The Common Veterans

Kenneth Holmes | Jeff Schrock | Fred Schlorke | Tony Buoscio | Casey Hendrickson

The Common Veterans is a podcast created by veterans, for veterans, exploring topics that matter most to the veteran community. From personal stories and shared experiences to deep dives into ethical, moral, and societal issues, each episode brings an authentic voice to conversations that resonate. Whether it's navigating post-military life, discussing mental health, or exploring subjects like ethics, morality, and religion, The Common Veterans is a place for open dialogue and community. Join us as

  1. Season 4: Episode 6: The Stuff We Don't Diagnose

    22 HR AGO

    Season 4: Episode 6: The Stuff We Don't Diagnose

    The Stuff We Don’t Diagnose is a conversation about the weight people carry when life does not fit neatly into a label. In this episode of Common Veterans, we sit down with Reverend Pastor Mason Vieth to talk about the things that do not always show up in a chart, a report, or a diagnosis, but still shape the way people live, think, and relate to the world around them. This episode steps away from clinical framing and leans into lived experience. We talk about moral injury, guilt, anger, avoidance, silence, faith, and the long shadow certain moments can leave behind. Some experiences do not sit right with who we believe we are, and even when time moves on, part of us can stay caught there. That is where this conversation begins. Pastor Mason Vieth brings a perspective that is both personal and pastoral. As Kenny and Tony’s home church pastor, he knows them well enough to keep the conversation honest, grounded, and, when needed, from going too far off the rails. His role in this episode is not to hand out easy answers. It is to help make room for reflection, accountability, forgiveness, and hope without pretending every wound can be explained away. Together, this conversation explores what happens when emotions no longer move in straight lines. Anger does not always have a clear target. Guilt does not always fade with time. Avoidance can look like staying busy, shutting down, laughing things off, isolating, or refusing to revisit certain memories. On the surface, that may look like coping. Underneath, it can be evidence of something unresolved still asking to be acknowledged. One of the central ideas in this episode is that not everything needs to be diagnosed in order to be real. There are experiences that carry deep emotional and spiritual weight without fitting neatly into a category. That does not make them less important. If anything, it makes conversations like this more necessary. In this episode, we talk about:moral injury and the burden that can linger when an experience does not sit right with who you believe you areguilt, regret, anger, and resentment that do not always make sense on the surfaceavoidance, silence, and the ways people distance themselves from painfaith, forgiveness, and accountability without easy answersthe importance of being seen and heard without being reduced to a diagnosis This is one of those episodes that does not rush toward a solution. It sits in the hard space on purpose. It makes room for honesty, reflection, and recognition. Sometimes the first step is not explanation. Sometimes it is simply naming what has been carried for a long time. Guest: Reverend Pastor Mason Vieth Podcast: Common Veterans Slainte

    2h 2m
  2. Season 4: Episode 5: Permission to Fail

    31 MAR

    Season 4: Episode 5: Permission to Fail

    Episode 5: Permission to Fail Veterans are good at telling the version of the story that makes sense. Service. Transition. Forward movement. Progress. What often gets left out are the moments in between — the jobs that did not work out, the leadership decisions that fell short, the relationships that took a hit, and the seasons where nothing felt as steady as it was supposed to. In this episode, the hosts take a more honest look at what failure can mean after service. Not as a dramatic ending, but as part of the road that many Veterans quietly walk. This is a conversation about setbacks, identity shock, hard lessons, and the uncomfortable reality that growth often comes through struggle rather than in spite of it. Too often, failure is treated like something to hide or explain away. Veterans especially can feel pressure to present a clean, polished version of life after the military — one where discipline always wins, experience always translates, and the next step always makes sense. But real life is rarely that neat. Sometimes the plan falls apart. Sometimes the transition hits harder than expected. Sometimes what looked like the right move turns out to be the wrong one. FreedomSystem.org joins the conversation to talk about what they see in the Veteran community when those moments happen. They discuss the pattern of Veterans knowing help is there, delaying the reach for it, and then eventually showing up when life has pushed them to a point where something has to change. It is a real look at what failure can stir up — and what can begin when it is finally faced head-on. This episode is not about glorifying mistakes or pretending every setback is somehow inspiring. It is about ownership, reflection, and perspective. It is about understanding that failure does not cancel out growth. In many cases, it creates the conditions for it. The suck is real. The frustration is real. But so is the possibility that what felt like a breaking point was actually the beginning of a better footing. If you have ever felt like your story got messy after service, this conversation is for you. If you have ever looked back at a bad season and realized it taught you more than an easy win ever could, this one will hit home. We are The Common Veterans.Clink.

    2h 39m
  3. Season 4: Episode2: The Translation Lie

    17 MAR

    Season 4: Episode2: The Translation Lie

    Introduction One of the most common pieces of advice Veterans hear during transition is simple: “Translate your MOS.” The idea sounds reasonable. Replace acronyms with civilian terminology. Turn missions into projects. Convert leadership into management language. Take the language of the military and make it sound like something a corporate hiring manager might recognize. But for many Veterans, that advice never quite works the way it is supposed to. In this episode of Common Veterans, we examine what we call The Translation Lie — the assumption that transition is primarily a matter of converting military language into corporate language. The Limits of Translation Military service is built around mission clarity, hierarchy, and shared expectations. Civilian organizations operate differently, often with less structure and far less shared context. When Veterans are told to simply “translate” their MOS, the result can feel forced. The words may change, but the experience behind them often becomes diluted. Leadership, responsibility, and decision-making shaped in a military environment rarely fit neatly into a few lines of corporate language. Real Conversations About Resumes In this conversation, we walk through examples many Veterans recognize — resumes that sound impressive but say very little, LinkedIn advice built around buzzwords, and well-intended transition guidance that oversimplifies the reality of military experience. The result can be frustration on both sides. Veterans struggle to communicate what they actually did, and employers struggle to understand the depth of responsibility that service often requires. Bridging Two Different Worlds The real challenge of transition is not just language. It is culture. Veterans benefit from learning how civilian organizations define responsibility, leadership, and accountability. At the same time, employers benefit from understanding the environments where Veterans developed their experience — environments where decisions are often made under pressure and leadership begins early. When both sides understand each other better, the conversation changes. Special Thanks This episode also gave us the opportunity to sit down with Ty Bancroft of Bancroft Companies, who joined the conversation and offered perspective from the civilian leadership side of the table. We also want to offer a sincere thank you to Ty and the Bancroft Companies for their generosity in supporting the Common Veterans podcast. Their support helped us upgrade the video equipment used to record these conversations, allowing us to continue sharing these discussions with a wider audience. Closing Transition from military service is rarely solved by a simple formula. It takes time, reflection, and honest conversations about how experience translates across two very different professional cultures. At Common Veterans, we believe those conversations matter. The more openly Veterans talk about the reality of transition, the more prepared the next generation will be when their time comes. If you are looking for community, resources, or conversations with others who understand the journey, visit FreedomSystem.org. Common Veterans We are the Common Veterans. Slainte.

    1hr 58min
  4. Season 4: Episode3: When the Uniform

    2 MAR

    Season 4: Episode3: When the Uniform

    Introduction We begin the way we always do. Host roll call. A moment to recognize the voices in the room and the stories behind them. This episode is brought to you by Winter Oak Studio, who continues to support conversations that matter. Toast: “To the Uniform. There’s ceremony when you put it on. There’s paperwork when you take it off. There’s nothing in between. To the uniform that formed us, the silence that followed it, the mistakes that shaped us, and the purpose that still calls us. Slainte.” The Last Day We take a slow walk through the final day. CIF turn-in. Signatures collected. Gear accounted for. A last formation that feels both significant and strangely procedural. Then comes the drive off post for the last time. No band. No closing speech. Just an open road and the realization that something structured and familiar has ended. It isn’t dramatic. It’s administrative. And somehow that makes it heavier. Expectations vs. Reality Most of us imagined transition would feel like relief. More freedom. Better pay. Less pressure. Instead, many of us found something else: silence. No rank on your chest. No clear chain of command. No defined mission. And eventually, someone asks, “So what do you do?” It’s a simple question. But when your identity was once summarized in a title, answering it can feel more complicated than expected. Identity Shock When the rank is removed, what remains? That question isn’t tactical. It’s philosophical. If identity has been tied closely to function, what happens when the function changes? Are you still the same man or woman without the uniform? Without the authority? Without the structure that once shaped your days? No checklist prepares you for that internal recalibration. Emotional Collision Transition carries emotions that don’t sit neatly together. Pride in having served. Grief that it ended. Relief mixed with longing. You may find yourself missing people you once complained about. Missing routines you once counted down to escape. Missing the clarity of knowing exactly where you stood. And at times, standing in a crowded civilian space can feel strangely isolating. Mistakes We Made Some of us withdrew. It felt easier to assume, “They wouldn’t understand,” than to risk explaining. Often some of us carried ego into rooms that didn’t operate on rank. We measured civilian life against military standards and quietly judged what didn’t align. Many of us resisted help. We expected structure to appear on its own, yet expected purpose to be assigned. Things Nobody Warned You About Your family built a rhythm while you were serving. Reintegration means learning that rhythm, not overriding it. Civilians do not organize their lives around mission clarity and ambiguity is normal for 'em. You will miss parts of service you once disliked. That realization can be unsettling; most importantly, brotherhood does not automatically continue. It must be maintained intentionally. Theology & Philosophy of Transition For many of us, service felt sacred. There was meaning in the discipline. A kind of liturgy in the repetition. Civilian life can feel ordinary by comparison; ordinary does not mean meaningless. The Warrior Principle A warrior without direction can become restless. Restlessness, left unattended, can turn destructive... the work of transition is not to erase the warrior. It is to redirect him. To rebuild tribe with intention. To choose a mission rather than wait for one to be assigned. This requires humility. And patience. And community. Closing Taking off the uniform does not remove your calling. It simply changes the environment in which that calling is lived out. Our encouragement in this episode is simple: call one Veteran. Have one honest conversation. Admit one struggle out loud. Silence loses power when it is shared. If you are looking for community or structured support, FreedomSystem.org continues to build spaces where Veterans can reconnect with purpose. WE ARE THE COMMON VETERANS Clink.

    1hr 43min
  5. Season 4: Episode 4: Civilians are Watching

    16 FEB

    Season 4: Episode 4: Civilians are Watching

    Movies, television, and social media have created familiar images of Veterans — the unstoppable warrior, the haunted survivor, or the flawless patriot. While often meant to honor service, these portrayals can quietly shape how civilians view and interact with Veterans in everyday life. In this episode, featuring guest host Goose, the conversation explores how media-driven perceptions follow Veterans into workplaces, homes, and communities. The goal is not to criticize storytelling, but to highlight how simplified narratives can create unrealistic expectations for a diverse and complex community. From Screen to Reality Pop culture often presents Veterans as one-dimensional characters defined by strength, trauma, or unwavering duty. While compelling, these portrayals rarely capture the full spectrum of Veteran experiences. Veterans return to civilian life as parents, coworkers, students, entrepreneurs, and community leaders, each carrying unique personalities and life goals. These portrayals influence how Veterans are treated professionally and socially. Some workplaces automatically view Veterans as natural leaders, while others may hesitate due to misconceptions about emotional stability. Within families, loved ones may walk on eggshells, unsure how to communicate or offer support. In public settings, well-meaning appreciation can sometimes be paired with misunderstandings shaped by fictionalized narratives. Community Impact and Support Organizations likeFreedomSystem.org and InVets frequently see the ripple effects of these perceptions. Many Veterans express interest in support services but delay seeking assistance, often believing they must handle challenges independently or avoid reinforcing stereotypes. At the same time, public respect for military service can open positive opportunities through employment initiatives and community programs. Education and open dialogue remain essential in helping civilians better understand the transition process and the varied realities Veterans face after service. Changing the Narrative Breaking stereotype cycles begins with authentic storytelling. Encouraging Veterans to share their experiences — through writing, conversation, or creative expression — helps preserve history while strengthening connections between Veterans and civilians. How these stories are shared matters just as much as why they are shared, ensuring conversations remain honest, respectful, and meaningful. Reintegration is not solely a Veteran responsibility. Strong communities grow when both Veterans and civilians listen, learn, and support one another through real human experiences rather than scripted assumptions. The next episode will continue exploring life after service by examining identity changes, personal challenges, and the unexpected realities Veterans encounter when rebuilding civilian lives through reflection, philosophy, and lived experience. We are the Common Veterans. Clink. Sponsor: Winter Oak Studios

    2h 17m
  6. Season 4: Episode 1: That's Bullsh*t

    19 JAN

    Season 4: Episode 1: That's Bullsh*t

    We’re not starting Season 4 quietly. We’re not easing in with a polite “welcome back.” We’re kicking off 2026 with a full-throttle “that’s bullsh*t!” and we’re doing it the only way we know how — loud, honest, and unfiltered. Welcome to Common Veterans Season 4. This season is going to be bigger, bolder, and more unapologetically real than ever. And we’re starting with the topic that every veteran, service member, and military family knows all too well: The Military Is Full of BSNot all of it. Some of it makes sense. Some of it’s necessary. But let’s be real — a lot of it is just nonsense. And we’re not afraid to call it out. In Episode 1, “That’s Bullsh*t!”, we dive into the stuff that makes you roll your eyes, laugh, and wonder how anyone ever thought this was a good idea. Pointless bureaucracy Training that exists just to fill time Orders that make no sense Traditions that are outdated but still mandatory Leadership decisions that are so ridiculous they’re almost impressiveAnd yes — we talk about the moments when you just have to embrace the suck because fighting it would be a full-time job. Why We’re Doing ThisBecause the military experience isn’t always heroic speeches and perfect discipline. It’s also: laughing at the absurdity surviving the nonsense learning how to keep your sanity intact even when everything around you feels like it’s falling apartThis episode is a reset. A “we’re back” moment. A reminder that we’re not here to sugarcoat anything. We’re here to tell the truth. The Best BS Moments From Episode 1Without spoiling everything, here are a few highlights that made us laugh and cringe at the same time: The paperwork that somehow takes longer than the job itself Training requirements that don’t apply to anything you’ll ever do Rules that exist just because they always have Moments where you realize the “plan” was made by someone who has never been in the roomIf you’ve ever been in the military, you know exactly what we’re talking about. And if you haven’t — you’re about to get a front-row seat to the most honest version of military life. What You Can Do About the BS (Real Talk)Here’s the thing — we can’t fix all the nonsense. We can’t change the system overnight. But we can control how we respond. In this episode, we talk about what actually works: When to push back When to shut up and do the job When to laugh so you don’t lose your mind How to keep your head above water when everything feels ridiculousIt’s not a guide to “winning” the military. It’s a guide to surviving it — with your sanity intact. Listener StoriesThis season is about real experiences, real voices, and real truth. So if you’ve got a BS story — we want it. Send us your wildest, funniest, most ridiculous military moments and we’ll feature them in upcoming episodes. Whether it’s a short voice clip or a text message, we want to hear it. What’s Coming in Season 4If Episode 1 is any indication, Season 4 is going to be louder, funnier, more honest, and more unapologetic. We’re not holding back. We’re not censoring the truth. We’re just telling it the way it happened. Listen NowSeason 4 of Common Veterans is available now on all major platforms: Spotify Apple Podcasts Google PodcastsIf you’ve ever said “that’s bullsh*t” in uniform — this season is for you. Welcome back. We’re starting Season 4 with a bang, and we’re not stopping.

    2h 25m
  7. Season 3: Episode 17 - Crossing the Generational Divide

    22/12/2025

    Season 3: Episode 17 - Crossing the Generational Divide

    Veterans of different eras come together to share how military life and reintegration have evolved across generations. From early conflicts to modern warfare, this episode explores what has changed, what hasn’t, and how camaraderie continues to bind Veterans together. I. Introduction The episode opens with reflections on how service differs by decade while the core experience of wearing the uniform remains the same. Toast “A toast to those who came before, those who serve now, and those finding their way home.” Special guests from different services and generations are welcomed into the conversation to help bridge the generational gap. II. Boot Camp to Battle – Then vs Now Veterans discuss enlistment periods spanning several decades and how the military experience has evolved over time. What Has Changed Discipline and leadership stylesLiving conditions and military payEquipment and uniformsCommunication Home Letters versus phone cards versus smartphonesBasic training calls homeCommunication from combat zonesThe shift from handwritten letters to emailsDining Facilities and Food C-RationsK-RationsMREsModern DFACsIII. Coming Home – Then vs Now Reintegration into civilian life is examined across different wars and eras, highlighting how each generation faced unique challenges when returning home. Conflicts discussed include: World War IWorld War IIKoreaVietnamGrenadaIraqAfghanistanIraq (post-9/11)Modern conflicts and emerging global tensionsGear, Tech, and the Evolution of War Protective gear and survivabilityThe role of media in shaping public perceptionWeapons systems and ammunitionCommunications, GPS, and battlefield awarenessIV. The Common Thread: Camaraderie Despite generational differences, one constant remains — camaraderie. Veterans discuss how brotherhood has endured while the way it’s expressed has changed between older and newer generations. V. Closing The episode wraps up with announcements and reminders about upcoming Veteran-focused events. Poker eventsBattle of the Bands (including sign-ups)InVets SummitsRemembering and honoring those who servedVI. We Are The Common Veterans No matter the era, the mission, or the uniform, the bond of service endures. This is The Common Veterans.

    2h 11m
  8. Season 3: Episode 16 - A Home Base

    26/11/2025

    Season 3: Episode 16 - A Home Base

    Veteran Homeless Veterans face unique housing challenges that ripple through lives and families. In Michiana, the gap between need and available, affordable units is painfully real. This episode explores practical steps to find stable housing and rebuild the sense of home many of us carry with us from service. We begin by laying out the common barriers: rising rents, credit challenges, lingering service-related injuries, and the mental health struggles that complicate steady employment and stable tenancy. Rural and urban landscapes create different roadblocks—transportation and isolation in smaller towns, competition and higher costs in cities. Transitional moments like ETS, post-deployment, and retirement are high-risk periods where small setbacks can become long-term instability. Next we take a close look at local supports. Organizations like FreedomSystem.org and Mishawaka Troop Town work to connect Veterans to immediate shelter, case management, and community. Miller’s Veterans program at the South Bend shelter provides structured support that helps people regain footing, though funding, space, and staffing remain constant challenges. We also offer practical actions. Veterans should connect with county VSOs and nonprofit case managers who know HUD-VASH, SSVF, and local voucher systems. Consider creative housing: shared homes, micro-housing units, and modular builds can provide quicker, affordable options. Family and support networks remain vital—sometimes the path to stability is a shared roof while benefits and income get sorted. For property owners and neighbors, the episode outlines how small measures make a difference: flexible lease terms, willingness to accept alternative documentation, and partnering with local groups to vet applicants. Community volunteers can help with move-in assistance, furniture drives, and mentoring. Finally, we reflect on what “home” means: it’s more than shelter. Home is routine, safety, dignity, and a place to reconnect with purpose after service. The episode closes with resources, encouragement, and a call to action: build bridges, not barriers, and help Veterans find a place to belong. Listen, share, and join the conversation—because when a Veteran finds a home base, the whole community is stronger. Additional practical tips: Start with documentation: pull together DD-214, ID, proof of income, and any medical records that support disability claims. These documents speed up eligibility reviews for VA and local programs. If your credit report has errors, dispute them early; small clerical fixes can open rental doors. Emergency funds and stabilization: SSVF and local charities can provide short-term payments for deposits and first month’s rent. Ask about budgeting help and connections to employment supports to reduce future risk. Housing alternatives to explore: contact community land trusts, faith-based housing cooperatives, and nonprofit developers focused on affordable units. Shared housing networks, where Veterans rotate responsibilities, can reduce costs and build peer support. Tiny home villages and modular units are increasingly used as transitional or permanent solutions. Longer-term strategies: work with VSOs to pursue service-connected benefit claims, apply for supportive housing like HUD-VASH, and enroll in employment or training programs tied to stable income streams. Advocate for local policy changes: inclusionary zoning, landlord incentives, and funding for supportive services. Community involvement: volunteer at shelter programs, support fundraisers for local Veteran housing initiatives, and encourage local leaders to prioritize Veteran homelessness prevention. Landlords can partner with nonprofit case managers to mitigate perceived rental risks. Closing encouragement: finding a home base takes teamwork. If you’re a Veteran, reach out—help is available. If you’re a neighbor or community leader, consider how small, concrete steps can change a life, and let's make a difference!

    2h 14m

About

The Common Veterans is a podcast created by veterans, for veterans, exploring topics that matter most to the veteran community. From personal stories and shared experiences to deep dives into ethical, moral, and societal issues, each episode brings an authentic voice to conversations that resonate. Whether it's navigating post-military life, discussing mental health, or exploring subjects like ethics, morality, and religion, The Common Veterans is a place for open dialogue and community. Join us as