Improve Health                                     Discover Hope

        Redox Signaling Molecules. Now that’s a trio of words you don’t hear every day! Their harmony is something you don’t want to miss. Simply put, Redox Signaling Molecules (RSM) are native to the human body and detect, repair and replace damaged cells. Age, stress and environmental toxins cause a body’s supply to diminish. Now, please understand, RSM do not “cure” anything, but helps each cell function at its optimal level, as designed. It would be no surprise to us if you’ve also not been introduced to Zeolite. Zeolite is the only micronized and activated zeolite colloidal suspension in the world. The zeolite is like a tiny, negatively-charged cage that pulls in a variety of toxic substances in the body and forces their excretion. This process results in a healthier environment throughout the body, as a cleaner and healthier body fixes itself. All products provided are 100 percent natural and non-toxic – and safe for long-term use. Trooper’s Hope brings this and other technologies, health education, encouragement, empowerment, and group interaction to those who are serving/have served our country in uniform! You are invited to become a member of our Trooper’s Hope Family. Contact us for more information.



                                                            The Trooper’s Hope Team



Helen Jackson

Helen Jackson is a woman with a vision and is dreaming big! For 25 years she worked in the supporting spouse role (Army), relocating to posts both in the US and abroad. As a Navy mom, Texas Guard mother-in-law, and grandmother of Air Force and Navy service men, the Indiana native has witnessed the effects of repeated deployments on younger military families. The dream to make things better for those who serve or have served (using redox technology) led Helen to create Trooper’s Hope, Inc. The Texas resident, author of Army Green, Navy Blue – A Military Wife’s Journal , and long-time volunteer in military chapel women’s ministry, believes it is now her mission to support the military community in a new way.

Meagan Harp

Meagan is talented in many areas. She created the Trooper’s Hope logo, and has been instrumental in the organization and administration needed to get Trooper’s Hope up and running. The Texas native has lived her entire life tied to military service. Both her grandfathers served in Vietnam, and her father rotated in and out of the Middle East as a contractor between Meagan’s 5th and 10th grade school years. She’s experienced the heartbreak of dad leaving, and the uncertainty of when she’d get to see him again.

Michael and Darlene Weiss

Raised in a military family, Darlene Lord thought she knew what to expect from military life…sort of… when Michael Weiss asked her to marry him. The couple exchanged vows at Fort Bragg, North Carolina during the third year of his 30-year military career. Darlene knows all too well the frustration of single parenting; what it means to balance loneliness with making new friends; and longing for family while living adventure. After Michael’s retirement he served as the U.S. Army Chaplain Corps Regiment Honorary Sargent Major. Currently, Michael is a missionary and life coach, and Darlene’s commitment is mediating and conflict resolution coaching. Together, their passion is to equip and empower military families to live a hope-filled life of purpose and peace.

Kristy Adame

Kristy knows military life. As an Army daughter and now, raising her daughter with an Army National Guardsman, Kristy understands having to make friends quickly and blooming where she was planted. She has learned to hold down the fort during multiple deployments, juggle military and civilian commitments, and maintain long distance relationships. Despite inevitable absences during holidays, birthdays, and dance recitals, it is relationships with others (especially family), she says, that keeps one sane.

Leisa Kosanke

January 2009, life changed dramatically for Leisa and her family. An auto collision left her daughter, a college freshman, with a traumatic brain injury (TBI). Leisa was told many times by medical professionals, the window of recovery to make substantial gains is 18-24 months. The Washington resident left her professional career to assume the role of a care-giver. Three years post injury, her daughter still spent much time in bed. There were gains in the first three years over the course of 300+ medical provider visits. But during that time period, nothing pointed to her daughter having the ability to live on her own. In 2012, Leisa learned about a technology which repairs and replaces damaged cells. Her daughter’s progress has been remarkable. Leisa’s career has now shifted to sharing these molecules with others and speaking about navigating between hope and grief and the many facets of healing from and living with a TBI.

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