What's the best advice you've ever gotten from someone in the military?
Ha. A couple of my favorites to finish that:
"...give us gloves/cold weather gear when we can't wear it?"
"...sew pockets into pants and jackets if we can't put our hands in them?"
To your point about cold weather gear.
The best advice that I've put to use is "admit when you don't something - at the right time, to the right person." As a 2LT who enlisted as an 09S, there is a never ending list of things I don't know, and my greatest tool so far is figuring out who to ask, how to ask, and when to ask. I've seen plenty of other inexperienced 2LTs not gain the respect of their Soldiers, and remain ineffective leaders, because they keep going on not understanding things with a 'fake it 'til you make it' attitude. After Platoon Leader, my primary job is to learn, and developing relationships with experienced NCOs who go out of their way to help and educate me as been invaluable.
"Be at the right place, at the right time, in the right uniform all
while looking good and giving 100% for 100% of the time with an attitude deemed
necessary to complete the task"
When I got to my first unit in '99, Ft Drum, NY, as a PFC straight out of
AIT, my first line leader was previously an 82nd Airborne Soldier of the Year
that had passed a small yellow sticky to me that told me this is what you need
to Be, Know, and Do if you want to get promoted and be successful while here.
The first line above is pretty much the gist of what was on that sticky, but
here are the other target points that were right below that line:
DO: Military and Civilian Education ALWAYS
DO: max your APFT and weapons marksmanship
DO: as many correspondence courses as possible
DO: look good physically and mentally, first impressions are lasting
impressions in a competitive occupation
DO: learn everything about your job and your supervisors
Basically, I was told by him that it is human nature to be attracted to
attractive people. (I think he was very in to himself specifically on the
personal appearance but as a whole with his explanation he had a valid point,
considering his Fast Tracking his way through promotion.) In a job world that
has a very competitive promotion system this explanation was worth knowing.
This attraction he mentioned can be physical, educational (knowledge based) and
mentally/emotional (your attitude). Knowing this, if I strove to be successful
or at the least give the best that I could in these areas I would naturally
have more of a competitive edge. I worked my butt off as a young soldier in
schools, fitness, and while at work used initiative and made it a point to be a
part of every mission. Sadly, I couldn't fix ugly but I could fix an out of
shape appearance :-)
This I believe was the best advice I received from day 1
in the Army and has proved right ever since.
He would change up the subject matter and apparatus to bring but it never got old. Lol
It has never left me. I think about it with my up and coming soldiers. The only measure of who you are is how you guide and watch the success of those around you.
Some once told me "I may trip, I may fall. I will not quit, I will crawl" i also remember this it motivates me to keep pushing.
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