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It has been said that if a soldier is not complaining to you, then your soldiers do not trust you. So many people think that “everything sucks” for them. Today’s soldiers focus on everything they don’t have instead of everything they are privileged to have. I am currently deployed on my fifth combat tour as the Provost Sergeant in Bagram, Afghanistan. The biggest complaints that I have heard in recent weeks are how sub-standard the living conditions are, how slow the internet is, and how junky the non-tactical vehicles are.
During my last tour, I slept in a tent with seven other soldiers. Some of them snored so loud that they drowned out the noise of the air conditioner; other soldiers were labeled as the stinky kids, and others needed company so desperately that they would knock on the door constantly to see what people were doing. And, without fail, the wind would pound against the tent, night or day, for 100 days at a time.
Currently, I live in quarters that are makeshift storage containers (connex boxes); these buildings compete for quality with low-income, stateside apartments. My bed is a standard-size, twin bed with the same frame that my son sleeps on; I get to use linens just like he does. Now I have a hard structure to sleep in, with only one roommate; my junior soldiers only have three people to a room, max. There are indoor restrooms within three doors of all rooms, regardless of where you are on base - that sure beats walking in flip flops through sand or rocks in the middle of the night.
Even with all the improvements to living conditions, “everything sucks” for soldiers.
In 2007 or 2008, I was forced to stand in line outside a trailer for 30 minutes in order to use the phone or check my email. I remember phone conversations with my family; after I spoke, my wife would hear the words two minutes later. There were often nineteen other soldiers in the same trailer trying to talk on the phone at the same time. Often, we found ourselves shoulder to shoulder or back to back, jockeying for position. I remember soldiers would complain back then because of the lines being so long; however, in today’s operational environment, soldiers are walking around with cell phones in the middle of a war. They get the opportunity to FaceTime, Skype, or instant message anyone and everyone back home. Yet, there are still the complaints of how slow the internet speed is. Looking back at how conditions were only a decade ago, these complaints are truly mind boggling.
Having junky Non Tactical Vehicles (NTVs) is another complaint heard through the base. A NTV is a basic car - basically anything other than a military vehicle. There are thousands of NTVs located on post for general transportation. Yes, it is far to walk if you travel to the opposite side of the base; however, most people are placed within 400 meters from where they work to where their barracks are. There are dining facilities located within walking distance from any point, yet still people insist on the need to drive everywhere. They drive the 400 meters to work, and then they drive down the street to go eat. It’s insanity.
There has been a weight problem in the military for a few years now - perhaps people will start putting two and two together and realize that all the driving is an issue. During my initial four tours, I walked everywhere I went; NTVs were not even an option. Now, military police are responding to minor traffic accidents and pedestrians being struck by vehicles. All of these vehicles are just serving to convenience laziness.
We’ve been at war for over a decade, nine months at a time. There have been great leaps and bounds in technology that have improved the quality of life while forward deployed. Consider for a second that you can fly across the United States in six hours! How many weeks did it take our ancestors? Or even our parents? And still, the plane seats are uncomfortable and the Wi-Fi doesn’t work. Complain, complain, complain. In order to combat the “everything sucks” mentality, leaders need to lead from their position with an attitude of gratitude. Soldiers don’t know what they don’t know.
During my last tour, I slept in a tent with seven other soldiers. Some of them snored so loud that they drowned out the noise of the air conditioner; other soldiers were labeled as the stinky kids, and others needed company so desperately that they would knock on the door constantly to see what people were doing. And, without fail, the wind would pound against the tent, night or day, for 100 days at a time.
Currently, I live in quarters that are makeshift storage containers (connex boxes); these buildings compete for quality with low-income, stateside apartments. My bed is a standard-size, twin bed with the same frame that my son sleeps on; I get to use linens just like he does. Now I have a hard structure to sleep in, with only one roommate; my junior soldiers only have three people to a room, max. There are indoor restrooms within three doors of all rooms, regardless of where you are on base - that sure beats walking in flip flops through sand or rocks in the middle of the night.
Even with all the improvements to living conditions, “everything sucks” for soldiers.
In 2007 or 2008, I was forced to stand in line outside a trailer for 30 minutes in order to use the phone or check my email. I remember phone conversations with my family; after I spoke, my wife would hear the words two minutes later. There were often nineteen other soldiers in the same trailer trying to talk on the phone at the same time. Often, we found ourselves shoulder to shoulder or back to back, jockeying for position. I remember soldiers would complain back then because of the lines being so long; however, in today’s operational environment, soldiers are walking around with cell phones in the middle of a war. They get the opportunity to FaceTime, Skype, or instant message anyone and everyone back home. Yet, there are still the complaints of how slow the internet speed is. Looking back at how conditions were only a decade ago, these complaints are truly mind boggling.
Having junky Non Tactical Vehicles (NTVs) is another complaint heard through the base. A NTV is a basic car - basically anything other than a military vehicle. There are thousands of NTVs located on post for general transportation. Yes, it is far to walk if you travel to the opposite side of the base; however, most people are placed within 400 meters from where they work to where their barracks are. There are dining facilities located within walking distance from any point, yet still people insist on the need to drive everywhere. They drive the 400 meters to work, and then they drive down the street to go eat. It’s insanity.
There has been a weight problem in the military for a few years now - perhaps people will start putting two and two together and realize that all the driving is an issue. During my initial four tours, I walked everywhere I went; NTVs were not even an option. Now, military police are responding to minor traffic accidents and pedestrians being struck by vehicles. All of these vehicles are just serving to convenience laziness.
We’ve been at war for over a decade, nine months at a time. There have been great leaps and bounds in technology that have improved the quality of life while forward deployed. Consider for a second that you can fly across the United States in six hours! How many weeks did it take our ancestors? Or even our parents? And still, the plane seats are uncomfortable and the Wi-Fi doesn’t work. Complain, complain, complain. In order to combat the “everything sucks” mentality, leaders need to lead from their position with an attitude of gratitude. Soldiers don’t know what they don’t know.
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 29
Great post 1SGT. I look back on my tenure in the Army and sometimes wish that I was still serving. I was thankful for everything I was taught and had all the experiences to include serving in RVN. These are the things we carry everyday of the rest of our lives, your soldier should be thankful for what they have.
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Marines don't complain, they ask for more or can we do it again, Sir! A difference between soldier and Marine
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Yep, I lived at Kabul Compound (AKA Camp Eggers) in 04,05,07 and 08. The facility was wonderful in my eyes, because (a) I wasn't a Private on an endless guard roster and (b) I have also experienced a much greater level of suck on other deployments. I'll bet the Soldier's thought Valley Forge was cold and it sucked too.
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Ah, hell, there is always something to complain about from somebody's point of view. It's just a matter of making sure they keep things in perspective. I long for "old school" Army. At least if they are bitching about bullshit stuff, that means the important stuff is squared away.
I'm out of the Army, been out for 8 years, and I still bitch about stuff that sucks for the ones that are in now.
I'm out of the Army, been out for 8 years, and I still bitch about stuff that sucks for the ones that are in now.
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Wow...you had A/C? I never did when I was in. But I sure as hell remember the stinky kids. It was during the time when the Platoon Sergeant ordered us to take him to the shower blivet and hose him down. SFC David Pratt said it perfect. "The things that suck the most make the best memories." I didn't have email access or cell phones in the field and it was ok with me. It gave me time to bond with my brothers (some more than others). But no regrets there. The part I loved the most about training and deployments was getting back to a time where we would deal with the "What if?" What if we didn't have electricity or access to anything internet related (one in the same). What would we do? Well, to those soldiers that say that everything sucks remember this: You were not forced to raise your hand and serve your country. You did this on your own. The different branches of the military train different, deploy different and provide certain amenities to their service members. You are not required to have your phone or internet access. That is a privilege. When you think you have it bad, there is always someone that has it worse than you.
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There is usually a shortage of positive character amongst the new Soldiers.
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I like this post and concur. While at the old the Rhein Main, we were in old dorms that were falling apart, but the smell of cheeseburgers, AFN TV in an old day room were the days. It felt like reality and yet, these conditions were prime real estates to those in the fields or the tents my dad had in Korea, Thailand and Vietnam. MSG(P) Rafael Aguilera
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If it don't suck then the job is not getting done and your not having fun nothing like walking a couple hundred feet in the sand and rocks with camel biters in flip flops to use the porta potty you gotta love it
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It's because most Junior Soldiers are born after 1990 are self entitled sh*ts. So they think it should be just like it is back home. Sorry, no, I'm not PC. From what I see of most of todays soldiers, they would have been beaten/killed back in my day. We had nothing. Op Just Cause, only reason we got to call home, a benefactor, ie. rich Panamanian, whose building we holed up in for the day, let us use his phone. Otherwise we got SQUAT! These soldiers need to STFU, sit down, and appreciate how easy they have it....
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