By Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Joshua W. Brown
26th Marine Expeditionary Unit
MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C., April 24, 2014 – In
fifth grade, Connie Hernandez received an artistic school assignment. Each
student was required to draw their future selves in different milestone stages
of their lives.
Hernandez got to work and knew exactly what she planned to
do. Her drawings included sketches of her completing high school, graduating
college, becoming a Marine, and eventually becoming a doctor and lawyer.
Thirteen years and a few plan adjustments later, Hernandez
is close to reaching her dream. The Los Angeles native is now a field wireman
assigned to the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit here and a corporal in charge of
Marines.
“I always knew I wanted to be in the military since I was a
little girl,” Hernandez said.
She comes from a military background. Her father was a tank
mechanic in the Marine Corps during the 1980s and was stationed here.
Working as a certified nursing assistant at a facility for
Alzheimer’s disease patients, attending community college, and looking to
advance her education, Hernandez decided to enlist in the Marine Corps.
“I saw the Marine stand at a [college] fair on campus,” she
said. “I noticed the professionalism of the Marine at the stand, took a
business card, and that evening decided that this is what I’ve been missing in
my life.”
Hernandez said she was attracted to the Marine Corps’
professionalism, elite training and the opportunity to be a part of the best.
“My mom was worried and upset when I told her,” Hernandez
said. “Eventually she warmed up to it and became supportive as time went on.”
Putting her education on hold and pursuing a different kind
of opportunity, Hernandez enlisted as a field wireman.
“We’re charged with maintaining and managing telephony,”
Hernandez said. “We also work with contractors to determine what communications
carrier to use in our unit.”
Field wiremen do cabling and installation of phone lines
that give Marines a communications edge on and off the battlefield. Her
occupation allows the commander to command and control forces abroad.
“I enjoy it, and I enjoy being a Marine,” Hernandez said.
“It really is different from anything else.”
In her time as a Marine, Hernandez has deployed with the
26th MEU, practiced skills beyond that of her own occupational specialty, and
was promoted to the rank of corporal. The promotion is sought after by many
Marines as it is the first of the Marine Corps’ noncommissioned officer ranks.
“Being an NCO taught me to be strict, have things in order,
to be independently functioning, and to be dependable,” Hernandez said. “I am
more outspoken, and I am more professional.”
She plans to use the professionalism she’s learned and carry
it over into the civilian workforce where she plans to pursue a career as a
registered nurse.
“I love to take care of people,” Hernandez said. “I’d like
to go to southern California, hopefully.”
With family in that area, Hernandez would be close to home
and able to pursue this goal.
Hernandez plans to stay close to her family and friends, but
also to remember and appreciate those Marines who influenced her career and
motivations.
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