Pulse June 2016 | Page 24

CONVERSATIONS WITH JUSTIN CONSTANTINE Some may say RETIRED U.S. MARINE CORPS LIEUTENANT COLONEL JUSTIN CONSTANTINE’s story is nothing short of a miracle. By all accounts, he should have been dead after he was shot in the head by an enemy sniper while on a routine combat patrol in Iraq in 2006. In his book My Battlefield, Your Office, he wrote: “I cannot see out of my left eye. I am missing most of my teeth and the end of my tongue. I cannot run—the doctors removed several bones in my legs to use in reconstructing my upper and lower jaws.” And yet, despite these challenges, Constantine not only survived and recovered, but went on to work for the Department of Justice and for the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s counter-terrorism team. He also worked as senior advisor to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Hiring Our Heroes campaign and later became a TED speaker. Rightly so, he calls his new life his second act. PULSE: You were pursuing a degree in law when you decided to serve and join the military. What inspired you to serve? Justin Constantine: A good friend of my father’s had been a U.S. Marine officer who served in Vietnam, and when I was in high school, he encouraged me to join the U.S. Marine Corps. I applied for a Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) scholarship for college, but did not make the cut. I had to work several jobs each summer during college to pay for school, so going to Officer Candidate School during the summertime was not an option. Ultimately, I was working at the school gym during law school and a friend came by to talk for a few minutes. When he left, he said he was going to see the officer recruiter. I asked him what he was talking about since we were 27 years old. He said there was a specific program for attorneys in the U.S. Marine Corps, and I told him to tell the recruiter I would be down the next day. That was April 1, 1997. P: You have survived one of the toughest adversities few could imagine: a catastrophic gunshot wound in the 22 PULSE ■ June 2016 head. How did you manage to not only survive but rise above such life-changing adversity? C: First, I have been extremely fortunate during my recovery. This starts from the amazing Navy Corpsman George Grant, who saved my life in Iraq, to my amazing wife Dahlia who dropped everything in her life to be with me after I was injured and who accepted my marriage proposal two years after I was injured—it also includes the myriad of programs designed to support our veterans that I have participated in over the years. Second, I always knew I was going to have a successful recovery, and I made a conscious decision to not only do really well at everything I spent time on, but to also focus on the things in life that were consistent with my short- and long-term goals. I also learned that it is okay to ask for help when it is warranted, and I encourage people to do a lot more of that. P: Much like in the U.S. Marines wherein teamwork is deemed critical, you’ve stressed in your book the need for those in management to take care of their team. Can you share some advice on how managers can put their team top priority? C: Yes, taking care of your people should be a manager’s top priority. There are several easy ways to demonstrate this. Of