What We Saw at SENT And Why It Matters | Military Veteran Project

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What We Saw at SENT And Why It Matters

3/10/2026


SENT stands for Strengthening & Equipping Neighborhoods Together, and that’s exactly what they’re doing. Not just running programs but walking alongside people.

This Is What Prevention Really Looks Like. At the Military Veteran Project, we talk a lot about prevention. But the truth is, prevention doesn’t start in a moment of crisis. It starts way before that.

It starts with:

  • Someone having a place to live
  • Someone having access to care
  • Someone feeling connected instead of alone
  • Someone being given a chance to rebuild their life

That’s what SENT is doing every single day. They’re helping people find jobs. They’re creating access to mental health support. They’re restoring neighborhoods. They’re building relationships. And when you step back and look at it…that’s exactly how you prevent suicide.

Why This Hit Home

Because the needs we see in veterans and military families? They’re not isolated. They’re human needs. Purpose. Stability. Connection. Support. And what stood out to me is that SENT isn’t waiting for people to fall through the cracks—they’re showing up before that happens. That matters.

This Is What Community Is Supposed to Look Like

There was no ego in that room. No competition. Just people who genuinely care about making things better. And that’s where real change happens. Not individually Not competition.. Not in separate missions. But together.

Moving Forward

We’re grateful we were in that room. Grateful to learn. Grateful to connect. Because if we’re serious about prevention, about truly saving lives, this is what it takes. Communities showing up for each other. Organizations linking arms. People choosing to care. And we’re proud to be part of that work here in Kansas.

Honoring the fallen. Uniting the living. Inspiring the next generation.

Have you ever walked into a room and just felt restored? I recently had the chance to attend a partner breakfast with SENT here in Topeka… and I left feeling something I don’t take lightly anymore, I felt hope. Not the kind of hope that sounds good on paper. The kind you can actually feel in a room. You could see it in the people. You could hear it in the stories.You could feel it in the way they talk about their community, not as a problem to fix, but as people worth investing in.

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