DIGGING A NEW MISSION
Warriors take fighting spirit into civilian life
give you a mission anymore – you have to create it,” he said.
“That can be daunting but it’s also very exciting. You get to take all of the skills and experience that you have and run with it.”
Marlborough said passion projects or interests like startups, sports, home renovations and creative outlets were all “adaptive coping strategies” which can help soldiers transition back into civilian life.
Former commando platoon commander Bram Connolly said he discovered his creative streak after deciding to discharge in 2012. After being asked to help edit a friend’s military book, he became an author himself.
“I was in a cafe in Melbourne editing a chapter of his book and I looked around and thought ‘I could get used to this’,” he said. “This is a different lifestyle from where I was in Afghanistan getting my arse handed to me.”
Connolly, 45, also runs a leadership program for mining service company PYBAR in Orange while running his own pre-military mentoring program WarriorU and a popular motivation podcast.
He said he would like to see more focus on post-traumatic growth, rather than post-traumatic stress, among veterans.
“All of the things that we did in Afghanistan, all the things we did at the battle of Zabat Kalay, seeing vehicles blowing up in front of us, they all added to my personality.
“We all have bad things happen in our life but I don’t think there was one instance in my personal life which would come anywhere near what I experienced with Yankee Platoon. That stuff was defining.”
Victoria Cross recipient Mark Donaldson, who spent 15 years in the military — most of that with the Special Air Service Regiment — said he “dabbled in a variety of roles” after the military before landing with Boeing Defence Australia. The 39-year-old admits that for special forces operators, no career will ever compare to their job in the military. “I still love it today. I’d go and do it right now if I was asked to,” he said.
CALL them vet-preneurs — a new breed of modern Diggers transferring their war skills from the battlefield to boardroom when they decide to finally “leave the green”.
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Jeremy Holder, an army corporal who was awarded a Medal for Gallantry for his actions in Afghanistan while deployed with commandos from the former 4th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment, now runs his own specialist medical equipment business.
“I really just stuck with what I knew, and that was providing pre-hospital care in tactical, austere and complex environments,” Holder said.
Holder, 34, became a paramedic immediately upon leaving the military before starting his company TacMed Australia after noticing a gap in the market for specialist equipment and training for first responders.
“So I started this business in my room between ambulance shifts eight and a half years ago and now it’s my fulltime job with 10 full-time staff and 30 casuals around Australia,” he said.
Police and ambulance services around the country are the biggest clients of the business, based in Coffs Harbour.
Holder said running the business was hard but that his time in the army had taught him to keep the challenges in perspective.
“There are definitely times when you miss being on the tools, but you can’t do it forever so I’m really happy where I am right now.”
Jody Tieche is creating a new life one picture at a time after returning from two tours of Afghanistan with 4 RAR (Cdo).
“When I came back from my second rotation it was hard going back to a sense of normality,” he said.
“To deal with those traumatic incidents I put my energy into photography. I bought a water housing and focused on surf photography. For me that’s an opportunity to just chill out in the surf. You can have all these thoughts in your head but it’s a peaceful environment.”
Tieche, who works as a medic on an oil rig off Brooe, is also completing a Bachor of Paramedicine and opes to join the Queensland mbulance service. Former military psycholist at 2nd Commando egiment Major Clint Marlrough said it was vital for terans to find new purpose their lives after leaving the med services. “What do they want to do xt? Someone’s not going to