Veterans Bonded For Life by U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Michael Eaddy
December 29, 2019
Reuniting with a long-lost friend is a good thing, but reuniting
with a brother can save a life.
Veterans of B Company, 2nd
Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne
Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina, reunited with the help of the
Independence Fund in Nashville, Tennessee, September 26-29, in hopes
of maintaining their “brotherly” connections for life support.
“This has been the best experience for me since I got out [the
Army],” said Wesley Rogers, a reunion attendee. “The one thing that
I noticed when I got here is how much better I felt looking in the
faces of all these people, verses when I was at home and I’d let all
these people go by.”
The weekend was organized to reunite the
Soldiers of B Company, 2/504 so they can rebuild lost relationships
and build new ones to maintain the connections needed to keep the
conversations going within the life of a brother who might revert to
the traumatic experiences they all faced while deployed to
Afghanistan in 2005 to 2006.
September 27. 2019 - Veterans of B Company, 2nd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina, receive instruction on proper climbing and zip lining at The Adventure Park during a unit reunion, organized with the help of the Independence Fund, in Nashville, Tennessee. The purpose of the weekend was to reunite the Soldiers of B Company, 2/504, rebuild lost relationships and build new ones in order to establish the relationship veterans need for life support when they need someone to talk too who will understand their language and can relate to the experiences they’ve had while serving in the military. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sergeant Michael Eaddy)
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In June 2005, the company engaged in a major gunfight near the
Pakistan border resulting in one brother killed in action and
multiple others wounded in action.
This was a common theme
throughout their deployment, which had major lifetime psychological
effects on these young men.
“We’re here because we absolutely
need each other. More than each one of you know, I’ve needed this,”
said Col. Brandon Teague, commander of the 3rd Brigade Combat Team,
101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), Fort Campbell, Ky. and former
commander of B Company, 2/504. “We’ve lost some brothers needlessly,
and we can’t have that happen anymore. We are brothers, and we can
talk to one another.”
According to The Independence Fund, a
non-profit agency dedicated to the resiliency of veterans, after
that deployment nearly 10 percent of the brothers from B Company
were lost either in combat, as they continued their military career,
or by suicide.
In a letter to Teague, Lt. Gen. Charles Flynn,
Deputy Chief of Staff G3/5/7 for the U.S. Army said, “Combat has
lasting impacts on all of us as Soldiers and leaders, and in 2005
you fought exactly the way you were trained to fight; with courage
and of pride knowing that you were paratroopers. Together you
endured inevitable hardships that came with that extremely
challenging mission during those difficult years.
“Although
we share these experiences and sacrifices together, everyone
processes them in their own way. Regardless, we’re all Soldiers and
paratroopers for life, and we must continue to stand by and for each
other to ensure no one ever feels alone regardless of what they may
be going through. I encourage you to continue to build and nurture
the relationships and bonds that we formed through these shared
hardships.”
The weekend not only reunited B Company with
their long-lost brothers, but it gave them the opportunity to speak
to a familiar face that’s been through what they’ve been through; a
brother who will understand their language and can relate to the
experiences they’ve had while serving in the military.
“I’m
big on conversation,” said Pablo Casillas, a reunion attendee. “When
there’s no conversation with another person, that’s where the
problems are. When things are said in the open then that’s when I
feel better; we have to look for healthier coping mechanisms instead
of looking for the jar or the drugs. Sometimes it’s just better to
talk.”
The four-day reunion brought B Company together again
after a 15-year hiatus from the everyday jokes, pranks and life with
their Army brothers. This connection could possibly be the only
thing that might save a life.
“We believe there’s magic in
brotherhood,” said Danica Thomas, board member of The Susan M.
Tillis Foundation. “No one knows you like your battle buddy. The
same way you guys had each other’s six in country, keep that going
on U.S. soil. If owing it to yourself isn’t enough, then do it for
those who can’t be with us today.”
Help is available 24 hours
a day seven days a week if you need someone to talk to. Please call
the Suicide Hotline at 1-800-273-8255, the Self-Harm Hotline at
1-800-334-4357 or the Transgender Suicide Hotline at 1-877-565-8860
if you need assistance.
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