Bendrr Checking In

by Bendrr 12 Replies latest jw friends

  • Bendrr
    Bendrr

    Hey everybody!

    Got home a little while ago from this weekend's drill and thought I'd stop by.

    The drill was today, but most of us decided to camp out at the facility overnight since it is a long drive for a lot of them. Our 1SG lives in Florida now, but drives up here to stay with his unit. Our batallion Chaplain Major lives in TN, but still drives down on Sunday to spend time with us. Second Batallion, second to none!

    It was a fun, though hot, weekend. The building we use at Georgia Public Safety Training Center is not air conditioned. Last night we just killed some downtime, grilling out, drinking beer, staying up late. I said screw sleeping in the building, it'll be cooler outside. So I dug my air mattress out of my 3-day pack and set it up on the back porch without a tent or sleeping bag. And I was right. It was cooler outside. Eventually. Like at about 0200 or so. And once I accepted all the damn bugs, I got a couple hours sleep. The temperature was still bearable when our 1SG started blowing his whistle at 0400.

    This morning we had a joint land nav exercise with a local CERT (Community Emergence Response Team, http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/) Close to 20 showed up and were divided up into smaller 4-person teams. Team Two was called out and the S3 SGT looked at me and said "Team Two is yours, Private."

    Oh. It's a TRAINING exercise. Thanks for telling me in advance.

    So I got to take charge of 4 civilians on a land nav course a little over a mile long through very dense woods in very hilly terrain. Civilians who had only had classroom time, and apparently not much of that.

    They were lucky. They wore street clothes. We were in full ACU's (think long sleeves in 90+ degree Georgia heat with 90+ percent humidity) plus had our LBE vests on. I do like my LBE vest though. It has a compartment in the back for a Camelbak hydration bladder.

    My team did ok, with only a little "guidance". I only had to stop them once, when one member and his pace counter went off in nearly opposite directions while the 3rd member with the compass who was supposed to be keeping them on a certain azimuth just stood there with his face hanging out not saying a word. To make it a perfect near-eff-up, my Brigade Command Sergeant Major had decided to tag along with MY team to see how I'd do. He never said a word. I let them go about 10 meters, looked at him, he just rolled his eyes. I told the stationary to call them back and REMINDED (caps intended) them of the instructions I'd given them before we started.

    Minor deviations on a 185 meter leg of a dense forest land nav course aren't acceptable. Trust me. Try running a course late at night with red-filtered flashlights looking for markings that in daylight are flourescent orange.

    After that, they 'got it' and did fairly well for beginners.

    Apparently I'm doing something right, as the NCO's are pushing me to (pardon the Witness lingo, but in military context it is sorta funny) reach out as one would to become a Ministerial Servant. Last night our S3 SGT assigned me to put together a PT regimen. Then this afternoon when we were discussing BN matters, assigned me to prepare to teach a radio communications class at next month's FTX if the regular instructor can't make it. And since he gave me the assignment, that means the regular instructor WON'T make it.

    The S3 was sort of a jerk to me when I first started, but I guess I've done something right.

    Upcoming missions were announced, one of which is a support mission at Fort Stewart where we will work with combat troops of the Army and NG, I'm definitely going for that one. We get to play the part of hostiles in one of a couple of Middle Eastern conflicts.

    But you know what really made my day?

    On the way home, in uniform as we don't change out of them until we actually get home, I stopped by Kroger to pick up a big fat sirloin for dinner. As I'm standing in the checkout line, I feel a tug at my sleeve. I turn to see a goth-looking kid of about 16 or 17 with hair down to his ass looking at me. He says nothing, just shakes my hand.

  • mrsjones5
    mrsjones5

    "On the way home, in uniform as we don't change out of them until we actually get home, I stopped by Kroger to pick up a big fat sirloin for dinner. As I'm standing in the checkout line, I feel a tug at my sleeve. I turn to see a goth-looking kid of about 16 or 17 with hair down to his ass looking at me. He says nothing, just shakes my hand."

    That was sweet.

    Welcome back,

    Josie

  • chickpea
    chickpea

    i really enjoy reading your experiences,
    makes me wax nostalgic for my time
    in service... sometimes i want to kick my
    own a$$ for not staying in... i could have
    retired at 50 and had a whole other
    career life experience.... oh well!

    something else altogether to be part
    of something bigger than yourself
    and organized to carry out a mission
    innit, blud? one of those "if i have to
    explain it..." kind of things

    i got one of my letters of commendation
    on a training exercise way back in my day
    at fort riley kansas in BNOC school....

    volunteered the morning after a
    night course to help the range
    commander work the kinks out
    of one of the the sector's that
    had misinformation on the coordinates
    vs targets

    i was there as a combat medical
    specialist and was training in
    orienteering, trying to find a
    4 x 4 post, painted white,
    in the dark, with coordinates
    and compass .... we used a STRING
    to keep count of paces, 1 knot/1000 paces

    we found it.....;-)

  • minimus
    minimus

    hey! Great to have u stop by!

  • Black Sheep
    Black Sheep

    I like reading about your adventures.

    Thanks for popping in.

    Cheers

    Chris

  • Bendrr
    Bendrr

    Chickpea, y'all didn't have the beads? Oh wait, I still haven't gotten either the beads or knotted up some 550 cord. I just keep count in my head and use a notepad. I've got my 100 meters dialed in to 62-64 paces depending on terrain but I hate trying to do the math in my head in the field.

    something else altogether to be part
    of something bigger than yourself
    and organized to carry out a mission
    innit, blud? one of those "if i have to
    explain it..." kind of things

    You know it! The mission doesn't succeed unless you personally MAKE it succeed. Somebody's always going to slack off, you've got to be the one to do what it takes to make it work. (remind me to tell you privately about the YCA Graduation last weekend)

    I had a potential recruit come join us today. Someone I've known for a long time. He's prior service, Air Farce. Sergeant at Cheyenne Mountain even. He got assigned to a different team and had never learned land nav in the Air Farce. (bash away!) So when we get done, he tells me "I was handed a compass and told to use it! I don't know how to do this!"

    Um, here's a clue. If you don't know, ask. You attend drills to learn, and to learn from your eff-ups. Lord knows I've gotten yelled at many times.

  • Bendrr
    Bendrr

    Oh and Chickpea, you'd love our BN and BDE CSM's. Both train with Blackhorse (2 BN). Both are 'Nam combat vets. When we had our orientation flights in a UH-60, the BDE CSM bitched to hell and back when the crew chief closed the side doors.

    When the 1SG showed up to open up our building at jipstick, BDE's CSM was already there. Sound asleep on his issue cot. He came out and drank with us wearing his ACU undershirt and a pair of pajama bottoms. Cussed up a storm in front of the female CPL, then at breakfast made us stop and told her to say grace.

    They're old school. If you eff up, anybody else would just give a stern reminder. CSM Simmons will demand push-ups and put you on KP. Even the officers show him respect.

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    HOOAH! Badass update bro. I have thought of signing up, but I am probably to0 chicken shit to commit this late in life. By the way, sure hope you guys are on our side if the blue helmets ever show up.

    BTS

  • Mary
    Mary

    Hey Bendrr.......That was a great read. It sounds like you're really enjoying it too.

    Excellent!

  • Bendrr
    Bendrr

    Never too late, Burn.

    Not sure which state you live in, but if yours has a State Guard / State Defense Force, go for it.

    It doesn't matter how old you are or what you can or cannot do, what matters is Parati Servire. Ready to serve. That's the GaSDF motto.

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