Military & Veterans

You were trained to carry the weight. RDX helps you set it down without losing yourself.

Service changes your system — the way you connect, the way you hold power, the way you fit inside a family that didn't go through it with you. RDX gives you a framework to understand that shift and restore the balance on your terms.

The Invisible Shift

The wound isn't always combat. Sometimes it's coming home.

In service, the system worked. You had a mission, a rank, a unit. Power and connection were built into the structure. You knew your role and it held you together.

Coming home strips all of that. The mission is gone. The rank means nothing at the dinner table. The family you left behind formed new rhythms without you — and now you're a variable they don't know how to balance for.

That imbalance shows up as rage, withdrawal, hypervigilance, or a quiet disconnection you can't explain. RDX names it exactly — and gives you and your family a shared map to find your way back to each other.

The RDX Military Framework

+Unit cohesion → Family connection
+Mission clarity → Purpose at home
+Command structure → Shared power
+Combat readiness → Emotional availability

How RDX Helps

Built for the discipline you already have

No civilian platitudes

We don't start with 'thank you for your service' and move on. RDX therapists understand the specific dynamics of military culture — rank, mission, unit cohesion — and meet you there.

Reintegration that actually works

Coming home is harder than leaving. RDX maps the exact imbalance that happens when high-power, high-connection unit life gives way to a household that doesn't run on mission. We fix the system, not just the symptoms.

A framework built for strength

Traditional therapy can feel like weakness. RDX is structured, outcome-focused, and direct — built for people who are trained to push through. It respects the discipline you bring while giving you tools the military never did.

Active Duty

Navigating the pressure of service, deployments, and the relationships strained by both. RDX helps you stay balanced while the mission demands everything.

Veterans

Identity, purpose, civilian life — the transition is its own mission and it doesn't come with orders. RDX maps the shift so it doesn't have to feel like starting over.

Military Families

Spouses, kids, and parents carry the weight too. RDX works with the whole family system — not just the service member — because reintegration is everyone's work.

Areas of Focus

Specialties for military & veterans

Combat trauma & PTSDFamily reintegrationMilitary-to-civilian transitionUnit & leadership dynamicsMoral injuryIdentity after servicePartner & spouse supportHypervigilance & emotional shutdownAnxiety & panicBurnout & recovery

In Their Own Words

What people take away

Really called me and my lizard brain out — but very interesting and applicable to every relationship I have.

Lecture attendee

You're in a system whether you want to be or not. Once you see it, you can't unsee it.

Lecture attendee

The way we respond to a situation is more important than the situation itself — and we have the power to control this.

Lecture attendee

I loved how he explained why opposites attract and how it serves the function of the system.

Lecture attendee

Interactions and responsiveness are profound in relationships. I saw it in the still face experiment and felt it in my own life.

Lecture attendee

I learned that I am usually powerful and disconnected, but I move a lot with my family for survival.

Lecture attendee

It's our choice to move freely between power and vulnerability. I never thought of my responses as something I could change.

Lecture attendee

I really liked how he acknowledged who we are while recommending we move towards a healthier center.

Lecture attendee

The hardest mission is the one nobody trained you for

Book a consultation with an RDX therapist who understands what service actually costs — and what coming home actually asks of you.