|

Marine Sgt. Mariama Tarawally and Sgt. Kittrel
finish each other's sentences. Although this is likely the first time they've
known each other, they share a very deep bond; that of in-theatre combat,
life-threatening illness and relentless passion not to leave fellow Marines
battling for survival.
Tarawally contracted Malaria in Iraq late last
year. Although that was treatable, the disease triggered a very serious and rare
kidney disease,
focal segmental
glomerrulosclerosis, or FSGS. She was an inpatient here for several weeks, then
a daily outpatient.
She
knows how hard hospital stays are on families, as her husband and children
needed to move from North Carolina to Maryland to be with her. She knows the
complexities in financial matters and leaving friends at the last school - and
just being very uncomfortable.
"It gets better," she tells patients. She knows, and she
knows every little bit of attention helps," just talk about it."
"I volunteered to go back. A sailor asked why we want to go
back [to combat]. All you got is each other, all we’ve got is each other and you
know your unit is still out there, and I’m going to do it till you tell me I
can’t do it anymore," this warrior said.
Yet she knows some battles are harder won than others.
"Sometimes your main focus is to get out of that bed."
|