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Vets to Row 3,000 Miles to Redefine Mental Health

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Lorne Fultonberg

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Lorne Fultonberg
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Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

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303 871-2660

91桃色 psychology professor prepares team for a transatlantic journey

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The first question is always: 鈥淲hy?鈥

As in, 鈥淲hy would you ever want to row across the Atlantic Ocean?鈥

The answer, for Alex Evans, belies the 50-foot waves, violent storms and long nights that will push a team of never-before rowers to their limits.

鈥淵ou gotta do something insane in order to get attention anymore, right?鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 just hold a 5K anymore. That鈥檚 boring.鈥

So instead, Evans and a team of three other U.S. military veterans are taking on a 5555K. That鈥檚 3,000 nautical miles 鈥 the distance from Spain鈥檚 Canary Islands to the Caribbean鈥檚 Antigua and Barbuda.

And what makes that worth laboring through? The opportunity to make waves on an issue that for too long has simply treaded water. Evans and his squad want to call attention to and destigmatize the mental health issues that have plagued American veterans 鈥 the same issue the 91桃色鈥檚听Graduate School of Professional Psychology (GSPP) is working to reframe.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a stigma associated with veterans reaching out for mental health care,鈥 says Evans, the skipper. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the appearance of weakness.鈥 In addition to their own personal struggles, most veterans, he explains, know someone who has committed suicide.

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The rowing team is known as听听and its members, with extensive help from the GSPP鈥檚 Jacob Hyde, are training for the race of a lifetime. More than听听from around the world will test the ocean waters in December鈥檚听听known as the premier event in ocean rowing. Evans, a former infantry paratrooper, and his teammates鈥擝eau Maier (who served with Evans as an infantry paratrooper), Bryant Knight (Army Special Forces) and Christopher Kuntz (Army Rangers, Special Forces)鈥攚ill be the first all-American team of veterans to make the voyage in this way.

鈥淚 think our message is just showing people through our example that they're not weak,鈥 Evans says. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important that a group of veterans stand up and bare themselves and tell our stories."

Hyde听is deeply familiar with the stories veterans share. As the director of the GSPP鈥檚听Sturm Specialty in Military Psychology,听he has heard them countless times. And as an Iraq War veteran, he has lived them.

鈥淚 loved the idea,鈥 Hyde says of Fight Oar Die鈥檚 upcoming voyage. He learned about the group through a mutual friend who arranged a meeting between himself and the crew. 鈥淭heir ultimate goal is to raise awareness for military mental health. And once they told me how they were going to do it, I was interested on multiple levels.鈥

A specialist in isolated, confined and extreme environments, Hyde saw a two-tiered opportunity. In the months leading up to the race, he and his graduate students have provided personalized psychological evaluation and preparation. In regular sessions, the 91桃色 team has designed countermeasures to combat the stress and mental grind that comes with an estimated 50 days on the ocean.

These guys are rowing for the awareness that military service members and veterans have all sorts of problems and you can do whatever the hell you want, no matter what problems you may have. Those problems can hold you back, but only for a certain amount of time if you are really determined. If you really want to get through it, you will find a way around it.

Jacob Hyde Faculty director, Sturm Specialty in Military Psychology
Jacob Hyde

Four former service members have a natural advantage in coping, Hyde says, having been in extreme conditions before. But even so and even with extensive fitness training, alternating between two hours of rowing and two hours for chores or sleeping will be grueling.

Hyde plans to check in with the team every few days via satellite phone. He鈥檒l engage them in simple conversations and administer some psychological tests, ensuring each team member is cognitively able to continue the journey.

Once Fight Oar Die completes its mission, Hyde鈥檚 focus will shift to research. He hopes to find ways to create positive outcomes 鈥 not just non-negative outcomes 鈥 for teams facing stressful, confined environments for extended periods.

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鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping that some of this work helps us build our knowledge base for long-term space flights, especially the Mars mission,鈥 Hyde says. 鈥淭he issues we鈥檙e facing on this boat team are very similar. If we can figure that out, we can start to prepare people up front in a different way.鈥

Hyde calculates each crew member will row 1.57 million strokes. If all goes well, he estimates, the trip will take 36.5 days. (听On its website, Fight Oar Die is budgeting 50.)

The race 鈥渋s not going to be pleasant,鈥 Evans admits. 鈥淚鈥檓 going to have some issues some nights when I see a 50-foot wave and freak out. I鈥檓 not a huge fan of sharks. But I really don鈥檛 have any fears. I鈥檓 highly confident this thing is going to succeed and it鈥檚 going to really help people.鈥

The money raised听from Fight Oar Die鈥檚 maiden voyage will largely cover the cost of the 28-foot boat and the trip鈥檚 necessaries. Anything over that, Evans says, will go to support Hyde鈥檚 work at 91桃色.

鈥淗e has a keen interest in helping veterans overcome these issues,鈥 Evans says. 鈥淗e鈥檚 engaged. He really wants to change things. We couldn鈥檛 have found a better partner than him.鈥