What I’m Thankful For

Today is Thanksgiving and I have a lot to be thankful for! Currently, I’m out of Michigan away at some government training. I’ll be here until I graduate in April. After graduation, I’ll be moving to Phoenix where I’ll be working. I’m very thankful for the job opportunity and for Phoenix over some worse locations I could have gotten! The rest of the post will be catching up with what I’ve been up to and what I’m thankful for.

I’m thankful for the beauty of our country and of my home state Michigan. Now that I’m away, I have the opportunity to appreciate the beauty of other parts of the country. However, before I left I made a fall colors trip to the Upper Peninsula. There was this train bridge off in the woods near Negaunee, MI that I’ve always wanted to explore so I hiked out there to see how the colors were. I was a little early, but it is still an awesome spot and I’m glad I got to check it out before I leave Michigan for a while.

I’m also super thankful for my family! It’s a bummer to be away while they gather for Thanksgiving, but I know that they are supportive of what I’m doing and I know I’ll be seeing them soon in the future. They have been so helpful in helping me move all of my stuff and storing it while I’m at training. My dad will deliver my truck to me here at training soon as well. I’m especially thankful that I was able to make it to meet and witness my newest niece, Claire’s, baptism in Virginia before I headed to training.

Since my time in Michigan is over, for now, my military career is up in the air. It will come down to where I think God can use me best. I am blessed to have many opportunities, and for now, I am deciding between staying with my current unit for a potential deployment or transferring to the Reserves or National Guard in Arizona. Lots to contemplate. All I know for now is that it has been an absolute honor to be a platoon leader. I have learned so much about leadership and about myself in the two years I have been leading my platoon. Even if this is just temporary and I will come back to lead them in the future, I am very thankful for all the men I have worked with that have helped me grow and develop into the leader I am today.

I’m so thankful for the sport of jiu-jitsu and the life lessons and friends it has given me. At my last class, I was surprised with a promotion to purple belt. Coach Carl said some nice things about me and then he asked me if I had anything to say. I hadn’t planned anything, but it was one of those moments where everything comes from the heart. I gave a speech with my voice quivering with emotion as I spoke and at the end, Coach was choked up and several people in the class were crying. That’s how much this gym and the people there mean to me. I am looking forward to dropping back in when I’m in town.

Lastly, I’m so thankful especially for two of the guys above (both closest to me). Wyatt and Aaron have been my roommates for the last three years and have dealt with me leaving for 6 months at a time on multiple occasions. They have managed everything at the house without any complaints. We had so many good times camping, watching sports, going to bars, playing cards, and just chilling around talking about life or watching movies. Leaving them feels like it’s the end of an era.

Overall, I am incredibly blessed! God has been so good to me. Covid hasn’t been easy for anyone, but the people that have been there for me during this time have been such a blessing. I’m excited to finally start moving forward into a new chapter and I’m sure I’ll the people from this closing chapter will be reappearing in the next! God bless!

What I’m Thankful For

You Never Know if You Never Try

This next post is a raw copy and paste out of my journal with some notes in parentheses to add some context.

Well, I failed out of RTAC (pre-ranger course). We had our land nav (Land navigation test – compass, map, and protractor to find points out in the woods) retest today and we woke up at 2am to get ready and eat an MRE (Meal Ready to Eat) before we got on the bus. This day went better than the first and I had two points at a reasonable time in the morning but it took so long to get back to the other side of the course, that by the time I did I did not have time to get the other points.

I was praying the whole time that I would find my points and I was praying that I would pass and God delivered a few points to me right after I was done praying but I guess he has other plans. I was only able to find 2 out of the 5 points. We got back and did hygiene and I started to process that I will probably get dropped. That was a complete bummer. We packed up all our gear and I got offered RTLI (a pre-pre-ranger course designed for basic training students) and then to roll into the next ranger class. I turned that down. It would have put me all the way in September ranger class and I can’t wait that long.

I came to the conclusion that the time had kind of passed for me to put everything into ranger. Had I passed RTAC I wouldn’t have left ranger school until I got my tab, but I just don’t have the heart for the extended pre-ranger timeline at this point knowing I have other opportunities that I am excited about. A year ago I was much more physically ready not having come right out of JRTC (previous training I finished recently) and had nothing else going on and all I wanted to do was go to ranger. At this point, I have a final offer to be a border patrol agent that I’m excited about and is my full-time job opportunity. I am really disappointed in myself for not passing ranger school. However, at the end of the day, God has a plan and before I went to pre-ranger school I was contemplating even going once I got my border patrol offer. This made it clear to me what opportunity I should pursue and honestly I am in such a blessed position to have options that cause such a serious deliberation. So it’s on to the next.

I still can’t help but feel disappointed in myself for failing. I’ve never failed a land navigation course in my army career and this just happened to be the one that meant the most to me. It’s unfortunate, but that’s the way life shakes out sometimes. There is also a part of me that is upset and honestly embarrassed that I told so many people that they wouldn’t see me for months and that I would be gone at ranger school. My company commander, 1SG, battalion, and army peers will probably be disappointed. My family, including my retired ranger uncle, and friends who were praying and rooting for me will be sad for me and also probably a little disappointed as well. I’ll show up at the jiu-jitsu gym and people will ask why I’m back already and I’ll have to explain to all these people that I failed. It’s embarrassing and I was not looking forward to it. Honestly, I’m still not looking forward to that, but I’m getting to a healthier mentality with it. I got closer by thinking about a speech Teddy Roosevelt gave. It’s come to be known as “The Man in the Arena.”

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.”

Yes, I have to deal with my failures and with those who might point them out, but at the end of it all, you never know if you never try. Like Roosevelt said if I’m going to fail I might as well fail while daring greatly. So yes I failed pre-ranger school and ultimately my shot at actual ranger school. It doesn’t mean I can’t dare again, but at this moment in time there are other opportunities for me to get in the arena and that is what I’ll do. Ranger school will still be there and I would like to go back, but at the very least I can hold my head up high knowing that I tried.

You Never Know if You Never Try

JRTC and on to the Next!

It’s been a minute since the last update. Since then I’ve been hard at work remodeling our kitchen and working on a motorcycle I bought back in early December. I should have done a better job of taking before and after pictures, but it’s a definite upgrade in functionality and in looks. Below is the only older picture I could find of it next to a shot of the new look. It’s still in progress so I didn’t give you the full look.

The motorcycle got some upgrades like a cellphone charger, LED headlights, and an awesome gear rack in the back. I got a couple of rides out of it, but unfortunately, since then I killed it. I think it’s a more involved engine problem so unfortunately, it’s a problem for future me.

This is a random side story but look at the two pictures below. They are both the same house two years apart. It’s a neighborhood on the rougher east side of Saginaw that I like to walk through from time to time just to get a different perspective. This last time I caught a picture of that house before the full force of Spring had taken over the whole house with ivy. It’s a pretty interesting thing to think about how we humans just came into nature to establish our own dwellings, and how once we are gone nature will take back over. It makes me think about what a city would look like if humans just disappeared.

Besides those projects I spent a fair amount of time on active duty orders preparing my army national guard unit for a bigger summer training at Fort Polk, Louisiana. We just recently finished our rotation at JRTC (Joint Readiness Training Center). I’m actually writing the majority of his post on the backend of the training down here.

JRTC is essentially a simulated combat situation. There is a “box” that you enter to start the simulation. In the box you wear all your gear, in addition, to essentially an industrial level laser tag system. Our whole Brigade was there which is approximately 3,000 soldiers give or take. On our level, it just meant that the timeline for getting missions and guidance took longer than it typically does. Overall, it was hot, there were all sorts of bugs, snakes, and spiders, and even scorpions. It wasn’t the most fun, but we did have a couple of good missions. One mission in particular we were the only company out of the entire Brigade to take a foothold in one of the villages there. I died on that mission, which isn’t unexpected because I actually died four times throughout the rotation. For the sake of the scenario, I just happened to be a very similar replacement! We spent 15 days total in the “box” and lots of lessons learned.

Toward the end of my time in the field, I had a pretty nasty rash on my leg that actually started to grow and swell pretty bad. I toughed it out to stay in the field with my platoon until the end of our time in the box. You can see in the picture above that it got roughly twice the size of the other leg. It wasn’t fluid or anything; just really swollen. After an ultrasound determined it wasn’t a blood clot they theorized it was probably some sort of bug/scorpion/snake bite reaction. I actually had to spend 3 nights in the medical bay confined to elevating my leg while watching movies, which wasn’t the worst thing haha! Eventually, I made it back to our company and helped them close out the last couple of tasks, though I, unfortunately, missed most of the packing up process. We had some leadership meetings and then waited for our day to get out of that miserable humid environment.

We had charted flights to and from Ft. Polk which was a nice experience not having to deal with airport security. Overall, this annual training was over a month long and I spent time at Camp Grayling, Fort Custer, and Fort Polk. One of the highlights was doing the Murph (a workout named after a fallen Soldier) with some of my men on Memorial Day at Fort Custer.

Now, for me, it’s off to Ranger school starting on July 9th. I am glad to have had the tough annual training experience just before to get me in the right mental state. Physically, I am not in as good of shape as I would like, but Ranger school is probably more of a mental battle than anything. I’m a little anxious, but very excited about the opportunity. Ranger school is a challenge that I have been trying to tackle for over a year now and COVID had ruined a couple of my chances, but at last, I’m on the right track. Anxiety-wise, Ranger school has been looming unfinished over my head for too long. That’s why I am so excited to finally get there and get it done. Regardless it will be a tough and grueling experience. Prayers while I am there would be greatly appreciated!

Hopefully, the next blog post will be from a Ranger. God bless!

JRTC and on to the Next!