Overloading
Fitz Morty has returned to school after spending two years in the military. He has recently been diagnosed with PTSD, depression, and ADHD. He adopted his dog Sadie in 2017 and got her registered as a certified stress so that he could keep her in the dorms while he finishes out his college degree.

Fitz works as a RA and a desk assistant to make some extra money to pay for school. His desk shift is over at 4 a.m., so to pass the time he studies for a test he has the following morning. He has to be up again at 6 a.m. for drill practice, so tonight is going to be another all-nighter.

Unapologetically blunt, in a floor meeting Fitz calls out a resident of his hall for asking stupid questions.

Fitz slaps some peanut butter on some bread and shoves it into his mouth for a quick dinner before he has to rush off the his floor meeting that starts five minuets.

Fitz has an amazing way of commanding the attention of everyone in the room, he is often the loudest and most comical of the group and is always telling jokes or stories for everyone’s amusement.

Fitz is easily distracted and has been making one of residents Zachary McClain laugh instead of finishing his Residents Assistant test he has to pass to continue being an RA.

Finding a small moment of silence, Fitz sits alone with his ESA in attempts to decompress from his hectic day. Although he claims she needs him for emotional support more than he needs her.

Finding a small moment of silence, Fitz sits alone with his ESA in attempts to decompress from his hectic day. Although he claims she needs him for emotional support more than he needs her.
Overloading himself with multiple jobs, school, and ROTC caused him much more stress than he anticipated, and worsened his mental health problems more than he ever imagined. Unfortunately, Fitz was unable to keep his job as an RA or finish his degree at WKU, he also dropped ROTC and all other dreams of rejoining the military due to the mental scars left from his last deployment that he could not overcome. Still gratified to have served his country even for a brief time, he dorns his Army uniform and battle scars proudly as he moves on from this chapter in his life. This is the reality of survivors of PTSD.
