| Veterans
News Flash 
Miss Utah Credits Military Service With
Her Civilian Success
By Jamie Findlater
Special to American Forces Press Service
Utah
Army National Guard Sgt. Jill Stevens,
who is competing in the Miss America pageant
as Miss Utah, plays with children while
serving as a medic in Afghanistan in 2004.
(Photo
courtesy of Sgt. Jill Stevens) |
WASHINGTON, May 5, 2008 – As
the reigning Miss Utah and as a combat medic who
has deployed to Afghanistan with her National Guard
unit, Sgt. Jill Stevens said her experiences as a
soldier have helped her in her civilian life.
In an interview on the “ASY
Live” program
on BlogTalkRadio.com, Stevens said her experience
from November 2003 to April 2005 taking care of
up to 40 patients on any given day at the Bagram
Air Base medical aid station gave her the determination
and adaptability that are paramount to her success
in other aspects of her life.
"Being a solider, you
are really trained to adapt to any situation," she
said, "and
it has really prepared me for civilian life."
Stevens, who serves in the Utah National
Guard’s
1st Battalion, 211th Aviation Regiment, joined
the National Guard in 2001. She said her military
life and her civilian life aren’t as different
as some people might think.
"A lot of people think
these paths are so different and that I live
a dichotomy, but there's a reason I am involved
in both organizations,” she
said. “Both
the military and the Miss America Association promote
education [and] teach you to be a leader, think
on your feet and stay in shape and, above all,
to serve your country," she said.
During her service
in Afghanistan, Stevens said, she developed a
great deal of pride for her country, particularly
for the women who serve in the military. During
her deployment, she competed in the inaugural
marathon race at Bagram and was the first woman
to finish. Stevens now has completed 14
marathons, and she said the one in Afghanistan "was
one of the toughest."
"Here I was a woman, running in a country where women were mistreated, defiled
and oppressed. … I was angered as I was running, but at the same time
proud -- proud to be not only an American woman but an American soldier fighting
for their worth,” she said.
She
said she thought of Afghanistan’s
women every step of the way, and it carried
her to the finish line.
“We are making a difference,” she said. “I know these women
are realizing their worth, and some are taking
a stand to determine their place in the world."
During
her deployment, Stevens said, it was important
to keep morale high for the continued strength
of the force.
"I was there to take
care of the physical injuries,” she said, “but
I also really saw the emotional side. I saw firsthand
that keeping the morale high really helps our soldiers
perform better."
“ASY Live” on
BlogTalkRadio.com is part of the Defense Department’s
America Supports You program, which connects citizens
and companies with servicemembers and their families
serving at home and abroad. Stevens recalled the
touches from home that helped her most during her
deployment.
"Thoughtful gifts meant
a lot to me -- favorite foods or an encouraging
e-mail was great, [because] it meant so much
that they took time to think about me," she
explained. She took the importance of boosting
morale a step further with her own personal cause
to encourage her fellow servicemembers.
"Since we had electricity
over there, I was like, ‘Mom, send me a
bread machine!’ she said. “Whenever
I heard they were having a rough day, I baked
bread for the soldiers … just
to boost their spirits."
Another important memory
of her deployment, Stevens said, was the opportunity
to interact with local children despite the language
barrier.
"You speak different
languages; you’ve grown up in really different
cultures,” she
said. “We would communicate with the kids
by smiling and making funny faces."
Back in the United
States after her deployment, Stevens acknowledged,
she had the wrong idea about pageants before
she got involved in that aspect of her life.
"All I thought these
girls did was just wave their hand and look pretty,
and that was not something I wanted to be associated
with," she
said.
That was before she
learned that pageant titleholders can make a
difference by their ability to serve as spokeswomen
and form organizations. "I love
to serve, I love to give back,” she said. “That's
why I am a soldier and a nurse."
The realization that
a pageant title could help her make a difference,
Stevens said, is when she "learned
how to put on make-up instead of camouflage paint."
Stevens said she was
impressed by the support she received from other
soldiers when she decided to pursue the Miss
America title.
"I have brothers and
sisters around the world that are so supportive,
and I know that whatever it is, they’ve
got your back,” she
said.
During her pageant,
she recalled, 100 soldiers were in the audience,
cheering her on. “I
didn't know half of them,” she said, “but
they came to support another soldier.
This continued support
from her “family” of
servicemembers is now an important part of who
she is and will help keep her focused toward her
next goal, said Stevens, who will hold her Miss
Utah title until July.
"There is so much negative
publicity on the news today, and optimism is
important,” she
said. Looking forward, Stevens said, she will rely
on her military experience and connection to maintain
her optimism and carry her into her next endeavor.
"Wherever you go, if
you wear the uniform or sport the military ID
card, you connect with people immediately," she
said. "I
know that will always be a part of me."
(Jamie Findlater works
in the New Media branch of American Forces Information
Service.)
SOURCE:
U.S.
Department of Defense
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