
Fort Hood hosts Army's fourth Master Resilience Training course
By Sgt. 1st Class Gail Braymen, Division West Public Affairs
Mar 15, 2010 - 5:00:36 PM
Blackanthem Military News
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| Soldiers in a Master Resiliency Training class interact via video teleconference with Soldiers at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia March 12, 2010. The 10-day MRT course, held at First Army Division West headquarters in conjunction with the Philadelphia class, is only the fourth MRT session conducted so far Army-wide. The 61 Soldiers in the Fort Hood class will graduate Wednesday. Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Gail Braymen, Division West Public Affairs |
FORT HOOD, Texas - More than 60 Soldiers will be among the Army's first few hundred master resilience trainers when they graduate Wednesday from a session of the Army's new Master Resilience Training program held here.
The 10-day course, held at First Army Division West headquarters and conducted in conjunction via video teleconference with another class of Soldiers at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, is only the fourth MRT session conducted so far Army-wide. The first course, also using video teleconferencing, was held concurrently at Fort Jackson, S.C., and Philadelphia during November 2009.
"The overall goal (of Master Resilience Training) is to be more resilient, to be able to face an adversity, to go through something and, on the other side of it, come out stronger," said Sgt. 1st Class Charles Barrow.
Barrow, a physical therapist stationed at Fort Jackson, attended the pilot MRT program last August and then became a facilitator, traveling to wherever courses are conducted. As a facilitator he helps Soldiers acquire life skills of self-awareness, self-regulation and optimism that will help them cope with deployments and other personal and professional challenges.
"It's important for me to be part of this because I've seen so many people change," Barrow said. "I heard one Soldier say, ‘I struggled through my first deployment, and I'm about to leave again in two weeks, but I know when I get over there, I'll be able to handle it better, and I'll be able to talk to my Soldiers.'"
Master Resilience Training - developed in collaboration with the University of Pennsylvania - is part of the Army's Comprehensive Soldier Fitness program, which encompasses the five dimensions of strength: physical, emotional, social, family and spiritual. Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey has said the goal is to have one master resilience trainer per battalion by the end of this year.
The 61 new master resilience trainers graduating from the Fort Hood course represent both local units and units from Fort Bliss, Texas; Fort Sill, Okla.; Fort McCoy, Wisc.; Fort Lewis, Wash.; and White Sands Missile Range, N.M. Upon returning to their duty stations, they will lead and train other Soldiers on resiliency issues and teach life skills.
Sgt. 1st Class Reynaldo Contreras of Fort Hood's Battery E, 1st Battalion, 44th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, said he had been apprehensive about attending the course.
"My first initial thoughts were that I was going to be singing ‘Kumbaya' and holding hands and hugging people and, being a combat Soldier, I did not think that was where I needed to be," Contreras said. "My thoughts were I needed to be training my Soldiers and getting ready to go to the battlefield."
But after just a few days of training, Contreras admitted, he was already incorporating new MRT skills into his daily life.
"I've used a couple of techniques at home to see if this is actually the real deal, and, yeah, some it actually worked pretty good," Contreras said. "This is definitely something that works with your mind rather than just physical training or training in general. It works on the mental aspect of a Soldier. When I go back to my unit … I'll tell the Soldiers how I thought it was going to be, and how it actually benefitted me and what I took from it."
Dave Shearon, head of the University of Pennsylvania training team at Fort Hood, said Contreras' eagerness to exercise his new resilience skills is typical.
"We see people kicking the tires," Shearon said. "They're trying (techniques) out. Folks give this a serious effort because they know the purpose is to help Soldiers."
The MRT course incorporates a variety of teaching methods, including lectures, classroom discussion, small group break-outs and role-playing. The break-outs, during which Soldiers actively apply material discussed in the lectures, are most effective at preparing the students to become trainers themselves, said Sgt. 1st Tanisha Medina of the 1-361st Training Support Battalion of Division West's 5th Armored Brigade at Fort Bliss.
"If we can teach it among our peers and learn the material, we'll be able to better teach it to our Soldiers and to other people," Medina said.
Soldiers spend the first several days of the course learning the material; during the remainder of the course, they learn how to teach the material.
"Within the first five days, you get to learn a lot about yourself and how you deal with situations and how you view life," Medina said. "I strongly feel that if you, yourself, can identify problems and handle them more effectively, then you'll be more positive in your life - not only in your work life, but also in your personal life. I'm glad the Army's finally realizing that we do need resilience. Yes, our Soldiers are strong, but we can be stronger mentally, also."
ADDITIONAL PHOTOS:
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| Sgt. 1st Class Chad Cross of the 3-358 Training Support Battalion of First Army Division West's 191st Infantry Brigade at Fort Lewis, Wash., participates in a discussion during Master Resiliency Training March 13, 2010. The 10-day course, held at First Army Division West headquarters and conducted in conjunction via video teleconference with another class of Soldiers at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, is only the fourth MRT session conducted so far Army-wide. The 61 Soldiers in the Fort Hood class will graduate Wednesday. Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Gary Stacy, Division West Public Affairs |
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| Sgt. 1st Class Cedric Shegog, a staff member of the Fort Hood Resiliency Campus, participates in a discussion during Master Resiliency Training March 13, 2010. The 10-day course, held at First Army Division West headquarters and conducted in conjunction via video teleconference with another class of Soldiers at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, is only the fourth MRT session conducted so far Army-wide. The 61 Soldiers in the Fort Hood class will graduate Wednesday. Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Gary Stacy, Division West Public Affairs |
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