Sunday, July 10, 2011

What are the odds?

This is actually the first article I wrote, before I found out about Davin and Dan being there. This was also intended to be published as a Newspaper article

     It is approximately 6500 miles as the crow flies from Homer to Bagram, Afghanistan. That distance was bridged in an incredible way this spring. Sometime in Mid-April of this year, a chance conversation at the local CarQuest between Mariah Thomas-Wolfe and R.J. Austin led to the discovery that both of them had sons deployed to Bagram with the 455 EMDOS, serving in the same unit.
    Mariah’s son, Senior Airmen Zach Schindler is a 2004 graduate of Homer High and works in the Contingency Aeromedical Staging Facility or CASF as a medical technician. R.J.’s son, Captain Robert Austin, graduated Homer High in 1994 and is a Nurse Anesthetist working in the Operating Room inside the hospital. The two met a about two weeks after their parent’s encounter, during a IDF or Indirect Fire attack, when the CASF was evacuated into the hospital.
    “It is incredible. No matter how far away we get, I always run into somebody from home. My last deployment (To Balad, Iraq in 2005-2006) I worked with a guy from Kenai. There are a couple of docs here from Alaska as well. I am impressed with how well represented Alaska is in the Armed Forces.” says Captain Austin.
    Coincidentally, only a couple of nights before Austin and Schindler met, Capt. Austin snapped a picture. He explains, “People back home make and send blankets and pillows for the wounded troops to use on their flight out to Germany. The litters that the patients travel on are lined up in the hall a few hours before the flight. That night, I happened to notice the embroidery on the blanket said “Homer, Alaska.” I don’t know who sent that blanket, but I hope they read this article and know that it did indeed keep a wounded service member warm on a long flight, and that it cheered up another service member, seeing that reminder of home. Whoever you are, thank you.”

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