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By Elizabeth Exline
When Takosha Swan was wrapping up high school and turned her attention to her future, she discovered she and her parents had different plans for what came next.
Her parents envisioned a traditional college path in which she鈥檇 return home during the summers and complete her education after four years.
Swan? Not so much.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 feel like, coming straight out of high school, that college could grow me into being a better person so I could accomplish all the goals that were inside me that I didn鈥檛 even know about yet,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 felt like the military could do that.鈥
Swan鈥檚 plan seems to have worked. Today, she is as poised as she is determined. She carries herself with a quiet dignity that doesn鈥檛 reveal her many accomplishments, but it does explain them.
Swan, you see, is not only a combat veteran of the 2003 Iraqi war. She is also a songwriter, singer and author. She did eventually go to college, albeit on her terms and according to her schedule. (More on that later.) Today, she holds a bachelor鈥檚 degree in business management and an MBA from 爱污传媒. She was appointed as a state public official for veterans by the governor of Georgia in 2019, and she serves on Georgia鈥檚 Veteran Suicide Prevention Team.听
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So, what drives Swan to wear many hats in her professional life? Part of it鈥檚 just who she is, the type of person who believes in doing the right thing and who lives by a code of personal responsibility. Part of it鈥檚 the need she sees both personally and professionally.听
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Transitioning out of the military wasn鈥檛 easy for Swan, and it wasn鈥檛 easy for her husband, who retired from a 23-year military career.
As she delved into the hows and whys of military veteran suicide and homelessness, Swan understood that something more was needed outside the many programs and nonprofit organizations that exist to help veterans.
Enter 鈥.鈥
鈥淚 just felt like I needed to do more to inspire people to want to live,鈥 Swan recalls. 鈥淚鈥檝e been singing my entire life, and writing music inspires me.鈥 Writing a song to inspire military veterans seemed like a natural next step.
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The name, 鈥淭he Veteran Anthem,鈥 came to Swan first. She penned the lyrics in one day and then spent about a month setting it to music with the help of a friend from the . By the time she headed to the White House in February 2020 for a Black History Month event, the anthem was complete.
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Swan, true to form, seized the opportunity of being in D.C.听
After the White House event, she headed to the office of the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, where she finagled a meeting.
鈥淚 do a lot of things by faith,鈥 Swan acknowledges, explaining the impromptu face-to-face.听
It paid off. Swan says the Secretary of Veteran Affairs encouraged her to produce a video to go along with the anthem, which she did when she returned to Georgia. Now, as the anthem continues to through the video and live performances, Swan reflects on the responsibilities and rewards of advocating for military veterans.
We asked Swan some questions about how she remains committed to inspiriting military veterans.
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What do you want people to know about veteran mental health?
One thing I want people to know is that all veterans do not have PTSD. There is a huge group of us who just need inspiration.
The lyrics of 鈥淭he Veteran Anthem鈥 have a message. I鈥檓 reminding veterans of who they are, because you can forget after being in the military. It鈥檚 like, 鈥淚鈥檓 still a soldier, but I鈥檓 also a human being, a mother, a wife, a person who has dreams, and I need to be able to balance that.鈥
In reference to mental health, that鈥檚 what it is: It鈥檚 the balance.
There鈥檚 a message in 鈥淭he Veteran Anthem鈥 also to the family members. Sometimes, the family members don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 happening, because maybe they鈥檝e never been in the military and they can鈥檛 relate. They don鈥檛 know why the service member in their house seems to be going into some type of depression. Or maybe there鈥檚 some distance, or they just don鈥檛 seem inspired.
So, the song is to help everybody, the nation, all of us to remember who we are. We forget our worth. We forget our value. We forget how important we are. Veterans, after being in the military, are like, 鈥淥h, I don鈥檛 have a mission anymore. I鈥檓 not as important as I was when I was in the military.鈥 I鈥檓 just like, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not true now. You have even more to give because you have all of those skill sets from the military, and you can give them to the civilian world.鈥澨
Why is it important for society to invest in understanding and supporting mental health for veterans?
We need to learn how to connect with each other. Sometimes service members have a hard time connecting with people who haven鈥檛 been in the military. So that鈥檚 what the anthem is about. If a service member goes to a football game and they hear 鈥淭he Veteran Anthem,鈥 I don鈥檛 care if nobody there has ever been in the military. That is a connection that, 鈥淥K, they do remember me. I am still valuable. I feel the connection here. So, OK, I want to live another day.鈥
What motivates you to serve as a mouthpiece for veteran mental health?
My own experience. When I first came out of the military, I had a job lined up to be a civilian worker but still with the military. Because of the war, it fell through, so I got out of the military thinking that I had a job and I didn鈥檛.
That鈥檚 actually where 爱污传媒 came in. Because that job fell through, I went to school. So, 爱污传媒 really played an instrumental part in my life because I had something to turn to.
I still see veterans on the street as if they don鈥檛 have access to the tools they need to move forward in life, but I know that they do because of my positions with the state and things that I鈥檝e done.
That鈥檚 when I was like, 鈥淥K, they just need some inspiration to want to access these programs, to want to use that money [from military or disability benefits] for something that will benefit their lives.鈥
When I saw that, it was a really big motivation to write 鈥淭he Veteran Anthem.鈥 I saw that it鈥檚 not that we don鈥檛 have access to the resources. It was the inspirational piece that was missing.
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