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How a Veteran Transformed Her Life

U.S. Navy veteran Anna Andersen is quick to tell you how the 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 impact on her life goes beyond the beauty of the plants to the nurturing she found in its Veteran Internship Program (VIP).

鈥淚 am grateful for the VIP and Garden for providing me direction into the horticulture profession and community. I have reaped the most benefits in a very personal way,鈥 she said, adding that she has been 鈥渢hrough a lot of emotional trauma, and the Garden saved me from darker places. I am fortunate to work in a place that has given me purpose, joy, and literally life.鈥

Andersen, 30, who began the VIP in summer 2016, now works full-time as an assistant horticulturist in the Lakeside Gardens. The job includes 鈥渂eautifying鈥aking sure plants are healthy, as full as possible and true to the designer鈥檚 intentions. There鈥檚 a lot of weeding, pruning.鈥

VIP helped her transition from the military to the civilian world, she said, as well as 鈥渄iscover my passion for the outdoors and find mentors to guide me to be a more professional leader and demonstrate how to be a well-rounded person.鈥

Anna Andersen

Andersen credits the program鈥檚 emphasis on both hard skills (r茅sum茅 writing, etc.) and soft skills (鈥渓ike being a better communicator鈥) for her success. That includes completing a degree from George Williams College in Environmental Science and Sustainability, seasonal work in the Garden鈥檚 summer camp with the former manager of Youth and Family Programs, Amy Wells, and in the Elizabeth Hubert Malott Japanese Garden.

But it鈥檚 those 鈥渟oft skills,鈥 cultivated by members of the Garden鈥檚 team, that helped her deal 鈥渨ith a lot of problems I didn鈥檛 realize I was going to have and didn鈥檛 necessarily know how to deal with,鈥 she said.

Anna Andersen

In the summer camps, for example, 鈥淎my [Wells] knew what needed to get done, yet she still gave me opportunities to do it how I wanted to get it done. Which is different than the military. They just told you what to do and didn鈥檛 give you a reason for doing it.

鈥淲ith Amy, I was able to see how she interacted with people, how she handled herself when she was talking to people and how she listened to people,鈥 said Andersen. 鈥淚 was able to observe what an effective listener and leader looks like. This is something I am still working on, but I think the VIP set me up for success by providing a good example for me.鈥

Dozens of military veterans have participated in the VIP since it was established in 2014, according to Alicia Green, coordinator of the Buehler Enabling Garden. Green, who also oversees the VIP Program, added, that  Horticultural Therapy Services has always served the veterans population, mainly in VA hospitals. The department brainstormed other ways to reach and help the population and came up with the VIP. A federal grant allowed them to run a two-year pilot program, placing veterans with a Garden department鈥攆rom accounting to construction-maintenance鈥攆or a paid 12-week internships.