Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) has become center stage for mental health. As the tragedies for many veterans continue to play out post-war, the education and research regarding PTSD has recognized the varied events, encounters, experiences and responses in which PTSD can have multiple types of individuals. Especially now, more than ever, the social exposure to the violence, aggression, volatility, oppression, disasters, etc., in our lives leaves us in a vulnerable and chronic state of trauma exposure. Sometimes, recognizing the impacts of such exposure can be hard to identify until it is too late.