Hello, BG Tom Landwermeyer from Homes For Our Troops here, I'll be by on Tuesday for a Q&A, what questions do you have for me?
RallyPoint is honored to host BG Tom Landwermeyer, former Deputy Commanding General of 2d Infantry Division and current President/CEO of Homes For Our Troops, for a live Q&A on August 8th. BG Landwermeyer began his career as an Armor Second Lieutenant in 1976 upon graduation from West Point, and became an Army Aviator in 1981. He served honorably across the US, Germany, Japan, Bosnia, Iraq and Korea for 33 years while holding key staff positions at US Transportation Command, US Forces Japan, and culminated his career on the Army Staff at the Pentagon. BG Landwermeyer retired from the Army in 2009, and previously served as COO at Armed Services YMCA of the USA.
Today, at Homes For Our Troops, BG Landwermeyer’s team helps build and donate specially adapted custom homes nationwide for severely injured post 9/11 Veterans, to help them rebuild their lives. Post questions below about his leadership, Homes For Our Troops, transition, and leadership.
Thank You.
Indiana - Homes For Our Troops
Indiana
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Thank you for your service to our country and also your service to us who are disabled veterans. Thank you for coming on here to field questions.
My question is concerning the possibility of requesting a home being built. In that I want to be honest about myself.
Before asking my questions, let me give a bit of background about myself. I am a disabled vet and retired from the Army in 2006. Am a triple dipper (Army retirement, Social Security disability, and 100 % from the VA). In November 2004, I was wounded by an IED in Tal Afar, Iraq during the Northern uprising while the second battle of Fallujah was raging. It was a puncturing head wound, have shrapnel in my brain, a prosthetic skull larger than my hand that takes up nearly the left side of my head. Headaches, Severe TBI, and many other maladies persist. Having been wounded twice in thirty days (the first time from a mortar attack in Mosul at FOB Marez-exactly 30 days earlier), PTSD had been present before the big battle that nearly killed me. I have other problems I am not going into for time’s sake and I don’t want to seem like I am trying to build a case for myself.
I have many friends, active duty, veterans, and civilians who keep asking me why I do not request a home to be built by one of many great veteran charities doing the work. They tell me the reason why I should do this is because I deserve this. I always shy them on and here is the reason why (and do not always share this reason with them.) It is not about who deserves it. Yes, I went through a lot of pain and go through a lot of pain on a daily basis. To me, to say I deserve this is almost like saying this is a lottery and I deserved to win it. I always felt this is not what this is for. It is here to meet a need for veterans-mostly those who lost limbs, paralyzed in some way, or wounded in some other way that prevents mobility or in need of special access.
A good friend brought up the fact in the past I have had many dizzy spells and have had (and still do but not as intense) what can best be described as feeling mini explosions in my head. It starts as a rushing sensation that starts in the back of my head moving forward convulsing the membrane of my brain. As it would move down my head it would increase dynamically in speed meeting at my eyes climaxing in an explosion where everything would turn blinding white. Now, it is not so intense now as it used to be the first few years. Because I have shrapnel in my brain I could not get an MRI which prevented us from ever figuring out what the exact cause of this was…the possibility being mini/micro stroke or some sort of seizure. My fear, because the science is new, with age how much of this comes back and what affect does it have?
With this in trying to do as much as I can to recover, have been using education to recover brain functions. Some of my own research for a paper on my condition, I have learned that Traumatic Brain Injury from blast injuries have been found to age brains quicker. This because veterans who have TBI from the war zone had donated their brains for study (which I also plan to do). Besides this, they have also found that there were indicators of early onset of Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s Disease, and other CTE’s.(resources for this at the end of this letter). Putting this all together, I begin to think maybe I should try to get a home built for myself. The reason why is because I would not believe in waiting for whatever malady to hit before putting something in place. Even though I am almost 45, when it comes to the brain, you never know how things can happen or what can affect you (For instance, one night returning home from class, a deer hit my car and even though it did not affect my car that much, and the deer kept on trucking-nearly dropped all classes I was taking because of the affects it had on me and my brain.)
Returning to my point, I still feel selfish thinking I just want a new house and am taking from someone who might need it more than I. Do not want to take from those who need it now. On the other hand…
As of now I inherited from my dad two 1974 single trailers he put together as one place with about two Acres of land.
Your wisdom would be appreciated. Right now I am staying in the Philippines as we take care of the paperwork with my wife who is Filipina in getting her squared away to come to our country as my sponsored relative. This is the reason I am writing this as a posting as opposed to participating actively.
Thank you for your wise advice on this subject matter. Thank you very much for coming to Rally Point and serving us veterans and active duty military.
David Emme
Resources:
Blast causes brain to age:
Hicks, R. R., Fertig, S. J., Desrocher, R. E., Koroshetz, W. J., & Pancrazio, J. J. (2010, May 1). Neurological Effects of Blast Injury. The Journal of Trauma, 68(5), 1257–1263. Retrieved from: http://doi.org/10.1097/TA.0b013e3181d8956d
Blast causes CTE
McKee, A. C., & Robinson, M. E. (2014, December 10). Military-related traumatic brain injury and neurodegeneration. Alzheimer’s & Dementia : The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association, 10(3 0), S242–S253. Retrieved from: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jalz.2014.04.003
Thank you very much for your service and for allowing us to ask you questions here on RP. I am an Army Brat and my father is a West Point Grad and Retired Col. BG Landwermeyer, I love your Company Homes For Our Troops. I work in my spare time to assist VETS to find jobs and / or services. I wanted to know out of all the severely injured post 9/11 VETS, what criteria do you use to be able to determine who will be accepted into your program because I may be sending some VETS your way if they meet your criteria.
Thank you BG Landwermeyer very much for everything you have done for our Country and what you are doing now to honor our VETS!
V/r,
Courtney Minturn
We can put you in touch with our intake department and they would be able to provide you with more specifics. They can be reached at [login to see] . Lots of great information on our website as well: https://www.hfotusa.org/help/
Housing Grants for Disabled Veterans - Home Loans
Specially Adapted Housing grants to help Veterans with certain service connected disabilities.
Sincerely,
Courtney
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