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Retired Georgia Army National Guard CSM uses own journey to help future veterans prepare for civilian life

Kari Williams by Kari Williams
March 12, 2026
Phillip Stringfield was the 8th command sergeant major for Georgia Army National Guard. Photo by Capt. William Carraway

Phillip Stringfield was the 8th command sergeant major for Georgia Army National Guard. Photo by Capt. William Carraway

Joining the Georgia Army National Guard was Phillip Stringfield’s redemption arc. 

“I wanted to be a soldier. I wanted to contribute to the military and to America,” said Stringfield, a Georgia Army National Guard veteran. “I’m very patriotic. I think everybody that can serve, should serve. And it was an honor for me to serve.”  

Stringfield was about four years removed from his self-described failure of a stint on active duty when happenstance led him to speak to a Guard recruiter and enlist. 

Command Sgt. Maj. Phillip Stringfield, outgoing senior enlisted advisor for the Georgia Army National Guard (left), Maj. Gen. Joe Jarrard, Georgia National Guard Adjutant General (center), and Command Sgt. Maj. Roy Marchert, incoming senior enlisted advisor (right), during the Change of Responsibility invocation at Dobbins Air Reserve Base in 2018.
Photo by Senior Airman Jamila A. Haven

His renewed career took him from a private to retiring in 2018 as command sergeant major of the Georgia Army National Guard — a role he sought from day one. 

Now, Stringfield is sharing his journey through his debut book, “Faith to Faith: A Warrior’s Story of Resilience, Faith, and Redemption,” which was released Feb. 6. 

Six months after his retirement, Stringfield was diagnosed with prostate cancer, which he said is a result of his deployments and exposure to burn pits. His faith led him to write about resiliency, as well as how he navigated depression and became alcohol-free. 

“[There were] redeeming qualities I had to bring back,” he said, “and all through the book that’s what I want to share with people. That it’s OK to be not OK.” 

Stringfield, who has been diagnosed with PTSD, said he also tries to impress upon service members the culture shift they will face when they leave the military. 

“To this day, I can’t [sit] with my back turned in a restaurant … and it’s OK to be that way, and that’s what I share with warriors,” he said. “You might not ever change from being in that, and that’s OK. But you have to start letting go, and that’s the part of the book that I talk about redemption and faith. You have to start back believing in society, believing in things around you, … and start redeeming yourself and crossing back over into the civilian world.” 

But he stressed that it’s not a quick process. 

“I try to let people know it’s not going to be overnight that you’re going to be able to just flip the switch and become a civilian again,” Stringfield said. “It doesn’t happen that way.” 

Not even for traditional guardsmen. They still have a void to fill, according to Stringfield, who ended his career in Active Guard Reserve. 

“If not through your military family that’s retired, through your civilian family or whatever you used to do,” he said. “You have to fill that void that you’re walking away from. And sometimes it’s not easy for people to fill that void.” 

Stringfield is now CEO of Patriot Seven.

Even as “the most senior enlisted” role in the state, Stringfield said he was unprepared to leave the military, making him wonder how junior noncommissioned officers handle the transition. 

Which is why his book also breaks down areas that service members need to account for in their post-military goals, such as education and finances, alongside using military benefits, such as VA home loans, while they’re still eligible. 

Stringfield’s overarching goal with the book, he said, is for readers to come away knowing their story doesn’t have to define them. 

“Don’t let it be the every ending of you. I tell my children, I tell people I talk to every day, it’s alright to be in a struggle,” he said. “Don’t stay in the struggle.”  

“Faith to Faith: A Warrior’s Story of Resilience, Faith, and Redemption” is available on Amazon in hardback, paperback and as an audiobook.  

Visit Patriot Seven for more information, or to book Stringfield for a book signing or speaking event.

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Tags: Active Guard Reservecommand sergeant majorFaith to FaithGeorgia army national guardPhillip StringfieldPTSDVA home loans
Kari Williams

Kari Williams

Kari Williams was the associate editor for AmeriForce Media from September 2021 to September 2023. She has more than a decade of experience in the journalism industry across print, digital and social media platforms throughout the Midwest. Kari has bachelor’s and master’s degrees in mass communications from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.

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