called giving us the thousand yard stare. to me, that s where someone doesn t see anything going on around them. they re just looking a thousand yards away. the suicidal woman is tina zaun, who is experiencing post-partum depression after the birth of her second child. i remember just being in the house and just feeling numb. just numb. the statistics show that postpartum depression reaches its height 90 days after the birth of a baby, and we almost hit it to the day. we were like three days off. tina s depression is so deep, her husband had asked tina s mother to help look after her. apparently i was talking about jumping. i don t remember talking about jumping. apparently they were trying to keep the car keys away from me. according to tina, on that july morning, her mother lost patience with her for not being able to get over her depression.
reckon, you know, world war i, shell-shock. world war ii, battle fatigue, combat neuroses, korea, vietnam, thousand yard stare. but now because of the undeniable rates of ptsd, suicide, violence, military has gotten religion fast. but even doing the conventional psychiatric treatment is not sufficient and we should do more. we can do more but it requires changing the standard mode of care. when patrick says that it s a proportion of people that are affected and the others come back and they don t show these affects, that s true, but that s because they re so resilient they can compensate for it. the reality is that everybody is significantly affected. it s only some that go over the edge. they ve had that exposure. thank you both for joining me tonight. coming up, what s wrong with a guy taking three days off to help his wife when she gets birth to a child? apparently a lot if you re a professional baseball player according to some sports nuts.
shell-shock. world war ii, battle fatigue, combat neuroses, korea, vietnam, thousand yard stare. but now because of the undeniable rates of ptsd, suicide, violence, military has gotten religion fast. but even doing the conventional psychiatric treatment is not sufficient and we should do more. we can do more but it requires shanging the standard mote of care. when patrick says that it s a proportion of people that are affected and the others come back and they don t show these affects, that s true, but that s because they re so resill yebt they can compensate for it. the reality is that everybody is significantly affected. it s only some that go over the edge. they ve had that exposure. thank you both for joining me tonight. coming up, what s wrong with a guy taking three days off to help his wife when she gets birth to a child? apparently a lot if you re a professional baseball player
she was what i have always called giving us the thousand yard stare. to me, that s where someone doesn t see anything going on around them. they re just looking a thousand yards away. the suicidal woman is tina zaun, who is experiencing post-partum depression after the birth of her second child. i remember just being in the house and just feeling numb. just numb. the statistics show that postpartum depression reaches its height 90 days after the birth of a baby, and we almost hit it to the day. we were like three days off. tina s depression is so deep, her husband had asked tina s mother to help look after her. apparently i was talking about jumping. i don t remember talking about jumping. apparently they were trying to keep the car keys away from me. according to tina, on that july morning, her mother lost patience with her for not being able to get over her depression. it was too much for tina to
the hospitals were closed down. but when those people wound up in cities like new york there were sros, cheap housing plagueses. if you were discharged with a prescription bottle and one bottle of medicine to help you. itch y if you lost your apartment on the upper west side you could walk around the corner and find a cheap apartment. in the 70s and 80s when the co-legislation was founded the housing dried up. sros, lost 100,000 units. as a result snuff. what? condo, buildings. my first apartment was a former s sro. a woman, sunny was a distressed looking woman was standing in front of my building one day. one bright sunny day, this woman standing there, kind of, you know, clearly, with a thousand yard stare in her eye. i said may i help you. thought there was something wrong with her. she said i used to live in this