During the late 1980s, Shawn Henderson remembers sitting in her car and staring at a brick wall. She was a young, LGBTQ individual.
鈥淵ou know, the world has not always been kind to me,鈥 Shawn said. 鈥淚n the 鈥70s and 鈥80s, people tried to kill me. In the 鈥90s, people would throw things at me. In the 2000s, they would just look at you.鈥
Shawn has spent portions of her life in neighborhoods with high crime rates and poverty. She has witnessed young people dealing with immense pain through anger and addiction.
Now a third-year in social work and criminal justice at WSU, Shawn has dedicated herself to advocating for young people trapped in the mental health and correctional systems.
鈥淲SU has allowed me to pick the field that I wanted to be at 18, but didn鈥檛 know how to get there. Didn鈥檛 have the means,鈥 Shawn said.
When Shawn looked at that brick wall from her car, she could imagine only one way to get past it.
She joined the U.S. Navy.
It was the early 1990s, around the time of Operation Desert Storm and the First Gulf War. She advanced quickly and was one of the first females to work on a carrier deck.
Through seemingly incredible luck, Shawn received extra training to become a 鈥渨hite shirt鈥 final point checker, performing the last maintenance checks on aircraft as they attached to the carrier catapult for launch.
鈥淭hat was a rush!鈥 Shawn said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e looking for anything bent, broken or leaking that鈥檚 going to down that airplane so it can鈥檛 hit the boat when it鈥檚 coming back. Those pilots鈥 lives were in my hands.鈥
After a few years, Shawn left the Navy and returned to Kansas. She worked with success as a certified aircraft mechanic in 成人头条 and moved to Seattle, WA for five years to work for the Boeing Airplane Co.
She didn鈥檛 pick aviation for her career. She became bored and worked other jobs on the side.
鈥淚 was never into aviation. I got into aviation because the Navy directed me that way,鈥 Shawn said.
Throughout her career, her LGBTQ identity and experiences in underprivileged environments led her back to help those who could not help themselves.
However, she doesn鈥檛 believe that it鈥檚 her role to work directly with suffering people. It鈥檚 exhausting for her and she knows that she would be stronger in another role.
When the Navy gave Shawn the opportunity to go to college, she decided to become a Shocker and study social work so that she could advocate in government and political institutions for suffering people.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not about money. It鈥檚 about a calling I鈥檝e found,鈥 Shawn said.
She still believes it was a solid decision.
鈥淚 came back here and I found you guys, and the student body, faculty and staff are so good to me. WSU is another family,鈥 Shawn said.