Counselling for Veterans and Military Members

You gave everything to the mission. But nobody taught you what to do when the mission is over.

You Don't Need Anyone to Tell You Something Is Off

You already know. You’ve known for a while.

Maybe it’s the way your eyes sweep every room before you sit down. Exits first, then faces, then hands. You pick the chair with your back to the wall, and your partner doesn’t ask why anymore. Maybe it’s the way your heart rate climbs when you drive past a certain stretch of road, or how a car backfiring sends your body somewhere your mind left years ago. You’re not in theatre. You know that. But your nervous system hasn’t got the memo.

Maybe it’s the 0300 wake-ups. Sheets soaked, heart hammering, the dream still clinging to you like smoke. Your partner rolls over and asks if you’re okay. “Yeah. Fine.” You say it so often the word has lost all meaning. Some nights you don’t even try to sleep. You sit in the dark, TV on low, scanning nothing. It’s easier than lying there waiting for whatever comes next.

Or maybe it’s the anger. It shows up fast, out of nowhere, way out of proportion. Someone cuts you off in traffic and you’re white-knuckling the steering wheel, jaw clenched, blood pounding. Your kids have learned to read the signs. Your partner walks on eggshells. You can feel your family pulling away, and the worst part is you don’t blame them.

“You went from leading troops in the field to snapping at a twelve-year-old over a messy room, and you can’t explain the distance between who you were and who you’ve become.”

The transition is its own kind of wound. One day you had a mission, a unit, a rank, a reason to get up at 0500. The next, you’re sitting at a kitchen table filling out a civilian resume that asks you to describe your “relevant experience” in bullet points. How do you translate what you did into something a hiring manager understands?

You’ve been told to talk to someone. Maybe you’ve even thought about it. But then the old voice kicks in: suck it up. Other people had it worse. You’re not broken. You don’t need help. That voice kept you alive once. It kept you focused when focus was the difference between coming home and not coming home. But here, in this life, it’s the thing standing between you and something better.

It Doesn't Stay Like This

Nothing about where you are right now is permanent. That’s not a slogan; it’s what happens when you start working through what you’re carrying instead of packing it tighter.

Picture sleeping through the night more often than not. Not every night; that’s not how it works. But enough that you start to feel like a person again in the morning instead of a ghost running on coffee and discipline. Picture sitting at the dinner table and actually hearing what your kids are telling you, instead of nodding while your mind replays something from a decade ago.

Picture understanding why the anger comes on so fast, and having something in your kit besides white-knuckling it until the moment passes. Picture finding a new sense of purpose; not as big as the one you had in uniform, maybe, but real. Something that gets you out of bed because you want to.

This isn’t about erasing what happened. It isn’t about “getting over it.” It’s about learning to carry it differently so it stops running your life from the background.

A Counsellor Who Knows the Culture From the Inside

My name is Sean Lewis, and I served in the Canadian Armed Forces infantry.

I won’t pretend my service looked like yours. I was never in a combat zone. But I wore the uniform. I lived the culture. I know the hierarchy, the dark humour, the camaraderie that nothing in civilian life quite replicates, and the silence around struggle that gets drilled in long before anyone hands you a rifle. I know what “good to go” sounds like when it means the opposite.

When you walk into my office, or log into a virtual session, you won’t have to spend the first three appointments explaining what the chain of command does to how you think, or why you can’t just “turn it off.” I’m not learning about military life from a textbook.

Credentials & Experience

  • Canadian Certified Counsellor (CCC #11252849)
  • Master of Divinity
  • MA in Counselling Psychology
  • 10+ years in pastoral ministry & crisis work

Practical, Structured, and Built Around What You Need

Session Details

In-Person

132-328 Wale Rd, Colwood, BC Close to CFB Esquimalt & Westshore

Virtual

132-Available throughout British Columbia Secure, private video platform

Rate & Coverage

$150 per session Covered by many extended benefits. VAC assistance available.

There’s no couch. There’s no clipboard. And I’m not going to sit across from you nodding and asking “how does that make you feel?” for an hour. This is grounded, practical work. You set the pace.

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

Helps you stop fighting the thoughts and feelings that keep showing up, and start building a life around what genuinely matters to you.

Narrative Therapy

Gives you a way to make sense of your story without being defined by its worst chapters.

Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT)

Keeps us focused on where you want to go, not just where you’ve been.

Mindfulness (Situational Awareness)

Not chanting; it’s improving your situational awareness internally so you can respond instead of reacting.

Common Challenges I Help With

Every veteran’s experience is different, but these are challenges that come up often. If you recognise yourself here, you’re not alone.

Transition & Identity Loss

You spent years defined by your service. When that’s gone, the question ‘who am I now?’ can feel paralysing.

Hypervigilance & Sleep

Scanning rooms, startling at sounds, lying awake. Your nervous system is still operating like you’re in theatre.

Relationship Strain

The people closest to you feel the distance. You want to be present, but something keeps pulling you behind a wall.

Moral Injury

Things you saw, did, or failed to prevent that conflict with your values. A deep wound about right and wrong.

Substance Use

A few drinks to quiet the noise became a few more. It’s the most reliable solution you’ve found so far.

Disproportionate Anger

Small triggers, big reactions. You don’t understand why a traffic jam sends you through the roof.

Finding Purpose

Civilian jobs feel meaningless compared to before. Nothing carries the same weight or sense of mission.

Avoidance

You’ve restructured your life around avoiding crowds or triggers, and the world keeps getting smaller.

Straight Answers

Will you actually understand military culture?
I served in the CAF infantry. I didn’t deploy to a combat zone, so I won’t pretend my experience mirrors yours if you did. But I know the culture from the inside; the language, the dark humour, the hierarchy. You won’t need to spend our sessions explaining what military life does to a person.
No. This is private practice, completely separate from the military, the government, and any employer. I don’t share records with anyone. What you say in session stays in session. There is no reporting chain.
It can. VAC’s Mental Health Benefits programme provides immediate coverage for anxiety, depression, and trauma-related conditions. CCC-designated counsellors are recognised providers. I can help you understand your options.
Yes. Most veterans I work with don’t come in with a diagnosis. They come in because something isn’t right—sleep, relationships, anger. You don’t need a label to deserve support.
Then we don’t. Therapy isn’t an interrogation. We start wherever you are. Some people need to build trust before they go to the heavy stuff. That’s not avoidance; it’s smart.

Both. Whether you’re still in uniform, in the process of releasing, or years into civilian life, the door is open. I also work with reservists and military family members.

You've Already Proven You Can Do Hard Things

Asking for help isn’t weakness. It’s a tactical decision. You’re identifying a problem and taking action to solve it. You don’t have to be in crisis. You just have to be willing to take the next step.

“You don’t have to explain the culture. I already know it.”

Learn about Sean’s background in military service, trades, ministry, and journey to becoming a therapist.