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Healing the Invisible Wounds of War with Movement

How a Boston-based program is using running, fitness, and holistic care to help veterans in life after service

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Ryan Vanderweit joined the infantry in 2002 and was quickly deployed to Iraq at the beginning of the war. When he got out of the military seven years later, reentry to everyday life was not easy. 鈥淲hen you come out, you have a completely different thought process than people who haven鈥檛 served,鈥� he says. He had trouble making friends and didn鈥檛 know how to fit into the new world around him. He struggled with anxiety.

It wasn鈥檛 until Vanderweit started working out with a friend, another new vet, that something clicked. Showing up at the same time every day and working hard with someone who understood his experience was transformational. 鈥淚 found that place where I belonged again,鈥� he says. Vanderweit found his own path to mental well-being through running and fitness鈥攁nd he knew others could, too.聽

鈥淭his mission is personal, because fitness, in many ways, has saved my life. I know what it can do.鈥�

Around the same time, a new organization in Boston called , a partnership between the Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital, was founded to provide veterans like Vanderweit with no-cost care to help them thrive in life after the service. 鈥淥ur purpose is to address the invisible wounds of war,鈥� says Dr. Ron Hirschberg, Director of Wellness at Home Base. Hirschberg hopes that the stigma of mental health stops being a barrier for people to get care. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really that hurdle of communicating to the public and to the veteran themselves that a mental health challenge is no different than a physical challenge.鈥�

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When Vanderweit found Home Base, he knew he had to get involved. Today, he runs the organization鈥檚 , where he works with 20 to 30 veterans a week over the course of 90 days. 鈥淭his mission is personal,鈥� he says, 鈥渂ecause fitness, in many ways, has saved my life. I know what it can do.鈥澛�

Johnny Jarnagin was part of the first cohort to come through Vanderweit鈥檚 program. He served as a medic in the army and was deployed to Afghanistan. And like Vanderweit and so many veterans, he struggled to find his place in civilian life. 鈥淲hen I first got out, I sort of wanted to distance myself completely from my experience in the military and just forget,鈥� Jarnagin says. 鈥淏urying things and just forgetting about them isn鈥檛 a good way to deal with them, so I think finding Home Base and a like-minded community of people who went through a similar experience was pretty important.鈥�

Fitness was a major point of connection in the military, with everyone working out together every day, so it was a natural way for Jarnagin to connect with other veterans as a civilian. Physical health really is mental health, he says, which wasn鈥檛 something he鈥檇 considered before Home Base. 鈥淧eople who have gone through the military have to deal with a lot of stress and challenges and traumas,鈥� Jarnagin says. 鈥淚 think that being open to pushing yourself again in a physical way will really open doors and help people become more whole.鈥�

Vanderweit helps people move past their perceived limitations every day, and he鈥檚 putting that into practice himself this fall. He鈥檚 running the Marathon des Sables, a six-day, 250-kilometer race across the unforgiving Sahara Desert. It鈥檚 something he never thought he would do. Vanderweit is looking forward to pushing himself and the healing that comes along with it, and to bringing awareness to what Home Base is doing to address the struggles veterans face every day. 鈥淭he gym might not be for everybody, running might not be for everybody, but movement is for everybody,鈥� Vanderweit says.聽

That idea鈥攖hat everyone can benefit from movement鈥攕hows up in everything Home Base does, including its annual fundraising event , a scenic 5K or 9K run through Boston that ends by crossing home plate at Fenway Park. And it鈥檚 an idea shared by , which has partnered with Home Base for over a decade. 鈥淣ew Balance has been something more than a corporate sponsor. They care about the veteran population. They care about the people we serve,鈥� Vanderweit says.聽

This year鈥檚 Run to Home Base, happening on September 25, is more important than ever, Vanderweit says, because the pandemic made the road to recovery that much more difficult for veterans. To learn more or sign up, visit


Veterans and their families can learn more about the support services offered by Home Base by calling (617) 724-5202. To support Home Base with a contribution, .

础产辞耻迟听聽We stand for something bigger than sneakers. We champion those who are fearlessly driven by their passions. We elevate sport. We do right by people and the planet. Together, we drive meaningful change in communities around the world.聽

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