THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Pursuing Education After the Military

Pursuing Education After the Military

By Shandiin Ramsey

Author: Bodine, James/Wednesday, April 19, 2017/Categories: Home, Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

Non-traditional students are common in colleges across the United States.  Some of these students have come from the military and are trying to receive their degrees to move on to the next chapter of their lives.

 

Over 1 million veterans are using their Government Issued bill to attend college after their service, but only 15 percent of these veterans are traditionally aged college students between the ages of 18 and 24, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.  

 

Fort Lewis College is home to at least 150 of these non-traditional students working to continue their education, Paul Flores, president of the Veterans Club said.

 

Flores was wounded in combat while deployed to Iraq with the Army, he said.

 

He had anticipated staying in the military and making it a career, but that all changed when he was hit with debris from a grenade, he said.

 

“When I got out, I really had to decide what I wanted to do for myself, because all I really wanted to be was a paratrooper,” he said.  “I expected to live the next 20 years of my life jumping out of a perfectly good airplane. But in a split second, everything can change.”

 

Flores moved back to the Pima reservation where he was from, and he became a council member for his tribe and was in charge of Veterans Affairs, law enforcement, and congressional liaison for two years, he said.

 

After committing to go to Georgetown University to study political science, Flores visited his cousin who attended FLC for spring break, he said.  After seeing the campus, he immediately fell in love and changed his plans.

 

“The serenity, the calmness, the environment and outdoorsiness,” Flores said. “It helped me heal, not just physically but emotionally.  It was a place for me to reflect on where I had been, where I was going and what I wanted to do with the rest of my life.”

 

Andrew Fillmore served in the Marine Corps as an infantryman, while Jake Yost served in the Navy as a hospital corpsman working for the Marine Corps.  

 

Fillmore joined when he was 17, he said.

 

“My dad did 20 years in the Air Force, and I always wanted to be in the military. It was between the Army or the Marine Corps, and I wanted to be the best, so I joined the Marine Corps as infantry,” Fillmore said with a laugh. “I enjoyed the hell out of it.”

 

Yost spent three years between FLC and Metro State before deciding to join, he said.  

 

“I joined because I needed direction and it sounded intriguing when they told me they would pay for my school and send me around the world and I thought ‘all right, cool’,” Yost said.  

 

One of the biggest issues the three have faced in school as a non-traditional students has been how students address them and the questions they ask.

 

“We come with a stigma, and its hard because people think that they’re going to trigger us,” Flores said. “A lot of times it’s not really that. We’re just trying to move on with our lives and open a new chapter.”

 

Yost agreed that other students ask some uncomfortable questions about his military past.

 

“I’ve had one or two people come up and ask ‘Have you ever had to kill somebody?’,” Yost said.  

 

Fillmore added that he had been asked a question like that in his history class.

 

“I was infantry, and I showed them my tattoo,” he said. “‘What do the red dots mean?’ Well, do you really want to know what they mean? Take a guess.”

 

Fillmore misses the community he left in the military and had a hard time transitioning to school where it is less structured and not as close, he said.  

 

“The brotherhood I had in the Marine Corps was like nothing I’ve ever had anywhere else,” Fillmore said.  “It was really hard coming from a group like that then bouncing around trying to figure out what I want to do. I was an infantryman.  I can shoot a rifle pretty good, and I can not get shot pretty good.  There’s not many jobs on the market like that.”  

 

The Veterans Club on campus serves as this brotherhood for the vets at FLC, Flores said.   

 

“The Veterans Club was the group that saved me from being lost,” Fillmore said. “Granted we’re all different branches, but it’s a brotherhood in a way.  We all did the same thing, and we all have the same mindset.”

 

All three found the Veterans Club, and it served as a sanctuary for them, they said.

 

“The branches all intersect,” Flores said. “They may not be the exact same thing, but when the innuendo and the jokes start flying, it gets past none of us. Giving each other a hard time is how we decompress.  In a high stress environment, humor is the best way to get past it and keep going. That’s how we know to get through stressful situations rather than being somber because, no matter what, you still have a job to do, and it isn’t going to stop.”  

 
 
Print

Number of views (5504)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

ASFLC Candidates Q&A: Cody Stroup and Madison Klearman

By: Mandy Lorenson

The Independent sat down with president and vice president candidates for the student body government elections. Polls opened at 8:00 a.m. on Monday and close at 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday.

Editor's note: The following interviews have been edited for clarity. The Independent sat down with president and vice president candidates for the student body government elections. Polls opened at 8:00 a.m. on Monday and close at 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday. Students can vote online for ASFLC elections. Cody Stroup: President Candidate What prior experience do you have that...

Behind the Scenes of a Campus Snow Day

By: Mandy Lorenson

On the days where the Fort Lewis College campus gets hit with snow, the Physical Plant Services Snow Management Team evaluates multiple factors on campus to determine what they need to do to get campus ready for the new day.

On the days where the Fort Lewis College campus gets hit with snow, the Physical Plant Services Snow Management Team evaluates multiple factors on campus to determine what they need to do to get campus ready for the new day. “It start with the Physical Plant Services,” Lauren Savage, FLC media relations coordinator, said. From the time Physical Plant starts to make their way...

ASFLC Elections Committee Updates Election Bylaws

By: Benjamin Mandile

The Associated Students of Fort Lewis College revised their student election bylaws for the 2019 election after an issue during the 2018 election.

The Associated Students of Fort Lewis College revised their student election bylaws for the 2019 election after an issue during the 2018 election. During last year's election a complaint was made against Chance Salway, the current ASFLC president, claiming that he was actively campaigning in the Student Union Building against campaign rules stated on page 5 of the 2018 election...

Multiple Tutoring Options Available to Students on Campus

By: Nate DeCremer

Fort Lewis College offers students several options to get tutoring help in a multitude of different subjects through resources such as the Writing Center, Algebra and Statistics Alcove, and the Math Assistance Center.

Fort Lewis College offers students several options to get tutoring help in a multitude of different subjects through resources such as the Writing Center, Algebra and Statistics Alcove, and the Math Assistance Center. For students looking for help with their writing, or just looking for a second pair of eyes. The Writing Center in Jones 105 is an excellent resource to get student-to-student...

Snow Impact on Spring and Summer Conditions

By: Coya Pair

Durango’s snow pact has been 120 percent of the average this year, Aaron Ball, adventure education operations manager at Fort Lewis College, said.

Durango’s snow pact has been 120 percent of the average this year, Aaron Ball, adventure education operations manager at Fort Lewis College, said. Compared to last year, the amount of snow in the Durango area has been quite surprising. However according to climate change patterns, this unpredictable weather isn’t so unpredictable after all, Heidi Steltzer, biology professor,...

First3031323335373839Last