Monday, July 08, 2013

Face of Defense: Alaska Army National Guardsman on Track to West Point


By Army Sgt. Balinda O'Neal
Alaska National Guard

CAMP DENALI, Alaska, July 8, 2013 – As a high school dropout, Army Spc. David Huff has accomplished more than he ever expected in the past three and a half years.


Click photo for screen-resolution image
Alaska Army National Guard Spc. David Huff, a signal support systems specialist for the 297th Battlefield Surveillance Brigade, runs during a physical training session at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, June 18, 2013. He will enter the U.S. Military Academy Preparatory School as a cadet candidate this month. Alaska National Guard photo by Army Sgt. Edward Eagerton
  

(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.
Upon completing the Alaska Military Youth Academy ChalleNGe Program, enlisting in the Alaska Army National Guard and graduating from the National Guard Patriot Academy, Huff is now bound for the U.S. Military Academy Preparatory School and U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
 
After an altercation led to suspension at the end of his freshman year in high school, Huff was left six credits behind and with a diminishing grade point average.
“I had to make up those credits, and I had an attitude problem,” said Huff, 21, a signal support systems specialist for the 297th Battlefield Surveillance Brigade, Alaska Army National Guard. “So I dropped out of high school and was accepted into the AMYA.”

The AMYA ChalleNGe Program is designed to intervene and reclaim the lives of Alaska’s at-risk youth and produce graduates with the skills to succeed as adults.

“I got angry really easily and let opportunities that I could have had go by the wayside under my own free-will and accord,” Huff said. “I did well at the AMYA but still left there dealing with some issues of immaturity.”

Two months after he talked to a recruiter, Huff enlisted in the Alaska Army National Guard and took advantage of another opportunity by attending the National Guard Patriot Academy.
While lack of funding closed this pilot program in January, the Patriot Academy offered qualified recruits the opportunity to finish high school and earn college credit while giving back to the community.

Two of Huff’s role models, including an instructor at the Patriot Academy, helped him refocus on long-term life objectives, said Army Brig. Gen. Mike Bridges, commander of the Alaska Army National Guard. They guided him toward “being successful and to really go for a diploma and look at other options,” he said.

“One of those other options was the potential to receive a National Guard nomination to West Point from the Alaska Army Guard,” Bridges said.

With no knowledge of West Point, Huff began researching the academy that has become synonymous with educating, training and inspiring many of the Army’s greatest leaders throughout the past 200 years.

“To see the people who have actually gone to West Point and to see the things they have done, [attending] is a goal worth aiming for,” Huff said. “The experience that you get there, the different people that influence you, it’s second to none.”

With thousands of students applying to West Point each year, it is an exceptional honor to be accepted for admission. After being denied admission twice, Huff was finally admitted into the West Point Preparatory School on his third attempt.

“I was taking college English, Trigonometry, and Chemistry, and they saw I was doing well,” Huff said. “I’m extremely grateful they recognized the academic and leadership potential in me because usually when they say ‘no’ the first time, it stays ‘No.’”

With roots in the Alaska Army National Guard, Huff will be able to share what he’s learned here and also expand on that, giving even more to the country with this new venture.

“We will feel bad about losing a great soldier from our ranks who has potential and is doing well, but the Alaska Army National Guard is sharing this young man and his potential with the nation through service,” Bridges said. “He is succeeding in a great way, which makes us very proud of being his host family unit.”

“For me to even have the opportunity to go to the prep school is a blessing in and of itself,” Huff said. “Through all this, I’ve learned that you really can’t go anywhere unless you have a goal in life.”

With a growing list of people Huff attributes to his success, there are two people that stand out -- his father, Darryl Huff, and retired Army Gen. Colin Powell.

“Apart from God, I couldn’t have made it this far without my dad,” Huff said. “It’s amazing what God has done for me, and my dad always knew I could do better and pushed me.”

Huff has nothing but accolades for Powell after reading his book, “My American Journey,” while attending the AMYA. Huff said his guiding principle in life came from the book: “There are no secrets to success. It is the result of preparation, hard work and learning from failure.”

“I changed my mindset and my history of getting in trouble into something positive,” Huff said.

“You get the right mindset, you get hungry, and you go after what you want.”

Huff will be leaving for the West Point Prep School this month.

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