I did three deployments. I came back from all three. I thought that meant I won.
What nobody told me was that the war follows you. It doesn't stay over there. It rides home with you in your chest, in the way you flinch at car doors slamming, in the nightmares that make your wife afraid to wake you, in the rage that comes from nowhere and terrifies the people you love most.
My wife Elena told me quietly one night that she felt like she was living with a stranger. That was the truth. I had become a stranger — to her, to my kids, to myself. The man who had left for the first deployment was not the man who came back from the third. I didn't know how to be him anymore.
Asking for help felt like surrender. I had been trained to be hard, to push through, to suffer in silence because suffering in silence was what strength looked like where I came from. The idea that I needed to sit in a room and talk about my feelings felt like weakness — like I was admitting the war had won after all.
My unit's chaplain finally said something that got through. He said: "You wouldn't tell a soldier to walk on a broken leg. Why are you telling yourself to operate on a broken mind?"
I don't know why that landed when nothing else had. Maybe because it came from someone who'd seen what I'd seen. Ma