U.S. Army

ANDREW THETFORD AND WILLIAM "BILL" THETFORD

ANDREW
SPECIALIST
ARMY – 11B/INFANTRYMAN
YEARS OF SERVICE – 8 YEARS
DEPLOYMENTS – 1 [OIF]
William
COMMAND SERGEANT MAJOR
ARMY – 75TH RANGER/SPECIAL FORCES NCO
YEARS OF SERVICE – 38
DEPLOYMENTS – MULTIPLE
AN EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK

ANDREW:

“I had this romantic notion that everyone should serve. My dad was a great example but watching the old World War II movies really instilled that desire to serve. I was medically separated after eight years as a Specialist with a deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom and a deployment to Kosovo. I had just gotten back from Kosovo. We were doing a jump at Fort Bragg. I landed, felt some pain and tried to walk it off, and ended up with a broken leg in three places. Rehab and therapy just weren’t cutting it. I had wanted to do my twenty and right after that jump I’d been scheduled to go to the Warrior Leadership Course to become an NCO, but it wasn’t to be.

I graduated from Fayetteville State University, and I am currently working for a defense contractor at Fort Bragg. Thankfully, I didn’t really have a problem separating. I feel like TAPS really helped me, and I had a plan. You are who you are today because of what happened yesterday. And I like who I am today. There’s been some tough stuff, I won’t lie, but I have been consistently realizing it does get better. We don’t talk about it enough, but you can have Post Traumatic Growth too, not just the PTSD we always talk about. We’re not all broken. In fact, most of us aren’t.”

AN EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK

WILLIAM:

“I enlisted right after the failed rescue in Iran. I wasn’t ready for college, and it wasn’t ready for me. My grandmother was the matriarch of the family, and she said being a Ranger would make a man out of me. I started in the 2nd Ranger Battalion, went to The Unit at Bragg and eventually became the CSM of JSOC for General Votel and progressed with him until I was his CSM at SOCOM, and then CENTCOM.

I deployed first to Grenada, then with TF Ranger in Somalia. I was part of the PIFWC (Personnel Indicted for War Crimes) mission in the Balkans. I deployed for the first time to Afghanistan in 2002 when Bagram was just a tent city. I was also part of the initial invasion force into Iraq. In the end, I did multiple deployments in support of the Global War on Terror. I enjoyed making Battlefield Circulation trips with General Votel to check on our troops and make sure they had the resources they needed and understood General Votel’s guidance and campaign plan. We’d go and see the guys and check in on them to see how they were, helping to serve them rather than be directly in the fight. I’ve been blessed from the time my grandmother said the Ranger thing. I wouldn’t change anything.”

Photo: © Beau Simmons, 2020

U.S. Army

ANDREW THETFORD AND WILLIAM "BILL" THETFORD

ANDREW
SPECIALIST
ARMY – 11B/INFANTRYMAN
YEARS OF SERVICE – 8 YEARS
DEPLOYMENTS – 1 [OIF]
WILLIAM
COMMAND SERGEANT MAJOR
ARMY – 75TH RANGER/SPECIAL FORCES NCO
YEARS OF SERVICE – 38
DEPLOYMENTS – MULTIPLE
AN EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK

ANDREW:

“I had this romantic notion that everyone should serve. My dad was a great example but watching the old World War II movies really instilled that desire to serve. I was medically separated after eight years as a Specialist with a deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom and a deployment to Kosovo. I had just gotten back from Kosovo. We were doing a jump at Fort Bragg. I landed, felt some pain and tried to walk it off, and ended up with a broken leg in three places. Rehab and therapy just weren’t cutting it. I had wanted to do my twenty and right after that jump I’d been scheduled to go to the Warrior Leadership Course to become an NCO, but it wasn’t to be.

I graduated from Fayetteville State University, and I am currently working for a defense contractor at Fort Bragg. Thankfully, I didn’t really have a problem separating. I feel like TAPS really helped me, and I had a plan. You are who you are today because of what happened yesterday. And I like who I am today. There’s been some tough stuff, I won’t lie, but I have been consistently realizing it does get better. We don’t talk about it enough, but you can have Post Traumatic Growth too, not just the PTSD we always talk about. We’re not all broken. In fact, most of us aren’t.”

AN EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK

WILLIAM:

“I enlisted right after the failed rescue in Iran. I wasn’t ready for college, and it wasn’t ready for me. My grandmother was the matriarch of the family, and she said being a Ranger would make a man out of me. I started in the 2nd Ranger Battalion, went to The Unit at Bragg and eventually became the CSM of JSOC for General Votel and progressed with him until I was his CSM at SOCOM, and then CENTCOM.

I deployed first to Grenada, then with TF Ranger in Somalia. I was part of the PIFWC (Personnel Indicted for War Crimes) mission in the Balkans. I deployed for the first time to Afghanistan in 2002 when Bagram was just a tent city. I was also part of the initial invasion force into Iraq. In the end, I did multiple deployments in support of the Global War on Terror. I enjoyed making Battlefield Circulation trips with General Votel to check on our troops and make sure they had the resources they needed and understood General Votel’s guidance and campaign plan. We’d go and see the guys and check in on them to see how they were, helping to serve them rather than be directly in the fight. I’ve been blessed from the time my grandmother said the Ranger thing. I wouldn’t change anything.”

Photo: © Beau Simmons, 2020

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