Navy Veteran’s Story Inspires Returning Warriors by U.S. Navy Cmdr. Kris Hooper
August 22, 2021
In 2004, retired Senior Chief Hospital
Corpsman Byron Rowe was mobilized in support of Operation Iraqi
Freedom where he served initially with the Iraqi Intervention Forces
participating in the Battle of Fallujah.
While assigned to
the headquarters element of an advisory support team (AST), he was
responsible for leading teams of Navy corpsmen with Marines assigned
to coalition battalions fighting in some of the most intense urban
warfare since World War II.
 July 24, 2021 - Retired Senior Chief Hospital Corpsman and keynote speaker Byron Rowe holds the audience spellbound as he recalls events from his mobilization to Iraq in 2004 where he witnessed first-hand the results of intense combat operations during the Battle of Fallujah. Rowe spoke with service members and guests during the Returning Warrior Workshop (RWW) in Austin, TX. Returning Warrior Workshops are a component of the Yellow Ribbon Reintegration Program designed to honor service members and their families while helping the transition of Active and Reserve Component Sailors returning from deployments and individual augments. (U.S. Navy photo by Cmdr. Kris Hooper)
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His corpsmen provided medical support in
the field, sometimes under fire, while teaching Iraqi forces combat
medicine practices and techniques. They also coordinated follow-up
medical care for serious casualties and the return of the remains of
coalition soldiers killed in combat.
The group’s day-to-day
task of identifying deceased soldiers and processing their remains
was particularly difficult and emotionally draining, resulting in
combat stress each sailor had to cope with while performing their
duties.
Once their tours were over, de-mobilized active duty
Sailors returned to their regular commands and Reserve Sailors to
their civilian lives. Some had physical injuries, but even more
faced psychological challenges from their experiences that could go
unnoticed initially by even close family members and friends, and
untreated for years.
Many, including Rowe, faced suppressed
emotions and haunting memories in a completely different environment
where they didn’t have the common bond of experience shared with
fellow service members who could relate.
“We fix the obvious
injuries our Sailors and Marines have that we can see on the
outside, but often don’t fix the things we can’t see, painful things
they may be going through on the inside,” he related.
“I had
trouble transitioning back at work and re-connecting with my family,
the people I loved most in the world,” said Rowe. He described how
he couldn’t even focus on the simplest tasks at work and became
reclusive, eventually turning to alcohol as a coping mechanism.
Rowe, a 26-year veteran, served as the keynote speaker and guest
singer for the national anthem during the Returning Warrior Workshop
(RWW) hosted by Navy Region Southeast Reserve Component Command Fort
Worth (RCC Fort Worth) July 23-25, 2021 at the Renaissance Austin
Hotel in Austin, Texas.
His presentation, while humorous at
times, exhibited a vulnerability and honesty encouraging Sailors and
their family members to open up and get the help they need.
Rowe
currently serves as a Veterans Outreach program specialist with the
Vet Center, a readjustment counseling organization in the Department
of Veterans Affairs’ Veterans Health Administration, and has always
believed in the importance of giving back.
He is grateful to
participate in the RWW program because it was directly responsible
for putting him on the path to recovery.
“I believe I owe my
sobriety, the survival of my marriage, my career, my happiness and
wholeness to this program,” said Rowe. “If I can help some other
returning service member or their family in even the smallest way,
I’m happy to do it.”
Returning Warrior Workshops are a
component of the Yellow Ribbon Reintegration Program (YRRP) designed
to help ease the transition of Active and Reserve Component Sailors
returning from deployments and individual augments.
 July 24, 2021 – Facilitators and attendees share their stories during a tabletop exercise at the Returning Warrior Workshop (RWW) in Austin, TX, July 23-25. (U.S. Navy photo by Cmdr. Kris Hooper)
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They
provide returning Sailors with the opportunity to reconnect with
their loved ones, share their experience with others who also
returned from mobilization, and learn about many valuable resources
available to assist them with reintegration.
Commander, Navy
Region Southeast Reserve Component Command Capt. Mark Hofmann
thanked attendees for their service during his welcome presentation
and encouraged them to seek assistance if needed. “I hope you leave
this RWW feeling appreciated and with contact information for
service providers available to support you, having learned a little
bit more about yourself in the process,” said Hofmann.
Personnel Specialist First Class Natashia Handley of RCC Fort Worth
attended the RWW to help with any travel, pay, or administrative
issues the returning warriors have experienced and to honor them for
their service.
Handley expressed the sentiments of other
staff members by saying, “It’s really gratifying to see the
returning warriors get a chance to relax and tell their story,
knowing there are people here who care about them, support them and
are happy to give them the recognition they deserve.”
The RWW
in Austin was the first conducted in-person by RCC Fort Worth since
the COVID-19 pandemic gripped the country and began shutting
gatherings in March of 2020.
The support staff was grateful
for the return to face-to-face workshops. “The pandemic further
isolated our returning Sailors which is exactly what we worry about
most,” stated table facilitator Kandi Debus from Navy Region
Southeast’s Family Readiness Program.
Several resource
organizations had representatives present to provide referrals
including Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), Employer Support of
the Guard and Reserve (ESGR), Military OneSource, Psychological
Health Outreach Program (PHOP), and Wounded Warriors.
Dallas
Hale, an Air Force veteran and PHOP clinical counselor stated, “Once
a client comes to us or is referred to us, our job is to determine
what types of resources we can put them in touch with to best serve
their needs, whether it be college or employment assistance,
financial and mental health counseling, or a range of other support
services.”
These services can help reintegrate Sailors from
all walks of life, those with very different backgrounds and
experiences.
Roxanna Carrillo, a Yellow Ribbon Reintegration
Program Specialist for RCC Fort Worth, has been involved with the
program for nine years in multiple regions. Carrillo acknowledged,
“Attendees often arrive unsure of what to expect from the weekend,
and while each gain something different, they all depart with the
common assurance they have a Navy family who cares about them, who
wants them to speak up if they’re struggling, and who will assist
them in seeking the appropriate programs and resources.”
LT
Megan Roberts, one of the RWW attendees, volunteered as a nurse to
serve aboard the Mercy-class hospital ship USS Comfort (T-AH-20)
when it was deployed on short notice to New York City in March 2020
as the pandemic began to spike. She was deeply honored by citizens
lining the piers in New York harbor holding signs to welcome the
ship and the services it would provide in very uncertain times.
Still, Roberts found it emotionally challenging to deal with the
fact her deployment orders had no expiration date so they literally
had no idea how long they would be needed or exactly what they would
be doing. She was able to speak about the stress these unknown
factors created and to process the experience with others in Austin.
Senior Chief Hospital Corpsman, Dawn Scheetz, attended the RWW
in Austin with her husband as the culminating event of her 26 years
of service in the Navy Reserve. She reflected on what it meant by
stating, “The most important thing to me as a chief was to be able
to provide guidance and resources to my Sailors who needed help.
These Returning Warrior Workshops do the same thing. They are
providing me with the resources I need to deal with anger issues
built up over time. This was a really good way to finish my Navy
career.”
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