Episode Details
Back to EpisodesI Came For The Free Army Flashlight (Judy Fryover)
Description
War zone medicine is not just trauma bays and helicopters. Sometimes it is 140-degree heat, dust storms that ground flights, and a charge nurse trying to keep blood running while a policy says patients must move in 72 hours. Judy Fryover, an Army Reserve nurse and later colonel, walks us through the real texture of military healthcare, from the small details that make you laugh to the moments that stay heavy long after you leave Iraq.
We start in Portland, Michigan, where Judy grows up as the oldest of eight in a tight, hardworking family. That foundation carries into a demanding nursing path through Lansing Community College, Sparrow Hospital, and decades of perioperative and surgical work. Then a chance conversation with a recruiter leads to a direct commission and a second career in the United States Army Reserve, complete with Officer Basic, learning acronyms, and discovering why NCOs keep the Army running.
Judy shares two Iraq tours from two very different vantage points: a combat support hospital caring for US service members, civilians, contractors, and detainees, and later Civil Affairs work at the Baghdad US Embassy where briefings, coordination, and leadership pressure replace the bedside. We also talk about veteran care after deployment through VA contract work, the challenge of earning trust in rural and underserved communities, and the leadership habits she swears by: never stop learning, write down objective facts, listen before judging, and protect your people.
If you care about military stories, Army Reserve life, combat medicine, nursing leadership, or veteran healthcare, this conversation delivers the kind of detail you rarely hear. Subscribe, share this episode with someone who serves or supports a veteran, and leave a review with the lesson you’re taking from Judy’s story.
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