I think I would defer to Doug on that a little bit, as I tend to do in this situation, but I do know that one thing we hear a lot of feedback on in our program—it's the reason the program is structured the way it is—is that very often the experiences that veterans or service members may have had in the military are so profoundly traumatic and so difficult to speak about that they won't talk about them with their family or in front of their family. The term they often use is that they don't want to put it on them.
When we put them in a group of their peers, they can air these things. They can talk about them. They know they're not going to hurt the person in the group across from them because they've had similar experiences. I think there's absolutely a place for veterans to work with their families to heal and to improve the family relationship, but I think there also needs to be a place for the veterans to do their work separately. There are some things they simply won't want to put on their families.