Posted on Jul 27, 2015
Col Kyle Taylor
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We all have had different experiences based on our specific training as well as our experiences in various jobs. Based on those experiences we should be able to reflect on this experiences, and tell our stories. What title would you give your stories?
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1SG Civil Affairs Specialist
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"Why does anyone live here?"
Just when I think the Army has sent me to the worst possible dump of a location, they up the ante.
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SGT Kevin Hughes
SGT Kevin Hughes
5 y
Oh Dear Top. I can see another title coming up for your book: "This in not your Grandfather's Holiday Inn." Stay safe!
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MAJ Ken Landgren
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How power point destroyed my marriage and almost made me resign my commission.
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MAJ Ken Landgren
MAJ Ken Landgren
>1 y
Seriously. I would write a book on leadership.
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LTC Stephen C.
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Edited 5 y ago
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Col Kyle Taylor, one of RallyPoint's very own has already done so, the title is "Uniforms" and was written by Sgt David G Duchesneau. Here's the Amazon write up on Sgt Duchesneau's fine reminiscence.

"This book, Uniforms, spans an era in a boy’s life that tells about his experiences growing up in a small New England town, from his childhood years, attending parochial school, to his adolescent years, continuing parochial school and becoming an active member of a drum and bugle corps for ten years. The story continues into early adulthood when he enlisted into the United States Marine Corps, through boot camp, and then serving two tours of duty, 1969 through 1970, in Vietnam. It is a factual description of his life as he grew up and through his experiences of wearing many uniforms, which shaped his life and future forever. The language used in this book is sometimes graphic, with four-letter expressions. However, it is the exact language that was so commonly used during that era. The author does his best at explaining what it was like to grow up in the late 1950s and the 1960s, attending school taught only by nuns. Then while still attending school, joining a drum and bugle corps and all his experiences traveling around New England and Canada, performing in parades and field competitions. At eighteen years old, he enlisted into the Armed Forces, United States Marine Corps, and explains what life was like at eighteen years old in 1968 to go through boot camp at Parris Island in South Carolina. As his marine infantry training continued, the author describes, in detail and in his own words, what it was like as the Marine Corps prepared him and many others like him for combat in Vietnam. The author then describes, to the best of his recollection and ability, what life was like in Vietnam in 1969 while he was attached to a marine combat unit in Quang Tri Province of Southern Vietnam. The book goes on to describe how, at the end of 1969, he was redeployed to another combat unit south of Da Nang. The author stayed in Vietnam until mid-August of 1970 and then was released from active duty and returned home at the age of twenty-one. This book speaks from the heart and mind of everyone who has ever had the experience of attending a Catholic school with nuns, all those who were ever so fortunate to be a member of a drum and bugle corps, and all those combat veterans who served in Vietnam and experienced the rigors and sorrows of that war."

I've read the book, enjoyed it immensely and recommend it to all. SGT (Join to see) CPT (Join to see) GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
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PO2 Peter Klein
PO2 Peter Klein
>1 y
"The Right Way, the Wrong Way,and the Navy Way"
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PO1 G. Leslie /Stiltner
PO1 G. Leslie /Stiltner
>1 y
A guide of worthless information you were taught in boot camp and then never used again!!
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MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
9 y
A great read!!
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SGT Kevin Hughes
SGT Kevin Hughes
5 y
Wonderful. Just wonderful.
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