This article analyzes the multiple and contradictory functions of barracks nostalgia for a veterans organization in the United States, Irreverent Warriors, and for its principal activity, the Silkies Hikes. Silkies Hikes are day-long events across the US in which military veterans, men and women, convene to hike in their underwear to prevent veteran suicide. The Hikes are more than exhibitionistic gatherings of nearly-naked veterans. They are elaborate rituals where veterans expose and deploy their bodies to navigate and survive return from war. Drawing on feminist and queer theoretical insights, I develop a reparative case study of the Hikes to explore three arguments. First, militarized nudity can be more than, and other than, violation. Second, nurturing militarized masculinity might be experienced as necessary for some veterans' post-war adjustment. Third, nostalgic re-enactments are not either/or re-/de-militarizing. Rather, Silkies Hikers are militarized subjects undergoing a de-militarization process which they experience as violent and traumatic so they in turn seek out, even demand, re-militarization, but re-militarization recast as a counter-violent manoeuvre. Consequently, the Silkies Hikes represent a critical opportunity to elaborate theories of militarized masculinity and foreground dilemmas involved in calling on endangered bodies to do the work of de-militarization.