Story of an Army Brat
by Jensina Anderson
Well, I barely know where to begin. My father, Master Sergeant Gene Noel Anderson,
enlisted in the US Army in 1973. I wasn't born until 1976. He recently retired in 1997 so
as you can see he was in the Army my entire life. Being an Army brat is the only thing I
know how to be and the only thing that I am really good at.
Some of the other people that have posted stories here have already expressed the
feelings that I am about express as well but, I am glad to know that I am not the only one
who feels this way.
One thing is that I don't have a place to call home. I was born in Ft. Campbell, Kentucky
in 1976. My sister was born two years before me in the same hospital. We transferred to
California when I was 1 year old and stayed there until I was 3. My next younger sister
was then born in California. We moved to Oregon so that while my Dad was gone to
Korea for a year my Mom would have help from his family raising us kids.
When Dad
finally returned we moved to Fort Benning, Georgia. This is where my memories really
begin. My dad became a Drill Instructor and we never saw him for five years while we
lived there. It was really tough. I started school there and attended Dexter Elementary
School until the second grade. Then we moved to Ft. Bragg, North Carolina where I went
to fourth, fifth and sixth grade. I don't want to tell too much or I could write a book. From
there we moved to Schofield Barracks, Hawaii. My dad worked in Schofield but, we
lived on Aliamanu Military Reservation closer to the airport.
Hawaii, I guess, is where I
mostly consider home because I attended Aliamanu Intermediate and Radford High
School (for only three years). This is where I consider I spent the most important years of
my life. Life was very hard but, I wouldn't change it for the world. I then graduated on the
mainland (Oregon) from high school. Then I did what I had dreamed about since I was
five years old. I enlisted in the Navy.
The Navy wasn't my choice until very recently
when I realized that I didn't like the Army because of the things I had gone through with
my dad. I married in 1995 to another Navy member and in December 1996 my military
career stopped short due to a medical condition with my ankle. Now I am a military wife
and in a position that my mother was in for so many years except subtract the kids.
My
dad retired this past May of 1997. His speech was so wonderful for his retirement
ceremony. I just want to share one part. My father was very emotional because military
life was all we had ever known and now it was going to end. It is so very scary to become
a civilian. I have never been a civilian and won't be one for a little while because my
husband is still active duty. It scares me to death. My Mom and Dad and my younger
sisters are scared too.
My Dad said in his speech that when we add up how many years
our family has served on active duty in the Armed Forces that it totals over a century.
Like I said, what is a civilian? It must be such a different way of life. I thank my Dad
everyday now for raising me as a military brat. Of course at the time I didn't like it but,
now that I am a little older and out of the house I realize how many skills and
responsibilities I was taught by being an Army brat. It makes me cry tears of joy now that
I see that I am not alone in the experiences I had growing up as a military brat. Thank you all for sharing your stories. Here is my small contribution.