Breaking the Cycle: PTSD, Veterans, and the OODA Loop of Equine Therapy
FEB 10, 202678 MIN
Breaking the Cycle: PTSD, Veterans, and the OODA Loop of Equine Therapy
FEB 10, 202678 MIN
Description
Send a textA Marine’s war doesn’t end when orders do. Matthew Ryba takes us from boot camp before 9/11 through Ramadi and Marja—lost friends, near misses, and a night spent in a fallen lieutenant’s rack that changed his trajectory—and into a lab where PTSD is measured, mapped, and, unexpectedly, met by horses. Along the way we confront hard truths: why the military’s alcohol culture magnifies risk, how drone warfare’s drive-to-work, bomb, drive-home rhythm fractures identity, and why so many veterans avoid therapies that demand retelling the worst day of their lives.What makes this conversation different is the practicality. Matt breaks down the Man O’ War Project’s eight-week equine-assisted therapy: 90 minutes, once a week, outside the clinic walls. No trauma scripts. Just teams of veterans, skilled facilitators, and horses that mirror human arousal with astonishing sensitivity. The goals are simple—guide a horse at liberty onto a tarp, breathe when frustration rises, coordinate with peers—and the outcomes are powerful. fMRI data shows shifts in threat and reward circuits. Nearly half of participants no longer met PTSD criteria after completing the program. Dropout rates fell to 8.4 percent, a fraction of typical veteran care.We also widen the lens. Moral injury in ambiguous wars, the way memory reshapes itself, and the role of camaraderie when the uniform comes off—all affect recovery. Matt shares how veteran-led outreach, choice among modalities (from equine work to EMDR to emerging psychedelic therapies), and nature itself rebuild agency. Healing here looks grounded and real: dirt under boots, a calm horse on a tarp, a steadier breath, a nervous system learning safety again.If you or someone you love is carrying the weight of service—combat, homefront stress, or the long tail of loss—there are options that respect your pace and experience. Explore the Man O’ War Project at mowproject.org and the Columbia PTSD Research and Treatment Team. Listen, share with a battle buddy or family member, and if this helped you, subscribe and leave a review so more people can find their way to tools that work.John R. Boyd's Conceptual Spiral was originally titled No Way Out. In his own words: “There is no way out unless we can eliminate the features just cited. Since we don’t know how to do this, we must continue the whirl of reorientation…” A promotional message for Ember Health. Safe and effective IV ketamine care for individuals seeking relief from depression. Ember Health's evidence-based, partner-oriented, and patient-centered care model, boasting an 84% treatment success rate with 44% of patients reaching depression remission. It also mentions their extensive experience with over 40,000 infusions and treatment of more than 2,500 patients, including veterans, first responders, and individuals with anxiety and PTSD Stay connected with No Way Out and The Whirl Of ReOrientation X: @NoWayOutcast · @PonchAGLX · @NoWayOutMoose Substack: The Whirl Of ReOrientation - www.thewhirl.substack.com