With the decompression in the third location, they are taken specifically through some of the things that will help them reintegrate with their families. Amongst those is the need to have realistic expectations when they go home, and not to be living in fantasies. Another, for example, is that if the husband has been deployed and the wife has taken over responsibilities for the finances and all of the household care, and everything, when he gets home, it's unrealistic for him to expect to go right back to where he left off and to take control of those away from his wife immediately. There has to be time for the two of them to reach a new equilibrium, because they'll both have changed during the time of the deployment. So there's education given from that perspective.
There's also education with respect to the fact that having been on deployment and experienced the circumstances they've worked under, those are not what they will face when they get home. They don't have to worry about grassy areas being mined; they don't have to worry about people hiding behind buildings to shoot at them, or worry that if a vehicle approaches them it might blow up and harm them. So there's education towards that.
There's also education about the signs and symptoms of operational stress injuries, so they can recognize them and seek help, or they can recognize them in their friends and recommend that they get help too.