No Way Out

Breaking the Cycle: PTSD, Veterans, and the OODA Loop of Equine Therapy

Feb 10, 2026
Matthew Ryba, a Marine veteran turned PTSD researcher who helped run the Man O’ War Project, discusses an eight-week equine-assisted therapy studied at Columbia. He recounts combat, moral injury, and military coping cultures. Short scenes cover the program’s hands-on exercises, horses mirroring arousal, surprising clinical and fMRI shifts, low dropout, and why veterans connect with this outside-the-clinic approach.
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ANECDOTE

From Recruit To PTSD Researcher

  • Matthew Ryba joined the Marines at 17 and deployed after 9/11, serving in the Philippines, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
  • He described sleeping in a fallen lieutenant's rack in Marja as a defining moment that pushed him toward studying PTSD and psychology.
ANECDOTE

Reenlistment Led Back To Combat

  • Matthew Ryba reenlisted after an outreach letter promising combat-hardened NCOs were needed and later deployed to Marja, Afghanistan.
  • He served as a jump platoon sergeant and escorted dignitaries including journalist Bing West during operations.
INSIGHT

Alcohol's Cultural Role Raises Risk

  • Alcohol is deeply embedded in military culture and often becomes an unhealthy coping mechanism after trauma.
  • Normalized drinking raises risk by lowering inhibition in high-risk people and exacerbating post-service problems.
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