the hardest for the vetshen ty cocomeack is ty'y' been a part of unitt, really tht it, all on thsameme mison. an when n ey come me, and ty dodon't have missisi, and ty dodon't have anit, tt't's lo w whaleads to t isosotion, whicicthen canead to t the dg and alhol abuse, which then very often leads to suicide. and whahat i have foundnd from e vveterans i've interviviewed is that theyey really hahad to seek their own salalvation and find their own w way back into what e would call civilizationon-- that, youou know, the civiliaian world. there's something about farming, and working with the soil, and wworking w with livingng plantsd with livestock ananimals that after you've been n in a culture of death and war, to bee in a culture of life and sustaining and d creating life, isis deeply hehealing. >>>> you know, i'm m not ashamef my service or what happened in iraq, , but i learned that i ifu know, when working with living things you become a nurturer instead of a destroyer. and t that was rereally--that ws a really significant realizazatn for me. >> the thing about it is we come out here and w