The Arizona Republic

Ecotherapy retreat helps student veterans at ASU

- Tom Maxedon Tom Maxedon is a host, producer and reporter at KJZZ. This story was produced by KJZZ and appears here through a collaborat­ion between The Arizona Republic/azcentral.com and KJZZ. Hear the full story at kjzz.org.

Arizona State University’s Office for Veteran and Military Academic Engagement helps student veterans better integrate into civilian life.

The office is adapting an ecotherapy program developed in Colorado for an Arizona-based retreat that exposes student veterans to the wilderness in hopes of fostering discussion and healing.

Arizona Warriors Wilderness Journey is modeled after Huts for Vets, started in 2013 by Paul Anderson, a writer and wilderness guide.

Anderson said in a video recap of a recent excursion, “Veterans are ultimately philosophe­rs because they have dealt with the big issues: life, death and the meaning of existence. I decided to bring veterans into a wilderness setting with a peer group of veterans and a context, a book of readings that give a philosophi­cal foundation to what we’re talking about and to human life. Once you get a philosophi­cal mindset that’s cultivated in this program and get these discussion­s going, then (veterans) just go off and what I’ve heard on the trails from veterans is profoundly brilliant.”

He said he got the idea after reading about the high number of suicides committed by veterans which is about 18 per day, according to the latest statistics published by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

For students fresh out of the military, a large part of that existence deals with managing their personal finances.

“When you’re in the military, everything is provided for you,” said Shawn Banzhaf, senior military advocate for the Pat Tillman Veterans Center at ASU. “From the time you wake up until you go to sleep, they tell you what you’re going to be doing. And then they provide all your medical insurance all free of charge, all your meals. Your housing is provided for.”

One of his central roles is to help veterans transform from military to student life.

“So, if you’re 18 and you go in the service, let’s say you did one contract of four years, maybe you never even had a job and had to spend your own money on those things and you don’t even understand maybe what that looks like,” he said.

Banzhaf also said he never wants students to forget the importance of their life as a veteran, but he also doesn’t want them to forever be defined by their service record.

“A really important part about what I do is helping them see that they’re more than just their DD 214. Just because the Army told you that you were good at these three things on the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery test doesn’t mean you can’t be anything that you dream to be.”

A Bronze Star recipient and 21-year

Army National Guard veteran, Banzhaf was in combat in Iraq in 2006-07. He said post-traumatic stress disorder is also a top concern for students.

While Arizona Warriors Wilderness Journey borrows largely from the premise of Huts for Vets, it takes student veterans into the wilderness near the Mogollon Rim for hikes followed by discussion.

Michelle Loposky, assistant director of outreach and engagement at the Tillman Center, who along with Banzhaf went on a recent retreat, said, “It seems that once an individual is in nature away from the chaos of society they seem to find this rooted self. Yet, in this program there is still this element of comradery and it helps our students find a way to transition from that military identity to what it looks like to being a college student and beyond.”

Loposky served as an Army combat field medic for four years as part of stabilizat­ion forces during the Bosnian War and has witnessed first-hand how the wilderness retreat transforms formerly quiet souls. “I see that transforma­tion in each one of our student veterans like who they were. Sometimes they’re closed in. They’re not really sure what to make of it, until the fourth day where we can’t make them stop talking, but we want them to continuall­y talk,” she said.

For Melvin Cruz, a senior at ASU studying public service and public policy with a concentrat­ion in business and a minor in communicat­ion. He’s on track to be graduated in December. Cruz is an intern at the Office for Veterans and Military Academic Engagement and an Army veteran who saw combat in Iraq.

He’s a first-generation American whose parents emigrated from the Dominican Republic and worked hard to adapt to the American way of life.

Cruz said military life gave him a similar sense of discipline, comradery and the need for teamwork he learned while growing up.

“My father was a big preacher of: ‘You live here, you’re going to contribute.’ ”

In a recent video from the retreat, Cruz said he still struggles to find peace even 15 years after his service.

“We all have internal struggles. It’s hard to quiet the noise. It’s hard to find that silence we all need. And sometimes as veterans, it’s hard to find that. And, that’s kind of it. You know? Just trying to find that peace, that silence, that balance.”

Cruz is thankful the retreat helped him connect with others who deal with the fact that every day is Veterans Day.

 ?? COURTESY OF ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ?? Michelle Loposky, left, of ASU’s Pat Tillman Veterans Center hikes alongside Sharon Lombard on Nov. 1.
COURTESY OF ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Michelle Loposky, left, of ASU’s Pat Tillman Veterans Center hikes alongside Sharon Lombard on Nov. 1.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States