I examine a lot around identity and the change in roles and identities as people go through transition, so my work is around stages of change. As people are releasing from the military, they're changing from being from a military member to becoming a veteran and, essentially, a civilian. For a lot of women, that shift is different, because there is this social perception of what a veteran looks like, and that quite often doesn't match with how women appear in the world. There isn't, also, that acceptability. Quite often, I hear stories about women veterans with the veteran plates, and people will approach them and ask, “Oh, did your husband serve? Did your dad serve?” This is then compounded by the experience of military sexual trauma, where there is institutional betrayal. There is that difficulty for women to identify with the institution that has betrayed them, whether it be military sexual trauma or any other type of injury or illness that they may have acquired over the course of their career.