About this episode
Send us Fan MailA childhood reshaped by an expressway, a career born from a newspaper ad, and a camera that followed him from training fields to a war zone—Glenn Wilkewitz’s story is a masterclass in showing up when it counts. We sit down with Glenn to chart his path from Detroit neighborhoods and ROTC hallways to 30 years in the Air National Guard, where he learned to love both the hum of computers and the craft of photography.You’ll hear how a young bagger turned data operator rode the evolution from punch cards and mag tapes to mainframes and 286 desktops, then retrained again to keep pace with early networks and hospital IT. Glenn explains how a remote job entry terminal made him an early “remote worker,” why Pensacola’s photography school became a turning point at 42, and how an eye for images helped him navigate base politics and tell the stories that would otherwise stay in a drawer.The centerpiece is his decision to volunteer for Iraq at 52. Glenn breaks down the unseen work of video exploitation: pulling 15-second clips from F-16 tapes, labeling mission data, and pushing files over secure networks to shape decisions on the ground—all while rockets and mortars bracketed his days. He balances those memories with the moment he came home, the quiet truths about prestige after the uniform comes off, and the purpose he found serving the Michigan Flight Museum—keeping vintage aircraft flying and communities connected with a few well-aimed antennas.Threaded through are the personal anchors: his wife Debbie’s grit and grace, a faith journey that began in a bunker, and two daughters who turned skills into futures—one teaching STEM, the other helping touch the moon with Orion and Artemis. Glenn leaves listeners with practical, generous advice: build a marketable skill during the narrow window, stay curious, and do what you have to do so you can do what you want to do.If this story moved you, tap follow, share it with a friend who loves military history or tech, and leave a short review with your favorite takeaway. Your note helps more people find conversations that matter. Support the showwww.veteransarchives.org