Soldier's Life Turning Journey by U.S. Army Sgt. Karen Lawshae
March 5, 2020
For Sgt. James Green, his path to the U.S. Army could be
described as a rocky one.
He was born in San Angelo, Texas as a “military brat,” being the
son of an Air Force tech sergeant. During his formative years his
family bounced around between various places, including several
stateside and overseas locations such as Maryland, Texas,
Washington, Hawaii, and Japan. His family finally settled in El
Paso, Texas following the completion of his father’s term of service
in the U.S. Air Force.

December 30, 2019 - Sgt. James Green, a native of El Paso, Texas, assigned to the 1st Armored Division Mobile Command Post Operational Detachment (1AD MCP-OD) stands outside his work location at Task Force-Southeast Headquarters in Southeastern Afghanistan. Green credits his service in the U.S. Army for helping him change his life around for the better. Green is currently deployed to Afghanistan as a member of the Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion, 1st Armored Division supporting Operation Freedom's Sentinel and Operation Resolute Support. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Karen Lawshae)
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Green describes his early life as “chaotic, and unstable.” “As
soon as I would make a good friend, I'd have to leave,” he said.
This is an unfortunate fact of life for many military children,
but Green had other issues to deal with as well – the eventual
divorce of his parents and some extremely challenging anger issues.
His mom thought his anger stemmed from the divorce, but Green says
there were other concerns beyond the surface.
“I was angry
and I was diagnosed with ADHD [Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder]. I had a ton of energy and nowhere to put it,” he said. “I
was a very destructive child; I was hard to deal with as a child.”
Green went through years of medication and therapy for his ADHD
and anger issues, none of which seemed to help. One day he decided
to stop taking the medication out of frustration and found other
outlets to deal with his ADHD. Unfortunately, he states he turned to
“illegal” means to deal with his issues.
Juvenile
delinquency followed, with various forays into theft, drugs, and
other illicit behavior. Green got a wake-up call, however, when he
got arrested. The arrest was for a minor offense, but it was enough
to make him want to turn his life around.
He felt military service
would help him find structure in his life, so he enlisted as a
Soldier in the Texas Army National Guard in 2003 as a cable systems
installer-maintainer and deployed to Iraq within a year of his
enlistment.
During Green’s first deployment to Iraq, he
gained additional clarity and focus through dealing with difficult
circumstances. Green’s combat deployment to Iraq was harsh and
violent. He was awarded an Army Commendation Medal with Valor device
for his actions when his guard tower was attacked by a vehicle-borne
improvised explosive device (VBIED) and small arms fire.
In
a different incident, some Iraqi children were killed by a roadside
IED that was intended to target him and his fellow Soldiers. The
attack took place in a location where Green had been interacting
with those same children the day before during a combat patrol, and
the lone surviving child came to the gate of his unit’s outpost
after the tragedy to inform him of what happened.
“It was at
that point that all the anger I had been holding on to, all that
energy was gone. It was a completely reality-shattering moment for
me, and everything changed in my life,” said Green.
Green
has since deployed three more times with the Texas Army National
Guard: two more tours in Iraq, and he is currently deployed to
Afghanistan, where he is an invaluable member of the communications
section during his assignment at Task Force-Southeast, based in
Southeastern Afghanistan. He assists with everything
computer-related and keeps communications running smoothly
throughout the task force as the help desk administrator.
Green is a proud member of the 1st Armored Division’s Mobile Command
Post Operational Detachment, known as the 1AD MCP-OD, a relatively
new Texas Army National Guard unit that is a company-level element
for the 1st Armored Division Headquarters and Headquarters
Battalion, based at Fort Bliss, Texas.
1AD MCP-OD Soldiers
work side-by-side with the division’s active duty Soldiers,
providing essential skillsets needed during major training exercises
and frequent deployments. It is a rare opportunity for a National
Guard Soldier to work so closely intermingled with the active
component.
“I really enjoy a lot of facets of it,” Green
said. “We have a lot more reach and a lot more opportunity to do the
jobs that we originally signed up to do.” Green also enjoys the
MCP-OD’s frequent opportunities for training missions and overseas
deployments.
In addition to his military achievements, Green
has educational goals as well. He currently holds an Associate’s
Degree in Information Systems & Security from Western Technical
Institute, and aspires to earn both a Bachelor’s and a Master’s
Degree in Cyber Security and Information Assurance in the future.
He hopes to re-class his military occupational specialty (MOS) to
35 series, Intelligence, and hopes to get the opportunity to work
within the Department of Defense in the future.
As for his Texas Army National Guard career, Green plans to take
full advantage of the unique opportunities afforded by his unit,
saying “This MCP-OD will keep me until my military retirement.”
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