By Shannon Collins
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
VENTURA, Calif., June 11, 2015 – As the nightmares took
control of him, the sailor’s wife wrapped her arms around him and told him he
was safe, comforting him until he calmed down and went back to sleep.
Navy Chief Petty Officer Averill Malone, a logistics
specialist, has been married to his wife, Ida, for eight years, and he said the
support he receives from his wife as a spouse and caregiver helps him with his
post-traumatic stress symptoms.
“She tells me I’m safe, especially on those nights when I’m
waking up screaming and jumping from nightmares,” he said. “When I get
depressed or the anxiety starts kicking in, she says, ‘Baby, you’re safe.’ I
love her for loving me through this.”
Military Service
Malone joined the Navy right out of high school and loved
being in logistics during his 22 years of service, making sure equipment and
mail got to and from the ships.
While he was deployed to Camp Victory in Iraq from 2007 to
2008, he was on a night patrol when he heard bombs, rockets and mortars land
all around him.
“I was really scared for my life,” Malone said. “I thought
to myself, ‘If it’s my time, it’s my time.’ I just walked and prayed and sang
songs.”
Breaking Point
When he came home, he said, he felt depressed and emotional,
was anxious around loud noises and had trouble sleeping, but he didn’t realize
he had post-traumatic stress disorder.
“I took care of my sailors and just pushed on,” Malone said.
He said that looking back, there was a decline in his work
performance, but he didn’t know how to ask for help and kept internalizing his
feelings.
At home, he had rules for the children: Don’t slam the
doors, no loud music or television, and leave Dad alone and let him take naps.
The breaking point came in 2013, when his son Alonzo slammed
a door. Malone and his son fought until his other son pulled him away. Through
the help of his friends, he acknowledged something was wrong and checked
himself into Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda,
Maryland.
“At first my plan was I was just going to keep driving and
run into something to kill myself but I called a battle buddy, James, he’s been
deployed several times,” Malone said.
“It was 2 in the morning, and he said, ‘I don’t know what to
do but go to Bethesda, and I’ll meet you there.’ I didn’t know how to explain
it and how to talk to people about it, but they finally got me a therapist, and
that was the beginning,” he said.
Ida Malone, who served as a Navy corpsman for eight years,
said she was angry and hurt initially, because her husband hadn’t told her he
was hurting. They are both ministers, and she said she was also angry with God.
“I told God, ‘You took him over there, and you broke him,’”
she said, her voice breaking. “I told Averill, ‘You lied to me. You shut me
out.”
She said when she went to visit him at Bethesda on the third
day, she saw the shell of the man she knew and kept telling him, “I’m sorry.
Whatever you need me to do, I’ll do it. I just need you better.”
Healing
She said getting counseling, going to counseling sessions
together and meeting other caregivers and spouses of wounded warriors have
helped her better understand post-traumatic stress and the role caregivers
portray in wounded warriors’ lives.
And now they also have Ruby, a 2-year-old service dog.
“Ruby’s part of the family,” Ida Malone said of the terrier.
The dog has learned that when the family is cooking dinner it is time for
Averill to take his medicine and will nudge him.
“Ruby has really helped me, because I didn’t socialize,”
Averill Malone said. “Meeting new people and talking was hard. I hid it pretty
well.”
Ruby helped him heal, he said. “She chose me; I didn’t
choose her. She just wanted love me and fix me, so it’s a win-win situation.
She calms me down when I get anxious and depressed and reminds me to take my
meds. She’s become an integral part of my treatment team.”
Ida Malone said having a caregiver who is related to the
wounded warrior can be beneficial. “We know them,” she said. “We know their ins
and outs. We know what triggers them. We know what they can and can’t handle.”
Navy Trials, DoD Warrior Games
Adaptive sports events give caregivers a chance to meet and
share information, Ida Malone said. She said it also gives her a better
appreciation for her situation.
“Every day is a struggle for everybody, be it the warrior,
be it the caregiver, be it the provider,” she said.
Last year, during his first time competing in archery in the
Warrior Games, Averill Malone said the crowd and proximity of his fellow
competitors made him nervous and anxious. He hadn’t realized he was in the
medal round, he said, and started shooting poorly.
Ida, always the one to say, “Suck it up,” and “We’ve got
this, Team Malone,” said she got out of the stands and went over to him.
“She said, ‘I want this medal. I want two 10s,’” Averill
Malone said. “I said, ‘Roger that.’ And I went out and shot two 10s, and we got
the bronze medal. It was like a movie, because I was shooting all over the
place, and she just made me buckle down and focus. I was scared and nervous
because I had never competed before and then I was like, ‘OK, it’s Team Malone.
We can do this.’”
Teammates Become Family
When Averill Malone first tried archery last year, his wife
wasn’t with him at the camp. He said he wasn’t doing very well, got depressed
and had a few suicidal thoughts. But, he said, his coach and teammates built up
his confidence and are now part of his treatment team.
“Every shot I took, they were like, ‘Great job. You’re doing
well. Good shot. Hey, let’s shoot for sodas. You’re a chief, you can afford a
soda,’” he said, wiping away a tear. “They helped me over a hump and seeing
these guys again at the camp this year, it’s been an amazing journey. I’m
thankful.”
Ida Malone said she is grateful for adaptive sports and her
husband’s teammates.
“Averill smiles more and opened up more,” she said. “They
are like his extended family. … This is better than any counseling session or
doctor’s appointment, because they’re amongst one another. They look out for
each other more than any care provider or any doctor.”
Averill also competes in cycling and enjoys fishing and
painting. He said competing has given him confidence.
“I was looking at my shadow today, and I was like, ‘Wow,
that’s the shadow of an athlete. That’s the shadow of a warrior,’” he said.
2015 Warrior Games
Ida, their daughters, Dominique and Iyanna, their son,
Joshua, and Averill’s brother plan to attend the 2015 DoD Warrior Games at
Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, scheduled for June 19 to June 28.
“I want Averill to know he’s supported. … I just want him to
have that satisfaction that his family and friends are in his corner cheering
for him,” Ida Malone said.
Ida and Averill
The couple met on a blind date in 2006, and Averill said he
didn’t know what love really was until he really trusted Ida with his internal
struggles.
“When we got married, I knew I loved her, but I didn’t know
if there were limits to that love,” he said. “She could’ve left me. She
could’ve said, ‘I didn’t sign up for this.’ I didn’t know that love could carry
us through like this, especially when I went into the hospital. To have her
love in my corner and her say, ‘Baby, you can do this’ during those days when I
was having a bad day and didn’t want to put the uniform on, I’m really thankful
for that type of love.”
He said having his dog, Ruby, and his children were just
added love.
“I love her for loving me through this and for loving me
back to health,” he said.
Averill Malone said he plans to retire from the Navy in
August, and his wife is helping him with his transition into a civilian career.
Ida Malone is pursuing her bachelor’s degree in nursing.
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