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  • Staff Sgt. Ashlee Griffin: Progress not Perfection

    “When I was about 15, I had one of the darkest points of my life. I was almost 200 pounds and I started to get bullied. We moved to Germany and I realized I wasn’t happy with myself, so my step-dad asked me to go to the gym with him.”Staff Sgt. Ashlee Griffin, 39th Operational Medical Readiness

  • Be your best self: Airman fortifies resilience in the face adversity

    When it comes to personal stories of resiliency, Staff Sgt. Kristen Domke, 39th Security Forces Squadron Turkish Pass and ID American liaison, said her whole life is a resiliency story.“Everything I’ve gone through has made me a stronger person and has helped me be the best me I can be.”

  • “Check on us… we’re not ok!”

    An Airman posted this message on social media; a cry for help amidst a period of racial violence and social turmoil in America. U.S. troops stationed overseas could only watch as their nation reeled under one of the most divisive chapters in its history.

  • Airman desires to help others after recovery from alcoholism

    Two years ago, Senior Airman Matthew Fouard, an air traffic controller assigned to the 39th Operations Support Squadron Radar Approach Control (RAPCON), checked himself into Cannon Air Force Base’s Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention and Treatment program (ADAPT). The program focuses on promoting

  • "Why"

    Perhaps the most perplexing enigma about the question “why” is this: while it is one of the most asked questions, it is also very often not answered. This is the somber concept Master Sgt. Teve Molioo, along with his former unit, wrestled with one fateful morning.

  • A chance at a brighter future

    “You’re here with me because nobody else wants you,” Master Sgt. Debbie Jackson recalled one of her relatives saying. “That line stuck with me for a very long time.”