
MARSOC
MARSOC
As a Raider, you’ve spent a career operating in complex, high-threat environments where the mission demands. Long training cycles, deployments, and constant readiness leave little room for medical care, documentation, or long-term planning. Our program is for Raiders who want a clear, structured transition plan that accounts for the pace, hazards, and realities of the job.
Let's be honest, when you return from deployment you are either going directly into a new work up or you're going to regiment - you will not be afforded time to plan your transition.
MARSOC-Specific
Operational Hazards
Blast and
overpressure exposure
breaching, indirect fire, rockets, shoulder-fired weapons.
Heavy kit under speed
cervical and lumbar strain from dynamic movement with heavy plates, comms, and team gear.
Close-quarters work
chronic shoulder, elbow, and wrist injuries from CQB, combatives, and dynamic entries.
Unstable terrain and rapid insertion methods
knee degeneration, ankle instability, foot problems.
Airborne and MFF Operations
spinal compression, knee trauma, repetitive-impact injuries.
Partner-force operations and austere environments
inconsistent medical access, improvised care, minimal documentation.
Diving and maritime operations (for select billets)
knee degeneration, ankle instability, foot problems.
The Problem

Chronic
Allostatic Overload
Years of sustained deployment cycles, irregular sleep, and high-consequence decision-making create the physiological load associated with operator syndrome — a combination of sleep disruption, endocrine changes, fatigue, irritability, and cognitive fog.


The Solution
We build a structured plan tailored to the operational and medical realities of a MARSOC career - deployed, at home, or in training.

YOU ONLY TRANSITION ONCE.
Most service members have never purchased a service like this — but they should.
“Most service members don’t realize how much money, time, and opportunity they lose during transition
until it’s already too late. We fix that.”