Married Senior Airmen reenlist together

  • Published
  • By Joel Langton
  • 47th Flying Training Wing public affairs
The winding road of Senior Airmen Luis and Angeles Perez's lives, who have been Air Force members for four years and husband and wife for a little more, took another positive turn Oct. 30. 

A few minutes after 9 a.m., they took turns raising their right hand in the wing conference room and signed up for four more years in the Air Force. 

They each initially enlisted at the Military Entrance Processing Station in 2005. Angeles joined the Air Force Nov. 15 and Luis Nov. 29. They saw the Air Force as a route to something a little better, and a way out of their hometown of Firebaugh, Calif. 

For Luis, college was too expensive and he saw the Air Force as a way to pay for his education. Angeles was sold on the Air Force when she attended her brother's graduation from Basic Military Training at Lackland Air Force Base. It seemed like a natural step for them to get married and then join the Air Force. 

However, marriage was the part that almost didn't happen. They spent half of each day together in high school, and can't even say when they first noticed each other. They argue over if it was in Biology, Chemistry or Calculus. 

"I knew who she was, but I was the nerd in the back of the room," Luis said. 

They finished high school as friends, but not much more. They were two smart kids who helped each other with homework and happened to live a mile from each other. A month after graduation, Angeles' accidentally called Luis. 

The accidental phone call led to Luis, the nerd in the back of the room, getting Angeles to come over and watch television. And the rest, as they say, is history. A year later, they married, joined the Air Force and a few months after that they were stationed at Laughlin.
Angeles saw the Air Force as a great deal and planned on giving the world's premier air and space force four years, and then focusing on being a mom. Ariana, the couple's daughter, was born two years into their tenure at Laughlin. Angeles liked the Air Force, but knew she'd have to do at least one deployment during her first four years and wasn't looking forward to four months away from her little angel, she said. 

So, when she got the orders to go to Kirkuk Air Base, Iraq, she knew it was part of the job and went. What she didn't know, was those four months would change her perspective on the Air Force. 

Angeles was assigned to the Unit Control Center and responsible for ensuring everyone was safe and accounted for after attacks, as Kirkuk averaged two mortar attacks per week during her deployment. While terrorists were trying to destroy the air base, they were changing the Air Force from a job to a profession for Angeles. 

"I got to see how my job makes a difference. We were there and we were in the fight," Angeles said.  "When I left for the deployment, I wasn't going to reenlist," she said. "When I got back, I knew I was going to." 

For Luis, a medical readiness manager, the decision was a little easier. "I liked the Air Force. I liked what we do, I just expected to reenlist," he said. 

He's involved in the fight as well, ensuring that medical group members have what they need when they deploy. He then keeps track of them and if they need something, he gets it out to them. 

"I see the fight through our deployed members' eyes," he said. "I'd like to deploy, but right now, it's important that I make sure our people have what they need." 

Now there is another twist in the road ahead of them. They've been at Laughlin for more than three years, and it's natural to expect a move in the near future. 

However, their leadership has a simple objective: "We want to keep them here," said Col. Bruce Peters, 47th Medical Group commander. 

However, Luis and Angeles know the truth. You just never know what's around the corner.