芭乐视频

A Higher Purpose: Caring For Those Who Serve Our Country

Aryka Lor MA '24, PsyD' 27
Aryka Lor MA '24, PsyD '27, administers a shot during her time as an medical technician in the Hawai'i Air National Guard. As part of the Air Force's Health Professions Scholarship Program, the military is paying for Lor's education in Pacific's graduate psychology program. Submitted photo.

Serving in the military is a lifestyle. It is a passion. It is a higher calling to serve to defend the freedoms that the United States hold so dear.

But the armed forces are also a place where people find themselves and discover their higher purpose and calling. Such was the case for Aryka Lor MA 鈥24, PsyD 鈥27.

When she joined the Hawai驶i Air National Guard out of high school, Lor served as a medical technician, a specialty involving work in emergency rooms and serving on a hazardous response detachment team. While she enjoyed the challenge that a medical specialty offered, Lor found herself attracted less to the treatment of physical ailments and more to a patient鈥檚 mental well-being.

鈥淲hen I was a medic, I would always get comments like, 鈥榊ou released some tension for me.鈥 I just enjoyed being personal and friendly during those first interactions,鈥 Lor said. 鈥淚 felt like it wasn鈥檛 really medicine, and that鈥檚 when I went towards behavioral health and psychology. I feel like that鈥檚 a better fit for my personality.鈥

Discovering her purpose to pursue psychology led her to 芭乐视频, where she is one of several graduate psychology and optometry students enrolled through the military鈥檚 Health Professions Scholarship Program (HPSP). Offered by the , and , the competitive program provides full scholarships for graduate education in several medical fields and provides a monthly stipend for living expenses.

Upon graduation, HPSP participants commit to at least a three-year term of military service. Participants are commissioned as officers, initially as second lieutenants in the Army and Air Force or as ensigns in the Navy while in school. After graduation, participants begin service as captains in the Army and Air Force and lieutenants in the Navy.

For Lor, the program is more than a way to pay for her education. It is an opportunity to better serve servicemembers and families as they navigate their unique challenges.

鈥淚 think I鈥檝e always wanted to support servicemembers and their families because I know the unique structures that they go through,鈥 said Lor, whose father and husband are veterans. 鈥淗earing my husband鈥檚 experiences really motivated me to not only work with soldiers and family members, but also with the higher-ups to show the benefits of taking care of people and their mental health.鈥

That spirit of service also inspires Deontae Massey-Johnson 鈥22, MA 鈥24, PsyD 鈥27, who is also attending Pacific through the Air Force HPSP. He believes that the better he can serve his fellow airmen鈥檚 mental health needs, the stronger the Air Force can be.

鈥淎 lot of things that military personnel are undergoing are monumental things that would make the average person shake,鈥 Massey-Johnson said. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 why I think psychology in the military is important. We want to provide a safe space for soldiers to feel comfortable about expressing things that are hard, that they don鈥檛 feel like they can express on the outside.鈥

Unlike Lor, Massey-Johnson did not have family influences in his decision to join the military. He considered joining the Air Force after high school but instead followed his best friend, Collin Weires 鈥22, to Pacific, where he earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree in psychology.

When he interviewed for admission to Pacific鈥檚 graduate psychology program, he expressed to Associate Professor Tamara Tasker his continued desire to serve. She encouraged Massey-Johnson to apply for HPSP. Since being accepted to the program, he has been able to focus some of his work on topics that prepare him for the unique environment of the military.

鈥淢ost of the faculty that I am involved with at Pacific know that I am in HPSP and support me,鈥 Massey-Johnson said. 鈥淚 have the opportunity to do presentations and assignments on cognitive processing therapy, which is a gold standard in the Air Force around prolonged exposure.鈥

Jordan Cutaia 鈥23, OD 鈥26, who served six years in the Air Force before enrolling in Pacific鈥檚 optometry program, would have remained enlisted if not for the opportunity to take advantage of HPSP to pursue his goal of becoming a commissioned officer. He became familiar with Pacific after meeting students on rotations at the clinic he worked at in Florida.

鈥淭he clinic that I worked at in the Air Force was a site for fourth-year students, so I was already familiar with Pacific and I knew a bunch of students,鈥 Cutaia said. 鈥淪o having those connections and familiarity, as well as being veteran-friendly, helped make the choice.鈥

Cutaia finished his bachelor鈥檚 degree in visual science through his G.I. Bill benefits. He was further helped by Pacific鈥檚 participation in the , which covers tuition expenses for veterans that the G.I. Bill does not cover.

鈥淢y biggest goal was to come out of school debt-free,鈥 Cutaia said. 鈥淚 ended up using two years of my G.I. Bill to finish undergrad, but with the Yellow Ribbon Program, they match whatever the G.I. Bill doesn鈥檛 pay.鈥

While the military service commitment after graduation for Lor, Massey-Johnson and Cutaia is three years, all three are considering the armed services as a long-term career option.

鈥淚鈥檝e already served with the guard for nine years,鈥 Lor said. 鈥淪o I know it鈥檚 something that I am already familiar with. So I know it鈥檚 something that I can do long-term if it continues to fit my needs and my family鈥檚 needs.鈥

鈥淎fter my three-year commitment, I will be halfway to retirement,鈥 Cutaia said. 鈥淚t ultimately depends on my experience, but I would like to make a career out of it if things align properly and the experiences are what I anticipate them to be.鈥

Whether it becomes a long-term career path or not, Massey-Johnson appreciates how HPSP makes his career pathway clear.

鈥淗PSP added the layer of setting in stone my career when I get out of school,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut if I do my contract and I don鈥檛 want to continue, then my resume looks amazing.鈥

Esther Kim OD '26Studying & Serving With Purpose & Excellence

芭乐视频 not only helps students pursue their purpose of service but helps those students achieve excellence in the process. Such is the case for Esther Kim OD '26, an optometry student studying through the Army Health Professions Scholarship Program. In 2025, Kim received the Colonel Bzdula Student of the Year Award from the Association of Armed Forces and Federal Optometric Services, recognizing her as the section's optometric student of the year.

Read About Esther Kim's Journey

Publication Date