*Article from Resolute Mideastern Ohio, June 2026*
Written by: James Fye, Director of Recovery Services at AVO Behavioral Health
There’s a belief that keeps many veterans from seeking help: “I’m not that bad.”
You’re still working.
Still showing up.
Still handling your responsibilities.
So whatever’s going on, it doesn’t feel serious enough to do anything about. But the reality is, a lot of veterans who struggle with mental health or substance use don’t look like they’re struggling at all. From the outside, everything seems fine. On the inside, it’s a different story. Sleep might be off. Irritability creeps in. It’s harder to relax. Harder to shut your mind off. Sometimes it’s not even one big issue—just a constant feeling that something isn’t right. For many veterans, alcohol or other substances become a way to manage that.
Not to lose control—but to gain some.
To take the edge off.
To get some sleep.
To slow things down.
And for a while, it works.
That’s what makes it easy to ignore.
When Coping Starts to Cost You
The issue isn’t coping—it’s when the coping strategy starts to take more than it gives. What starts as something occasional can quietly become something you rely on. A few drinks to unwind turns into needing it to relax. Then, needing it to feel normal. This isn’t about a lack of discipline. It’s what happens when stress, pressure, and unresolved experiences build up over time. You adapt. You push through. You handle it. Until eventually, it starts handling you.
The Rock Bottom Myth
A lot of people believe you have to lose everything before it’s time to get help. That belief does more harm than good. Because the best time to make a change is when things still look “fine” on the surface. That’s when it’s easier to adjust. Easier to regain control. Easier to prevent things from getting worse. You don’t need a crisis to justify taking care of your mental health.
What Help Actually Looks Like
One of the biggest barriers for veterans is the idea that getting help means giving up control. In reality, it’s the opposite. Good support is practical. It’s structured. It meets you where you are. It might look like talking to someone who understands how veterans operate. Rebuilding routine and structure in your day. Learning ways to manage stress that actually work in real life—not just in theory. It’s not about overcomplicating things. It’s about finding what works and sticking with it.
You’re Not Alone
A lot of veterans carry things long after their service ends. And most of them don’t talk about it. But staying silent doesn’t make it easier—it just makes it heavier. The truth is, you’re not the only one dealing with this. Not even close. You don’t have to hit rock bottom to make a change. You just have to recognize when something isn’t working anymore.
That’s not weakness.
That’s awareness.
That’s discipline.
That’s strength.