Luke feels the pressure of being back home. He wants to be home with wife and daughter who he loves more than life itself, but he feels the pull of the military and what he's always known, his brotherhood.
Luke begins to crack from his issues of PTSD and not knowing how to adjust to his normal back home in the civilian world.
Carolyn urges Luke to please stay home and use the GI Bill and go back to school. His inability to focus, to even fill out a resume, compels him to join the police force against his families wishes.
Luke's PTSD issues are getting stronger and he resists going to the VA to get help. He also needs a job to help support his family badly so he tries to fake a pee test with the help of his best friend Craig.
Luke admits to Carolyn that he failed the drug test because of smoking weed to help deal with his headaches, and he then breaks down and apologizes to his dad for letting his family down.
Luke finally breaks down and goes to the VA and starts to open up with other veterans struggling with PTSD. He learns he is also not alone in the journey and will always be a soldier. He also learns the incredible power of equine therapy and how to heal with horses.
Luke gets an urgent message from his brother in arms and his best friend Craig, they both served together in the Afghanistan war. Is it enough to help him come home?