The journey from service to civilian life, and its endlessly complex reverberations, has long since faded from the attention of those who prefer simple stories of homecomings and happy endings. Fresh news, new scandals, and the relentless tide of daily life have drawn most people away from the private struggles endured in quiet kitchens or lonely bedrooms after the last salute has been given.
Yet, as I have every reason to believe, the full weight of these transitions-and the truths and wounds that accompany them-have rarely been revealed to the wider world. For those who have not carried the burden, either upon their own shoulders or beside a loved one, what follows may seem both familiar and foreign.
As my own friend and comrades have taught me, and as my life after leaving the uniform has confirmed, no honest memoir of a veteran's journey would be complete without some small record of these silent battles-the ones that echo long after the fanfare is gone. In the spirit of candor and connection, then, I offer these pages: raw, unfiltered, and fiercely human. It is my hope that in reading, you will find not just stories, but understanding, and that these truths, long left in the shadows, might at last see the light.