By Claudette Roulo DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, December 9, 2015 — Resiliency has been a central
theme of Marine Corps Sgt. Maj. Bryan B. Battaglia’s time as senior enlisted
advisor to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
As co-champion of DoD’s Total Force Fitness program, which
takes a mind-body-spirit approach to fitness in support of readiness, Battaglia
visited thousands of troops around the world to talk about resiliency’s
importance in their own lives and in the lives of their families.
The program provided a framework for the military services
to build their own resiliency programs, enabling each service to adapt the
concepts to their own unique needs, he said in an interview with DoD News.
He explained that all the services are different in their
own ways, but they're identical in their concept, scope and initiative; they
all have the ability to maintain a resilient service member, family member,
unit and organization. “Readiness has a direct connection into
resiliency," Battaglia said. "If you're not resilient, your readiness
is not going to be as high as it should be, and that affects warfighting and
that affects the ability for our men and women to do the nation's bidding. It's
all connected.”
Battaglia said he knows the program works because it worked
for him.
Changing What it Means to be Fit
“We as a military have changed our culture -- it's still in
progress -- but changed our culture on fitness; meaning [not just] running and
pullups and sit-ups and crunches. While that is fitness, Total Force Fitness is
a much more holistic way of looking at well-being and readiness,” the sergeant
major said.
He said senior leaders being willing to take a public stand,
such as former Sergeant Major of the Army Command Sgt. Maj. Raymond Chandler
III, who has discussed his own struggles with post-traumatic stress following a
rocket explosion in Iraq, “helps younger folks to say 'Hey, if they can do it,
maybe I can do it too.’”
Battaglia acknowledged the lingering stigma out in the
force, "but, boy, have we gotten much better with it,” he said. “That
credit needs to go to folks who are not ashamed and who have the sort of
courage and comfortability to stand in public or stand before subordinates and
say 'I did it.' And that was my small contribution -- that at one time I was
affected and impacted by the stigma of saying, 'You know what? I'm not as fit
as I used to be. I'm not as fit as I think I should be. Let me see someone
about it.’
“As I gave it an honest look, I saw what Total Force Fitness
could do, but it also showed me how unfit I was,” the sergeant major said.
Recognizing When There’s a Problem
In 2005, Battaglia was injured in Iraq and was eventually
diagnosed with post-traumatic stress. But, he said, if it wasn’t for his wife,
he would never have admitted to himself that something wasn’t right.
“It was Lisa who really enlightened the seriousness of how
unfit [I was]. You know, you would have expected that if it wasn’t myself [who
noticed] it would have been my NCO or my boss or somebody who is as close. ...
But they don't sleep in the same bed at night, so spouses ... see things, hear
things and witness things that we sometimes don't see ourselves,” Battaglia
said.
“That was the breaking of the ice. All prior to that, the
post-deployment health assessments all contained various questions -- 'Of
course I'm ok, of course I'm ok. I'm ready to go; I'm ready to go back again.'
That's what we train for, that's the strength that we're expected to have,” he
said.
But, the sergeant major emphasized, recognizing that you
need help and seeking it out when it’s needed is a critical piece of total
fitness.
“We want that to happen, because if it's left untreated,
that's where the liability and vulnerabilities come in, and the risk even
increases,” .he said. “We want to get them whatever help they need to manage
the injury or the illness, thereby returning the mind, body and spirit to an
optimal level of performance.”
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