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The Rebuilt Warrior Transition Blueprint

  1. The Rebuilt Warrior Transition Blueprint Scott DeLuzio 44:36

Silence can linger long after a veteran has returned home and taken off the uniform. For Eric Gillis, one of the toughest challenges after leaving the Army was learning to function in a world without the structure, purpose, and brotherhood that once held everything together. He kept his inner struggles to himself, feeling he had no right to speak up because others had paid a higher price.

That silence nearly cost him everything.

This story follows Eric’s journey through post-military chaos, hypervigilance, Family struggles, Therapy, and the moment a doctor said something that changed his path: “You can be better.” From that point, Eric started rebuilding his life as a husband, father, teacher, author, and creator of The Rebuilt Warrior. He shares how veterans can turn their military strengths into civilian success, rebuild trust, take responsibility, find purpose, and create the structure they miss after service.

What you’ll hear is a relatable message for veterans feeling stuck, ashamed, angry, isolated, or unsure of where they fit now. It’s a reminder that struggle doesn’t have to be the final chapter, and that a new mission can be built, one honest step at a time.

Timestamps:

  • 00:03:27 – Leaving military structure behind
  • 00:06:25 – The night everything almost ended
  • 00:12:27 – Turning private pain into Rebuilt Warrior
  • 00:19:03 – Breaking down the STRUCTURE framework
  • 00:37:30 – A message for veterans in silence

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.