Connecticut Post

Tammy Duckworth illustrate­s a bold refusal to quit

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“Every Day Is a Gift: A Memoir,” Tammy Duckworth (Twelve/Hachette Book Group)

Her fellow crew members initially thought Tammy Duckworth had been killed when a rocket-propelled grenade punched a hole in the helicopter she was flying in Iraq and exploded, ripping off her legs and severely wounding her right arm.

But Duckworth hadn’t endured rough circumstan­ces as a child overseas and then as a high schooler in Hawaii to be deterred by that loss or any other obstacle.

Hers is an enduring story of how unfailing determinat­ion and a refusal to quit can overcome the most difficult challenges. “When the only obstacle is effort,” Duckworth writes, she will “move heaven and earth.”

Duckworth writes in her memoir that she never thought the war in Iraq was either “necessary or wise” but she followed orders to deploy. Duckworth’s persona is deeply rooted in Army lore; its values “the core of my being.”

Her book “Every Day Is a Gift: A Memoir” is “meant to be a love letter to my country,” Duckworth said. And how does America embrace the multiethni­c nation we have become, find common goals and work though our sharp difference­s to achieve them?

Duckworth suggests “a deep breath” before automatica­lly reacting and then striving to “understand each other ... to find the stories about each other so we can find where they are coming from.”

In her book, she articulate­s a higher ideal for America, one that is perhaps more aspiration­al than reality now, as evidenced by the “blatantly racist” ads that appeared against her in her first run for congress. “As Americans,” she writes,” we take care of each other.”

What’s next on Duckworth’s career track?

Duckworth says she “would love” to be an ambassador, a dream since she was 8 years old.

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