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By Operation Gratitude
The podcast currently has 10 episodes available.
In this episode of our Solidarity of Service podcast, host and Operation Gratitude CEO Kevin Schmiegel speaks with two current Starbucks employees with different, but equally important backgrounds in service. Matt Kress is a Marine Corp veteran and also worked as a firefighter before eventually becoming Senior Manager of Military and Veteran Affairs with Starbucks. Nikki Young, a veteran spouse, formerly worked as a Starbucks Military Family Store Manager and is now a part of the company’s Talent Acquisition Team. Together, the three cover the power of service, gratitude, and community, and the human connection that can be made through conversations that happen over a cup of coffee.
To purchase a Starbucks Military eGift card visit: https://www.starbucks.com/gift/catego...
“Service is doing your part to make the world a better place. Most of us are serving in some way or have the ability to serve. It doesn’t have to be signing up for the military and giving 4 to 20 years of your life. It can be little acts that you’re doing on a daily basis in your community.” (Kress)
“That’s what makes it a military store- our partners, our customers, our veterans and spouses that work. We’ve created a safe space for our community...It was important to me to create that awareness for my team. Being (in this role with Starbucks), I felt a sense of duty to ensure that our community was supported.” (Young)
“There’s a recognition when we bring communities together in service that people are there for the same reason. They’re there to serve whether they’re in uniform or not and they’re serving together. There’s a recognition that they all want to make their communities stronger.” (Schmiegel)
Watch this episode here: https://youtu.be/GBgC-SCDhj4
In the 10th episode of Solidary of Service, host Kevin Schmiegel chats with military spouse and Blue Star Families’ Co-Director of Applied Research Jessica Strong. Strong and Schmiegel discuss the results from Blue Star Families’ 2020 Military Family Lifestyle Survey. Find out what surprised them, what didn’t, what the results mean for military families, and how the results can be used to help bridge the military and civilian divide. Strong also discusses exciting changes to the newly launched 2021 Military Family Lifestyle Survey, which will be open until June 7! Find out how your family can participate in this year’s survey here: https://bluestarfam.org/survey2021/
Watch the episode here: https://bit.ly/3ucYsVk
11:07 [Military] families spend a lot of time apart and that was intensified during 2020 because people who were deployed were having to stay apart for longer due to quarantines or potential exposures. If you were geobaching, your ability to travel may have been limited due to covid restrictions. A lot of those issues we already saw got a little bit more intense for families. -Jessica Strong,Blue Star Families’ co-director of applied research
11:59 For the past few years, we have kept tabs on mental health in general -- service members, family members, veterans mental health -- particularly their thoughts of suicide. This year for the first time we asked about whether children had thoughts of suicide and found that 6% of our active duty families responded that sometime in the past year their child had expressed thoughts of suicide, so we know its been an intense year for everybody. - Jessica Strong, Blue Star Families’ co-director of applied research
14:10 I think it's really important for people to know that [the Annual Military Family Lifestyle survey] is statistically significant data that shows trends over time and [this] is important because it allows us to address the problems that exist. - Kevin Schmiegel, CEO of Operation Gratitude
15:41 I was surprised to see the amount of discrimination that service members mention. Service members of color -- 26% of them - said they had experienced racial discrimination in their unit and command. -Jessica Strong, Blue Star Families’ co-director of applied research
20:25 -21:20 The reason I think we get all excited and geek out about data is because its very validating, if you are coming from that lived experience yourself you are thinking, “I am not the only spouse who has struggled with employment after a move. I am not the only person who has struggled with mental health in the past year. I am not the only one struggling with time away from my spouse. It’s validating to see its not just you, you are part of a community, and everyone is going through some of these things. And that’s one of the things that COVID showed us over the past year, is we are strong together as a community and we do better when we are working together. It’s the power of certain tragedy that brings us together. -Jessica Strong, Blue Star Families’ co-director of applied research
22:00 We were expecting to see that everyone’s social isolation would have gone up [in 2020] because we couldn’t hang out with other people. But we actually found the opposite -- that social isolation wasn’t that different than it was before because we are still connecting with each other. And I think military families are really good at connecting with people because we are very practiced in it from moving all of the time. So we just took those skills we had from connecting with people over a distance and applied them not to just with our extended families and friends from other duty stations, but applied that to our friendships with people [in our community] and helped our civilian neighbors who didn’t have those skills also build those connections from a distance. -Jessica Strong
In this eighth episode of Solidarity of Service, hosts Kevin Schmiegel and Sherman Gillums, Jr. are joined by military spouse and entrepreneur Serena West. West’s company, Westhouse, blossomed from a home hobby into an online boutique which aims to grow connections, communities, and businesses. West speaks about her journey to discover her own identity while also navigating the demands of being an Army wife and mother and her efforts to combat the widespread under- or unemployment of military spouses. She, Schmiegel, and Gillums also discuss how military families can better connect to their communities and the importance of pursuing that connection with intentionality.
Watch the episode here: https://youtu.be/lwPsMDJ-pjU
In this seventh episode of our Solidarity of Service podcast, hosts Kevin Schmiegel and Sherman Gillums Jr. speak with Oscar Mike Apparel’s founder and CEO Noah Currier. Currier is a Marine veteran who was paralyzed in a vehicle accident in 2003, just three days after returning from a combat deployment to Iraq. He says the mission at Oscar Mike is to recognize and highlight those unsung heroes who are making a real difference in the lives of others. The Oscar Mike Foundation and proceeds from Oscar Mike Apparel sales allow OM to host events and opportunities that support injured Veterans and encourage them to get and stay active. Currier says this idea of service to others has been “baked into” his original business model since its inception nearly a decade ago. Gillums, Schmiegel, and Currier discuss what it takes to find success and the responsibility that comes with being a leader of a service-minded mission. Currier shares his vision for the future of Oscar Mike, which also aligns with Operation Gratitude’s mission to build bridges between the civilian and military communities.
To purchase an Oscar Mike and Operation Gratitude t-shirt: https://www.oscarmike.org/products/operation-gratitude
Watch this episode: https://youtu.be/VcIPBXJ3xo8
“Mom, I want to go change the world, make a difference, and do something that will bring God glory.”
In our sixth installment of Solidarity of Service, hosts Schmiegel and Gillums are joined by Gold Star Mom Janice Chance. Chance’s son, Captain Jesse Melton, USMC, was killed in September of 2008 while supporting combat operations in Parwan province, Afghanistan. Chance speaks about preserving her son’s legacy through service to others and using that service to heal. She says she’s made it her daily mission to make a difference in the lives of others, particularly military, veterans, and first responders.
Chance also discusses her personal experience with Operation Gratitude and highlights the value of community partnerships and continuous, tangible action to impact and improve outcomes for our nation’s heroes.
Watch on YouTube:https://youtu.be/Fk3pPddUviM
In this fifth installment of the podcast that brings you stories of the intersection and spirit of service with exclusive content, Operation Gratitude CEO Kevin Schmiegel and NAMI Chief Strategy and Operations Officer Sherman Gillums, Jr. host Dr. Mark Shapiro, host of Explore the Space Podcast.
Shapiro talks about the power of service in connecting communities and bridging divides. He discusses the differences in service and volunteerism and the importance of a service mindset.
Mark Shapiro Bio
Mark Shapiro is a practicing Hospitalist and Medical Director in Santa Rosa, CA. He grew up in Santa Rosa and from there went south to UCLA for his undergraduate education. While on the road to medical school, he got his degree in History with a focus on the American Civil War and worked as a sportswriter for the Daily Bruin. He is the host of Explore the Space Podcast: (explorethespaceshow.com)
He completed his medical school training at Baylor College of Medicine and his Internal Medicine residency at UC-San Diego before spending 10 years as a Hospitalist with Sharp Rees-Stealy Medical Group in San Diego. He served as Chief of the Department of Medicine at Sharp Memorial Hospital before moving back to his hometown. He currently works as a Hospitalist and Medical Director with St. Joseph Health Medical Group at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital.
When not working or podcasting, Mark enjoys spending time with his family, playing tennis, and roasting coffee.
In this fourth installment of the podcast that brings you stories of the spirit of service with exclusive content every week, Operation Gratitude CEO Kevin Schmiegel and NAMI Chief Strategy and Operations Officer Sherman Gillums, Jr. host the Honorable Patrick Murphy, the 32nd Undersecretary of the Army.
Murphy reflects on his time in the Army, his family's military commitments, the awards and accolades that he earned and the people he interacted with that got him where he is today. The conversation covers a range of topics about bridging the civilian/service divide and the need for a national call for service and Murphy's desire to lead a purpose-driven life in serving others.
Patrick J. Murphy began serving our nation at age 19, when he enlisted in the United States Army. For the past 28 years, in one role after another, he has maintained that commitment to serve—as a soldier, as the first Iraq War veteran elected to Congress, as the Under Secretary and Acting Secretary of the Army, and as a champion for veterans’ issues with an extensive background in health care management and innovation.
As the member of a military family, Patrick understands both the challenges facing previous generations of veterans and the experiences of his fellow service members who came of age during the post-9/11 era. Today, he brings a vision focused on innovation, efficiency, and accountability to shaping the future of veterans’ support and empowerment.
Patrick’s leadership harnesses the power of public, private, and nonprofit partners to support veterans in finding jobs, starting businesses, and securing quality health care and mental health services. His mission is to help provide all of America’s 20 million veterans—including the more than nine million who rely on the Department of Veterans Affairs —with the opportunity to enjoy stability and success.
Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/HZgOursG36E
In this episode, fellow Marine and COO of Operation Gratitude, Retired Colonel Paul Cucinotta, joins hosts Gillums and Schmiegel for a candid conversation about his call to service both in the military and as Chief Operating Officer of Operation Gratitude.
Cucinotta provides insight into his and his family's personal experiences with service, what it means to wear a uniform, and how he was called to serve in the next chapter in his life. Cucinotta discusses heroes without capes, the gift of a care package (and why it is much more), and the team at Operation Gratitude.
Watch this episode on YouTube.
This episode focuses on a conversation with Chief Executive Officer of Operation Gratitude and Retired Marine Corps Officer Kevin Schmiegel. Sherman Gillums interviews Schmiegel, examining his choice to serve our country, highlighting the characteristics of great leadership, and sharing what gratitude and service means to him. The episode dives into Schmiegel's personal connections in regard to his mentors, his family's choices to serve in different generations, and his call to continue to serve in a non-profit role.
Schmiegel shares insight into the importance of actions and words like the ones President Franklin Delano Roosevelt said in this famous quote “Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the assessment that something else is more important than fear.” He and fellow podcast colleague, Sherman Gillums, Jr. discuss the fears of Americans today, what it takes to find the courage to serve, stories of heroes that were affected by those who give back and how the nation can unite in solidarity of service to bridge any divides and make an impact.
Watch this episode on YouTube.
In the first episode, Kevin Schmiegel and Sherman Gillums, Jr. give us a backstory briefing of the inspiration for this podcast. They share stories from their experience in the Marine Corps and the people who influenced them and who they mentored. The veterans talk about their own families' dedication to service with children of their own in the military, how they came to that decision, and what these dads hope for their children's future. They touch on tragic events of their past with a focus on learning from them and finding empathy and understanding instead of vengeance and divide.
This episode features the pair sharing their choices to continue to serve as non-profit leaders, discussing Sherman Gillums, Jr.'s role as Chief of Strategy and Operations Officer at the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) and what he has witnessed in regard to the sacrifices of first responders and military. Kevin Schmiegel talks about his dedication to Operation Gratitude as their Chief Executive Officer and how the organization's efforts change people's lives, and "that it goes beyond a thank you". The leaders see current challenges in America as opportunities to grow as a nation through acts of kindness and "going one step further." It's clear why these grateful Americans are leaders of their organizations - you get fired up and inspired listening to them speak about healing our nation by finding solidarity in service.
This podcast is dedicated to the memory of John D. Ellis, U.S. Army, 1951-1953 (Korean War veteran).
Watch this episode on YouTube.
The podcast currently has 10 episodes available.