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    Combat to cowboy boots: Airman uses horses to spread resiliency

    Combat to Cowboy boots

    Photo By Senior Airman Jenna Caldwell | Airman 1st Class Lauren Nolan, 22nd Logistics Readiness Squadron materials management...... read more read more

    WICHITA , KS, UNITED STATES

    12.19.2016

    Story by Airman 1st Class Jenna Caldwell    

    22nd Air Refueling Wing

    MCCONNELL AIR FORCE BASE, Kan. – Running around the woods of North Carolina trying to catch a wild horse was a brave, blonde messy-haired child who everybody thought was crazy. Crazy only because she had fallen in love with a flea bitten, little gray Arabian horse, that almost nobody could manage to catch, except Lauren. She wasn’t yet tall enough to put the halter on, so she would put the rope around the horses neck, hold her and look to her dad for help—until she got older that is.

    For Airman 1st Class Lauren Nolan, 22nd Logistics Readiness Squadron materials management journeyman, this is where her passion for horses began and would continue to be a blessing throughout her Air Force career.

    “She can pick up on a horse’s personality in a second; she has a natural gift with them,” said Teresa Nolan, Lauren’s mother. “Lauren would always get up really early. By the time I woke up, she would already be out in the pasture to see her horse and have her tied up, grooming her by herself.”

    Stationed at McConnell Air Force Base since 2015, Lauren has two horses that occupy her time. Tiz Sunshine, 4 years old, and Shoobie, 6 years old, are both off-the-track thoroughbreds. Lauren has owned Tiz for two and a half years and Shoobie for about a year. She boards them in the local community and spends her off-time taking care of them and training them for barrel racing.

    “When I leave work, if I’m not helping out at the barn, I’m working with them on barrels,” said Lauren. “Shoobie is a diva, and Tiz is a little doll button. If you’re trying to teach Shoobie something and she doesn’t understand, she’ll give you attitude right back. Tiz, will do whatever you tell her; she doesn’t care. She will stand there, look at you and stick her tongue out at you—she is so quirky.”

    Much like a military training instructor develops civilians into Airmen, training horses takes the same time and perseverance, although a milder process. Lauren works with the horses most every day, and has even set individual goals for them. She want them to be really patterned with the barrels and running well by this spring.

    “I have to have a lot of patience,” said Lauren. “You can’t take a 1,200-pound animal and turn it into a superstar overnight. It takes months and months, but it’s very rewarding to take a horse that didn’t really have a chance, work with it and make it into something.”

    Lauren also uses this patience at work. She works in an office ordering aircraft parts for the KC-135 Stratotanker mission. The stress of having the responsibility of ordering millions of dollars worth of equipment and the potential for mistakes can be somewhat daunting. If she has a bad day at work, her outlet for stress is in the dusty barn and muddy pasture.

    “It’s very relaxing to go and just hang out with them and get rid of all the stressors of the day,” said Lauren. “My family is over 1,000 miles away. I can’t see them but once a year, so the horses mean everything to me. Tiz and Shoobie have helped me more than anything else ever could.”

    With the unique challenges military members face, from frequent moves to deployments, everybody needs a way to unwind; spending time with the horses is hers. Realizing how much Tiz and Shoobie help her, she is sharing this experience with others.

    “Every once in a while, I’ll take Airmen out to see them so they can have their little getaway,” said Lauren. “They could come ride them, brush them or just interact with the horses to help them cope with whatever they’re dealing with.”

    Lauren not only brings Airmen out to see the horses, but the Airmen’s families as well. She specifically wants to help first-term Airmen, like herself, who are new to base, as well as children with deployed parents.

    “I take anybody out to see the horses who needs it,” said Lauren. “Being on base and in military life is stressful for a lot of the people. It has impacted and helped everybody I have ever brought out there—you can see it. The kids grin, laugh and giggle the whole time. It’s instant. They get all giddy the moment they see them.”

    Just as she takes pride in her work as an Airman, she has pride in her horses. When she brings other people out to the barn to see Tiz and Shoobie, she wants them to look their best.

    “It’s in her nature, it’s who she is and what she loves,” said Teresa. “Lauren will do whatever she has to do to keep them healthy and well-fed, even it means she’s not going to have something, just to take care of the horses.”

    She gets off work and switches from combat boots to cowboy boots. When she gets to the barn and heads to the pasture to round up the horses, she stops in her tracks. She’s got fellow Airmen coming to the barn to see the horses and Shoobie looks like a walking mud puddle from rolling on the ground after a night of Kansas rain. With a sigh, a few words mumbled under her breath and a hint of smile, she gets the watering hose and brush. Here they go again.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 12.19.2016
    Date Posted: 12.19.2016 20:19
    Story ID: 218186
    Location: WICHITA , KS, US

    Web Views: 209
    Downloads: 2

    PUBLIC DOMAIN