by Tammy Cournoyer
Air Force Personnel Center Warrior and Family Operations Center
JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-RANDOLPH, Texas – An Air Force wounded warrior has a new buddy that is helping him cope with his physical and mental pain, thanks to the Train A Dog – Save A Warrior program.
Air Force Personnel Center Warrior and Family Operations Center
JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-RANDOLPH, Texas – An Air Force wounded warrior has a new buddy that is helping him cope with his physical and mental pain, thanks to the Train A Dog – Save A Warrior program.
Staff Sgt. Andrew Goligowski struggles with post-traumatic stress and the
pain caused by sarcoidosis, a disease with no cure that causes inflammation in
the lymph nodes, organs, joints, and other tissues. For Goligowski, the disease
strikes his joints at times making it painful to even bend his arms, and causes
masses in his lungs making it difficult to breathe.
Goligowski was serving as a military training instructor with the 321st
Training Squadron at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, when his symptoms began.
Once a military working dog handler with four combat deployments under his
belt, Goligowski was not only in pain, but he became withdrawn and depressed,
and needed help.
“I didn’t want to do anything,” said Goligowski. “I was grumpy and moody.
All I could think about was that I was never going to be able to do my job in
the Air Force again; then I’d think about not having a job at all, and having
no health insurance.”
The negative thoughts wouldn’t go away. Then he met Mali, a 3-year-old
Belgian Malinois, through the Train A Dog – Save A Warrior program.
“She’s a reason for me to get out of bed in the morning,” said Goligowski.
“The walls don’t get small when I’m with her. And because she’s a working dog,
there’s a special bond. She’s my battle buddy.”
Goligowski’s improvement has become evident to others as well.
“I had not known Andrew very long before he was teamed up with Mali, but, I
did notice that he was more cheerful and had a more positive outlook on his
current situation,” said Charles O’Connor, Goligowski’s nonmedical care manager
at the Air Force Personnel Center Warrior and Family Operations Center here.
Mali’s life has also been a struggle, as well. After becoming certified as
a service dog, the TADSAW program placed her with a former Air Force working
dog handler who was a Vietnam veteran living in California. Sadly, the veteran
died of a heart attack six months after getting Mali. His family couldn’t keep
Mali so she was returned to the program. She spent the next several months in a
kennel not working.
During that time, the program director, Bart Sherwood, spoke with
Goligowski about helping train the rescue dogs Sherwood fosters on his 80-acre
ranch near San Antonio. That’s where Goligowski met Mali, and their bond was
born.
Although she had already been certified as a service dog based on Americans
with Disabilities Act requirements, Mali needed to be recertified after being
“unemployed” for so long.
Working with Goligowski, Mali passed her recertification with flying
colors.
“There is a rapport between us,” said Goligowski, who has been with Mali
for four months. “We’re a pack, and I’m the pack leader. I just feel better
around her. She lowers my blood pressure, and gets me outside walking.”
There are other members of the pack at home. Married five years, Goligowski
and his wife, Whitney, have a 3-year-old son, Hayden. “My wife is the pack
leader of me,” admits Goligowski.
How does his wife feel about the new female in her husband’s life?
“I noticed his attitude change right away,” said Whitney. “He was like a
kid in a candy store or a kid on Christmas Day. Something had lifted. Mali
knows – she senses – when Andrew’s feeling down and is there to help.”
Mali accompanies Goligowski everywhere, even to work at Lackland where
Goligowski is the charge of quarters for the 321st while he awaits the results
of the Medical Evaluation Board.
He urges other wounded warriors to consider getting a service dog to help
with the tough times. Those who already have a family dog can pursue getting it
certified as a service dog.
“If you already have a pet and it can pass the test, it can be certified as
your battle buddy,” said Goligowski.
When not on the job, Mali enjoys being a family pet, playing with toys and
playing catch.
“I love her,” Whitney added. “She has such a personality.”
“Before being teamed up with Mali, Andrew was not one to venture out into
social events or activities,” said O’Connor. “He explained to me how much of a
difference Mali has made not only in his life, but on his family. He now goes
everywhere and has taken his family on a couple of vacations.”
Goligowski needed help, and Mali needed a job – in the end, they both got
what they needed.
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