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Turning Combat Scars Into Stories

  1. Turning Combat Scars Into Stories Scott DeLuzio 42:54

The hardest battles after service can happen in the quiet places, at home, at work, and inside your own head. Brendan T. Kelly spent 22 years in the Army before stepping into teaching, corporate life, and eventually writing. Along the way, he faced nightmares, PTSD, Family strain, and the hard truth that leading troops in battle did not mean he could heal alone.

This conversation follows the path from military structure to civilian uncertainty, from keeping pain boxed up to finally speaking it out loud, and from private writing to a published story built to reach others who feel stuck in the dark. Brendan shares how Therapy, cognitive behavioral work, family support, and storytelling helped him rebuild his life and create The Echo of Silence, a fiction book shaped by combat, invisible wounds, forgiveness, survival, and the cost of staying silent.

Listeners will walk away with a clearer understanding of why getting help is a strength, why healing takes real work, and how one veteran turned painful memories into a mission that may help someone else pick up the phone before they hit bottom.

Timestamps:

  • 00:03:57 – Losing the structure after Army Retirement
  • 00:09:13 – Hitting rock bottom and finally getting help
  • 00:13:55 – Learning to give the past a voice
  • 00:18:53 – Turning scars into stories
  • 00:31:10 – Writing the combat scene that changed everything

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.