Winter 2012, Vol. 20
Transcription
Winter 2012, Vol. 20
YELLOWRIBBON FUND UPDATE WINTER2012 VOLUME20 OntheRoadtoRecovery… A PLACE TO CALL hOME HIS LEFT LEG TO AN IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE DEVICE (IED) IN AFGHANISTAN, HE LEFT THE HOSPITAL. IEDs continued to injure other Marines from his unit, who also arrived at Walter Reed. During their outpatient treatment, if there was no room at Mologne House and no military housing available, they had to live in barracks without their families. An apartment, Glen figured, would give them a place to call home and keep their families together while they continued on the road to recovery. Photo by Kristin Henderson The 39-year-old Marine moved into Mologne House, the hotel that housed outpatients at the old Walter Reed facility. There, entire families lived in a single room. “That will make you crazy,” Glen says. According to Glen, “After an injury your life is anything but normal. Living in an apartment like this, cooking, interacting with neighbors, helps you get back to normal.” As a senior enlisted Marine, Glen’s job was to take care of the Marines he led. So he continued to take care of them while they recovered. Through the grapevine, he heard that the woman to call was the Yellow Ribbon Fund’s Diane Shoemaker. Diane is YRF’s director of Housing & Transportation. In addition to requests for apartments, she’s fielded calls for more than 1,500 free rental cars and nearly 10,000 free hotel nights for visiting family members, sometimes in the middle of the night. RECORD YRF Photo by Kristin Henderson ONLY FOUR MONTHS AFTER STAFF SERGEANT GLEN SILVA LOST n Freerentalcars................1,619 n Freerentalcardays............61,278 n Freetaxicabrides.............. 19,638 n Freehotelnights ..............10,695 n Freenightsin9apartments .......9,476 n Thousandsoffreeticketsforlocalevents n Countlesshoursofmentoringandguidance (continued on page 3) You can donate to the Yellow Ribbon Fund through the Combined Federal Campaign number:46855 UPCOMING EVENTS Dec 7 & 8 – YRF’s annual “Uncle Vito’s Christmas Party” at Fort Belvoir and Walter Reed Dec 11 – 1st Annual YRF No-Limit Texas Hold ‘Em Poker Tournament, Washington, DC w ww.yellowribbonfund.or g The Yellow Ribbon Fund’s Mission: Welcoming Our Injured Service Members Home A NOTE F ROM YOUR C HAIRMAN & E XECUTIVE D IRECTOR BOARD OF DIRECTORS LtCol John Adams, USAFR (Ret.) SFC Jason Burr, USA (Ret.) Corky Crovato ADM Bruce DeMars, USN (Ret.) Louis T. Donatelli John F. Jaeger Annie McChrystal Gen Stan McChrystal, USA (Ret.) Vito Pampalona Edward J. Quinn, Jr. Barbara Z. Sweeney CDR David A. Tarantino, USN William B. Wallace STAFF Mark E. Robbins, CAE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Amanda Basek DIRECTOR OF THE AMBASSADOR PROGRAM Jessica Fasnacht DIRECTOR OF THE FAMILY CAREGIVER PROGRAM Kristin Henderson DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS Mia Itoh ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR Ashley Keene DIRECTOR OF EVENTS & VOLUNTEERS Diane Shoemaker DIRECTOR OF HOUSING & TRANSPORTATION Robert J. Talbot DIRECTOR OF THE MENTORING PROGRAM Jack Tierney ASST. SECRETARY & TREASURER Marie Robey Wood DIRECTOR OF SPECIAL PROJECTS Please submit your comments to Kristin Henderson, Editor, at 240-223-1180 or via email at kristin@yellowribbonfund.org Yellow Ribbon Fund, Inc. 4905 Del Ray Avenue, Suite 500 Bethesda, MD 20814 240-223-1180 www.yellowribbonfund.org 2 Hope Is Overrated Hope. It seems like such a good thing, a warm and fuzzy emotion, comforting and sweet. Expectant parents hope for a healthy baby. Children hope for that next great present. Fans hope their team wins. But hope is overrated. Hope guarantees nothing. When the person you love has been injured in a war zone, you don’t want hope. You want certainty. You want to know for sure they’re going to recover. Yet all you have is hope – and hope can be tough. So at the Yellow Ribbon Fund, we offer something better than hope. We offer a little bit of certainty. No matter how the recovery’s going, family members know they can count on a hotel room from YRF when they come to visit their injured loved one. They know if they need a rental car to get around, YRF will make sure it’s there for them. They can look forward to free tickets to sporting events. They don’t have to wonder where to find a winter coat, a haircut, or a massage to ease their stress. The Yellow Ribbon Fund provides at least that much certainty for hundreds of injured service members and thousands of their family members and friends. The Yellow Ribbon Fund is in an extraordinary position. We see the reasons for despair: The serious injuries and complications that make for an uncertain prognosis. We see the worry in the parent’s eyes, the weight of an unknown future on a young wife’s shoulders. We also see the reasons for hope: The joy and relief of the family whose loved one opens his eyes and knows who they are. A young man with no legs who’s walking again. The soldier with one arm who has now taken up golf. Between the hope and despair – with your support – we provide sure and certain help they can count on. Jim Bugg Chairman Mark E. Robbins, CAE Executive Director Donated Tickets Get Thumbs Up From Injured Service Members Donate your unused tickets for sporting and cultural events and guarantee a mental health break for injured service members and a tax deduction for yourself. So far this year, the injured and their families have enjoyed Nationals, Redskins, and Orioles games, Wolftrap concerts, National Theater’s production of “The Color Purple”, and more... all thanks to the generosity of Yellow Ribbon Fund supporters. Photo by Ashley Keene James S. Bugg, Sr. CHAIRMAN www.yellowribbonfund.org A PLACE TO CALL hOME YRFSupporters (cover story continued) PUT THEIR MONEY WhERE THEIR MOUTh IS Why are these people smiling? The committee behind the 4th Annual Yellow Ribbon Fund Golf Outing at Great Oaks Country Club in Rochester, Mich., is smiling because the charity golf event brought in more than $73,000 for our injured service members and their families. Our thanks go out to (L-R): Elizabeth Chevalier, John Chevalier, Karen Head, Anthony Pampalona, Vito M. Pampalona, Vito A. Pampalona, Stanley McChrystal, Annie McChrystal, Trevor Pampalona, Charles Promesso, Scott Barone, Thomas Saracino and all the golfers and sponsors who made it such a great day! CLUB FUNDRAISERS On a stormy fall night, 200 members and guests of the Chevy Chase Club raised more than $33,000 for the work of the Yellow Ribbon Fund. During an evening emcee’d by Fox News anchor Brit Hume, they got to know the injured Soldiers and Marines who attended, including SSgt Glen Silva and YRF board member General Stanley McChrystal (Ret.), who both addressed the crowd. Interested in hosting a fundraising event at your home or club? Contact YRF Executive Director Mark Robbins: 240-223-1180 or mark@yellowribbonfund.org. w w w . y e l l o w r i b b o n f u n d . o r g Photo by Kristin Henderson Photo by Janet Flores ChARITY SPORTS EVENTS Photo by Kristin Henderson Glen and Diane, seen here at a fundraiser for YRF, worked together to place Sergeant TJ Brooks (right) and his wife in a YRF apartment. Like Glen, TJ stepped on a hidden IED in Afghanistan. One family member who needed a hotel was Glen’s sister. Glen recalls, “It was nice to have her come out. Talking to you on the phone is one thing. But to see you face to face is a whole other ball of wax. Family members need to see you to understand what’s happened, accept it, and move forward.” A free hotel helps make that possible. Diane has also found and furnished nine YRF apartments, which all meet Diane’s requirements: safe, homey, handicapped accessible, and conveniently located close to the new Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md. Glen was working with Diane to get one of his Marines into an apartment when Diane surprised him. “All you ever do is take care of your Marines,” she said. “We’re going to give you an apartment, too.” He didn’t want to take it, but she pointed out, “It’ll be easier on you when your daughter comes to visit.” Nine-year-old Elizabeth divided her time between Glen and his ex-wife in Ohio. Glen knew he still had three more major surgeries ahead, followed by a year of rehab. A barracks or a hotel was no place for a little girl. So he moved into the apartment. Glen plans to stay in the Marine Corps. When he moves on, another injured service member will move in and call this apartment home. Photos by Kristin Henderson Great American Cookies presented a $5,000 check to YRF board chairman Jim Bugg (second from left). All summer long, $2 of every patriotic cookie cake was earmarked for the Yellow Ribbon Fund. The check was presented to Jim by company representatives Bob Cross on the left, vice president of plant operations; and on the right Chris Dull, CEO of GFG Management, and Richard Hay, brand director. Photo courtesy of Great American Cookies FOR ThE INJURED AND ThEIR FAMILIES Glen’s daughter eagerly decorated her own room, exclaiming, “This place is awesome!” In the summer she loves swimming in the apartment complex’s pool. 3 Volunteers&Events YRF VOLUNTEERS IN ACTION For the big WALTER REED MOVE to the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, only four groups were asked to help: Operation Homefront, the USO, and the Red Cross, all large organizations... and the Yellow Ribbon Fund. We’re proud to be in such good company! We may be the smallest, but we’ve proved that we seek out ways to be the solution. Twenty-five YRF volunteers assisted with the move. Others installed more than 350 iPod docking stations that YRF purchased for patient rooms at the new Walter Reed and Fort Belvoir Community Hospital. More than 1,200 volunteers have helped make YRF, small as it is, the premier organization for assisting the injured and their families. “Volunteeringismywayofsayingthankyou.” –YRFvolunteer 4 YRF’s group SPORTING EVENT OUTINGS for injured service members and their families gave one wounded Chicagoan (waving, above left) a taste of home – he and his family got to watch their beloved White Sox play the Orioles from M&T Bank’s luxury suite at Baltimore’s Camden Yards. Other V.I.P. outings brought groups to skyboxes at FedEx Field. Photo by Ashley Keene Top: The day before the move, a team of volunteers installed YRF’s iPod docking stations in patient rooms. Above: On moving day, patients from the old Walter Reed arrived at the new one. Our FIRST EVENT AT FORT BELVOIR! The Walter Reed move scattered patients from Bethesda, Md., to Fort Belvoir, Va. So when the captains from the blockbuster reality TV series “Deadliest Catch” came to town, volunteer Susan Goodell and Volunteers & Events director, Ashley Keene, took them to visit Belvoir first, along with a couple of powerboat racers. Ashley (with the captains and racers, above) even got the powerboat on post... to the amazement of everyone who saw it cruise by on dry land. Photos by Ashley Keene Photo by Ashley Keene Photo by Kristin Henderson Photo courtesy of Ashley Keene Every week our volunteers are organizing social events and outings, and meeting individual needs. A few highlights... Our HALLOWEEN PARTY volunteers set up kids’ trick-or-treating and facepainting, and a pumpkin carving contest. The fierce competition began the week before with delivery of 50 pumpkins to the carvers – make that 51. Soon after the handout, Ashley got a call from an injured service member: “Mine broke! Can you bring me another one?”Ashley had his back. One emergency pumpkin run later, he was back in the fight for gourd gouging glory. www.yellowribbonfund.org CaregiverProgram YRF CARES FOR THE CAREGIVERS Chaz’s arm was saved, along with his sense of humor! During his recovery at Walter Reed, the Allen family has joined our outings and made use of a free YRF rental car and free hotel rooms for visiting family members. Follow Jessica’s blog at http://adventuresofteamallen. blogspot.com or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ GoTeamAllen. The Caregiver Program welcomes back Director Jess Fasnacht from maternity leave, and says THANK YOU to Interim Director Eliza Palmer for her great work! As the wives of injured service members, both Jess and Eliza bring a special understanding to the Yellow Ribbon Fund’s services for caregivers, which include massages, yoga, outings, and activities for the children. I called and spoke with the rear detachment sergeant in charge. He asked me twice if I was sitting down. Finally I told him if he didn’t start talking I was going to come to Fort Campbell immediately. He told me he was so sorry and that he was just going to read the report word for word. ‘On January 22 [today], Staff Sergeant Charles Allen was on a dismounted patrol in the Zhari district in Afghanistan. He stepped on and detonated an IED and has lost both of his legs. One leg is missing above and one is missing below the knee, in addition, his arm was severed.’ I questioned what ‘severed’ meant and the sergeant told me that was all he had at this point. After that I called my best friend Jessica. Months prior to this Jessica had to call me for support because her husband Kyle had been diagnosed with testicular cancer. When she answered the phone, I simply said, “It’s my turn.” She said, “Wait, Chaz is in Afghanistan.” I said,“Yes,” and then proceeded to tell her everything I knew. We decided that it really sucks to be 32 years old and her hubby to be fighting cancer and now mine doesn’t have legs. She and I had a little pity party and then, being my best friend, she said, “You’re ready now.” I said, “I think so.” Photo courtesy of Jessica Allen What’s it like to get the news your loved one is injured? ▲ In Her Own Words Photo courtesy of Eliza Palmer – Jessica Allen en Bradley EDT From: Colle 5:08:05 PM er 10, 2011 Date: Octob ckets ate Night Ti lmer ngs and D To: Eliza Pa ni pe O ge sa : YRF - Mas Subject: Re e that masanything lik never done ve e since I m ha a, iz to ld El ou en d w pp I Hello Jess an You”! Wow, I have had ha at nk so kind th ha e g T er in .. w th u. sa Yo Li best say “Thank s Gwen and that was the a bit I just got to that I have, and not feel sage therapist w x as la no m re d he to An T le f. e. el ab tim ant as is rt w I th po l e al im ris g sage for mys as rp rin su it w le and to my realize that ith my son du I can... my sa made me have been w ry comfortab t? Li ve ha g. lt w fe rin ss I ea ue g. w G ndin I was in. :) to relax. I and understa age or what still for 90 m t a busy mom d t my body im k I could lay rd thing to ge ater and go lay down an worried abou check out... I didn’t thin ha a is it e just that. Trust m k plenty of w xing time. do in la dr re en to relax and to ev IP e n V m e ca som rprised I ck and told g mom got how I was su when I got ba too... knowin n was happy him feel good e . ad es m know my so ili it m k fa ore... I thin ing for our relax some m uch for what you are do so m Thank you , Very grateful ZOO DAYS enable injured families like “Team Allen” (center) to practice normal family activities again. (That’s Eliza and husband Aaron on the left.) w w w . y e l l o w r i b b o n f u n d . o r g Photo by Marie Wood After experiencing a YRF massage, Colleen gave one of our Spa Days a try. Photo by Jess Fasnacht ley Colleen Brad YOGA helps caregivers manage their stress. (That’s Jess on the left.) 5 MentoringProgram AmbassadorProgram YRF’S MENTORING SUPPORT YRF AMBASSADORS REACh OUT Photo courtesy of Catholic University We’re glad to report that many of the injured veterans reached in their hometowns by program director Amanda Basek are doing fine. Some, though, need a helping hand. With new ambassadors stepping up every week, Amanda is connecting our veterans with someone who cares. Number of ambassadors so far: Number of calls made to injured veterans: Number of veterans matched with ambassadors: Photo courtesy of Jim Amos This fall the NCAA encouraged universities and colleges to recognize injured service members during their athletic events. Several from Walter Reed were named honorary captains at four Catholic University home games, thanks to YRF’s Mentoring Program director, Bob Talbot. Honored as heroes by more than a thousand of their peers (above), Army SGT Evan Cole performs the pre-game coin toss with Marine Sgt John Patterson, Army SGT Matt White, and Marine Lance Corporal Matias Ferreira. 44 Ambassador JIM AMOS, a Tennessee businessman, has been working with HEATHER McCLELLAN, the widow of Army Sergeant Justin McClellan, to get her questions answered about the death certificate. Heather’s still having rough days. Justin survived an IED attack in Iraq only to pass away while at Walter Reed. Photo courtesy of Justin Wilson ▲ Army Sergeant ALBERT CASTILLO met with Bob during a recent visit. Back on active duty, he returned to Ft. Bragg, N.C., from Afghanistan in time to witness the birth of his second child. ▲ Army Sergeant BRET NEISEN and his wife BRIDGET have returned to the St. Louis area where Bret is completing his therapy at Fort Leonard Wood. Photo courtesy of Washington Nationals 6 www.yellowribbonfund.org Photo courtesy of Bob Talbot ▲ Photo by Barbara Talbot ▲ Army Sergeant LUIS MORALES and his wife KATHERINE announced the birth of their first child, Sophie. Luis has also been awarded the Silver Star, one of the military’s highest honors. Photo courtesy of Bob Talbot ▲ Photo courtesy of Catholic University Lance Corporal MATIAS FERREIRA is considering a career in media and communications after he’s medically retired from the Marine Corps. Bob arranged for him to meet with local radio and TV sportscaster Johnny Holliday, who will serve as Matias’s mentor when he starts college next year. YRF Alumni Update 265 When ambassador JUSTIN WILSON (center) isn’t on the job for the General Services Administration in Georgia, he’s extending a hand to veterans in North Carolina and Alabama. (Spread the word: Ambassador volunteers needed in those states!) He and Amanda partnered with Operation Second Chance to save one veteran from being evicted. Disabled by muscular dystrophy – but not sidelined – Justin offers a can-do perspective to disabled vets. (continued on page 7) New & Ongoing Mentorships Seaman JUDI BOYCE, an Operation Iraqi Freedom veteran, was recovering from surgery at Walter Reed while moving into an apartment in Silver Spring ... with a little help from YRF volunteer John Scango, who provided the truck and members of Catholic University’s baseball team, who provided the muscle. 48 P R O F I L E MEET Corporal Jonathan & Stephanie Albrecht I Now Jon is carrying shrapnel throughout his body, including his brain. He is living with the invisible wounds of war that so many of today’s service members suffer from: PTSD and traumatic brain injury, or TBI. He suffers from constant headaches, but has insisted on being taken off all pain meds to avoid becoming dependent on the drugs. His arms grow weary when he holds his baby daughter, but still, he can hold her. f there can be such a thing as a typical young military family, Jonathan and Stephanie Albrecht fit the description. They are both 27 and live with their two young children in an apartment in Gaithersburg, Md. Jon’s tumultuous youth included foster care and gang life. As a result, he decided to join the Army for the discipline it offered him. Starting in 2005, he earned his bachelor degree in computer science between serving multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, where his unit faced constant fire and incurred many casualties. Photo courtesy of Jon Albrecht Like other young couples recuperating at Walter Reed, they’re trying to adapt to Jon’s changed physical and mental condition from war injuries. But unlike many of the others, Stephanie and Jon knew from the start what they were getting into as a couple: They met after he was injured, while he was undergoing therapy at a PTSD clinic in Richmond, Va. Jon in Afghanistan. Photo courtesy of Stephanie Albrecht During his second Iraq tour, an IED explosion left him with shrapnel in his arm. After recuperating, he returned to the fight, this time in Afghanistan with the 82nd Airborne. There, another explosion plunged him into a coma for three months. He goes to physical therapy three to four times a week at Walter Reed and enjoys hunting and fishing when he can. The Yellow Ribbon Fund has reached out to Stephanie through the Caregiver Program, offering her free massages, horseback riding, and a spa day at Roxsan Day Spa in Bethesda. The Albrechts are well aware of the high divorce rate among couples such as themselves, many of whom didn’t realize what it would be like to live with lifechanging injuries. Yet Stephanie possesses a deep understanding of what her husband has been through and wants to learn how to help him deal with his new reality. Jon hopes to stay in the military, where he has grown so much. But for now, his job is to continue therapy and get better, and then see what life has in store. Stephanie and Jon with their children, Garrett and Serenity. – Marie Wood Courtney and Vanessa, after he received the Purple Heart. www.yellowribbonfund.org Ambassador ED NOWICKI, who works on security issues, is helping Marine Sergeant COURTNEY RAUCH find a job in law enforcement in Virginia. Courtney and his wife Vanessa lived in a YRF apartment while he recovered from a bomb blast in Afghanistan that cost him his leg. Photo courtesy of John Souza Photo courtesy of Courtney Rauch (continued from page 6) While Army Master Sergeant JOHN SOUZA was recovering from his wartime injuries, he and wife Debbie were able to use a free YRF rental car and actively participated in YRF events. Now in Wisconsin, John is the first YRF alumnus to volunteer as an ambassador. 7 PRSRT STD U.S. Postage PA I D Hagerstown, MD Permit No. 93 Welcoming Our Injured Service Members Home Yellow Ribbon Fund, Inc. 4905 Del Ray Avenue, Suite 500 Bethesda, MD 20814 240-223-1180 Say: “Thank You for Your Sacrifice” With an End-of-Year Gift Want to do more than just say, “Thank you”... but not sure what else to do? The Yellow Ribbon Fund does. Injured service members and their families have told us exactly what they need, and we provide it – practical assistance, offered with dignity. Send your generous contribution today and join us in giving back to America’s proud heroes. During Army First Sergeant Mike Leonard’s year and a half at Walter Reed, he and his wife Cheryl benefited from YRF social events, outings, free car rentals, and travel assistance for their son’s visit. Photo by Charles Lee