About This Stamp
With this semipostal stamp, the U.S. Postal Service will raise funds to help treat those impacted by post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Tens of millions of Americans will experience PTSD in their lifetimes. Today, the nation is increasingly dedicated to compassionately treating this mental health issue.
The stamp features Mark Laita’s photo illustration of a green plant sprouting from the ground, which is covered in fallen leaves. The image is intended to symbolize the PTSD healing process, growth, and hope.
Many kinds of trauma can lead people to experience persistent symptoms such as intrusive thoughts, nightmares, and difficulty sleeping. Depression, anxiety, and fear can also occur. Though these symptoms may initially interrupt one’s daily life, for most people they typically dissipate over time. However, if these problems continue for more than a month, PTSD may have developed. Symptoms associated with the disorder often can be broken down into four categories: avoidance, hyperarousal, increased negative beliefs and feelings, and reliving.
Someone with PTSD might avoid situations, other people, or news reports, television shows, and movies that remind them of a traumatic experience. They may choose not to talk about the event at all. The disorder can result in increased irritability, insomnia, and hypervigilance. Called hyperarousal, this can cause sufferers to be easily startled and also have difficulty concentrating. PTSD can cause those affected to have negative thoughts about themselves and their future. Some with the disorder may struggle to maintain personal relationships and lose trust in others. Memories of an event sometimes lead sufferers of PTSD to relive trauma through nightmares and flashbacks. Particular sounds, smells, or sights, called triggers, can result in a person reliving a difficult experience.
The disorder cuts across demographic lines, though women are at a greater risk than men. Women are more than twice as likely as men to suffer PTSD at some point in their lives.
Sold at a price of 65 cents per First-Class™ stamp, this stamp is a semipostal. The price of a semipostal stamp pays for the First-Class™ single-piece postage rate in effect at the time of purchase plus an amount to fund causes that have been determined to be in the national public interest. By law, revenue from sales (minus postage and the reasonable reimbursement of costs to the Postal Service) is to be transferred to a selected executive agency or agencies. Net proceeds from this stamp will be distributed to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, which oversees the National Center for PTSD.
The title of the stamp, “Healing PTSD,” appears at the top of the stamp. A second line of smaller text centered along the bottom shows the plus sign that indicates a semipostal followed by “First-Class” and “USA.”
Art director Greg Breeding designed the stamp.
Stamp Art Director, Stamp Designer
Greg Breeding
Greg Breeding is a graphic designer and principal of Journey Group, a design company he co-founded in 1992, located in Charlottesville, Virginia. He was creative director until 2013, at which time he began serving as president and continued in that role through 2023.
Breeding’s fascination with modernism began while studying design at Virginia Commonwealth University. His affinity with the movement continues and motivates his ongoing advanced studies at the Basel School of Design in Switzerland most every summer.
As an art director for postage stamp design since 2012, Breeding has designed more than 100 stamps covering a diverse array of subjects, from Star Wars droids and Batman to Harlem Renaissance writers and the transcontinental railroad.
His work has been recognized in annual design competitions held by Graphis, AIGA, PRINT magazine, and Communication Arts.
Breeding lives in North Garden, Virginia, with his wife and enjoys nothing so much as frolicking on the floor with his grandchildren.
Photographer
Mark Laita
Photography has been Mark Laita's passion since he was 14, when he began taking pictures with his father's camera. After growing up in Detroit, he studied photography at the University of Illinois.
In the years since, he has produced award-winning commercial work for clients such as Apple, BMW, Adidas, and The Coca-Cola Company. Laita has published three books of fine-art photography. His first, Created Equal, was released in 2006. It was followed by Sea (2011) and Serpentine (2013).
Laita is now based in Los Angeles.
He has worked on two stamp projects for the U.S. Postal Service®: Beautiful Blooms (2007) and Healing PTSD (2019).