Scotty & Carissa’s Adopt a Soldier

Posted in Clear Cares, Scotty & Carissa in the Morning by Scotty on 11/1/2011

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Scotty & Carissa’s Adopt a Soldier with Truman’s Bar & Grill program has been a huge success thanks to you! It’s a way for members of our community to send a little bit of home to our local men and women serving overseas.

If you’d like to “adopt” a soldiersimply pick one from our frequently updated adoption list and we will email you back the soldier’s information, mailing address and a list of items they would enjoy as soon as we can.

If you are the parent, spouse, neighbor, and/or loved one of a soldier currently serving overseas, we hope you’ll take just a couple of minutes and submit their name for “adoption.” In the coming days, we will post your soldier’s name (first name only) on the adoption list. To submit a soldier for “adoption,” please fill out the form below.

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LetsSayThanks.com is a website that gives you an opportunity to send a free printed postcard to U.S. military personnel stationed overseas showing your appreciation for their service.

Soldiertributes.com is a site where you can make a tribute web-page to honor your soldier.

Segs4vets.com is a program that helps members or former members of the US Military who incurred illness or injury resulting permanent disability during their military service.

MarineParents.com is a place where Marine parents, wives and family members to connect and share while their loved ones are away.

Comments:

17 Comments


  1. Helen Humphreys

    This is a great program! Thanks for doing this. I’m a nineteen-year old girl from Columbia and last month I adopted John W. who is serving in Iraq right now. I sent him a package and he emailed me back. We have become pen pals. He has an identical twin brother who is also in the army. I like to write poetry and a couple of days ago I wrote this poem that I am going to send to him, and I wanted to share it.

    CHEER ON THE SOLDIER!

    Cheer on the soldier! For his responsibility is great.
    At every turn he knows not his fate.
    From the blazing sun to the freezing cold,
    His trials are numerous and untold.

    Cheer on the soldier! Give him a smile,
    For he sees much sorrow in every mile.
    He needs all the warmth from home he can get,
    That he may for a moment his hardships forget.

    Cheer on the soldier! For he is the bravest of all.
    Without hesitation he answers duty’s call.
    And though he may look handsome in his uniform so sleek,
    Remember that his profession is often very bleak.

    Cheer on the soldier! For he is what makes the army strong,
    And credit and honor to him does belong.
    For the destiny of our country is in the hand,
    Of every able and fighting man.

    Cheer on the soldier! Until he comes home.
    Let him know he’s not forgotten and alone.
    Show him your gratitude, show him you care,
    And if he needs someone, you’ll always be there.


  2. Stephanie

    Thank you! While my husband was deployed to Iraq he recieved packages and letters from the class at Bevier, MO. These packages and letters from the children lifted my husband’s spirits up. Thank you adopting my husband.


  3. Julie Powers

    THANK YOU, KCLR and Mid-Missouri for making Christmas away from home a little easier for our troops. It is very difficult not having them home so I salute those who took the time to participate in this program!!!!!


  4. Klara

    Hey KCLR
    It’s me again, well dad is back over seas again and I put him on here again and he got so many gifts and packages. It touches my heart to know that Mid-Missouri is doing sooooo much for OUR TROOPS, I know from the storys that my dad, other family, and friends that come home and tell me that they just LOVE the gifts and support, I can’t put into words how much I want to say thanks and God bless to everyone that helps in anyway they can for our troops I know they would all say thanks if they had a way, but I don’t think they would mind if I thanked you all for them. THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!! I want to give a big thanks to KCLR 99 as well because not only do they have this page for us and talk about it on air but they reach out too. My dad got a card and things from them too so thank you KCLR 99 you have raised the bar for all other stations because I haven’t ran acrossed a station with more heart and love and we can hear and see it when we get on the pages or on the air THANK YOU SOOOOO MUCH,(just can’t say that to much). I only lisson to you all because you are real and people can tell the min they hear you all. Merry Christmas and Hopes for a Great Year. May God be with KCLR 99 AND ALL OF MID-MISSOURI!


  5. Klara

    Ok everyone my dad is back home for a while and he is going around and personally thanking everyone for the gifts and pieces of home. He will be at MU on Thursday April 30 @ 4:00 and at one of my fav. spots Cody’s on Friday May 1st around 8:00 if you would like to meet with him or just come party with a little of the military then come see us. Thanks again to everyone that sends things not just to my dad but all the guys and gals over there I know they love knowing that they are making a diffrence and still thought of everyday. Hope to see you out there and remember One Nation Under GOD,indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for all.


  6. Julia

    THANK YOU SO MUCH for keeping Monica’s picture and conversation on the Adopt A Soldier page!!!! I don’t get to hear her voice very often and it’s nice to go to that page and listen to her!!

    PLEASE keep the Adopt A Soldier program active!!!!!!! Every soldier serving deserves to be remembered and it doesn’t cost that much to send a box of goodies! For the soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan, one of the things that they could use the most is unscented baby wipes. They are good for wiping the sweat and cooling the face. Temperatures there are already in the 100’s every day.

    Even if you don’t know the soldier, it’s very easy to fill a shopping cart with items they are sure to like, such as: beef jerky, beef sticks and cheese, small bags of peanuts, breath mints, Cracker Jacks, gum, cheese or peanut butter crackers, Chex Mix, individual powered drink mix, body wash, shampoo and conditioner, hair ties and bobby pins, razors and of course, baby wipes.

    Thanks again for everything you have done for the troops….don’t let them be forgotten! Keep up the good work!!!


  7. Laura

    I just want to thank zimmer radio stations for this program. I am a vet and a army wife and mother. I know that the soldiers are greatful for getting these boxes of different things. It makes there job easier know that people are behind them here at home.
    Thank you again


  8. Klara

    I just have to thank KCLR 99 for having this program and to thank you for putting TJ on here because if I ever need to hear or see him all I have to do is click play.
    THANK YOU MID-MISSOURI FOR BEING BEHIND OUR TROOPS, I know they are VERY GREATFUL for anything from home and the support, getting mail is the high light of there days even if it is a card just to say Hi and tell them thank you.
    God bless our troops and all that stand behind them!


  9. Donna B

    Sure would like to know the mailing deadline for packages to get to our troops in Afghanistan. God Bless them all!


  10. Scotty

    Hey Donna,

    Here is a link to the different shipping deadlines on the Post Office’s website. http://www.usps.com/holiday/shippingcalendar.htm?from=home_ftpromo&page=Holiday2010SeeShippingDeadlines


  11. Donna

    Thanks so much to KCLR for making this opportunity available to us. My package will go out in todays mail and I couldn’t be happier to be able to send something to our troops in Afghanistan. Shoot I was even able to pick someone who’s in the same MoNG unit my brother was in back in the 50s. Thanks again Clear 99!!!

    Helen your poem is beautiful. Well done.


  12. SHADY

    An Afghanistan Christmas

    I had no Christmas spirit when I breathed a weary sigh,
    and looked across my desk where the paperwork was piled up so high.
    The reports weren’t finished and the training I had to fix,
    My computer was down and the KC Chiefs had just lost by six.

    Here I sit, looking like an incompetent fool,
    I’d fix this thing if I only had the right tool.
    The burdens that I carried were about all I could take,
    thinking of my troops outside wondering wishing I could give them a break.

    I look outside gazing upon a desert scene, in shades of tan and rust,
    No snowflakes hung upon the wind, just clouds of swirling dust.
    And where the reindeer should have stood before a laden sleigh,
    MRAPS ran a column in front of ISAF Troops, marching on their way.

    A group of troops walked past the tent, not one looked past their teens,
    Their eyes were hard as polished flint, their faces drawn dusty and lean.
    They climb the mountains in armor with their rifles shouldered tight,
    their dearest wish for Christmas, “today I hope not to fight”.

    Other soldiers gathered, hunkered down against the wind,
    They gather pieces of mail and dreams and exchange each others find.
    Yet, for some there wasn’t much at all to put their lonely hearts at ease,
    They had no Christmas turkey, just a packet of MRE’s.

    They didn’t have a garland or a stocking for anyone to see,
    They didn’t need an ornament because they lacked a Christmas Tree.
    They didn’t have a present even though it was tradition,
    on their backs they carried, long belts of ammunition.

    I felt a friendly nudge along my right side,
    The major asked me what it was I feared or tried to hide?
    I saluted him with pride as he stood so near
    and exclaimed in a voice for everyone to hear.

    There’s nothing to fear, my uniformed Brother, our Nations sleep well tonight,
    My hero troops stand in sand and rock to give all mankind their right.
    Don’t worry about the things in life that really mean nothing at all,
    Instead, I am hopeful this day, that not one more of our Warriors has to fall.
    I am tormented by the thought of the troops I send out is wrong or right,
    The life force inside this aged body feels a compelling urge to write.
    And so I pushed aside my tasking orders and sit to draft a note,
    to thank the many so very far from home; and this is what I wrote,

    God bless you all for the gift of liberty you each provide,
    The ultimate sacrifices are like an unhealing wound, buried deep within my mortal side,
    The freedoms you give us; we simply can’t repay.
    Me and my family are thankful, each and every day.
    Merry Christmas Warriors,
    Another Afghan Christmas, the year is 2010.

    SHADY


  13. Diane Henderson

    My son, Corby, is on your Adopt a Soldier and has had a huge response from your listeners. He has really enjoyed all the gifts, foods, and other items that so many people have sent him. He has been sharing with the other members of his camp. They have really enjoyed and appreciated all the packages. Thank you and your listeners for their outporing of love.


  14. Spc JC Maupin

    Dear Proud Americans,

    I want to thank each and every one of you for all the letters and packages! It has been such a joy to read about what’s going on back home! (I really liked the stories about dogs, I love dogs.) And the packages have been great too! You can rest assured that I am never hungry now! I have all the Raman Noodles and Beef Jerky a man could ever dream of!

    I can’t express enough how grateful I am for these tokens of appreciation. I have never met any of you and we may never meet, but you still took time out of your schedules to write me letters and send things. I like hearing about what is going on in your lives because it takes my mind off this ugly place. When I would get your letters two things would happen: 1) I would feel grate because I knew people back home were thinking about me. 2) I would have a momentary reprieve from Afghanistan—when I read your letters I am taken back to that beautiful land of the free.

    Speaking of beauty and freedom, I would like to take a moment to ask you to please be aware of how great it is to live in America. Where I am (Northern Afghanistan) the land is baren empty dirt. Well, not totally empty, there’s at least two mine fields within walking distance of the base. I can’t remember the last time I saw a tree, or grass. This place will never rise up because the people are full of hate…or indifference. They have a culture that is the exact opposite of ours. We live in a place that praises and holds high: hard work, love, personal & religious freedom, cultural & racial tolerance. Here in Afghanistan it is literally opposite–the man who kills his neighbor over a slight religious difference—this is the man who is respected. Schools are bombed, as well as polling stations. People over here kill and harass each other over slight differences in ethnicity to the point that they can’t stand up as a nation. Here I am working with Asians, blacks, women, Christians, atheists, New Yorkers, and Texans. Anyway, I’ve gone off on a tangent, but it was just to let you know, by comparison, how great the place we live is.

    There I something else I want to say. I want to say that I’m sorry that I haven’t been able to write all of you back. I have had so many people write that it would be impossible for me to write every individual. Also, and I don’t want you to think that I’m complaining, but I work about 13 hours a day, every day. It’s not too bad, but when I do get off I am so tired that I can’t focus long enough to write!

    Thank you for your overwhelming support and encouragement! I’ll keep working hard, all I ask is that you keep enjoying freedom and the pursuit of happiness!

    Sincerely,

    SPC James “Corby” Maupin

    PS: It’s amazing to me the stark contrast between cultures of freedom/education and cultures of religious intolerance/purposeful ignorance. Example: 1500 to 2000 years ago Balk (the ruins of which are about ten miles from where I am) was the cultural, educational, literary and architectural epicenter of the entire Middle-east and Asia. Now that they have hate and ignorance they live in mud huts and have a literacy rate of less than 10%.

    PPS: Please—to make this war worthwhile—continue to read, love, work hard, and be kind to your neighbors.


  15. Jenni

    Well My Husband & I just Adopted our first Soldier, hopefully we can do more than just 1. This is the least we could do for someone compared to everything they do for us.


  16. Kerri Jenkins

    Thank you so much for doing this. We (the California branch of Hawthorn Bank) just adopted a soldier for the holidays and it is such an honor to be able to do this. We just got a bunch of books donated from Wood Place Public Lbrary for our soldier and his unit. What a great opportunity this is to let a soldier know that he is loved and appreciated. thanks again and God bless.
    ps: My son is currently serving in Korea away from his wife and 1 year old daughter and I just submitted his name as well.


  17. SGT Shane Zimmer

    I just wanted to drop a line to say Thank You to all the people who sent me care packages for the Christmas Holiday. You all have brought so much joy to many Soldiers here. I have shared my AWESOME gifts with my battle buddies and they love it. You all are have given us such AMAZING support, I wish I had time to Thank you all personally. Just know you brought great happiness to many by adopting one Soldier. I love you all, and can’t wait for my return home. You have my grattitude always.
    SGT Z
    MO ADT V
    FOB Finley- Shields, Afghanistan