No One Comes Home the Same: Reintegration, Regulation, and the Life After Deployment
A year ago today, I was in the Middle East.
After nearly two years serving on full-time orders with the Wyoming Army National Guard — preparing soldiers for deployment, deploying alongside them, and supporting them through combat and operational stress — I’m finally ready to unpack what that experience did to me.
Because here’s the truth:
No one goes on deployment and comes home the same.
In this episode, I share:
- What it’s like to serve as a Behavioral Health Officer during deployment
- The emotional complexity of supporting soldiers while navigating your own stress
- The realities of reintegration (and why coming home can be harder than leaving)
- How my family, marriage, and business shifted while I was gone
- What I learned about nervous system regulation in high-stress environments
- Why nuance matters more than ever — in leadership, in the military, and in our conversations with each other
Reintegration is real.
Identity shifts are real.
And growth doesn’t happen without discomfort.
I talk about the privilege and the hardship of deployment. I talk about grief. I talk about change. I talk about what it means to wear a uniform and still hold nuance. And I share where I feel deeply called next — helping people learn how to sit with themselves, regulate their nervous systems, and hold space without judgment.
After more than 20,000 one-on-one conversations with humans, I know this to be true:
We don’t often sit with ourselves.
And we don’t often have someone willing to simply sit with us.
That’s where I’m headed.
If you’ve ever:
- Walked through a major life transition
- Felt like you came home to a different life
- Navigated reintegration after deployment, divorce, graduation, or loss
- Or sensed that you no longer fit neatly into one box
This episode is for you.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you for staying.
Season 2 of Chitty Chats with Stacy begins now.