Fitness helped combat vet, ASU alum readjust to civilian life


Portrait of Rich Mulder.

Rich Mulder, a combat veteran and College of Health Solutions alumni, helps fellow veterans adjust to civilian life through fitness. Mulder is an alumni-sponsored runner this year for the 20th annual Pat’s Run. Courtesy photo

By Aidan Hansen

Army combat veteran and Arizona State University College of Health Solutions alumni Rich Mulder found fitness helped him transition back to civilian life. Now he supports his fellow veterans by offering them the same opportunities.

Mulder is an alumni-sponsored runner this year for the 20th annual Pat’s Run, a 4.2-mile-long fundraising run hosted by the Pat Tillman Foundation. Former ASU football player and combat veteran Pat Tillman's jersey hangs in the gym Mulder owns and operates. Tillman was a role model to him.

“I think what he sacrificed and what his family sacrificed is just so inspirational,” Mulder said.

Pat’s Run: ‘20 Years: One Legacy’

Pat’s Run celebrates second decade in Tempe

Saturday, April 13
Tempe

Like many veterans, Mulder first thought about joining the U.S. Army after 9/11. He was just 13 when it happened. 

“I just remember that day being like, 'Oh, I'm going to join the Army as soon as I'm of age,'” Mulder said.

He attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in military history.

“It was the most incredible place I'd ever been at that point,” Mulder said. “I knew at that point, I was like, I have to go here. I didn't apply to any other service academies, and I just pursued West Point and made it happen.”

After serving in the Army, Mulder found the transition to civilian life difficult, but says fitness was the biggest thing that helped him. Wanting to become a fitness coach led Mulder to pursue a master’s degree in exercise and wellness at ASU's College of Health Solutions. He graduated in 2016.

In 2017, Mulder started his gym, Liberty Performance Training. The gym also hosts a chapter of the organization Merging Vets & Players, which hosts a support group there every Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. The organization brings combat veterans and former professional athletes together and helps with personal development and difficult transitions.

“Our coaches take them through a workout, and then what's really powerful about it is after the workout, they have a huddle,” Mulder said. “At this huddle, it's just pure support.”

During the huddle, members talk to each other about life experiences, personal traumas and difficult life transitions.

“They have support now, and they have these peers around them that are helping them, and they finally feel supported again,” Mulder said.

Mulder is also a part of Quality Resilience Fitness. This organization aims to help combat veterans through fitness by providing a community for veterans and continuing the fight against veteran suicide.

With running a gym and participating in veteran organizations, Mulder says finding the time for everything can be hard, but giving back is the biggest reward.

"I get a lot of personal reward from doing this,” Mulder said. “I won't always be able to do everything, but I just ... try to show myself a little grace and just try to keep going.”

More Health and medicine

 

Three people stand outside next to a large sign that reads "Mayo Clinic Phoenix campus."

ASU, Mayo Clinic forge new health innovation program

Arizona State University is on a mission to drive innovations that will help people lead healthier lives and empower health care professionals to develop novel new health solutions. As part of that…

ASU-Mayo Team watches ASU pitcher in new pitching lab

Innovative, fast-moving ventures emerge from Mayo Clinic and ASU summer residency program

By Georgann YaraIn a batting cage transformed into a custom pitching lab, tricked out with the latest in sports technology, Charles Leddon and his Mayo Clinic research teammates scrutinize the…

A view of a traditional Tsimane home seen from a boat in a river

Is ‘U-shaped happiness’ universal?

A theory that’s been around for more than a decade describes a person’s subjective well-being — or “happiness” — as having a U-shape throughout the course of one’s life. If plotted on a graph, the…