A year ago, Shane Ekman was 31 years old and adrift.
Leaving the Marines had been tough. He'd spent four years taking orders, including two tours of Iraq as a machine gunner, then a squad leader. He missed the feeling of purpose and the structure. Worse, he kept hearing about military friends dying by suicide.
"You get out of the Marines, and you're like a lost puppy," Ekman said.
After a stint as a military recruiter, the Lake Elmo native wanted a civilian job — but had no idea what. It was at last year's annual Veterans Career Fair when Ekman connected with AVA, a modular construction company in Albertville with 21 veterans among its 100 employees.
Ekman will be back at this year's Veterans Career Fair, put on by the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development's CareerForce Veterans Employment Services, from 2-6 p.m. Wednesday at the Heritage Center in Brooklyn Center — except this year as a recruiter for AVA.
"My outlook was a little negative a year ago: 'Is there light at the end of the tunnel?'" Ekman said. "Now life is awesome for the first time in a while. Everything's looking great, almost like when I first hit the Marines. Even my parents and family have noticed the change."
The transition from military life to civilian life is littered with challenges — a transition that studies have shown has become increasingly difficult during the post-9/11 era. There are the mental health struggles from high-anxiety deployments, which in the most tragic cases can result in suicide. The veteran suicide rate increased by 36% in the two decades after 9/11.
There are everyday personal challenges as well: re-establishing a family role, and relating to those who don't understand the military experience.