From Baghdad to America: Life Lessons from a Dog Named Lava


Posted on Jul 28, 2008 By Melissa Holbrook Pierson
By Jay Kopelman  

Skyhorse Publishing, $23.95, 224 pages

Available on Amazon.com

In the news just last week, a combat veteran of our current war, diagnosed with severe post-traumatic stress disorder, sought his own treatment, with drugs: he was found dead of an overdose. The war's wreckage of human lives is by no means confined to the streets and deserts of Iraq. This is part of Jay Kopelman's important message in this follow-up to his gripping From Baghdad, with Love. And so is the fact that dogs, too, can experience the terrible aftereffects of life-threatening stress.  

After detailing in his first book the often hair-raising, sometimes humorous, sometimes shocking story of defying General Order 1-A, Prohibited Activities for U.S. Department of Defense Personnel Present Within the United States Central Command AOR, Title 10, United States Code, Section 164(c) ... [etc.], against keeping pets while on active duty in a military zone, the author now catalogs the differences between the wounded and the walking wounded. As we're only beginning to find out, the casualties of the war in Iraq are extending, in fearsome waves, to our shores. Divorce, suicide, alcoholism and drug addiction, depression, and violence have followed these soldiers home.

But when Lava, the winsome stray from the streets of Fallujah who made it against stacked odds to a new life in America, is injured in an accident here, all hell breaks loose for his owner, too. Kopelman realizes that both of them are suffering, in many of the same ways. And together the two of them must learn how to mend, from the inside out.

In World War I it was known as shell shock. Now, we call it PTSD. Kopelman sees himself in his dog's sudden fears; perhaps his dog feels akin, too, to his person when he experiences sudden rage.

"My advice to you is to live your life with all the gusto and pleasure of a dog. Specifically, my dog Lava." Kopelman learns many things, through necessity, when he returns from war. He learns from the letters of other soldiers who themselves were touched by the dogs they happened to meet in the battleground. He learns from the research he did into the psychic ailments of people who were made to do things that people never should do. He learns from his own foray into therapy, an act of bravery for a man who was taught (falsely) that it was not. And he learns - much - from a dog who teaches simply by quietly being there. 
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