Resource Hub
Everything changes in transition. This hub helps you stay grounded, supported, and clear—across every part of your life.

Financial Wellbeing
Budgeting, Planning + Stability

Career Wellbeing
Employment, Education + Entrepreneurship

Physical Wellbeing
Healthcare, Energy, Tricare + the VA

Social Wellbeing
Friends, Family + Relationships

Community Wellbeing
Home, belonging + Support
Featured downloads
Strengths: "Natural patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving that come most easily to you and can make the difference between good and great."
Your Strengths
Discover purpose, reclaim identity, and build from what’s already strong.
Strengths are the starting point.
Before the job hunt, before the paperwork, before the big decisions—comes the question: Who am I now?
Here, we focus on the things you do well naturally—your patterns of thinking, feeling, and doing that can help you navigate change with more confidence and clarity.
These resources will help you explore your top talents, reconnect with what makes you uniquely you, and use that insight to shape the next chapter. Knowing what you bring to the table is where real momentum starts.

Financial Wellbeing: Managing your money well to reduce stress and increase security.
Financial Wellbeing
Building stability through budgeting, planning, and a foundation you can trust.
Money can be one of the hardest parts of transition—and one of the most empowering.
Financial wellbeing is about effectively managing your economic life.
It isn’t just numbers—it’s peace of mind, freedom of choice, and the ability to create stability during seasons of change. When you have financial wellbeing, you feel ready to make decisions that serve your future.
It’s not about being perfect with finances—it’s about feeling steady, informed, and equipped for whatever comes next.

Career Wellbeing: Liking what you do each day and being motivated to achieve your goals.
Career Wellbeing
Time spent with intention—whether through employment, education, or entrepreneurship.
In transition, the career wellbeing question is: What do I want to do now—and how do I get there?
Career wellbeing is about liking what you do every day.
When you have a sense of purpose in your work—whether that’s a paid job, a personal project, or a new path—you feel more confident, energized, and motivated to keep moving forward.
Career wellbeing isn’t just about having a title or a paycheck. It’s about feeling that what you’re doing matters, that your talents are being used, and that your work fits into the life you’re building after military transition.

Transition is not something that can be done without a lot of learning. There are so many really BIG decisions to make.
Amy Shick
Physical Wellbeing: Having good health and enough energy to get things done daily.
Physical Wellbeing
Health, energy, and understanding your care through Tricare, VA, and civilian systems.
On the basic level, you need enough energy and health to meet the demands of everyday life.
During transition, that energy can take a serious hit. You’re carrying stress, uncertainty, and probably everyone else’s schedule, too.
Thriving physically means feeling strong enough to handle what’s in front of you—and giving yourself permission to make space for rest, recovery, and resilience along the way.
When you invest in your physical wellbeing, you’re not just surviving change—you’re building the strength to stay present for yourself and the people who matter most.

Social Wellbeing: Having supportive relationships and love in your life.
Social Wellbeing
Family, friends, and relationships who steady you, lift you up, and remind you that you matter.
Transition can shake relationships to their core.
Social wellbeing is about having strong relationships in your life.
The people around you—friends, family, mentors—are some of your greatest sources of strength. When you have healthy, meaningful relationships, you’re more likely to stay resilient through hard seasons and celebrate fully in good ones.
From marriage and family to friendships and mentors, you deserve support systems that hold you up, not wear you down. Because connection isn’t optional—it’s essential.

Community Wellbeing: Liking where you live, feeling safe, and having pride in your community.
Community Wellbeing
Home, belonging, and support—rebuilding roots in a space where you feel safe, valued, and connected.
In transition, we’re often the outsider starting over.
Community wellbeing is about the sense of engagement you have with the area where you live.
Thriving in your community means feeling connected, valued, and involved—not just passing through.
It’s about finding ways to plug in, give back, and build a sense of belonging wherever you land next.
Community wellbeing reminds you that even as places and roles change, you still have a place where you matter.
