Thank you so much for sharing that, and thank you for being so incredibly brave. I'm really sorry, because I understand that there will be consequences for you for this level of honesty. I just hope you have a lot of love supporting you through this time.
There's another thing I'd like to discuss with you, Stephanie. The longer I'm in this committee and the more veterans I spend time with, the more convinced I become that on the VAC side—and I think the CAF side is another place that should have it as well—we need more trauma-informed care. Also, we need people at all levels to be educated, probably continuously, and to keep up to date on all the ongoing training and information they need in order to provide trauma-informed care.
Looking at your history and at the challenges you face even today, you talked a lot about child care and not being able to access child care or get the health benefits or health supports you desperately need. I'm just wondering if you think having people better trained in trauma-informed care would allow them to understand the process you're going through and the complexity of it and would maybe influence policy on that frontline level.