Mental Health Care
Cultivating the Next Generation of Mental Health Care, Post-Traumatic Growth & Suicide Prevention in a Trauma-Informed Care Culture
Structured Environment. Self-Directed Engagement
The national conversation around military and veteran mental health has grown more urgent, more visible, and more well-funded over the past decade. Yet suicide rates remain troubling. Provider shortages persist. Families continue to navigate fragmented systems in moments when clarity and stability matter most. The challenge is not effort. It is structure. GenVETS is advancing a terrain-based model designed to address fragmentation at its root — by changing the environment in which support is accessed, experienced, and sustained. This is not an additional program layered onto the existing landscape. It is a reconfiguration of the landscape itself.
The Structural Problem
Across the country, thousands of organizations offer valuable services to military members, veterans, and families. Yet those services are often:
- Geographically dispersed
- Programmatically siloed
- Sequentially prescribed
- Evaluation-driven before stabilization
- Difficult to navigate during crisis or exhaustion
The GenVETS Hypothesis
Healing is not linear. Growth cannot be prescribed. Regulation precedes processing. Environment shapes physiology. In an era where neuroscience has deepened our understanding of autonomic regulation, we believe that supporting parasympathetic nervous system activation — through movement, nature, connection, and creative engagement — must be foundational to any non-medicinal mental health and post-traumatic growth environment. Not as a replacement for clinical care, but as a physiological starting point. This is not alternative thinking. It is physiologic thinking. Choice restores agency. Access reduces friction. Stability enables forward movement.
The Terrain-Based Model
GenVETS is developing a large-scale, land-based environment in Maryland designed to make multiple non-medicinal modalities accessible in one coordinated space. This is not an integrated care program. It is not a residential treatment facility. It does not replace clinical services. It does not prescribe a single path. It is a place. A place where individuals and families can engage, disengage, pivot, and explore at their own pace — in their own time — in their own space. Modalities may include:
- Equine interaction
- Agriculture and gardening
- Fly-fishing and outdoor immersion
- Narrative medicine and storytelling
- Art, music, and movement
- Yoga and breathwork
- Beekeeping and land stewardship
- Veteran-led peer environments None of these modalities is new. The difference? Proximity, availability, and freedom of movement between them. If one path does not resonate, another is available — without referral, waitlist, or system navigation.
Stabilization First
The model prioritizes stabilization before trauma processing. By creating an environment that supports regulation — physical, relational, and environmental — the terrain itself becomes part of the intervention. Exposure to multiple options allows individuals to identify what resonates, rather than being assigned a track. The goal is not performance. The goal is safety.
Families Are Central
Mental health and suicide prevention are not service-member or veteran-only challenges. Spouses, caregivers, parents, and children share the same nervous-system climate. Yet many models embed families as secondary participants. This environment is open to families by design — not as an afterthought. Peace, stability, and growth do not happen in isolation. They happen in relationship.
Why Maryland
Maryland presents a unique convergence of land opportunity, leadership alignment, and cross-sector collaboration. The Maryland pilot is being designed as a proof-of-concept site—not as a standalone destination, but as a scalable framework. The intention is to develop a replicable blueprint that communities across the country can adapt to their own land, leadership, and needs. This is not a franchise model. It is a structural template.
A National Blueprint
GenVETS is working with clinicians, researchers, nonprofit leaders, and community partners to refine a terrain-based framework that:
- Reduces duplication
- Encourages collaboration
- Honors individual pacing
- Lowers barriers to entry
- Supports non-medicinal stabilization
- Coexists with clinical care
Stewardship & Sustainability
The model emphasizes responsible land use, low-impact infrastructure, and sustainable design. Environmental stewardship and human resilience are interconnected. Caring for the land supports the long-term durability of the environment created for those who gather there.
This Is Not Expansion. It Is Correction.
This work does not critique the dedication of existing providers. It acknowledges the complexity of the current landscape. When outcomes remain stagnant, structure deserves examination. GenVETS is advancing a terrain-based response designed to cultivate peace, stability, and post-traumatic growth by changing the conditions in which support is experienced. The time is now. The place is here. The work is underway.
