Lauren
(Holuba) Nelson '04, shown with her husband Tom in February,
was honored for her efforts supporting wives and families
of men who served in Afghanistan and Iraq. (Photo courtesy
Lauren Nelson)
June 11, 2008:
Lauren
(Holuba) Nelson '04: Serving soldiers and their families
Lauren (Holuba) Nelson '04 never imagined that she would become
a military spouse. Although she grew up near West Point, she never had been there
and knew almost nothing about the military. But after marrying West Point graduate
Tom Nelson in July 2005 and saying goodbye to him two weeks later, when he left
for a four-month deployment to Afghanistan, she embraced her new life at Fort
Bragg, N.C. She joined the company's Family Readi-ness Group (FRG), but found
some truth to what she says is the FRG stereotype -- a group of women who sit
around and gossip about wives who are not at the meetings. "I saw that happening," says
Nelson, who decided to step up as leader of the FRG serving her husband's infantry
unit, which is all male.
Since taking over as FRG leader three years ago -- her term ended in April
-- she attracted a steady volunteer base of women and increased the number of
activities organized and the amount of money raised. She restored her FRG to
its purpose of helping soldiers and their families, especially during increasingly
long deployments. For her efforts in reinvigorating the group and for having "contributed
significantly to the promotion of the Infantry and the families of Infantrymen," in
May she was awarded the Shield of Sparta: Heroine of the Infantry, the highest
honor given to a military spouse by the National Infantry Association.
As FRG leader, Nelson's main role was to act as communications liaison between
the Army and the company's families. She disseminated news via e-mail or phone
calls to the next of kin and was the go-to person for family members with concerns
about their soldiers abroad. She came up with ways to keep up soldiers' spirits
during their long deployments by designing T-shirts for them for Veterans Day
and making sure every man in the unit received monthly care packages, be they
home-baked cookies or water balloons and launchers. Nelson also tended to the
wives' morale back home, setting up day care so that mothers could go to social
events and organizing classes on reading an Army payment statement and balancing
a checkbook. Nelson, who at age 26 is an elder among the FRG wives, saw herself
as a "guide" to the young wives, some of whom had not finished high
school and many of whom have children.
By far the hardest part of her job, she says, was supporting the families
of two men who were killed in action during her tenure. When Nelson arrived at
their houses right after the families had been notified, she felt unprepared
to comfort them. "That is a very hard, stressful job," she says. Nelson
kept in touch with the families after the funerals, calling regularly, providing
meals, and helping connect them with resources available to military families.
Under that dark cloud, she says, it was harder to be happy when her husband
came home in February. Having lived through her husband's two long deployments,
Nelson feels entrenched in military life and continues to serve soldiers in the
82nd Airborne Division through a Wounded Warrior Committee she helped found to
comfort and aid men injured in action. Still, she describes the shift from civilian
life, one that included four years at Princeton, as "culture shock."