Wednesday - July 1st, 2026
Apple News
×

What can we help you find?

Open Menu

Why Veterans Need Their Tribe

  1. Why Veterans Need Their Tribe Scott DeLuzio 59:48

Some men leave the military and still notice the empty seat at the table. The mission has ended, the unit is no longer there, and civilian life often lacks the honesty they once shared with fellow service members.

Historian and Marine veteran Bryan Rigg offers a unique perspective on this struggle. He draws from his research on World War II, Holocaust history, his time in the Marine Corps, and his efforts to save stories that might have been forgotten. He discusses unopened Iwo Jima records, German primary groups, the silence after war, and how veterans can lose their close circle of support when they come home.

This conversation covers both battlefield history and the daily challenges veterans face after service. It offers veterans practical ideas for building connection, finding meaning, seeking Therapy, learning from older veterans, supporting Family, and making small check-ins that help them keep going. You will come away with a better understanding of why isolation is so hard, how to rebuild connections on purpose, and how sharing pain with the right people can help you heal.

Timestamps:

  • 00:01:38 – How a Marine veteran kept serving through history
  • 00:06:45 – The World War II files no one had opened
  • 00:11:00 – Primary groups and why men fight harder together
  • 00:26:15 – Why veterans lose their tribe after coming home
  • 00:46:15 – Finding the why that keeps a man moving forward

Links & Resources

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.