Posted: Thursday, November 06, 2025
Author: Brian Gilman, Chief Executive Officer | Col, USMC (Ret)
In America, we’ve created a damaging narrative that combat veterans are victims—broken by their service and in need of being helped, fixed - their military service pathologized. This narrative is both false and destructive. Veterans are not fragile; they are among our nation’s most capable and resilient citizens.
The tragedy is not that military service harms them, but that our system for “transitioning” them to civilian life often fails to provide the pathways to meaning, belonging, and purpose after service. Military life fulfills profound human needs—honor, significance, challenge, meaning, connection, and service to something greater than oneself. Too often, civilian life replaces that with isolation, aimlessness, and pity. It’s no wonder that many veterans begin to question whether their lives still matter.
It is evident that a new approach to veteran well-being is necessary for transitioning service members. Because when veterans question the meaning of their life, it leads our nation to the harsh and devastating reality of these staggering statistics:
At Warriors & Quiet Waters (WQW), a Bozeman-based 501(c)(3) veterans impact organization, we believe the key to enabling thriving veterans and to combatting these statistics is found in nature. We reject the idea of veterans as broken or fragile. We know veterans have the capacity to inspire as exemplars of immense potential, forged by adversity and capable of continued growth. And it all starts on the land and water of Southwest Montana.
WQW’s nature-based programs empower post-9/11 combat veterans and their loved ones to thrive and live purpose-driven lives through peak experiences in nature and evidence-based programs that foster growth, discovery, connection, and community.
For us and our program participants, nature is more than a backdrop for our programs– it is a co-facilitator, without which, the transformative outcomes we see in our cornerstone program, Built for More, would not be possible.
For many veterans, time in nature offers the key to building meaning post-service as it enables them to successfully grapple with the challenges and opportunities they face in returning home. Research increasingly supports what organizations like WQW have long known: time spent in nature has measurable impacts on mental health, emotional regulation, and resilience.
Spending time in nature has been shown to have a range of positive physiological benefits:
This is why recreation at WQW is never “just fishing” or “just hunting.” It’s recreation with purpose. A deliberate blend of challenge, reflection, and connection designed to foster post-traumatic growth and rediscovery of meaning beyond military service.
WQW’s Built for More program is a nine-month journey that challenges Warrior participants to push beyond perceived limits and discover meaning, resilience, and direction—not despite combat adversity, but because of it. The journey is bookended by peak experiences in nature – engaging in the skills of fly fishing, archery hunting, or photography. These immersive moments evoke awe and wonder and set the stage for deep personal growth.
We firmly believe that time spent embracing challenges in wild places is essential to receiving the most life-changing impact from our programming. Introducing the restorative power of time in nature and the concept of Recreation for a Purpose is how we begin every Built for More experience. It is at the heart of what we do.
“Recreation for a purpose” means the outdoors becomes a co-facilitator of transformation. Whether casting a line on a quiet stream or waiting in the pre-dawn stillness of a Montana ridge, participants reconnect to the natural rhythms of challenge and peace that awaken resilience.
Since the inception of WQW, generous landowners across Montana have opened their gates and given Warriors access to their land and the waterways found there to support WQW’s programming. These places are more than just beautiful landscapes—they are sanctuaries where Warriors find space to breathe, reflect, and heal.
Whether it’s a quiet stretch of river, a spring-fed pond or lake, or a small creek, every invitation to fish a landowner’s private land creates the necessary conditions for post-9/11 combat veterans to rediscover purpose, rebuild community, and reclaim their sense of mission after service.
We approach every property we are invited to use by a Landowner Partner with deep respect, following Leave No Trace principles and striving to leave these places better than we found them.
For landowners, partnering with WQW is a meaningful way to give back—a gift of access that can be every bit as powerful as a financial contribution.
As WQW’s programs have grown, so too has the need for places to fish, hike, take photographs, and hunt. Cohort sizes are getting bigger as we pursue our goal to serve twice as many Warriors each year by 2030. Today, cohorts of seven or eight Warriors with their professional guides require space to spread out without putting too much pressure on any one fishery. Protecting the health of Montana’s waters is important to us, which is why we aim to distribute use across many properties, preventing overfishing and too much fishing pressure, while also ensuring sustainability.
For the veterans and their loved ones who participate in our programs, the impact of a day spent on the water cannot be overstated. These moments create the conditions necessary for lasting change and transformational growth. None of it would be possible without the generosity of strategic partners like Fay Ranches, who support our work and help spread our message, and the landowners who believe in our mission and support our in-person programming.
Become an integral part of a Warrior’s journey to discovering a renewed sense of purpose. Learn more about partnering with WQW as a landowner today! Click here to get started.
Thank you for considering this unique and impactful way to support our nation’s veterans.