Motivated to serve
Adam’s father, Honorary Colonel Alvin Jones, says that from a young age his son enjoyed learning about the military and could identify tanks and other equipment. “He’s always had an intense love and commitment to serve and be engaged in the Canadian Armed Forces.”
Adam applied for the military after high school. He began his service in 2011 as a Field Artillery soldier, now called a gunner. “My job was to be a primary crewman on a C3 Howitzer or M777 Howitzer,” says Adam.
In 2013, Adam fell off the top of an obstacle during the confidence course. He injured his hand and arm and suffered a concussion. “At the time, that concussion wasn’t considered a serious medical issue,” says Adam. “I convinced the nurse practitioner at the medical unit on base that I was pretty much good to go. They put me in a neck brace and put a brace on my arm and I returned to duty. I was able to advance my career, but I never really addressed the injury.”
The following year, Adam suffered another concussion. It developed into a traumatic brain injury that presented as a seizure. “One minute I was doing my job, the next I was on a stretcher.”
Someone in his corner
This time the concussion could not be ignored, forcing Adam to undergo emergency treatment. “All of the symptoms of that initial concussion and the follow up one came to the forefront. All the long-term symptoms happened, including difficulty with my cognitive ability, motor skills, language skills and vision.” Still, Adam tried to conceal his injury. “I disclosed, in what I thought was confidence, to my civilian occupational therapist. Then the following day, I got a call from my medical officer saying, ‘What do you mean you’re not eating, not sleeping, don’t remember anything and can’t remember any words?’”
After emergency treatment, Adam received a Temporary Medical Category. His medical officer wrote the temporary chit. “Part-time university studies” was among the orders on the chit. That’s when Adam’s recovery really started. “My medical officer ordered me to go back to university, which meant the military had to facilitate that,” says Adam. “I was injured in May and I started at Carleton University in September 2014 because the medical officer went to bat for me.”
Leaving the forces
The extent of his injuries meant that Adam eventually received a Permanent Medical Category. Adam was posted to a Joint Personnel Support Unit in Ottawa in 2017. There, he began the transition process and officially released in 2018.
The last few years of Adam’s service were focused on recovery, which included physiotherapy, speech pathology and occupational therapy. However, the time leading up to his release also included personal and professional achievements. Adam was selected to compete for Team Canada at the 2017 Invictus Games in Toronto. He competed in the rowing and track and field events. He received commendation and a promotion to the rank of Bombardier. The professional validation meant a lot to Adam. “It gave me the sense of leaving the Canadian forces with some recognition.”
While Adam could see the positive outcomes of leaving service, like having a university education, transition was not easy. “When I transitioned out, my greatest feeling, besides the sense of familial disappointment, was also the lost sense of belonging that comes from being in a battalion. I had accepted that my identity was as a soldier and as a member of a military family. To lose that was devastating.”
A shift in perspective
“My biggest psychological obstacle, with injury and transition, was that loss of identity as a soldier, because the way I evaluated all of my recovery was in terms of ‘Well, am I meeting the requirements to do my trade again?’” A shift in the way Adam approached life after service happened thanks to an important realization. “Rather than measuring up to who I had been, it was, Who can I be now?”
Adam started to pursue new hobbies and find different ways to challenge himself. “I started to develop in areas that I’d never explored before.” One of his new pursuits included learning to play the cello. “It gave me the opportunity to still push myself, still be in the driver’s seat of my recovery, but to also take the pressure off, do interesting things, round out my character and start separating my identity from being a defective soldier.”
Paying it forward
Adam is building a community of Veterans on Carleton’s campus. He started Canada’s first Student Veterans Association. The association welcomes Veterans onto the campus, offers a peer support network and provides tools to integrate with the school’s existing mental health services. As many as 40 people attend the meetings.
“The average age of a soldier is 25,” says Adam. “Incoming university freshmen are 18. Having something on campus where members wouldn’t feel like they were 10 years older than their classmates was a big leap forward for us.”
Advice to other Veterans
Drawing from his own experiences with recovery and transition, Adam recommends that fellow Veterans find ways to develop as people. “You might never be able to shake all of your belief and belonging in yourself as a soldier first, but if you start developing in ways that you haven’t experienced before, it relieves that mental pressure. It lets you gently transition over. It lets you come to terms with where you are.”
Date published: 2021-02-01