The Team House - From Marine to Army SMU Operator | Varpas De Sa Pereira | Ep. 382
Episode Date: November 26, 2025This interview features Varpas, a decorated, retired Marine Corps officer and Tier 1 Special Operations operator, detailing his intense career and the harsh realities of transitioning out of elite ser...vice. He discusses his unique psychological model, Warrior Withdrawal, which maps the emotional and identity struggles of leaving the hyper-focused warrior life onto the 11 symptoms of Substance Abuse Disorder. The discussion centers on the dramatic loss of purpose and community, and his advocacy for solutions while serving as a psychologist helping veterans navigate these exact challenges.Grab Varpas' book "Warrior Withdrawal: When BAMF No Longer Means Bad*$$ M^ther#u@!er" here: https://a.co/d/j8NT8FvToday's Sponsors:Praseidus Watch Companyhttps://praesidus.com/-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------For ad free video and audio and access to live streams and Eyes On Geopolitics...JOIN OUR PATREON! https://www.patreon.com/c/TheTeamHouseTo help support the show and for all bonus content including:-live shows and asking guest questions -ad free audio and video-early access to shows-Access to ALL bonus segments with our guestsSubscribe to our Patreon! ⬇️https://www.patreon.com/TheTeamHouseSupport the show here:⬇️https://www.patreon.com/TheTeamHouse___________________________________________________Subscribe to the new EYES ON podcast here:⬇️https://www.youtube.com/@EyesOnGeopoliticsPod/featured__________________________________Jack Murphy's new book "We Defy: The Lost Chapters of Special Forces History" ⬇️https://www.amazon.com/We-Defy-Chapters-Special-History-ebook/dp/B0DCGC1N1N/——————————————————————Or make a one time donation at: ⬇️https://ko-fi.com/theteamhouseSocial Media: ⬇️The Team House Instagram:https://instagram.com/the.team.house?utm_medium=copy_linkThe Team House Twitter:https://twitter.com/TheTeamHousePodJack’s Instagram:https://instagram.com/jackmcmurph?utm_medium=copy_linkJack’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/jackmurphyrgr?s=21Dave’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/dave_parke?s=21Team House Discord: ⬇️https://discord.gg/wHFHYM6SubReddit: ⬇️https://www.reddit.com/r/TheTeamHouse/Jack Murphy's memoir "Murphy's Law" can be found here:⬇️ https://www.amazon.com/Murphys-Law-Journey-Investigative-Journalist/dp/1501191241The Team Room Reading Room (Amazon Affiliate links):⬇️ https://jackmurphywrites.com/the-team-room-reading-room/Intro music by https://www.youtube.com/user/RemixSample"Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio"Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-team-house--5960890/support.
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The Team House with your host, Jack Murphy and David Park.
Welcome to episode 382 of the Team House.
I'm Jack Murphy here with tonight's guest on the show, Varpis Dessa Pereira.
He served as a Marine Corps infantry officer and then jumped over to the Army and served in a Yusasaki unit.
Multiple deployments to Iraq, Middle East, Africa.
and ended up getting out of the Marine Corps
and is now a clinical psychologist
working at Veterans Affairs,
obviously working with veterans and veterans issues.
So we're going to talk about the whole spectrum
of all of that in the interview.
VARPIS, thanks for joining us.
Thank you for having me.
I should also mention up front too.
He is also the author of the book, Warrior Withdrawal.
It's a, well, you tell the audience,
Varpus, what's your book about?
So the book is about this cluster of symptoms that I found that sort of is in between this idea of adjustment disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder.
I have it gone through school and looking at the diagnostics and statistics manual kind of what happened to me as like patient zero of getting out of the military didn't really fit in either of those diagnoses.
The cluster of symptoms for PTSD, one of them is avoidance.
I didn't have avoidance of combat.
I sought out combat.
I had an affinity for being with veterans and being in the military.
So that would be a disqualifier for PTSD.
And then the other thing that could be described,
explain the symptoms would be adjustment disorder.
That has a time limit, though, of about six months.
And so 10 years later, I'm still struggling with wanting to be back on the front line.
So it's like, that can't be it either.
So what is the, what is happening here?
and ultimately, closest thing that I could find was substance abuse disorder.
And so there's something about being a warrior that feels like you're addicted to something.
And so that when you get out, you experience withdrawal symptoms.
So the book is about my experiences, the multiple tours that I did, getting out, the struggles of getting out,
and then going through school and working at the VA and sort of finding a way to help,
veterans recognize what has happened to them, the training that they went through,
if they get spit out into the world with no untraining, and then how do you manage it?
Well, we'll get a little bit more in depth on that further along in the show.
But I'm going to start you off at the beginning.
You mentioned to me before the show, your first name is Lithuanian.
Your last name is Portuguese.
Tell us about the origin story of Varpus.
Where did you grow up?
How did you grow up? How did that eventually take you towards the Marine Corps?
Yeah, so I guess both of my parents are immigrants, both naturalized American citizens.
Mom is Lithuanian by way of Canada.
Her parents fled the communists.
And so we're stuck in between the Nazis and communists during World War II,
displaced persons camp, ended up in Canada, and then it moved down to Chicago with this big Lithuanian population.
where she met my dad who was born and raised in Rio, went to school in Rio, became a physician,
and then moved to Chicago seeking basically freedom.
Like he talks about how we don't understand this in the U.S.
the first time he could vote, there was only one person he could vote for because it was a dictatorship.
So he's like, I'm out of here, showed up in Chicago.
My parents met, ended up moving to the East Coast, Massachusetts, big Portuguese population there.
They needed a Portuguese-speaking doctor.
So that's predominantly where I grew up is in Massachusetts,
speaking Lithuanian to mom, Portuguese to dad,
and sort of thinking that that was everybody's life, house life.
Like we just used English in school,
and then we all went home and spoke in our native tongues.
Yeah, I think it was in third grade when I realized that's not the case,
everybody's house.
So the last name, Brazilian Portuguese, first name,
it is a Lithuanian word.
It is not a common name.
It's not like Joe.
It's literally translated to large bell.
And so I think I've joked about it before.
Like my mom was Gwyneth Paltrow before Gwoldre was naming her kid Apple.
So she named her second son, Large Church Bell, basically.
Well, what did the first one get?
So he's got my same, his dad's name, sorry, our dad's name.
And our dad has the same name as his dad's name, which is not much better because it's
Moseer, M-C-Y-R.
So he's sort of the third, except he also grabbed my mom's dad's name for his middle name,
so he's not technically the third.
But Malsir means article of pain in Amazon, Indian.
Wow.
So we go, so we go like,
Particle pain, large bell, and then my two younger brothers, Skidris, which is like sort of
made upish name of like clear.
And then my youngest brother, they were sure he was going to be born a girl.
So they only chose the name Lima, which is actually a common girl's name for luck.
Then when he popped out a boy, they're like, okay, well, he can't have a female name.
So they gave him the masculine version of Lima, which is Limus, which you can imagine basically
means male fairy.
Okay.
So your parents maybe need a little work on the naming conventions for the children.
Yes.
My mom was not a Johnny Cash fan.
A boy named Sue was not in her eight track player.
So I definitely tried not to do that with my own kids.
So you grow up speaking with.
Lithuanian and Portuguese, growing up in Massachusetts, what piqued your interest in military service?
How did that come about?
So I was actually born in Maryland at Bethesda Naval Hospital because my dad, in order to try to fast-track his citizenship,
took, got commissioned in the reserves as an Army physician.
And so he's immediately promoted a major as an internal medicine.
as an infectious disease specialist.
And so he was sent out to Fort Dietrich.
And so my dad was in the Army.
I don't know why, but I had an affinity for the Navy.
And then through high school, I was pretty sure
I was gonna go to Annapolis.
It's really the only place I applied.
And then the senior year, I had to have surgery.
And so I was DQ'd for Annapolis.
And then I got a scholarship to Boston University.
I said, all right, I'll do that, and then I'll go to Annapolis.
You know, after the year, I'll reapply.
But you had an ROTC program, and so they gave me the Navy ROTC scholarship.
And after a year there in Boston, I was like, I have three years of college now,
like a year's worth of AP credits, or two years worth of AP credits,
plus a year's worth of actual college.
I'm not going to go back and restart at zero at the academy,
because all roads lead to, for me, Quantico as a Marine.
So at that point, I was like, all right, I'll just stay here.
So you commissioned through ROTC?
I did.
And just like every other boy, basically, you know, G.I. Joe's camouflage.
I did it all.
Squirt guns, water guns, capture the flag was my favorite thing to play.
And through grade school and high school playing three sports, you know, a sport every season.
then and then continue to do that through college.
And so you came into the Marines, 1999 you got commissioned.
And now you have to go through basic infantry officer course.
What do the Marines call it?
Yeah, so we do something a little bit different.
We have officer candidate school and then all Marine officers go then through the basic school.
So depending of your commissioning program, whether it's the academy or OCS, everybody goes to the basic school, and everybody shows up with no MOS.
So all officers go to Quantico.
Nobody has an MOS.
Some people have flight contracts.
But then over the course of those six months, depending on how well you do, you get ranked from one to whatever it is, 100.
And then you select your MOSs.
Now, in order to ensure quality spread, they cut that 100 into thirds and then disperse the MOSs sort of equitably, which means that if you're in the top third, you need to be in the top of the top third to get combat arms.
And if you're in the bottom third, usually it's the bottom guy.
Mr. Irrelevant usually gets infantry.
Yeah, I think the Army does something similar so that you don't end up with purely just dumbasses in the end.
infantry otherwise i mean it's bad enough as it is i think what they try to do is they know just about
everybody wants to be in infantry combat arms and then they don't want like you the loggisticians to
be the lowest all of the lowest performers at the basic school or your logos your supply guys because
then things don't get done yeah as the generals say you know you think logistics not tactics
um then from tbs i got i was high enough to choose infantry then i go i went to the infantry officer
course for about 10 weeks.
We got my orders to my first unit.
It's first battalion, fifth Marines, out of Kent Pendleton.
And linked up with them as they're preparing to do a boat package.
So I went right away to Coronado for a month, doing the Scout Swimber School, and then
stayed there for probably another month doing the small boat raids.
That's pretty cool.
I mean, it must have been exactly what you were looking for, right?
It was.
And it was basically a roci.
to determine who was going to get to go be the scout swimmer.
And luckily I won.
And I was only in the Rochambeau because I had already done like the maximum swim
qual that you could still struggled with the brick.
You know, part of the qual for the scout swimmer course.
So managed to do it.
And all of that boat rating stuff was to prepare us for a deployment at the front end of 2001
to Okinawa.
Did that Okinawa deployment materialize or did other things take precedence?
Yeah.
No, no, no.
So 2001, so we flew out January of 01 sort of standard rotation.
It's a 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, sailed around Australia, Iwo Jima.
And it was only a six-month tour.
So we fly back around July of 01 and then we're on our off cycle.
basically so we're looking at doing like Operation Bright Star I think in Egypt
Sinai yeah September 11th happens and then you know everybody starts to get think that
things are going to change for me they did because so here's the funny story in 2000
2000 that was the youngest marine officer in their first Marine Division so if you're not
aware of how we do our birthday balls. It's the oldest Marine present and the youngest Marine present
share the first piece of cake. And of course, we're Marines, so everything has to be done
and rehearsed and practiced. So as the youngest officer present, I had to go to the practices
for the Honor Guard to like practice eating the cake, or at least receiving it from
oldest Marine present. That put my name, so you can imagine that plus my name got me skyline
with the general staff.
And so then when we came back from the deployment to Okinawa,
from Okinawa, the chief of staff and the staff sec were already like,
oh, hey, that guy's good to go.
He's a first lieutenant.
Like we were to pull him up.
And I show up to my interview with the general, General Cowdry,
and the staff sex like, and the general is also like, do you want to be here?
And I'm like, hell no.
You know, I want to go to recon, you know?
And he's like, oh, well, you know, it's exactly who we want here.
You want the guys that don't want to be here because if you wanted to be here, that would be a problem.
Reverse psychology is bullshit. They got you.
Yeah. So fortunately for me, though, that ended up being a second deployment because he's the assistant division commander.
And we got flown to Kuwait for four or so months as part of a CJTF for consequence management.
As far as I understand it, I think we were a sort of.
trying to build the backbone of the eventual division command for an eventual invasion into Iraq.
So from around Christmas, 01 through 2002, you know, I'm in the Middle East, flying around with the general, going to all of the embassies in the Middle East, talking about whatever they wanted to talk about.
And then we come back, and the benefit for me was it was only going to be for six months.
that was the aide, and then I would, in theory, sort of have a choice of duty station coming home.
So I wanted to go to recon, interviewed with the recon battalion commander, and he's like,
I'm only going to make you the H&S CO. I don't have any platoons open for you.
What's H&S?
So HHC.
Oh, okay.
Headquarters.
Hot dogs and sodas company.
So that was not a deploying unit, and none of us at the time.
So this is like mid-2002, thought that the entire divisions were going to get deployed for Iraq.
So I said, no thank you to that and took a job as an executive officer for another boat company.
So I found myself back in Coronado for a couple months, getting ready to set sail in January of 03.
So you kind of hit it just right.
Yeah, well, basically.
So set sail in January, full speed ahead.
I think we had 36 hours in Singapore between San Diego and Kuwait.
I got flown ahead into Kuwait and then it was, you know, all of February and most of March
kind of waiting, waiting for the green light to go.
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So what was sort of like your platoon's mission and your idea of how the Operation Iraqi Freedom was supposed to unfold?
I had no idea.
I mean, I was an executive officer.
Our specific job, so because we're part of the Mew, we actually got attached to a British Commando Brigade, so three Commando Brigade as part of their combat element.
And we were tasked with crossing the border and then securing the deep water.
facility of umkosser while the the four zero and four two commando or the royal marines i think we're
taking the alfal peninsula um to our this is down in like basra south of basra okay right so literally
right across the border is um kossar um and then move we we moved my battalion end up moving
further north up to azubayr and then a little bit further north uh and then we got
detached from the Brits because of Jessica Lynch, that whole
the asco.
So we all moved north up to Nazaria.
And so my battalion was part of the diversion attack to go rescue Jessica Lynch out of
Nazaria.
Now, me specifically, I was probably asleep in my in my black bag while all this
stuff was going on.
Were any interesting incidents that happened during that
appointment though that you were involved in there are a few um i try not to to speak ill of other
people um but it doesn't matter names it's okay there there was one specific incident that i'll
talk about this one because i bring it up in the book where we're in azubayr we strong pointed the
port because it's just our company providing security and i'm driving around with my company gunnery sergeant
which in the army it's like your first sergeant because he's the logistics guy and we hear 50-calf fire
or sniper fire and my company gun he's a former sniper so he's like that's outgoing we're trying to
figure out what are we shooting at um i get down to the the platoon that's on that strong point into
the south and the platoon sergeant asked me like hey what's the what's the drama sir and i'm like i don't know
that's why we're here. The platoon commander tells me, you know, what's going on. They've got eyes on a target, but it's not a target. It's women and kids, you know, maybe some men in vans, and they're just kind of looting a warehouse. And the platoon sergeant of that platoon tells me that our company commander had just called for a mortar mission. So he was going to use his 60 mortars on that target. And it's in that point in time where I was like, no.
That's not happening.
I had inscribed on my cover or my hat.
No women, no kids borrowed from Leon the professional.
So I threw the platoon commander in our truck and we drove to the CP and I just asked them like,
hey, did my CEO just ask to shoot a fire mission?
I asked to shoot a fire mission and they said, yeah, but we're going to deny it.
And I was like, okay, good.
I was getting ready to walk out, but there had been some other incidents that had
happened a couple days before. So the battalion gunner, the chief warrant officer,
it's like, no, no, you know, you tell him everything that's going on. And so I said,
okay, out of, out of just curiosity, when you call for fire, you have to give a target description.
And so I said, what was the target description that my CEO gave? And he said, 10 to 14 men in black
with AKs. I said, okay, that's, that's not what's there. Here's the platoon commander that had eyes on.
it's women and kids in their looting.
And I thought that was sort of done.
I thought that justice would sort of square things away.
I did not expect what happened next,
which was I got called in as insubordinate.
And then one of the other things that had come up
was that that company commander had pointed his rifle
at the fire support team leader.
Like if you should call another fucked up fire mission,
I'm going to kill you.
Because I should backtrack.
as soon as we crossed the border, we stopped and then we had incoming.
My company commander was sure that there's no way the Iraqis could be shooting already at us.
So he just was so sure that this was blue on blue fire that he was going to cause harm to the fire sport team later.
And he actually called the training timeout.
So the fire for effect went, you know, we got away.
I got away.
We all ran away.
So I actually have my platoon commander's tactical notebook as Iraqi shrapnel embedded in it.
And he kind of calls a training time out, pulls the nap out on a Humvee, calls all the platoon leaders and me to the Humvee.
And it's like, how did this happen?
And like, we can't stay here.
Like if that was, if that was their just fire mission,
you know we're bracketed now and we're not in a good place sure enough we got hit again
eventually we moved and and then our counter battery or somebody else took care of that d30
battery so that came up and then back to the mortar incident though my company commander
asks me like didn't you so did you hear the call for fire on the radio
i said no i didn't oh so you didn't hear what the grid was that i
called it. I said, no, no, sorry, I didn't. I didn't hear what grid you called in. And he said,
aha, see, so you didn't realize that I had actually offset the grid. He was going to use the 60-millimeter
mortars as warning shots. Danger close to our own troops, warning shots. And he got me with that.
I was speechless. But anybody who knows anything about fire support is like, that's just preposterous.
Yeah, that's not how the fire support center works. That's not how any of that.
works and your warning shots with the 50 cal already are not working so i really wasn't sure what to do
in that scenario but he said he could work with me or i could go to another company and i had to
weigh that decision it's actually maybe one of the first times that i selected to or i chose to do
what's better for everybody else and what's best for me i called in my fellow routine commanders
there's all the other lieutenants, and I said, what's best for me is to leave this company.
And I don't think that's what's best for you, because I can, I can withstand this.
And so I did. I stayed.
We go to Nazaria.
Basically, I don't see the company commander anymore.
Fly home, or sorry, not fly home, fly back to Bahrain, get on the ships, and sail home.
I get in more trouble for the shenanigans.
that allegedly I did in combat.
And at that point, it's like late 2003,
most, if not all of the Marines are gone from Iraq,
and I'm like, that was it.
That was my combat.
Wars over for us.
It's standing operations now, big army time.
And all of my peers are like getting their awards with B and Bronze Stars and all that stuff.
and I get a big fat zero because of all the things that happened.
So I was like, that's going to hurt me down the road.
But no matter, I still was thinking I can get over to recon or force recon.
The path at that point of time for me was going to be through fast company,
which is the fleet anti-terrorism security teams.
So I get orders there.
I show up and the Al Rashid Hotel had been rocketed.
So it pulled in the two platoons from FAS that were already,
I mean, they're always four deployed, but they pulled in two platoons that were four
deployed into Baghdad to reinforce what would eventually become the embassy and the hotel.
And so in order to maintain that force protection posture, they started to grab platoons from
state side. So I had, you know, within a month or so of showing up to Virginia with Fast,
I was back in Baghdad. And what, can you tell people what the mission is of the FAST teams?
Yeah. So it's anti-terrorism. Whatever form anti-terrorism can take, usually it's going to be like
a heightened security, heightened force protection measures. They're used for whenever there's
submarines that have nukes on them.
They bring out these marine platoons to help secure those areas for refuel, defuel.
Therefore, deployed, you know, when I was in Bahrain with Fast, we're on a pager to reinforce embassies
to go provide expeditionary security.
We come with a ton.
Fast platoons come with a ton of skill sets to do all of that.
They're kind of like a SWAT team, if you will.
the naval SWAT team.
And so the first assignment was you were going back to Iraq.
You said for this hotel was getting hit.
So the hotel was multiple, you know, was hit with a bunch of rockets.
And so the concern became that what was then the coalition provisional authority,
which is Al Rashid Alice, I think, was going to get hit.
And it is now the U.S. embassy there on the Tigris.
So they wanted to bring in a company's worth of fast Marines to provide better security for that
place. How did that situation unfold for you guys? It was so drastically different from OIF one.
Like I was in the green zone. I mean, I was eating catered food made by Pakistanis, you know,
in a palace with marble floors and toilets, which was a far cry from going two months without a
shower and then only getting kind of a quasi shower because they brought the NBC truck and like,
you guys need to be decontaminated.
The palace had a pool.
David Letterman visited our palace.
Some motivated cab officer and his Stetson jumped into the pool to catch a football that David Letterman threw.
And it was different.
It certainly was a different side of the war.
And still, you know, the Browd Irish was a big deal going from Bayotte Islander to National to this.
CPA. We were rolling around in SUVs that are unarmored and solder city was still not really
secure. But this was this, it was a unique time in late 03 and into, I guess, a little bit early
04 there in Baghdad where you could actually go to the SUC, not far from the combat surgical
hospital with no body armor, no weapon. Yeah, it's before things got really bad. Yeah, so then
that changed. It was basically guard duty for three or four months for us. So I came home from
that. We got relieved in place so that I could come home with the platoon and then make a regularly
scheduled deployment to Bahrain where we would be on the pagers for everywhere else. And so on that
deployment, there was an American who was beheaded in Saudi. And so there was some additional
concerns about threats to the embassy so they launched us to go reinforce Riyadh for about a month in July
and same with yeah go ahead and then we got sent down to Africa so I got I got my taste of the horn
of Africa in 2004 again different than like Alphazer and what was happening in Fallujah
yeah I mean what did they send you down to the horn of Africa for some of
it was training and some of it was just to you know make sure the embassy there was fine um it was good to
have a platoon of marines there to reinforce whatever might be going on and that also kind of started to
make me aware of how wild west it is out there like they sent us down to this one range
where um i think it took us like 13 hours to drive this is out in jabuette in jabutie yeah so we go
way down south it's like a 270 degree range where they're on our own my one assistant or one of the
between commanders was it was supremely afraid that we're going to get overtaken by baboons so he wanted
to make sure that the fire watch had a fully auto m1 m4 um but in my mind i'm like hey we're doing this
live fire training and if we have a casualty there is no medical support like our kazevac plan was this
was the CH53s, they're on 180 alert,
meaning that if we have something bad happens and we get on a sat phone
and we call up to Camp Le Monnier,
180 minutes later,
a CH 53 is flying 30 minutes down south to come get our casualties.
Interesting foreshadowing because when I was back in Djibouti in 2009,
we had an event where we had some casualties.
And so it became fortunate for those guys that the French foreign leaders,
was there and they could land one of their links is anywhere and that's how they got those guys to
to the hospital well this is a bit of a sidebar but i worked on a story a few years ago and it was a
army national guard unit in jabuti and they were making that same trip driving from the base
out to the range through all these canyons and valleys and everything and what none of them knew
and you know what surprised them was this huge rainstorm came through
It just poured rain.
And they got trapped out in the, you know, driving through these wadis going through driving LMTVs.
And I actually got video of one of the LMTVs rolling over in the water.
And they had four, three or four soldiers end up in the water.
And they recovered, like three of them managed to make it back to the shore.
One of them got washed all the way out to like the ocean and the French picked them up.
But survived.
Thank God.
I believe it. Even with light rain, it didn't seem like anything. And if you're used to, I mean, if you're from the East Coast or wherever, Seattle has rain all the time, the lightest amount of rain. And then we had about 48 inches of water that we had to afford in our land cruisers.
Yeah. It's wild. And after the fast teams, you did six months on division staff?
Yeah. So I came back from that deployment.
told me, I was a captain and I was too senior to take another platoon.
And rather than to suffer on battalion staff,
I volunteered for it to be an individual augment with my goal to be good to go on a military transition team.
My initial set of orders were to be for G4 logistics in Kuwait.
So I check in to Camp Lejeune with those orders.
And I'm like, hey, I'm a infantry guy.
from FAST. I don't know anything about logistics. Can we change that? I'm here to be a mitt.
And luckily they swapped me for some logistics officer and put me in the G3 down at the division.
So I deployed as a frag order writer within a few months. It became clear in Ramadi that
that's not a really difficult job. So the intentions message writer took up the
frag order writer duties and I got pulled as an out of hide mitt to go out to further west in ambar
with the two seven so the second brigade seventh Iraqi infantry division with our three battalions
and hit adipha and rawa and this is 2005-ish yeah so i spent just about all of 2005 in iraq
which is great because then I could pretend like the Red Sox were still World Series champions.
And Iraq was kind of like deteriorating pretty seriously by this timeframe.
You know, so 05, I think started a little bit of the awakening.
I remember being on Camp Blue Diamond when they brought in, I think, the tribes there to start
negotiating with them so that we could all focus on AQIZ or AQIM instead of, you know,
fighting the Shia.
Everybody wanted against Arkawi.
And then when I moved further out west,
they were still fighting out and al-Kheim
a little bit around
Rawa.
But most of the
really, well, I want to
say that. You know, Fallujah
was basically done. Second
Fallujah was done.
Rockets would still hit Camp Blue Diamond
and there wasn't a
lack of combat happening in Ramadi,
it just was not, I think, at the same level that it was in 2004.
For me personally, it was a lot of driving on, like,
route bronze, right uranium,
between all of the different Iraqi battalions.
And that was also a different experience because it's, you know,
minimally staffed on these with,
you break all of the requirements and minimums,
just to get out the door where we're basically going with nine Americans, three vehicles
out to wherever it is that we're going.
And then that really came to a point when we got, you know, I was lead truck, and so our truck
I hit with a small IED, not enough to disable us.
And we're pretty sure that this pickup truck in front of us is the one that dropped it.
So we chase it down.
We shoot at it together to stop.
It pulls over.
We have three trucks, so one goes far side security.
One stays a backside security.
And then my truck, you know, with the 50-Cal, is oriented to the target.
And it's really only at that moment that I realize I am the dismount.
I'm the vehicle commander and the dismount.
And the only other dismount is my turf, who's not armed.
And so I was like, oh, right.
well we close on the truck.
I don't need my turf to be armed,
but then when we get closer,
I haven't come with me,
we flanked the truck to you guys get out.
And at that point,
I realized I'm going to have to search them
because although I trust my,
it's like which way do you go with that?
Do I trust my turf to do the searching?
And I cover him or do I have,
so I handed my M4 on semi to the turf?
And I'm like, you pulled the trigger.
It's going to go.
Please stand.
In Enflayed, you know, and I closed the last, whatever it is, 10 meters with my M9 and search these guys.
I know they dropped the ID through the, there's a hole in the passenger side floor wall or floor.
But, you know, there's, there had no evidence.
And so I wasn't going to detain these guys on a hunch, even though I was, you know, they're in the wrong place.
They don't know where they're going.
their story, their cover for action doesn't check out.
It's like, nah, you guys missed your turn to Albuquerque back there.
So I know you're lying about this.
But what was I going to do?
There was no, there was no more explosives.
And so it might have just been an 82 millimeter mortar rigged below that hit us.
So we sent them on their way.
Jeez, what a mess.
And then after that deployment, you did the captain's career course.
I did. Went down to Benning. Again, the common theme of my military career is deploy as often as possible and stay stateside as little as possible. So I took the Army's course because it's six months instead of the Marine course because it's 13 months.
Went to, so went to Benning for that. Finished. Got my orders to back to Camp Pendleton as a company commander.
And then it was a matter of a few months, caught them on the tail end of their workup.
And by, I want to say July of 2007, I'm back in Iraq.
Wow.
Where did you guys go?
So north of Fallujah is a place called Sakwia.
And, you know, no offense to cav guys intended beyond, you know, you know what your job is.
and your job is not coin.
So the 5-7-cav mechanized cab unit that's there really did no patrolling in the AOR that I inherited.
Anytime they needed dismounts, they'd have to borrow them from the Marine battalions that were nearby.
And so what ended up happening prior to me showing up was the cab unit would go out and they'd hit IEDs.
And so they stopped patrolling.
And then they would only patrol if route clearance, like 224 engineers,
would come clear their route.
Then they would patrol from their
Bradleys and then
they would go back
right up until they had
like a catastrophic
event where
I don't know if it was even combat related
but they had about 13 heat casualties.
Oh man. That had to get
evacuated because they got stuck.
And
you know,
I inherited that
AOR. It was the Wild West.
So August of 07, we start clearing it.
And that's one of my patrols goes out and hits an IED into a canal.
We go to reinforce them.
My QRF kind of blows past them.
It's a second IED.
And so now I have two down trucks.
And we're trying to find where the trigger guys are.
So patrolling through the area, can't quite find them, recover the vehicles best as we can, leave them in place.
So we can come back the next day with some wreckers to pull these things out of the, one out of the canal and then the one off of the side of the canal.
And as we're driving that back, we get hit with another IED and recovering that vehicle, complex ambush.
So this is sort of the unfortunate drawing of boundaries.
The boundary was the canal, which was maybe 10 meters across.
And so not my AO is where I'm getting RPG fire from
and probably where the command was detonating all these IDs.
So it's like I get authorized to crossbow and the rickety mud bridges
didn't really look like they would hold up for us to cross.
So I'm like, we're good on our side.
And you fire support, we're troops in contact.
They're like, okay, well, we can support you with artillery from Fallujah.
And I had done the math already.
And I was like, no, thank you.
We're kind of at their max range.
And I'm looking to hit somebody who's 20 meters from me.
So what else you got?
Sent us some cobras.
And so as cobras I could manage because I could say,
hey, keep all your fires north of the canal.
Well, we're, I mean, we're so close that my Mark 19s,
gunner, like his 40-millimeter grenades weren't detonating.
They weren't arming.
Yeah, we wouldn't hit their minimum spins to arm.
And my 50-Cal, like we, as, they pulled the rear cotter pin, everything.
Try to free gun that thing.
He couldn't depress it far enough to hit.
Where the bad guys were so, you put your mind to use.
And I was like, well, shoot all your flares, shoot all our pop-ups into the reeds.
So they catch fire and then we'll shoot them as they're running out of their
other reeds.
They're not that flammable because they're right by the now.
But the bad guy, so bad guys, you know, whatever they were,
they decided to try to egress out of the area,
hot to do a vehicle.
The cobra saw it.
And so that was the end of them.
Smoked them.
Yeah, the cobra pilots don't screw around.
They do not.
after that kind of the rest of the tour just progressed in the way that you wish it would in counterinsurgency operations so we cleared the area got some host forces or some host nation people to stand up a provisional security force i start working with them partner with them they run the checkpoints near the end of my tour there they give me a call they're like hey these two guys that we know our bad guys came into the area they're both suicide bombers um
We took care of them.
One guy detonated himself, but the other guy didn't.
And so we're asking, can you shoot some Allum and bring out your EOD?
I'm like, sure, this is awesome.
You know, local people saw the local bad guys called the local law enforcement.
They managed it.
And so now all they need is like our support with Elum and EOD.
And then I get told I actually can't shoot a loom because this is almost 2008.
or it might have been 2008.
And the ROE was like, no, no, the tiny little base plate could land on somebody and kill them.
So no more looms allowed.
It's like, all right, well, how long were we waiting for EOD?
Two hours.
And so finally I go out there with EOD and talking to my Iraqi counterparts there.
And they're like, you guys took so long, like, I wish you would have told us you were to take this on.
We were just blown them up.
Yeah, it was always like that with EOD.
yeah so to me that was a success story right like the tour started with the wild west you know we cleared it out we
took our licks uh we gave back and then by the end you know the locals are managing their own stuff um
and go ahead i'm sorry well and it it uh you know you leave thinking that everything went great and then
I don't remember what I was like three or four months later.
You're like, oh, you know, there's still IEDs going off at ECP5 or whatever it is outside of pollution.
And you, I don't, this is kind of rare in the Army.
I don't know about the Marines, but you got to pick up a second company command?
I did, right?
So when I was at Benning, I went to that no form brief and kind of wanted to go to that unit.
And they asked the recruiters, hey, you take Marines.
And they said, yeah.
And I was like, great, how do I join?
And they said, you got to be branch qualified.
And I said, I eat crayons.
I don't know what that means.
And they said, if you're infantry guy, you got to be a company commander.
So I did that first tour as a company commander.
And then kind of called headquarters Marine Corps and said, hey, let me go try out for this other unit.
And they said, no, you're not up for PCS orders.
So then I was like, right, well, what do I do now?
and what I did next was I went over from a line company to weapons company
and kind of became the fire support coordinator for another deployment.
That's awesome. Back to Iraq.
Well, so we set sail.
This was 2009.
And so I really don't know what we thought we were going to do.
I sort of figured maybe we'd get pulled into Afghanistan or Iraq.
That's sort of the tendency with Marine Expeditionary units,
is they just go to places for 30 days and ruin it for all the people that have to stay there for longer.
That's the experience that I had as the Knit guy, like, hey, this marine unit comes in.
Like, you're just going to, like, eat and defecate in my area for 30 days, blow up stuff.
And I'm going to have to live with the results.
Like, you're going to shoot a NIC to clear possible IEDs.
Like, do you know what that's going to do to all my locals?
Like, no, no, thank you.
So what we ended up.
doing is we got attached to the counter piracy guys outside the Horde of Africa.
Ah, interesting.
And in a fun fact, my ship was hit by a submarine.
We're crossing through the Straits of Hormuz.
Whose submarine?
Our submarine.
Oh, no shit.
Yeah.
So I was on USS New Orleans and we were hit by, I think, USS Groton.
Did you have to like go into port for repairs after that?
Yeah.
So the USS New Orleans had to go dry dock in Bahrain, which meant, you know, you had half a battalion's worth of infantry guys just twiddling their thumbs.
So they ended up shipping most of us down to Africa again.
Someone got relieved for that.
I don't think you can crash a submarine without getting in trouble.
Yeah, the sub-captain got relieved for that.
Our captain did not.
And in reality, like normally you think if he hit something like that, you'd go to general.
quarters, you know, to deal with all the damage. But that didn't happen. And I know that didn't
happen because I didn't even wake up when the sub hit us. This is also, so then I got, so I got
sent over to the boxer, and this is 2009. So part of what we were doing is, is the boxer ended up
getting a whole bunch of guys from Damneck parachuted in to deal with America.
Oh, yeah. So you guys.
were down in the horn of Africa when that happened?
Cool.
And I mean, how did that unfold from your perspective?
Well, so from my perspective, I basically had nothing to do with it.
And, you know, because I was just a regular guy and they're going to bring in their own fires guys.
And it sort of kind of escalated that way where all of these Marines in this in this mew thought like, hey, we'll get to participate in this in some fashion.
And then one by one, whoever thinks that they're going to do something kind of got written off.
Like the recon guys were like, hey, we're the visit board search and seizure people.
This is what we train.
We're the experts on this.
No, thank you.
We got this other asset that's going to do that.
Even my buddy, the cobra pilot was like, well, I'm the forward air controller airborne.
You know, like I will be the guy who's flying fire support for these guys.
And he thought he was going to get to play.
and then he hears the, you know, the units air controller like,
hey, they have this stuff and bringing these little birds and all of that.
So he got frustrated that he wasn't going to get to do anything.
And so I think the only Marines that ended up supporting that at all
was probably the carrier pilots,
was sort of flying, you know, with ISR over Somalia while the Bainbridge did the work with the lifeboat.
So let's circle back around.
around here, like, now you're getting to the point where you're able to go to assessment and
selection. So you mentioned that they came in and gave you guys a brief while you were down at
Fort Benning and the captain's career course. Like, I know you can't get into the details of the
brief, but what was it that kind of sparked your interest in this organization?
So I had known about all those organizations. Well, I had known about that organization before.
mostly through, I guess, Hollywood and reading Eric Haney's book.
It was, it seemed up until that no form brief that it just wasn't in my cards.
They don't take Marines.
And Marines are kind of like a bucket of crab sometimes where if you want to go do that thing,
some of the Marines are going to pull you down and say, no, you can't.
Don't ever take you.
Which is why I would not have even gone to the no form brief, except it was required.
And so I went, and then I was just kind of on a whim.
Let me ask the Army guy, hey, do you take Marines?
And he said, yeah.
So I was like, all right, well, what do I need to do?
That was always my goal, yeah.
And so the Marine Corps kind of stymied you for a little bit.
Although, I mean, again, being a company commander twice is pretty awesome.
You finally come up for PCS orders and you had to go camp out in the school of the infantry until you could go to ANS?
Yeah.
So, you know, because we're sometimes not able to see second and third order effects when they told me I wasn't, I wasn't up for PCS orders. I couldn't apply for ANS.
Then when I was up for PCS orders, it was like, okay, well, now you can start your application for ANS and it's going to take a while.
So I was like, all right, well, I have to find a job in the interim. So they stashed me in the ops shop for the regiment for a little bit and the monitor, the detailer, branch manager, I don't which.
call it in the army. The guy who cuts you orders, it's like, hey, I can't. They're deploying to
Afghanistan, RCT, their regiment is. You're not. So I need to cut you orders somewhere else while
you square all this stuff away. So I got PCA orders to the School of Infantry at Camp
Pendleton. I show up there as I'm getting my invitation to go to the selection. So I show up
And I'm like, hey, I'm going to be your XO for the infantry training battalion.
And also, I'm going to go away for 45 days.
And then at the end of this year, you know, I'm up for orders to somewhere else probably.
And so tell us about assessment and selection.
What was that experience like?
That's a good question.
Because a lot of ANS, we relies on novelty in order to get,
good reads on people. So the general things that happen there, they don't want to talk about.
However, I will say that allegedly, after I finished, the women that I was married to at the time
said, would you do it again? And I said, absolutely not. Now I'm like, of course I would do it again,
right? And occasionally I will go back to help them out with A&S. And it's only like now, 10 or 15
the years later almost that I'll hear things and then in my mind I'll think like
you'll hear some of the cadre talk about this candidate mess this thing up and I'll be like
oh that must be new and it's only then that I realized no no I also did that task I just don't remember
it because the stress level is so high right that some of these memories don't encode
and they're throwing like when you say novelty they're like putting you in scenarios that take you
outside your comfort zone, basically.
Yeah. So there's your stress phases.
You know, everybody uses land navigation as a great tool because it's sort of self-correcting.
You have a good sense of geography.
It's a simple task that should be simple to accomplish, and it's hard because of the terrain
and the distances.
And so it's self-correcting.
Like if you choose bad routes, it becomes apparent because you don't make your times
and all that stuff.
So land navigation is a piece.
And then there's all these other things that come up
that you weren't prepared for or you didn't know
you were going to get tested on.
And I really liked how in the instruction phase,
it was basically like med school where it's see it.
So see it, do it, teach it is med school.
And that was basically how it was.
So like an IV, like you see somebody doing it.
Okay, here's your fake arm.
practice it, all right, turn your buddy, stick them.
And I'm like, all right, let's see how this goes.
And so you make it through assessment and selection.
And then there must be the whole train up process.
It must have been pretty cool.
Now you're getting to do commando stuff, right?
Well, so the Marine Corps had a little bit of a pause there as well,
because even though I passed ANS, they're like,
But you still owe us some time here at Camp Pendleton.
So I had to wait.
I had to defer for a year to go to OTC.
So I did.
And then went to OTC.
And it was, it was fantastic.
Like, I mean, really, really hard work.
I think in a year I had 17 non-consecutive days off.
It was all, almost all new.
and all challenging and no feedback, almost no feedback.
So to me, like somebody who strives or thrives on criticism or feedback or whatever it is
or validation if I'm doing it well, like that was difficult.
It's like, did I do a good job or did I not do a good job?
Like I need to know what the ham sandwich is.
What does it look like that you're looking for so I could produce it?
And I did pretty well at the captain's course.
So it's like, I know the doctrine, right?
I can, if what you want is a ham sandwich, I can do that.
I can do, you know, light infantry combat brigade tactics.
You're not asking for that.
So I'm stepping outside of that comfort zone.
But, you know, this is so nebulous.
And they're like, just, well, what do you think?
I'm like, I don't know.
You tell me, is this a good idea or a bad idea?
I have, you know, I'm a straight-legged dude, basically.
I have no concept of, you know, if this is good or not.
They're like this, you know, use your imagination.
Like, all right, well, then we'll do it this way.
And that was usually good for them?
I mean, apparently.
Yeah, they like the creativity.
And, you know, you would learn from your classmates because some of them had,
had, there are other courses that you can take that can help prepare you for some of that work.
I had none of them.
And so it was all OJT for me.
And then even within that class, I could see that rookie mistakes that I had made in the beginning.
I was no longer making them at the end.
Is this mostly like humint stuff that you're working on?
Yeah.
It's a close target reconnaissance work.
And what is, you know, do you know what, I mean, you have to have some conception of like the job you're training for?
Or like what is the actual position that you're going to be doing?
So at A&S, I had no idea.
I had none, really.
And then when I got to OTC, I started to get a sense of what the job would be if I was the person, if I was the operator on the ground.
And they were starved for officers at the time.
So it started to become a little bit more clear to me that what I was going to do was going to be a troop commander.
And so while I could also be a trigger puller or Humvee driver or whatever, more likely than not I would get staffed into task force positions.
And this is kind of, I can't remember if we mentioned it here, but it's kind of interesting that the Marine Corps kind of suggested that you go this route instead of going to the other Army unit that they felt you would have like better command time in this one.
I think it's sort of like rewind all the way back to the beginning.
When you grow up speaking to three languages and your parents or immigrants, there's a preference to send you to one place over the other.
If you desire, so the question to me is like, do you want to be a super soldier?
But in reality is that if you go there, you're really just going to be a troop handler in some respects.
or you can go to this other place where there's the possibility that you could also be the guy that operates.
And so to me, that was a little bit of a no-brainer, even though I didn't know what the job was.
So I was like, all, let me do that.
And after you finished OTC, like, what was it like when you took this position when you arrived there?
It was a little bit of a shock.
And so the standard line that I used when I would go forward,
to talks of people at the T-Sox, the theater special operation commands,
is they would all want to be read into the unit and the sap and all this stuff.
And I would say, you know 95% of what we do.
And then that last 5% is uninteresting.
And also, I borrow the line from the Disney movie Aladdin.
It's like, we have infinite cosmic power in an itty-bitty living space.
Like the breadth of the things that we can do is massive.
and, you know, the actual what we can't, what we're allowed to do is, is very, very constrained.
That came up a couple of times because this was during the Obama administration.
And so there were two events, which I can't remember the dates of,
but I definitely got called into the office on a Saturday in the snow to sit down and come up with,
I think we called it like the Chinese food menu of like,
what can we do to strike back because the president's embarrassed by what Soleimani said about
you know him um so what are our options it's like okay like you tell me like no limits right
yes no limits it's like okay man we're going to be here all day because yeah yeah here are
poised in the coups of things that i can do um you know from from from a to z and
And then we're going to start adding numbers to these things because we're in all of these places.
And we generated the list.
And then nothing was selected.
It's like, no, thank you.
Just have water.
The other was the Syria gas attack now that I think about it.
It was that red line had been crossed.
And then the question was, I think we may have just been in the front-leaning rest there because we leaned so far forward.
So we called in and it was like, hey, that's my area.
what have you got that can go assess all this stuff, go find everything.
So we got ready and then no call came.
And then by 72 hours later, you know, like, hey, our information is probably no longer accurate.
And I don't know that I can get anybody in there now.
Yeah, I remember when that happened.
And there was some movement that they, like, Ranger Regiment, like, they were like going to drop the hammer for a minute.
there. But then, yeah, Obama decided not to do it.
Which is why it's interesting to hear the guys talking about it now. Like
Mariska Alabama, that was his time frame too. I wasn't on the boxer.
In a bottom ad, too. But yeah, so he allegedly gave the green light on that. And then
what is unknown is there was also a German ship that was taken by Somali pirates.
So the boxer, for a brief period of time, had a bunch of German commandos on it as well.
And then as the Germans are briefing their chains of command about how this is going to go down.
I think they do the standard army of like, hey, we expect 10% casualties.
And this is VBSS.
You know, the number escalates to, I don't know, 15 or whatever.
And their chain of command started to balk a little bit.
Like, whoa, whoa, you know, casualties.
Like, no, the Americans just, they did this with no casualties, no problem.
This is different.
You know, it's the big deck.
from what I hear
and this is hearsay
the way that kind of went down
is the Germans asked the president
ate you know
what do you think he's like I don't know
it's your ship
and so they kind of took that
as don't don't do the strike
gotcha
yeah it's kind of interesting what you say
about the Chinese food menu because I've had
as I understand it even when
the president signs a finding for the CIA
and it has all this
stuff on there from like cyber warfare to assassination but then it's like hey hold on skippy you got
to read the fine print down here where it says if you want to use any of this you have to go back
to the president and get permission uh so yeah i mean i don't know what your opinion is but i mean is
there like jason born really is not a thing like that's a fantasy yeah that's a fantasy there's no
treadstone project.
You know, to my knowledge, there's nobody who walks into, you know, the cafe and knows the
numbers of all of the vehicles that are in the parking lots.
Like, I mean, if you have that kind of idactic memory and you're that autistic, then great.
I mean, maybe we can make use of that.
But then we also don't have the charisma if you actually do a job.
Well, speaking of which, because of your background, did you ever do any work in Europe
sitting in a cafe smoking a cigarette speaking Lithuanian?
No.
Near the end of my tenure was the invasion of Crimea.
So, of course, the Baltic states got very nervous.
And Sockpack hosted a few working groups.
And I got sent out there since Europe was my AOR or part of my AOR.
And kind of the questions came up like, well, what have you got that can help?
there and I said nothing but if you want something built there I can build it it's going to
take about two years and you need to tell me now because the guy who's going to do it is retiring
right did any of that go forward as far as building like in clandestine infrastructure for them
not to my knowledge no that's too bad there may be and you know I just may have been on the
outside of the gate by the time it started to happen mm-hmm
So I take it you did two, three years as troop commander.
And before we move on to the next thing,
anything, any final thoughts on that period of your career?
Anything that's interesting that you're able to talk about?
Not really.
The only interesting things are the parts that are uninteresting,
how the Marine Corps really doesn't like guys that go and become special.
And so ironically, like as soon as I finished OTC, they're like, hey, you're going to get orders to command and staff school.
I was like, no, I'm not.
There's no way.
Like I didn't just finish this program to get yanked into, you know, yanked over to Quantico for for Command and Staff College.
And I think this is a problem that we often have is we anthropomorphize, you know, big army or Marine Corps.
like Marine Corps has needs.
No, it doesn't.
It is, it's not an entity.
There's somebody who wrote this piece of paper directing this thing to happen.
I just need to go find that person and talk to them.
And so I got myself TDIY to Quantico, found the guy who wrote the order that was going to send me to school.
And I said, what I needed you to get off of this list?
Because I know person X and person Y aren't on this list.
And they're like, yeah, we scratched them off because this guy needs to get back into the cockpit.
this guy's over at Marsock and I was like, I'm not at Marsock.
You know, it can be a freaking break, like scratch my name off the list.
So they did.
I did still have to do a distance learning program.
And because I got enrolled into that, I got pulled off of going to be the task force commander in Afghanistan.
They just ended up sending someone else.
That comes up later as I talked to guys that got out.
out because I would make the comment now that I was so frustrated that I did command and staff
is a waste of time because I didn't end up becoming a lieutenant colonel or going to a staff.
I could have been the task force commander. Within a year or two years of having gotten out,
now I would say, well, command of staff was a waste of time, but I could have been my son's
soccer coach or I could have put work into who I am. That's a lot.
it's going to persist after the uniform is gone.
And I didn't.
And because of that, where you getting to the point now where, like, you're kind of done
with the Marine Corps?
Well, so in order to work for that organization, I had to be a geographic bachelor.
The woman that I was married to at the time didn't want to leave her job and travel to
the East Coast.
So I left her and the kids at, you know, just north of Camp Hamilton.
and then when the Marine Corps was calling back and saying,
hey, you need to go back to regular infantry.
I said, that's fine.
I'm more than happy to.
Please send me to Camp Pendleton.
That's where, you know, at the time my wife and kids were,
and they said, no, you're going to go to 29 Palms,
which is the Marines version of NTC.
So at that point, I was like, no, thank you.
I'm just going to take, again, the Obama administration,
offered early retirement so I took it and and then was the I got the lived experience of how when
you decide to get out because that is so contrary to the value set of the people staying in
you kind of become persona non grata yeah and even now as I talk to veterans I've lived on both
sides of that. So if you go back to my first company, command tour, go into outside of Fallujah,
like I had an E5 sergeant that was, you know, literally the best sergeant in the division because he'd won
this super squad challenge. He'd done his two tours. Even though we were going back to the same place,
all he wanted to do is go to Texas and open up a business that was a fitness gym slash strip club.
I don't know how he was going to make it work, but he thought you could make it work. God bless.
Yeah. So I went through all of the same, you know, all of the pressure that I could put on him to make that enlistment, guilt-tripping him. Like, hey, we're going back to the same place. If you don't, if you don't also go, people are going to die. You know the area. Don't you want your guys to succeed? Like, you got to come with us, re-enlist, re-enlist. And good for him that he didn't. And then I realized, like, oh, and this is this is a problem of ours. And we're, we're, we're, we're, we're, we're,
lot of what have you done for me lately.
I also saw that in Baghdad when there was a couple of guys that,
you know, they were partying at the Al Rashid Hotel and were not in the place
where they were supposed to be when the rockets hit.
And so their commander was so embarrassed that he basically, you know, wrecked their careers
and wouldn't give them a combat action ribbon.
So they all left the Marine Corps.
It's like, wow, this is what we do to, to, to,
allegedly our brothers.
And now at that point, I was feeling it, you know,
feeling that weight on myself.
Like my 06 colonel was treating me like a liar
about how I was trying to separate,
trying to try to check my story with the other Marines of the unit.
This doesn't make sense.
No, totally makes sense.
And so it was a little bit of a,
that seems to be common enough
of a theme. If it's not ubiquitous, it's at least, you know, the preponderance of guys that get out.
The departure is not pretty. And so that sets you into that six months to a year time frame
post service where you're kind of lost. And so we at the VA, that's the danger zone, I think,
where we see a lot of guys that start with substance abuse, major depressive episodes.
Most divorces will happen within those first six months because, you know, you lose everything.
You lose your sense of purpose, who you are, identity.
Yeah, the military kind of treats you like a leper when you're getting out.
But expanding on that, so you begin the retirement process.
What was your transition like out of the Marine Corps?
It was like immediate.
You know, I got my orders.
Maybe it was in the springtime.
And so I fought in every way that I could to try to modify them, change them,
find loopholes, you name it.
And then I think I basically had two months to separate.
The other thing that the Marine Corps did, which was so awesome,
was that's when they audit your record.
And that's when they decided that my pay entry base date was wrong.
And so they had been overpaying me for 15 and a half years.
And so they just stopped paying me.
What? They're like, you owe the government, we overpaid you $60,000. So we're just not going to pay you
for your last two months of service. And by the way, here's your bill for what we overpaid you.
Luckily, I ended up, you know, filing paperwork that said, it's a no pay due. Like, hey, man,
I didn't intentionally, you know, defraud the government. Like, I had no idea that.
you know the extra five dollars you were giving me for paycheck or whatever would amount to 60 grand
at the end of my career but you know for for the months of October November I was like where's my
paycheck and it just didn't exist they just cut you off like mommy and daddy say no more your
allowance is canceled yeah so with that kind of departure it's like go after yourself Marines
And for a while, I was like, I will never work with Marines again because I couldn't, I couldn't believe it that this, you know, an alleged brother.
That's what it went.
Yep.
But years later, when they need you again, you're a brother suddenly.
We're family, right?
We're family.
Yeah.
And so, you know, at the beginning, I would say, as a contractor, I was like, I wouldn't work with Marines.
And then even as a psychologist, is like, I prefer not to work with Marines, except for people that I knew before I got out.
And so I would work with recon because some of my lieutenants went over there.
And I would do, you know, if they asked for a favor, I would do a favor.
And even then, you know, like there's a recomb platoon commander who went after those two, a refund company commander.
And he's asking me like, hey, you know, what are the black ops that we can do on this mute?
like what are the black ops we can do in um in southeast Asia i was like none like you you're not
nobody's going to have you do that and oh by the way like where's all the OPE that these two guys
I know before you did like they prepped your battlefield they gave you all of this things oh no no
no like we're going to do something different it's like oh I see I'm also guilty of this like you
can't teach them or anything they we're all experiential learners so I can tell you to do the thing
but you're going to do it. Nope, I'm going to do it my way. And then, oh, my way doesn't work.
Right now, I'll come over and try your way.
And what were you doing as a contractor at that time?
I would contract for my old unit, either as a tactical instructor or as a role player.
Cool. And at the same time, you are becoming acquainted with being a full-time or part-time dad?
Mr. Mom. Yeah. Daddy Uber.
Yeah, that's how I feel now. My daughter's a teenager.
Yeah. So, yep, it was a drastic difference. I think I talk about it in the book, how I went from briefing Sackier on a kill capture mission in his AOR, probably early of 2014 to December 2014. My only responsibility is wiping my two-year-olds butt.
And how is that going for you?
you know, psychologically that like this is a big, big adjustment that you're making.
It was a massive adjustment, which is one of the reasons why, you know, I got drawn to
write this adjustment stuff into the book, Warrior Withdrawal.
And, you know, I was trying to figure out because, I mean, everything was gone, basically.
So the 15 and a half years of service and no more thank you for your service.
Also, active duty keeps on active dutying.
And I saw this one comment on LinkedIn the other day where some person writes in that she's been out for a year and her company commander hasn't called her once.
Like, well, of course.
And I laughed at it.
I was like, oh, yeah, maybe that's a problem.
You know, like that they just don't care about you anymore because they have, they got to keep.
The army keeps marching along, right?
as the song goes.
So, 2015, I was missed her mom for a year,
a woman that I was married to at the time.
She could increase her travel.
So she did do that.
And then by 2016, I was like, I got to do something.
And so contracting opportunities came up.
And as long as they were a conis based, I would take them.
And it was on one of these contracting gigs that I chatted with my op-psych.
from the unit.
I had a candidate that I was like,
hey, this guy's a narcissist.
How do I write that up?
You know, and he's like, like,
here you go, write it up this way, that way.
And we had a longer discussion about how kind of I was in this,
these doldrums having gotten out.
I feel more like myself on these contracts, you know.
So that's why it's like a withdrawal symptom.
And he's like, you should be a psych for their special operations units.
Like he said, they'll talk to you in a way that they'll talk to you in a way that
never talk to me because you've been to Coronado, you've gone through A&S, you've done all of these
things. So I was like, all right, write me the recommendation. And I started school. And then six
years later, I was done, four years of academics, a year of internship, and then postdoc at the VA.
What was kind of like your speciality when you went to psych school? Was it always, you know,
an idea that you were going to work with veterans?
Yeah, so initially that's what my goal was.
I had gone through the Sergs, the FBI's crisis response groups,
hostage negotiator course, because I figured I would do that well.
I did actually try while I was Mr. Mom to volunteer to be a hostage negotiator
here in Southern California.
And I got turned down because basically that's nobody's primary.
gig. In fact, at the FBI, there's only like six or seven or so full-time negotiators.
Yeah, we had one of them on your, Barry Nosner. Yeah. For everybody else, it's a, it's ancillary duty.
Right. Secondary job. Right. So for the, you know, like the local townships, I was like,
hey, I will, I will come be your negotiator. You know, you don't even have to pay me. I've got a pension.
I just, you know, this is the work that I want.
do. Like, I can't because of liability reasons. So that also sort of pushed me into the doctor route.
Almost as soon as I started psych school, though, that kind of soft guy, not soft, yes, special operations
guy took over where you're always trying to get to the left of the boom. So, you know, with special
operations, it was, all right, you know, before the ID blows up and then before the ID gets implanted,
and then before the holes dug, and then before the IED is made,
and then before the guy buys the parts of the IED,
that's how we get to the left of the boom.
And in psych school, I was like, to me,
that means I should be a child psychologist.
So help people out before they develop all of these problems,
because the adults are fully baked cakes,
and I don't want to unbake the cake.
Now, it's impossible.
So just give me the raw materials of the cake.
kids and then we'll bake a good cake. So for three years, for three practicum years, I was a child
psych working with at-risk teenagers at the Children's Hospital of Orange County and then
another intensive outpatient program with UCLA for kids that have those teenagers, kids that have
OCD and then over in San Bernardino County in an outpatient clinic. This was your post-doc work?
So that was practicum work and internship in San Bernardino County. And then
And when it came time for postdoc, I had gone to a buddy's retirement ceremony and paddle pass.
I mentioned that kind of, or actually I mentioned that exactly in the book's introduction,
how while I'm there, the thoughts of this warrior withdrawal piece,
like that missing thing kept coming back.
And I was back among all these veterans and spouses.
and I was like, I feel like I need to, you know, something is calling me to write this thing.
And so I took a residency postdoc year at the VA to sort of flesh out my hypothesis,
which was largely based off of Dr. Free's work, Operator Syndrome.
So at the time I had thought what I went through was because I was an operator.
And so my hypothesis was, okay, it's going to be the same.
the TBI, it's the constant deployment, it's all this stuff that's caused me to have this difficulty
transitioning. And so I went to the VA to confirm that assumption and then very quickly learned
that's not the case at all because right off the bat I started to get veterans that had not
gone to combat and then veterans who had not deployed. And all the way down to you, I had one soldier
who was separated at AIT.
And the symptoms were the same.
So the loss of identity, loss of sense of purpose, why bother getting out of bed,
communications issues, anger management problems, reliance on maladaptive coping skills like
substance abuse, video games, isolation.
So the way I, all of those tend to be learned in the military because they're adaptive
or effective. So like my tour to Okinawa in 2000, or 2001, nothing's going on. So the joke about
Okinawa tours is you either become an alcoholic or a PT stud. And then some people like me try to do both.
There's nothing to do. So you just try to fast forward through the deployment because there's an end date.
And so if I can sleep twice as long, then the deployment's half as long. And so I'll get home as fast as I can.
And then unfortunately, when you get home, usually it reverses.
And it's like, oh, I can't wait to be deployed again.
Right, right.
And so now you have a countdown to how can I get on this next deployment.
And we fast forward through time with video games, substance abuse, you name it.
Unfortunately, when you get out out and now you're a veteran, what am I fast forwarding to?
I'm just going to fast forward the rest of my life,
drinking not to fall asleep and sleep well.
I'm going to drink through the weekend and go back to work Monday
to get to Friday to drink through the weekend
because I don't want to deal with anything.
So I saw all of that at all levels.
And so my hypothesis shifted to basic training boot camp
is sufficient enough to drag you into this warrior culture.
And I absolutely think that there's a,
a significant cultural component to it.
It's one of the smallest cultures we have in the country.
So few people are in it.
And it's so tightly bound that when you're out of it,
you struggle with trying to be assimilated back in civilian culture.
I've described it in the past that it's like,
especially for like what you did,
that you were part of like a sub sub subculture that probably there were
certain things that you were read onto that 35 people in the entire world were read onto.
And so it becomes like this increasingly small circle of like people who can relate to your
experiences.
That is absolutely true.
And that I noticed that last November and this November, when I went back out to contract
from my old unit and I'm sitting at a table and it's one of the few places where I can
speak completely unguarded.
because everybody there
and there's I think less than 300 of us
or something like that
that have completed the entire thing
so to be in a room with 40 or 50 of them
or just sitting at a table with five or six of them
is it's really
de-stressing
and a good place to be.
However,
because I was seeing the same types of communications issues,
you know,
the, you know, it's the, it's the,
guy that was the cook or the in the motor tea guy that's walking around town with you know that
us army veteran hat and then the you know the nine line apparel t-shirt and then the don't tread on
me sticker on the on the back or their entire DD-214 on the back of their pickup and it's this is
the identification friend or foe it's like don't mess with me and because you know i would see all
of that it's also iFF because i want veterans
to approach.
Because again, that's when I, that's the withdrawal symptom.
That's how I know it's a withdrawal symptom.
Because when you chat with another veteran, all of that goes away.
Same as me sitting at that table with all my unit buddies.
It's like all of that, you know, the anger, everything, all that goes away.
It's like, it could just be meeting that.
Yeah.
That's incredible.
And one of the things you mentioned to me earlier, and I think you touched on it a little bit,
was this sort of difference between PTSD and adjustment, that there is this process of transition
and adjusting out of that military culture, which is sort of separate from PTSD.
You need not have gone through some sort of traumatic combat event.
Right.
So I had the opportunity to kind of really speak quickly through this at Austin for America.
and the way that I do that is I just go through the symptoms.
So with post-traumatic stress disorder,
as you're talking to Dr. Free, right now at the VA,
we don't really even bother asking about the trauma.
I mean, we try to get the index trauma,
but the post-traumatic stress disorder checklist doesn't bother.
It only asks about the other four symptoms.
So those major symptoms.
So those are really,
experiencing. So nightmares, flashbacks, that kind of thing. The second one is avoidance. So I don't
go to do the things that caused me to remember the traumatic experience. The third thing is negative
thoughts about self, negative emotions. So I can't be happy. I didn't do the best that I could or I
could have done better. And then the last one is hypervigilance or hyper arousal.
So is there a trauma?
And then those four symptoms with the PCL only measuring those four.
So when I looked at that for myself, it's like, okay, well, yeah, I mean, I was around death and dying.
Check.
I have a whole bunch of veterans that weren't.
And yet we have the same symptoms.
So re-experiencing, do I have nightmares, flashbacks?
No, I don't have those.
you're not at all.
So it's like, okay, well, maybe mine's just a little bit different.
The avoidance piece, I didn't avoid at all.
I had the affinity for, like I said before, I will seek out veterans.
I feel more like myself when I talk to veterans.
Most of my friends are veterans.
So I'm not avoiding those things that might remind me of the trauma.
I go to Camp Pendleton.
You know, I live close enough where I can hear the artillery fire.
So it's like, okay, if I don't avoid, then I don't meet that criteria either.
And so then the negative cognitions, negative emotions, and then the hyperarousal, it's like, well, that was my training.
So we don't call it hyper arousal.
We call it good situational awareness.
And if you have good situational awareness and you spot the IED and you save people's lives, we give you a medal for that.
And so what we don't realize then afterwards is if you don't train that away, the way that your brain works is it can modify that.
So now I'm on the highway and I'm driving.
And so I'm hyper alert at all the other drivers.
And then when I get home and I haven't had a car accident, that's sufficient for my brain to reinforce.
Well, that's because you were you're hyper alert.
So continue to be hyper alert.
Or, you know, the classic one of I have to have my back to the wall when I go to the restaurant.
you know, because somebody may come in and shoot up the place.
Well, that almost never happened.
And yet you're going to go home and say, well, but if it did, I was ready.
So I'm, my brain is internally rewarding itself for maintaining that high level of hyperarousal.
And that's why, you know, sometimes you have to get a reset on that, which is like the SGB or some other forms of therapy.
So when you put all that together, it's like, okay, then if it's not PTSD, maybe it's just the adjustment,
which is kind of a more nebulous diagnosis, which is, you have physical symptoms, emotional symptoms,
you know, maybe some somatic symptoms.
The problem with adjustment disorders, it's usually tied to, all right, well, six months after the,
whatever the adjustment is gone, it's no longer adjustment disorder.
Now it's like it's something else.
So if you lost your leg in combat, okay, well, for six months, you have adjustment disorder.
And then if you're still sad about it, it's like, okay, well, it's not adjustment disorder anymore because the leg's gone.
That's done.
Now it is, you're just depressed.
And so that didn't make sense to me either because I was still having those same challenges 10 years after I retired.
And I'm like 11 years after retirement now, and I'm still pulled to do and still
contract for, you know, my old unit. So it's not PTSD. It's not adjustment disorder. The only
thing that made sense to me was, and I talked about this in the introduction too, I had a chat with a
green beret buddy in our team house, for our team room, about why do I have to deploy, like that
Afghanistan tour? Why did it have to be me? Obviously, I didn't go, and they sent somebody else,
and I'm sure they did as good a job as I could have, but it had to be me. And it had to be me.
he felt the same way.
And so I said,
I feel like I'm an addict to patriotism or something like that.
Like,
I'm just blindly doing this for something I don't know why.
Jump forward,
whatever it is eight years.
And now I'm going through the substance abuse disorder symptoms.
And I'm like,
all of these fit me.
If I just,
instead of saying substance use, say being a warrior.
So there's 11 symptoms for substance.
substance abuse disorder and when I teach a class about warrior withdrawal, I would go through
all 11 and I don't try to define it for anybody. You say, all right, whatever causes you to
feel like a warrior, or you label it for yourself, is it positive reinforcement that I'm tough?
Is that what I was looking for? And that's why I kept climbing the spear to be in the toughest,
most selective unit. I don't know. Maybe that's what it was for me. But if you take that and then you go
through the symptoms is that, okay, was I deploying more often than was healthy for me?
Did I continue to deploy even though it was causing me physical harm?
And, you know, was I deploying instead of spending time with family?
Was I spending more time trying to go on deployments than is necessary?
Was I trying to quit deploying and I was not able to?
It's like all of these are substance.
That's substance abuse symptoms.
And then the final two being tolerance and withdrawal.
So for me, tolerance would.
was one deployment not enough, two deployments not enough.
So I did OF one, two, three, four, five, six, seven into eight, still not enough.
How do you go to special operations?
Still not enough.
And then the last symptom is withdrawal, which is when you take that substance away.
So when you're out of the military and you're no longer active duty or no longer, you don't no longer feel like a warrior,
you have all of these withdrawal problems, which that's what I cataloged, that's the anger management,
communications issues, maladaptive coping skills, loss of sense of self, loss of identity, loss of purpose.
And then as soon as we put you back into a warrior event, either like a, you know, a martial hobby,
like when you put you back into an MMA gym, or you become a law enforcement officer, and so you have a
tribe again and you wear a uniform again and you have a sense of purpose again and you feel more like
yourself all almost all of those things go away so it's like that's how it works with substances as well
if you are an alcoholic and we take you off of alcohol you have withdrawal symptoms and then
the small spit of alcohol that we give you back those clear away which is why we you know
use this hair of the dog business when you're you know had a wild night partying and it's like just
take a shot and it'll be regular. So when I go through all of the 11 symptoms with the veterans
that I work with, I ask them, hey, just keep score. And then at the end, I ask them, you know,
just keep in mind what your score is. If you have three of those symptoms, you have a substance
abuse disorder. If it's between three, it's more than, there's three and six, it's saying,
in the mild, moderate range, it's more than six, you get into the severe range. And then for me, I'm like,
I'm at 11 of 11.
And so right now I'm like a sober warrior.
And when I would talk to the Nexus guys or the skills bridge guys,
the DOD still thinks that the solution is.
You just need a job when you get out.
Like, that's not quite it.
That's a little bit antiquated,
unless you just go ahead and identify with whatever the job is that you get next.
if you stick with my substance abuse model,
which is the only one that seems to fit,
the solution has to be detox.
What form does that take?
So they're saying, well, that's skills bridge, isn't it?
And I'm like, no, it's not because you still pull that guy back
and make him do a PFT.
You still pull him back and make him do all these other things.
Like, he's not out of the military.
You're still in the military.
You're still in the military.
And then, oh, by the way, when they finish,
their skills bridge. There's no guarantee that there's a job for them there either. So it's like,
you know, you may have forestalled something. But that identity shift is still coming. So the detox has to be
zero warrior stuff. And I don't know for how long. I do know that it takes 13 weeks to make a Marine,
you know, basically trained Marine. And, you know, it takes what, 10 weeks to make a basically trained 11
Bravo and then we do zero on the back end to undo any of that.
So somewhere in there you have to do that or you have to find a way to help somebody get
clear of that substance, educate them that that's what is happening.
So that's what I try to do in my groups so that you, if you want to go back to it,
you go in there clear-eyed.
Otherwise, you do your skills bridge.
It's like, hey, all right, yeah, yeah, we put you in rehab.
And then as soon as you got out of rehab, we're like, we're going to a bar.
And we're all going to drink.
It's like, ah, okay.
And we're right back at it.
You found some success in treating veterans in that nature.
So it's less of a treatment and more of what I try to do is increase.
I mean, it does work.
It does reduce symptoms.
but more what it does, I think, is it increases someone's openness to therapy.
Gotcha.
Even the word, like, I don't like saying therapists.
I like calling myself a therapist because there's all of these connotations along with that word.
Nobody wants to go to therapy.
It's also why, you know, the second, the subtitle of my book is when BAMF,
nelager meets badass motherfucker because PTSD.
is is is is it means I'm broken means I need to be fixed it is a symptom it is a disease it is a
disorder that I have and I you know you have to fix it I don't want to have that title whereas
bamp or I will take that title like yeah and so for the VA I call it baseline adjustment
due to military functioning it's like I will enroll into that group I will learn about okay
I was trained to be this way I was trained to be hypervigilant I call it situational awareness I was
trained to think of myself as a bullet sponge. They scrubbed away all my personal boundaries.
You know, I was trained to jump on their grenade before anybody else. And so, you know, I was trained
to seek the sound of the guns. So not avoid. I was trained to have affinity. So we trained you.
And I cite this in the book, too. There's, you know, young E3 who said PTSD is what you had to get to
survive in Afghanistan. It's like, exactly. And
then we never undid that.
Nobody ever told you you're a human being, you deserve to have X, Y, or Z, and it's okay
to have emotions.
You don't have to shove them all down and maintain your good military bearing.
During the process of your work with VA, like, when was it that the idea for this book
for Warrior withdrawal came about?
I had started to think through the cluster of symptoms and trying to map.
map it onto the substance abuse disorder.
And then while I was working at the VA, two more things came up in my mind.
One being Marcia's identity, it's like a square chart, quad chart, where you've either
kind of know what you're going to be or you don't know what you're going to be, and then
you either have gone through some things and tried some things out or you haven't gone through
some things and tried some things out.
So where most veterans find themselves because you're in that identity forming part of your life at 1718 when you enlist, you become what's called identity foreclosed.
It's like, you are going to be 11 Bravo and you're going to be 11 Mike and you're going to be 11 Charlie.
It's like, oh, I don't want to do that.
I want to be an MP.
Sorry, your identity is foreclosed.
You don't get to choose.
You didn't get to be a rock star.
You get to try out as a carpenter or whatever.
you're a soldier now, and that is who you are, identity foreclosure.
And then when you get out, it's the Barry's acculturation model where civilians are the predominant
culture, and we want you to assimilate, which means you give up all of your war yourself.
You give up all those values, values like integrity, accountability, responsibility, punctuality,
you'd be like all the other civilians, especially here in Southern California,
when you tell somebody to show up at 3 o'clock it's like maybe they do maybe they don't 3 30 is close enough
see that's that's an east coast thing um yeah so then you know okay well what we we aim for is uh
for you to be integrated right i'll keep those things that i like about my warrior self and i will
make them work in the civilian environment that's very hard to do so we end up kind of going below the
water line where we're either separated which is
I only have veteran friends. I only hang out with veterans. I only do things. I'm a law enforcement
officer or whatever it is. And I won't engage in the civilian culture. But more often than not,
this is why we have that problem at the six months to one year mark is you're marginalized.
So I'm neither a soldier, nor am I a civilian. And that's when we have the depression, all of the issues.
Like my guy that failed AIT, it's like, I'm not even a soldier.
Who the hell am I? So when I added all that sort of halfway through my postdoc year, I started
the BAMP groups and decided to sit down and write the book.
And I mean, presumably the book is about all these things we've just been talking about.
But I mean, what's in the book? Who did you write it for?
So I basically wrote it for the veteran who is just getting out so that they can understand.
And I didn't want to talk about myself at all.
And then I was told by the publishers like, yeah, you can't write a textbook.
Nobody's going to buy it.
You have to tell your story.
And I accept that, as I note, I think in the book, like at the unit is the first time I ever got exposed to PTSD.
and
it was a Sergeant Major who came in
and his version of
what happened
kind of manifested as alcoholism
and it was hard to track
because the guys are so
good that even his 70%
was still, you know,
enough to be some other guys
of 100%.
Right, right.
Until we had a catastrophic
offset issue
And so he got fired and sent away.
So he's talking to us about that.
And it's at that point in time that I reached out so active duty to my op-psych.
And I said, yeah.
Harpice, you were there when there were a couple suicides, too, in the unit, weren't you?
Around that time frame?
2010, I don't.
Is?
Not that I recall.
all, you know, my, my memories all, I don't recall the precise, the precise,
there were some, you know, motor vehicle accidents as well.
Yeah, I don't recall specifically.
Either way, because that Sergeant Major had kind of been open about it, I feel like I owe it to all
the other veterans to say, like, okay, well, if this happened to me as a guy who climbed all
the way to the tip of the spear, then, you know, it's the umbrella that allows you to also then
say it's okay to be, if that guy says he was sad, then it's okay for me to say that I'm sad.
Right, right, right.
So that's kind of the beginning part of the book is a lot of what we talked about.
And then the back end of the book is kind of going through the symptoms, how it's different from
PTSD, how it's different from adjustment disorder, and then a little bit about the groups that I would
run.
So the book is out now. It's called Warrior
Withdrawal. We'll have links down
the description for folks who want to check it out.
Where's the best place for people
to go buy it?
Probably Amazon.
It's probably the easiest. Or they can go to the
publisher of Dallas books.
And then another
topic you had mentioned to me, I don't know
if you want to get into it or how deep you want
to get into it, about the courts
being in some instances
prejudiced against veterans.
just simply for their service that, you know, this guy's a highly trained combat killer,
blah, blah, blah.
So that's a great segue, too.
Because I published a book and because there are some literary devices to sort of make manifest
or make it easier to understand the challenges that are going inside of somebody's head,
the book that I published is being used against me in a court of law during my divorce.
So thinking, you know, maybe this was unique to me again.
I reached out to some peers and I realized that this is extremely common for veterans as a community to struggle in the family court systems because my profession is being used against me.
And, you know, there's some attorneys are sneaky and they'll try to say like, all right, do you have a VA disability rating?
okay, well, isn't it true that you have PTSD and aren't you going to go shoot up the school?
And I'm like, no and no.
Or sorry, none of your business and no.
You know, the irony is that going back to that Aladdin line, infinite cosmic power,
80-b-d living space.
It's like, yeah, you know, I have all of the training in the world.
And it's like that meme from the Patriot where, hey, if you don't have the capacity for violence,
then you doing nothing is just being a pussy.
You know, it's like if you, so the guy who has all of the control to manage all of this violence,
that's me.
I'm the least, the last person you should be afraid of.
And yet the family courts don't understand that.
And so anybody whose spouse goes to the family courts because there's no requirement for actual evidence
and you can just get a restraining order right away.
And so it's so common that there's reddits about what's called the silver bullet divorce
where your spouse can just allege domestic violence, allege child abuse,
and then that sets in motion the dynamics of the court that now you're constantly on the defensive
and you can't even do what you need to do.
And then if you step out of line even slightly, so even if the domestic violence,
temporary restraining order is garbage, if you by accident broke the 300-foot boundary,
now you have a criminal charge that's going to get upheld and you lose your rights to your kids.
And so that's not just happening to me. I find that this is happening. And among my patients,
I do, I don't know, 20 to 25 unique intakes per week. I've done over a thousand intakes of
veterans in the last couple of years. And almost always, I'll locate,
Gary one or two who are in a similar situation where I have a guy that I talked to you not that long ago
who thinks he has PTSD because of a car crash.
And he drives for Uber.
So I'm like, okay, well, we're back to that like, hey, avoidance and reexperiencing.
These don't quite match up.
And so we delve more into his personal history.
and he's got an extremely awful situation in his marriage.
And there's events in his life that are going to cause it to come to a head here in the next year or two.
Like, that may be why you're having these nightmares.
Your brain is unable to explain a pending divorce in a way that makes sense.
So it goes back to the last time you were ever this scared and afraid of an impending wreck.
And so it plays that out in your head as a car crash.
It's unreal to me that a person that goes out and gets treatment, you know,
that goes through the process to get help and has a VA disability rating,
they're going in to see someone like you, they're going to therapy.
And the courts see that as derogatory information that they can use against you
as if you're some sort of menace to society, even though you don't have a criminal record.
Yeah. And so we're stuck with the conundrum again where I, so again, the book is written for the veteran to read, to learn more about themselves. And I almost, I believe that more likely than not, it's going to be the spouse that buys it or somebody that cares for the veteran that buys it. And it's like, hey, you read this thing because this is you. And it's another barrier to treatment for me. Already I get veterans that don't want to be.
PTSD diagnosis or they're concerned about who can see their health record because they're concerned that they'll lose their security clearance or
You know everybody's heard some apocryphal story about somebody who had a PTSD diagnosis and it got leaked and then they took away their weapons. It's like
That's not supposed to happen. That's not how your your medical record is protected
And yet, you know, it it is a barrier in treatment guys will not come in. It will not admit that
that anything is wrong because they don't want to lose access to these things.
And so now this is just another one.
And so somewhat ironically or not ironically,
I may be working on another book to try to create a guide book for veterans and divorce to explain to them.
You know, we've just added moral injury into the Diagnostic Statistics Manual.
So that kind of compounds the warrior withdrawal stuff.
Like justice is not served.
or I thought I was going over to Iraq to find weapons of mass destruction, and then that wasn't the case.
And so, you know, in my mind, it's like, well, what was it all worth it?
Or more recently, we had all those guys that, you know, 20 years of combat in Afghanistan and for nothing.
And so that regenerates issues in veterans' minds of this moral injury because we do the right thing.
We follow the rules.
I mean, there's 10% of us that get Article 15.
Of course, the majority of guys follow the rules,
and we believe in truth, justice, the American way.
We have honor, courage, commitment, integrity,
and the opposite side doesn't.
I mean, I can think of 10 cases up the top of my head,
false child abuse allegations, false domestic violence allegations,
whatever technique, tactic, or procedure,
they've got TTPs to box you into a hole where you can't even fight out of it.
And the veteran, like me included, I trust that the system is going to figure this out.
And unfortunately, the system still runs on money.
It's like, what's going to happen first?
Does the system figure it out or does the money run out?
And that's an awful place to be.
So, again, because most divorces happen within six months,
of separation from the military.
You have the veteran who has loss of identity, loss of sense of purpose,
is relying on substances, whatever it takes to get through the day.
And now their spouse is accusing them of being a monster and filing, you know, to move away
and telling the court, this guy is crazy, he has all these guns.
He's going to go kill everybody.
And then, you know, all of those things that you left the military for,
get stripped from you.
Your family, your kids.
Yeah, yeah.
And then you're left with, you know, an empty house.
And it's like, what do I do?
Yeah, and we know what a lot of guys do, unfortunately.
Right.
Man.
Anything else that we haven't talked about, VARPIS,
that you want to make sure we cover tonight?
So I am on the board of this nonprofit called Operation Shield.
We're trying to grow into more states.
We're really only in California for now.
And what we're trying to do is bridge that gap.
So catch the active duty, soldier, sailor, airman, marine, or guardian before they get out.
And there's that kind of dead space between their enrollment into the VA where we can provide mental health services for them.
So Warrior withdrawal is out now. People can find it on Amazon, maybe a second book coming.
Yeah.
Varpus, thanks for sharing your story with us tonight.
Yes, sir. Thanks for having me.
Any final thoughts before we roll out of here tonight?
I would just say to all the veterans out there, you're not broken.
You don't need to be fixed. You just need training.
Absolutely.
Thank you, Varpus.
And thank you everyone who watches tonight.
Maybe there's a veteran in your life that you want to show this video with or get Barpus's book for.
So we'll see all you guys next time.
Thanks for joining us tonight.
Hey, guys, I want to tell all of you today about a new newsletter that we're launching that encompasses both the Team House podcast, the Eyes on podcast, and the high side news outlet, which I run with Sean Naylor.
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