A City That Keeps Me Connected to the Mission
Living in Pensacola, Florida, strengthens my work as a writer and editor for the VA Office of Research and Development. This city keeps me close to the heart of the mission. Pensacola is more than a beach town. It is a community shaped by service, aviation, science, and the daily lives of Veterans. All of that influences how I approach the stories I tell.
A Community Built on Service
Pensacola has one of the highest concentrations of Veterans in the country. Many Service members retire here after time at Naval Air Station Pensacola, known as the Cradle of Naval Aviation, or after tours at nearby bases like Whiting Field, Eglin, and Hurlburt. At the grocery store, the gym, or my kids' events, I am surrounded by people who have served or who are still serving. That presence matters. It keeps VA research real and personal. When I edit a story on traumatic brain injury or toxic exposure, I am not thinking about distant data. I am thinking about the people standing in line beside me.
A Culture Shaped by Naval Aviation
The rhythm of NAS Pensacola sets the tone of the city. Training flights roll across the sky. Blue Angels practices draw crowds to the seawall. Conversations in coffee shops touch on human performance, flight safety, and the long-term health effects of military service. The work happening in this region, including the VA and DOD partnership, gives me a constant sense of the challenges facing Veterans. Hearing loss, PTSD, balance problems, musculoskeletal injuries, and cognitive strain. In Pensacola, these are not abstract issues. They are part of the community’s daily life.
A Hub for Innovation and Human Performance
Another major strength of living here is the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition (IHMC). IHMC is internationally respected for its work in robotics, artificial intelligence, biomechanics, and human performance. Their research aligns closely with many VA priorities, including advanced prosthetics, rehabilitation technologies, and innovations that help people maintain independence. Being near IHMC keeps me close to cutting-edge ideas and gives me a front row seat to the future of human-centered technology.
Daily Life That Reinforces the Mission
The part I enjoy most is how Veterans, military culture, science, and innovation blend into ordinary moments. I can finish writing about new suicide prevention research and then walk into a restaurant where half the room is wearing retired squadron shirts. I can work on a prosthetics story and later see an amputee Veteran walking confidently along the waterfront. Pensacola gives me steady reminders of why this work matters.
Living Among the People I Serve
Working for VA from here does not separate me from the mission. It anchors me to it. This city lets me live among the people I serve. It keeps me grounded, motivated, and inspired. And in the end, it helps me tell the story of VA research with greater clarity, heart, and purpose.