scheduled.

For information call Sue Parker at Himmel Library 520-594-5305 ext.3

Happy Veterans Day At Laffs Comedy Club

Now ladies and gentlemen of the TucsonCitizen.com this is funny stuff. This salute to veterans has been sitting here all day in a draft form. So,I will share some humanity with you… It is possible that the Marine Corps Birthday was a bit too spirited, therefore effecting the memory of Grampa! I just now realized that I did not post it,as I have had more phone calls today inbound and outbound, with cheers for Vets then ever in personal history. What a treat. What respect. Respect is good for the soul. Makes me feel energized and appreciated. I do hope one day we can celebrate the “Last Warrior.” Is it possible?

Join us tonight at Laffs for a show entitled “Comics for Courage” that benefits the Wounded Warrior Project. Show time 7pm. Suggested donation $12. You know what is funny? They don’t have any Marines on stage. They don’t know us huh? So my one liner;You know why there is no such thing as a former Marine?….. you can’t reverse a lobotomy!!