Former soldier turned Sugarland employee adjusts to life in Chapel Hill

By Sarah Glen
Updated: 02/01/11 12:00am
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Cody England, 24, who served two deployments in Iraq over five years, now serves drinks and works at the register at Sugarland Bakery on Franklin Street in Chapel Hill. England has had to adjust from living out of a duffel bag to normal life in Chapel Hill.

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In the heart of Iraq, Cody England learned to live out of a duffle bag.

Now England, 24, has shifted from a single bag to a single apartment, moving to Chapel Hill after his contract with the Army ended in September.

“It’s kind of surreal coming back,” he said. “I like the city and its small-town atmosphere.”

England, originally from Amarillo, Texas, said he joined the army at 19 because he always knew it was something he was going to do. Two deployments to Iraq and five-and-a-half years later, he is working at Sugarland bakery on East Franklin Street.

While he said many people are surprised by his contrasting job choices, it all makes sense to him.

“I’m just a huge contradiction,” England said, who added that his favorite cupcake is the sweet potato praline.

At Sugarland, his first civilian job, England runs the register and makes drinks.

“Customer service is a piece of cake,” he said. “And I really like coffee.”

Before being stationed at Fort Bragg, England went through nine weeks of basic training and three weeks of jump school, where soldiers learn to jump from planes.

“It’s ridiculous. They load everyone up in parachutes, and there’s a stop light on the plane,” he said. “When it turns green, everyone just starts jumping off.”

From there, he was trained to be a nuclear biological chemical specialist during a 22-week program at Fort Bragg.

“If by chance you were hit by something and you didn’t know what it was, it would be our job to figure it out,” he said.

But after all this training, England said it was still impossible to know what he would find in the field.

“You take a lot more for granted in the states than you do there for sure,” he said. “The army can give you what you already own back, and you’ll be ecstatic about it.”

Along with an ability to live on less, England said serving in the Army has taught him to work under pressure.

England’s first deployment to Iraq brought him to Baiji in August 2006. He said this deployment was especially hard for him because of heavy casualties.

England said his next deployment to Baghdad in December 2008 suffered no casualties and was much more laid back.

“We just got really good at Rock Band,” he said.

Although his second deployment was more enjoyable, England said he was ready to move on.

“I wanted to go to school,” he said. “I was anxious for it. Time couldn’t move any slower.”

England said he is considering studying at UNC but isn’t sure what he wants to major in.

“I change my mind a lot,” he said. “I like zoology and business, but it’s going to be something I do on a whim.”

Lt. Col. Monte Yoder, professor of military science, said about one-seventh of the cadets in UNC’s ROTC program have previous military service.

Yoder, who has served in Germany, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Iraq, Afghanistan and Qatar during his 27-year military career, said some soldiers find the things they remembered and missed about their homes have changed.

“Everybody’s different, but the thing I observe most when I come back is color,” he said.

For others, like Durham County Elections Administrator Richard Rawling — who retired from the Marine Corps in 2005 as a sergeant major — adjusting to civilian life can be difficult because many people have preconceived negative outlooks on the military.

“A lot of people don’t understand what the military does,” he said.

Yet England, Yoder and Rawling all agreed their military service has positively impacted their lives.

“It’s weird hearing people say, ‘Oh, I could never do that,” England said of serving in the Army.

“Yes you could. I may not have recommended it while I was there, but now I definitely would.”

Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.

Published January 30, 2011 in Franklin Street, City

5 comments

Andy B
February 1, 2011 at 2:22 PM
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So as not to offend anyone, let me sincerely say God bless Cody England for serving our country…now how much money did Sugarland pay for this publicity? Perhaps the notoriously mean-spirited and verbally abusive Sugarland owner, Katrina, could answer my question. This is an irresponsible, manipulative, and flat association of two completely irrelevant concepts. I cannot wait for the follow-up piece, which will feature Cody indulging in Loco-Pops while playing in the quad with a labradoodle puppy. I guess Yoder and Rawling need to do something more blatantly pacifistic than attend UNC if they ever want a feature piece written about them.


cwhiz
February 2, 2011 at 11:39 AM
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dang someone’s got a b in their bonnet


Kelly
February 6, 2011 at 8:13 PM
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I don’t know Katrina personally but Cody is my boyfriend and he wasn’t chosen for the piece because of his association with Sugarland. The person that wrote the article asked her friend (who just so happened to work at Sugarland) if she knew any veterans that she could interview for a piece she wanted to write and she suggested Cody. He proposed doing the interview at Sugarland for convenience sake. I think Sugarland got the free publicity simply because it made for an interesting story since it was such a dramatic change from his previous job. Like I said, I don’t know Katrina, but she has been incredibly nice to Cody since he started working there so she’s good in my book.


Cody E
June 29, 2011 at 6:53 PM
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I have no idea what a Loco-pop is and I hate puppies. Next time you feel like crying make sure you know what you’re talking about first. Kthanks.


Katherine
July 12, 2011 at 1:48 AM
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I don’t know what a Cody England is, but he makes me laugh. So contradictory. Rofl……wipes laughter tear away oh life, you are so ironic.

 
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