Since making it home from the 1993 Black Hawk Down battle in Somalia, Keni Thomas has become a successful country music singer, motivational speaker and author.
I came out of the military with a pretty good skill set, and there were jobs I could have taken, Thomas told the Unknown Soldiers. But music is a disease. Its incurable.
Of all his endeavors, there is nothing more important to this Army Ranger than visiting with wounded heroes of the Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts. He thinks every day about his conversations with combat veterans at various hospitals, including a female military truck driver who lost her leg when her vehicle hit an improvised explosive device.
I told her it was OK to be upset about what happened to her, and she started crying, Thomas said. She said, I just dont know if anybody will ever love me. It was so basic and human.
Thomas will never forget the chaotic battle he and his fellow troops fought on the war-torn streets of Mogadishu more than 18 years ago. One reason hes so touched by his encounters with wounded veterans is that he knows he could easily have ended up in a hospital bed, wheelchair or cemetery.
Theres not a day that goes by that I dont think about it in some sort of way, Thomas said. I dont mean it in a Rambo flashback sort of way; I know by the grace of God is the only reason Im still around.
Thomas has a special talent for bringing the 99 percent of Americans who have never experienced combat into the minds of the 1 percent who have.
It took me a long time to figure it out, Tom, but when you make it home from something like that, theres this weird sense of guilt, he said. Why did I survive when other people deserved to live?
Thomas lost several friends in the brutal urban battle. Even though he threw himself into his music career soon after coming home, feeling content during the past two decades has been difficult. Instead of enjoying his success, he has often agonized over his fallen buddies who didnt get the same opportunity.
They had families. They had kids. They were twice the soldier I was, Thomas said. Whenever something good happens in your life, its like you dont let it happen, because that little voice reminds you of your friends who didnt make it.
It sabotages everything thats good in your life, he said.
In his songs, Thomas sometimes sings directly to fellow combat veterans.
Its what I do, the singer-songwriter said. I love to tell stories.
Another challenge recently conquered by the guitar hero was writing a book. In Get it On: What it Means to Lead the Way, Thomas recounts the chaos of the Mogadishu battle while using the battles painful lessons to convey principles of leadership.
Thomas candidly admits that at the Mogadishu battles outset, when U.S. troops set out to confront a murderous warlord, the highly trained Ranger did not expect the bloodiest American firefight since Vietnam.
When you set a goal, it always takes longer than you think its going to take, he said. Its a good lesson for us.
Whether its in a book, song or conversation with a wounded veteran, Thomas tries to convey the same powerful message. Without faith, Thomas believes, he wouldnt be in a position to help others.
Thats one of the beauties of putting some mileage on your life, he said. You can see with clarity that theres no way you ended up where you ended up on your own accord.
Thomas still thinks about the weeping young amputee who thought shed never find love.
Hopefully, shell find that if she doesnt let the guilt, the wounds and the anger consume her, shell get back into life and shell do just fine, he said. I hope someone will love her, and I hope everybody finds a sense of purpose.
Keni Thomas thinks hes found his. When I cant sing anymore, I think my life is going to be dedicated to teaching Iraq and Afghanistan veterans that its OK to be happy, he said.
Tom Sileo is a syndicated columnist. His Unknown Soldiers columns are distributed by Creators Syndicate and appear in the Centre Daily Times on Fridays. Readers may follow his posts on Facebook and his blog at www.unknownsoldiersblog.com.















