
Conversations A former army psychologist on ketamine therapy, PTSD and her surrogate twins
Nov 27, 2025
Louise O'Sullivan, a former Australian Army psychologist and veteran, explores her journey from military life to motherhood through international surrogacy. She shares her profound battles with PTSD stemming from her deployments, including a traumatic helicopter crash in Afghanistan. Louise highlights her life-changing experiences with ketamine therapy, which she found crucial for her mental health. From caring for her premature twins in Ukraine to redefining her purpose post-military, her story is a compelling blend of resilience, healing, and the quest for normalcy.
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Early Army Psychology Beginnings
- Louise joined the Army Reserves at 17 and trained as a psychologist, expecting clinical work but first did policy roles in Canberra.
- She learned early that being visible and approachable (PT, informal chats) built trust far more than the consulting room.
Tenacity Trumps Fitness In Selection
- Selection for special forces favoured tenacity and self-sacrifice over pure fitness or intelligence.
- Small behaviours like sharing food under stress signalled the character selectors wanted.
Helicopter Crash And Critical Response
- After a helicopter crash in Afghanistan three men died and several were badly wounded, and Louise shifted into critical incident response.
- She advocated letting troops attend funerals and come home rather than keeping them on operations to 'get back on the horse.'
