shogun... when I got out they had a 10 day course on being a civvie, mandatory for all of us separating... no kidding.. taught us to write resumes... walked us through situations we would encounter on the street and in the workplace and man even that didn't prepare me... it's hard bro... ya you have age on your side as said... just remember a lot of these people don't have an ounce of discipline in them... well not for the team, usually just for themselves and their benefit...
You have skills they can only dream about.. being able to look ahead and foresee multiple conclusions to an action in motion and plan for each if them.... you are a leader... they will resent that fact, especially the ones older than you... oh man the little tiff's I got myself out of...guess the best advice I can give there is maybe wonder out loud "what if we did X" one of the slobs will take it and run with it and call it his own... swallow the pride and just be glad a good job was done, one day you will be their boss trust me ;) ...
It took me abt 5 to 7 yrs to successfully transfer... each day was a little easier tho just so you know... and ya it has been.. "counting on fingers" dang 18 yrs since I served, there are still moments some days where I am dumfounded at the idiots...
For the PTSD we are all in the same boat just on different seats and levels... I have learned a lot here, had a lot of headaches trying to convince myself someone here was right even though I knew they were right in my heart... stick with the doc and the meds... it takes a man to say "hey I need help with this", not the other way around, stuffing it down is part of what got us here...
BTW: Devil Doc, 84 to 94... tours with 22nd MAU And 26th MEU different engagements.. a lotta Marines, medics, Corpsmen etc here... you have us, and all the other people here... there's no boundaries here.. we all live in the same state and city... it's called PTSD