Wednesday - June 24th, 2026
Apple News
×

What can we help you find?

Open Menu

Turning PTSD Into Creative Work

  1. Turning PTSD Into Creative Work Scott DeLuzio 38:19

PTSD does not always look dramatic. Sometimes it looks like overthinking, staying busy, and trying to keep your mind from going places you do not want it to go. This conversation is about what happens when a veteran finds a healthier outlet and actually commits to it.

Ken Webb talks about leaving the cycle of contract work behind, building a new life in Peru, and using writing to deal with fear, betrayal, and Stress that did not disappear after service. He gets into the discipline it took to finish a novel, why he wrote the first draft by hand, and how reading and writing forced him to slow down and focus. He also shares how parts of his book were pulled from real experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan, along with the personal betrayal that pushed him to finally get the story out.

This episode will connect with veterans who feel stuck in their own head, miss having a mission, or need a reminder that productive work can still be part of healing. It is honest, grounded, and useful. It also gives a clear look at how creative work can help someone process what happened without pretending the past never happened.

Timestamps:

  • 00:03:15 – He decides to stop waiting and start living
  • 00:08:39 – The hard truth about PTSD and the past
  • 00:11:15 – Why writing the villain was cathartic
  • 00:21:30 – Ken talks honestly about fear in Iraq
  • 00:30:31 – His advice for any veteran who wants to write

Links & Resources

Transcript

View the transcript for this episode.

Scott DeLuzio Host - Drive On Podcast

Scott is an Army veteran who served in the Connecticut Army National Guard as an Infantryman and was deployed to Afghanistan in 2010. Like many soldiers who deploy to combat, that deployment changed Scott forever. Drive On Podcast talks about the challenges soldiers face when coming back home. Reacquainting with loved ones, finding a purpose outside of the military, and the struggles that come with it all.

If we're going to get better, we have to start talking about the problems we're facing.