Posted on Aug 13, 2015
SMSgt First Sergeant
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In life we all have to make decisions. Some are easy to make, but others tough. I am not trying to pour salt on a wound or remove the band aid, but I am curious in how others respond to situations? And what the thought process is for them.
Posted in these groups: Decisions Decisions
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1stSgt Sergeant Major/First Sergeant
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Edited >1 y ago
We had an Iraqi Border patrol guy who had been shot and the Bn refused a medivac, so I decided to ground evac him to t iraqi hospital. Doc (HM3) said he would die without more care than we could give him in the back of my LAV-L. I took two LAV-25's for front and rear and hauled ass through Husaba, down IED ally. We all arrived safely but then had the same thing to get back. Fastest mounted patrol I was ever on. I dont think we ever below 65 MPH. Iraqi dude lived and I spoke to him about 5 months later. I put a total of 13 Marines, 1 Navy Corpsman and about 4 million dollars worth of vehicles and gear at risk to save the life of this one man. In this case the risk was worth he reward. Iraqi got home to his wife and kid.
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SMSgt First Sergeant
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It is stories like this that should be in the news. Way to lead from the front Top. Thank you for sharing.
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SMSgt Bryan Raines
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My hardest decision to make was to ask the ER staff to stop doing CPR on my wife. The CPR was not working and my wife and I had already discussed that since she was ill and not likely to get well she wanted no heroic efforts to taken. She was 32years old. The hardest thing I have ever done was tell an 8 and 4 year old their mother was not coming home. It was 25 Dec 1993.
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SMSgt First Sergeant
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God bless you sir. That is a sad story. Those kids were lucky to have you for their father. I can only imagine the magnitude of that decision and then follow it up with having to break the news to kids.
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SMSgt Bryan Raines
SMSgt Bryan Raines
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SMSgt (Join to see) - Thank you. It made me appreciate all the things life has to give and cherish all the times I have with loved ones both good and bad.
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Sgt Kelli Mays
Sgt Kelli Mays
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SMSgt Bryan Raines So sorry to hear your story.
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SGT Rick Ash
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There is no way to send my message but here goes. (When I hit ENTER my typing just disappears!) I was the night shift manager at 1/7 ADA, Tobin Wells, TX.(* miles north on War RD out of Ft. Bliss. The most sensitive piece of tracking equipment for the whole missile battery had been down 4 days so this would have been a Thursday night. 3 shifts a day for 4 days and still this tracker was down. It is a BIG decision to start pulling 100' cables loose by unscrewing the cap and wiggling them free of all 128 contact points (wires). It's a last, desperate move. So I went out to the line with my mind made up. When the crew saw me heading for the main cable they started disappearing into the desert....:-) When I pulled the cable head it almost fell straight down, someone had deliberately worked the head back and forth until half of the wires had come lose from the head. Pure sabotage. I sent a PFC back to the bay for the manual that dealt with THAT cable. With a flashlight I started soldering back the color coded wires to the correct pin with only a penlight I held in my mouth. When I say color coded by the time you get to the 100th wire you are looking at a white wire with a yellow winding stripe and the next wire is white with an orange winding stripe. The flashlight was dimming and only I knew the Colonel would be there at 0600 hrs as this issue had escalated to Condition Red. I finished soldering prayed and hooked the cable back up then threw the main power switch. When that tracking dual domed head started rising up I knew then. I had DONE IT! I had enough time to radio the Colonels adjutant and tell him the battery was UP!!
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SMSgt First Sergeant
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That is an awesome story. One thing I love about the military is the get it done attitude of most.
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