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“Work To Do”—AW2 Annual Training Wraps Up

By COL Greg Gadson, AW2 Director

AW2 Advocates show team spirit at the 2011 AW2 Annual Training Conference.

We’ve had a great week here at AW2 Annual Training. We’ve worked hard this week to learn about additional resources and benefits available to AW2 Soldiers, Veterans, and Families. And taking this time was important—it’s an opportunity to enhance the services we provide to the AW2 population.

And we’ve still got work to do. Now, it’s time for us to all go home and get down to business and continue serving. The Advocates are leaving Texas with renewed energy and a renewed sense of pride in their work. And a renewed dedication to making a difference in the lives of AW2 Soldiers, Veterans, and Families.

Like the Advocates, I’m returning to the office with a renewed focus.  They’ve given me a lot of feedback and suggestions to improve the program. I’m going to take some time and review a lot of their ideas and then actively look into ways to support them in their jobs, as they support wounded warriors.

This was the first time I met a lot of the Advocates. I’ve met many of them in my first few months as AW2 Director, but having them here together was incredible. I was really inspired by so many of their personal stories and their dedication to serving wounded warriors.  They remind me a lot of my troops in combat—they’re committed to the mission, whatever the cost. And here, at AW2, it’s a duty of compassion.

As an AW2 Soldier who serves all AW2 Soldiers, I am grateful for the Advocates and the service they provide every single day. And I’m grateful that they’ll continue to provide quality, personalized support to AW2 Soldiers, Veterans, and Families.

AW2 Advocates—Determined, Energized, and Passionate

By Alan Morales, WTC Stratcom

AW2 Advocates are charged with the mission to provide individualized support for AW2 Soldiers, Veterans, and their Families.

It’s only been six months since I first started working with AW2. During that time, I’ve had phone calls, e-mail exchanges, and even text message conversations with dozens of individuals who AW2 Soldiers, Veterans, and Families interact with everyday—Advocates.

In that time, it’s been easy to note the determination of this team. However, this week, my perspective reached a new level of understanding. Interacting with AW2 Advocates has demonstrated to me more than just their determination.  It has helped me understand their pure energy and passion.

Just a few hours ago, I sat at lunch with several AW2 Advocates.  Over the course of the hour, I later found out I had interacted with these individuals quite a bit, but never face-to-face. One conversation after another, I sensed the energy in their tone and facial expressions. Whether it was a discussion about day-to-day challenges or ways they overcame those challenges, there was a compassion in their demeanor that was contagious.

One conversation in particular resonated with me.  AW2 Advocate Tim Battle from Walter Reed Army Medical Center shared his experiences in the past three years. Battle started his AW2 career as an Advocate, then as a supervisor, and now—an Advocate once again. The young go-getter in me was confused about his progression. He seemed to be promoted, yet returned to his original position as an Advocate.

Battle quickly sensed the confusion in my face and knew before I even spoke what I was thinking. “It’s about interacting with the Soldiers,” explained Battle. For him, the reason he became an AW2 Advocate was to empower Soldiers. As a former Sergeant Major, Battle was always determined to remain on the ground with Soldiers. He further mentioned, “the desk job in Washington was important and was a chance for me to help groom the new classes of AW2 Advocates. But once that was done, I was ready to head back to what I truly love to do.”

Battle is just one of the 170+ Advocates who this “Washington D.C. brat” (yours truly, if you were confused) has had the pleasure to engage. Advocates are a different caliber of people and based on the Facebook comments I review daily, it seems that several AW2 Soldiers, Veterans, and Families would agree. Today, I thank AW2 Advocates for energizing me and offering me lessons that I am sure to bring back home.

Absolutely!

By Emily Oehler, WTC Stratcom

(left to right) WTC Commander BG Darryl A. Williams talks with COAD Soldier SFC Jonathan Grundy (with his service dog) at the AW2 COAD/COAR Forum.

Over the past several years, I have become a “wounded warrior junkie.”  If I go too long without meeting one or hearing their story, I need a fix.  While many might find this odd—to find enjoyment from listening to stories of Soldier’s worst days and life-altering injuries—I find it humbling and inspiring.

Until I started working with the Army, I, like many Americans, took Soldiers for granted.  Yes, I respected them.  Yes, I recognized their sacrifice.  Yes, I appreciated their willingness to serve.  But no, I didn’t get really get it.  I do now.

In my experience, Soldiers don’t like to talk about themselves—especially those who have been wounded or injured.  To most, it’s just part of their job.  A moment in their career.  Nearly normal.  To me, it’s an honor to listen to how men and women performed their job to the best of their ability, in some cases putting themselves in harm’s way to save others.  To hear how the team came first—before the one.  To listen to the medical miracles that walk amongst us.  To learn about the big goals they set and achieve.  It’s real life history direct from the source.  It’s amazing.

Recently, I was fortunate enough to interview 17 COAD/COAR Soldiers.  Soldiers who continued on active duty/reserve after being found unfit for duty as a result of being combat wounded or injured.  As SFC Jarrett Jongema told me, “We all have a story to tell.”  Here are highlights from a few:

  • “We were the Cavalry for the Cavalry,” explained National Guardsman SGT Tony Wood of his unit in Iraq at Camp Shield.  In 2005 a daisy-chain of improvised explosive devices (IEDs), an explosively formed penetrator (EFP), and two grenades exploding inside his vehicle, wiped out his entire crew and severely injured him (45 days in a coma and 25 surgeries).  “The biggest thing for me is that my team is gone—that still hangs me up.  I promised to bring them home.”  Yet, he continues to serve saying, “It might be corny, but I believe in the Army values.”
  • SSG Jonathan Looney was a senior scout in Iraq when he was injured in Iraq in 2007.  “I was in the back of the convoy this day.  There was no traffic.  That’s never good.  We were by a brick factory and boom.  I felt the impact, but was more worried about my Soldiers and truck.”  The explosion caused his spinal cord injury and traumatic brain injury (TBI).  “My goal was to serve 20 years in active duty, when I was injured I thought it was over.”  But through the Army’s COAD/COAR program, he can fulfill that career goal at the Armor School at Fort Benning.  “I want to be that Soldier that works with others Soldiers and show them that if I can—they can.”
  • “I’m 11 Bravo,” and that’s about all you need to know about SSG John Stevenson.  During his fourth deployment to Iraq he was injured by an EFP including blindness in his right eye, TBI, and the shattering of his right arm.  Regarding his TBI, he explained, “My brain moved 7mm to the right inside my head.” As to why he’s continued to serve when he could have easily medically retired, Stevenson stated, “My goal for doing this is to pay it forward.” Which could also explain why he’s now an 11 Bravo instructor at Army Combat Readiness Center at Fort Rucker, AL. Of wounded warriors, he states, “We have a lot to offer—a lot to give back.”  And to other wounded who are considering staying in the Army, Stevenson offers this advice, “Do not let people tell you what you do not want to hear.  Have a goal and stick to it.  I will retire on my own terms with a college degree, having done it my own way.”
  • SPC Bryan Camacho loves the cohesion and camaraderie of the infantry. “No one comes close anywhere else—we are the best at what we do.  The environment sucks but we manage to have fun and look out for each other.  When one is hurt, we’re all hurt.  We just pick each other up and move forward.”  But Camacho is now adjusting to a new job.  As he explained it, he moved from the front line to a front desk after his legs were paralyzed in 2007 when he was ejected from his Humvee.  But of his job at the Fort Campbell Soldier Family Assistance Center (SFAC), he explained, “I am still helping Soldiers in a leadership position—it’s just in an office and not on the battlefield.”  He plans to stay in and have a full career in the Army.  “I cannot quit, but that’s common among most Soldiers.  We push forward and don’t stop for less than our best.”
  • “Every day the doctor saw me, he said ‘you should be dead,’” SGT Lee Turner shared, then quickly added, “I am just a miracle walking.”  As to what drives him, Turner explained, “I’m alive.  The Army kept me alive.  The Army, as a whole, is the greatest thing in the world.”  As a 13 Bravo, Turner was on foot patrol with an eight-man squad when the Soldier behind him stepped on an IED.  Twenty-nine surgeries later, Turner is back in uniform continuing to serve 13 Bravos as an Advanced Individual Training (AIT) instructor at Fort Sill.  “My motivation is to wake up each day to train 13 Bravos.  That motivates the crap out of me.”

These are just a few of the stories I heard over a two-day period. While you might think their stories are unique, SGT Molly Holub stated, “I don’t see a difference between us and other Soldiers.  We can do as much—and as much good for the Army.”

After listening to each Soldier, I asked them all the same thing in closing, “Knowing what you know, knowing what you’ve been through, would you do it all again?”  And while all their previous answers were personal and diverse, this question yielded the same response, a passionate, “Absolutely!”

You can listen to more of these Soldiers, as well as remarks from wounded retired GEN Frederick Franks, Jr., firsthand in a new video on the WTC website.

Finally, to those who shared their stories—thank you.  And, to those who want to—just let me know when and where!

AW2 Veteran Kortney Clemons Inspires Advocates

By Sarah Greer, WTC Stratcom

National Paralympic champion and AW2 Veteran Kortney Clemons motivates AW2 Advocates at the 2011 AW2 Advocate Annual Training.

This morning, AW2 Veteran Kortney Clemons inspired the AW2 Advocates and staff at Annual Training. His warm, up-beat style and incredible story of resilience captured our attention and brought the crowd to its feet.

Kortney Clemons lost his right leg above the knee after an improvised explosion device (IED) explosion in Iraq in 2005. Since then, he’s gone on to become a Paralympic-level athlete and the national Paralympic champion in the 100 and 200 meters. He also does the long jump, and earlier this year, he set a U.S. record in the 200 meters at the Paralympic World Championships in Christchurch, New Zealand. He’s focused on the 2012 Paralympic Games in London, where he plans to be a medal contender.

When Kortney set the American national record in Christchurch, he didn’t win the race. But he did achieve his personal best–29.2 seconds, beating his previous time by more than a second.

“I’ve learned to stay in my lane,” he told the crowd. “If I do everything I’m supposed to do in my lane, I know I’ll be successful.”

On top of his athletic accomplishments, Kortney is also working on his master’s degree through the AW2 Education Initiative at Kansas University.

Kortney charged all of the Advocates to develop a plan to succeed with each individual Soldier on their caseload, much like he’s following a plan to prepare for the 2012 Paralympic Games and to complete his degree.

“I came up with a plan. I believed in my plan. I stuck to my plan. And now I’m executing my plan,” he said. “And I have to trust that it will work.”

Kortney also emphasized the importance of visualizing yourself succeeding and accomplishing your goals.

“I got to practice my podium walk today,” he grinned. “When I’m training, I visualize myself standing on the podium in London.”

All of us felt lucky and honored to be in the room while Kortney shared his message of preparing for success. And inspired to put it into action. I know I’ll be applying Kortney’s outline to my own life, and I expect many of the Advocates feel the same way.

2011 AW2 Annual Training Starts Strong

By COL Greg Gadson, AW2 Director

AW2 Director COL Greg Gadson gives opening remarks at the 2011 AW2 Advocate Annual Training in Dallas, TX.

Today was the first day of AW2 Annual Training. The AW2 Advocates from around the country and most of the headquarters staff are gathered in Dallas, TX, to spend a week sharpening our skills, expanding our networks, and learning more about resources–all to enhance the services we provide to AW2 Soldiers, Veterans, and Families, and to make sure they continue to build their team spirit and to enhance their collaboration.

This year’s theme is “Path to Independence.” As I explained to the Advocates, “independence” means something different to every single Soldier and Veteran in this program. It’s about getting to a place where you’re living a full life, in spite of your injury, and fully embracing your new normal. And for each of us, it happens slowly, over time–there’s not an “aha” moment or benchmark where you’re suddenly independent. Sure, there are big steps, like learning to walk again on your prosthetics or leaving the hospital or separating from the Army. But there are also small steps, like when a Soldier with a TBI remembers something important that wasn’t written down, or a Veteran calls the VA to make his/her own medical appointment.

This week, I’ll be working with the Advocates to make sure they’re supporting you–the Soldiers and Veterans–in fostering your independence. To help you take ownership of your lives and your futures, and to always know that AW2 is here to support you. We’re just a phone call away.

Check back to the blog throughout the week for more updates about how the Advocates are learning to serve you better.

Write a blog for AW2

AW2 Soldiers, Veterans, and Families can submit a blog for AW2 by emailing WarriorCareCommunications [at] conus.army.mil.