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Life after the battlefield

  • Monday, May 31, 2010 10:01
    Message # 351887
    Deleted user

    Life after the battlefield

    Q-C veterans tread uneasy road home

    Q-C veterans tread uneasy road home

    buy this photo Q-C veterans include, starting upper left and going clockwise, Kathy Hall, Jacob Trudell, Kyle Healy and Willie Snodgrass. Quad-City Times photos.

    The primary goal of every Johnny (and Jill), since the advent of war, is to come marching home.

    That doesn’t make coming home easy.

    The vast majority of the more than 1.8 million active U.S. troops, National Guard members and Reservists who fought the twin wars on terror come home with their minds, spirits and limbs intact.

    Very few, however, return unchanged and unchallenged, particularly the more than 410,000 members of the Guard and Reserve. Pulled from settled lives into active duty, they never again can be called weekend warriors.

    “I felt like I was always doing something wrong,’’ Kyle Healy, a twice-deployed Reservist and married Davenport father of four said of his first days back home. “Getting out and driving your car and going somewhere, that just felt weird.’’

    Each story is unique.

    Willie Snodgrass, a Clinton, Iowa, man who is retiring after 15 years of active duty in the Iowa and Illinois National Guards, is more concerned about finding work than recovering from injuries suffered in a convoy collision in Afghanistan.

    Kathy Hall, a grandmother of eight who has worked for the Guard at the Davenport Municipal Airport for 28 years, returned home for 10 days to bury her father during an eight-month deployment in Iraq in 2008.

    As an only child, a myriad of follow-up details awaited her on return.

    “I came home on emergency leave, patched it up as best I could and flew back,’’ she said.

    Moline police officer Jacob Trudell is a married Bettendorf father of two whose second stint in Iraq found him providing security at a Baghdad courthouse. He prefers not to talk about his time overseas. But he said his work as an MP prepared him for police work.

    Of the four Q-C warriors, only Healy has some experience with post-traumatic stress disorder.

    “Anxiety issues, things I’d never had before,’’ he said.

    All four say the ability to communicate with loved ones during deployments helped their reintegration at home. And programs like the Iowa National Guard’s Yellow Ribbon Reintegration Program work with warriors and families before, during and after deployments make the transition back as smooth as possible.

    Healy, Snodgrass, Hall and Trudell all are happy to be home, and proud to have served.

DOD Welcome home-small.jpg A welcoming home for our Troops.

Welcoming home our men and women doesn't end after the crowd disperses, it MUST continue on for the life of the Veteran! They've served us, now we will serve them with programs that work so they reintegrate into society.

We are a national public benefit nonprofit organization that educates American Communities about best practices to serve Veterans.  We honor their service by empowering Veterans to apply their training and skills to successfully transition to productive careers and enterprises.

We provide free vocational training 24/7 to all of our members through our website, in addition to local events.  We believe the tenet that American Communities are the ultimate beneficiaries when Veterans claim their benefits and invest in productive endeavors.

The SWVBRC enlists the support of members of local Communities like you to increase Veteran awareness of the value of obtaining a VA card and receiving earned benefits.

Sponsorships, donations, volunteers and support from communities like yours enable us to reach out to Veterans and empower them to transition back into successful, productive enterprises that ultimately benefit all Americans and support future generations.

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