An Unplanned Road Trip

What started out as a trip to endure “the hardest 10 days in the Army” turned into something a lot more. I left for Army Air Assault school in Fort Benning, GA on November 1st and finally returned back to Michigan on December 2nd after burning through a whole month, traversing 12 states, thousands of miles, sleeps in the bed of my truck, and many great times with friends and family along the way!

Air Assault school is split into three separate phases. The first phase was primarily academic where we learned all the different types of aircraft and their rated cargo capacity and the prerequisites for carrying sling loads. At the end of this phase was a 6-mile ruck with about a 50lb rucksack. The second phase was sling load operations. In this phase, we did a lot of hands-on with different configurations of loads for different types of helicopters. At the end of this phase is a hands-on test where you are graded on find 4 out of 5 deficiencies within 2 minutes on four different loads; the cargo trailer, a humvee, a cargo net, and a cargo bag. I failed the cargo bag and had to retest! Luckily after some retraining time, I did my retest and passed. If I had failed the retest I would have been sent home. The final phase of the school was rappelling. This was by far the most fun. We spent two days doing different types of combat rappels out of a 60-foot tower. On the third day of this phase, we went out to a big open field and we all had the chance to rappel 90 feet out of a Blackhawk. I was scared, but so pumped for that! Not many people can say they have been in a Blackhawk, let alone rappelled out of one and got paid to do it!

The very last event at Air Assault School is the 12 mile ruck where, again, you have the 50lb rucksack on your back and you have to complete the ruck in under 3 hours for a 15 minute mile pace. Seeing that this was the last event, and I really haven’t pushed myself that hard on rucks so far in my army career, mostly do to my inexperience, I decided to see what I was made out of. The route was 3 miles, so we had to do down to the 3 mile, then back to the start, and then to the 9 mile for the final turn around and then to the start for the finish. The fastest person in class, leading the ruck, gets to carry the guidon (class flag). If someone passes them they take the guidon and hand off their weapon to the guy they passed. Rucking with the guidon was never really a thought in my mind especially after I saw the class leader cruising wayyy ahead of me at the 3 mile turn around point. However, I had already decided this was a person challenge to see how well I could do. I noticed at the 6 mile turn around point I was a little closer. Then at the 9 mile I was a fair amount closer. I still didn’t think I’d catch the guidon, but I was determined to finish with a good time. With one mile left on the ruck I was running on a stretch with no streetlights (it was still dark since we started the ruck at 4am) then way ahead of me in the distance I saw a streetlight and the guidon waving under it! I couldn’t believe I was that close so, with renewed energy, I picked up the pace and caught up to them and joined the couple of other guys running with the guidon. They decided that rather than having one winner we would finish as a group all holding the guidon together. In the end I finished with the class studs, a bunch of ranger regiment guys and an SF guy, with a time of 2:10. That was under the 11min/mile pace goal I had set for myself, and more than that I learned an important lesson in leadership. Rather than having one guy finish and feel good about himself, we had 5 guys finish as a special group all proud to have been apart of the team. That was a good moment is one of my more fond Army memories.

After that I spent the weekend in Fort Benning catching up with friends. We had a really nice cookout night and we also had some dumpster diving and thrift store adventures! Another one of my buddies is going to be stationed in Italy, so I spent some time teaching him to drive a manual car in my old truck. Hopefully, that lesson will help him out when he tries to find a car once he gets to Italy!

After hanging out in Georgia I started heading southeast to Florida! My plans involved Visiting Florida’s three National Parks; Everglades, Biscayne, and Dry Tortugas. However, plans are prone to failure and that’s not exactly what happened, but I got my toes in the sand and I saw my share of sunrises and sunsets!

Everglades was the only real park that worked out and I really enjoyed my time there. It is a lot different than typical National Parks so you have to shift your expectations a lot before you visit. My visit was definitely elevated by the alligator that I saw. He was a biggin, probably over 10 feet! I saw him just chilling on the land right by the water and then I accidentally scared him into the water and watched him swim away. Iguanas seemed to be all over the Florida keys when I headed that direction.

I made my way out to Key West to catch a ferry to Dry Tortugas National Park, but unfortunately, it was really windy when I was there so all ferries were canceled. Being stuck in Key West with nothing to do is better than most places Id say though. I did the typical touristy things and made it to the southernmost point in the continental United States. I explored some wrecked bridges from, what I assume, was tropical storm damage. I also took advantage of some fresh seafood and sunsets. Biscayne was more mainland closer to Miami. I really got very little of the real experience at that park. That was due partly to the extra-expensive socially-distanced boat tours and due to the same high wind conditions. That park is best-seen snorkeling and with such high winds, the sand would have been all kicked up.

After spending so much time sleeping in the bed of my truck in wild and in Walmart parking lots it was pretty refreshing to catch up with some old friends (and sleep on their couches). The first friend I visited was my old college roommate Tre. Tre lives near Tampa now so that was a nice stop on my way back north from the Keys. The first night we just hung out and caught up and then he nerded out teaching me the Star Wars intricacies of the Mandalorian when we watched one of the episodes. Just like old times! The next day we went longboarding by the ocean and explored Clearwater beach, which is super nice! That night he and his girlfriend, Brooke, took me out to a restaurant on Clearwater beach. It was a great time and so good to see him! I already have plans of wrangling up the rest of the college roommates to go explore down there! We were both living in the moment so much that we, unfortunately, didn’t even think to take a picture together. Instead, enjoy a college throwback. Tre is the one taking the picture (neither of us looks that young anymore).

Coincidentally, Tre only lives an hour and a half south of my old high school roommate Joel (I went to a boarding high school for those who don’t know). Joel is in school to be a pastor and is doing what is called his vicar year where he gets assigned to a church under the guidance of an experienced pastor to mentor him and help him get some hands-on experience. I showed up on a Sunday morning and got to receive communion from him which was an awesome experience! It’s crazy to see how far we’ve come. We hung out at his place, went out for dinner, and then Lydia and Chloe obsessed over Hallmark movies and Christmas decorating back at their house. Needless to say, it was a fun first day of hanging out. The next day we went to a beach and watched the sunset and then had an oven pizza for dinner!

I left Joel and Lydia’s after hanging out for a couple of days and headed for Virginia where my family was having Thanksgiving this year. Virginia was a long drive and I got to talk to my Army buddy, Jack, who is stationed in Italy, on a Facebook audio call. He mentioned that his dad, who I know, lives in Fayetteville, NC, and that he would love to have me over if I needed a stopping point on the way to Virginia. I took him up on that offer and on short notice I ended up hanging out with his dad that night who caught me up on all his latest adventures as he’s enjoying his Army retirement. The next day he took me on a tour of Fort Bragg. As a retired colonel, he had spent quite a bit of time at Bragg and he practically knew what every building on that whole post was used for. He took me out to breakfast at the golf course on post and after that, I was back on my way to Thanksgiving with the family! It was super cool that I was able to catch up with Jack’s dad and that he was such a gracious host.

Since my brother Jon and his wife, Andrea are the only ones in the family who live in Virginia and they live in a smaller apartment we opted to rent a secluded house in Kinsale, VA near the Chesapeake Bay. It was in a quiet backcountry neighborhood with a big backyard with a dock to the Potomac! We were blessed with great weather and we spent a lot of nights around the bonfire and days playing catch and chasing my nieces around. There was even a zipline for the girls to play on. I tried my hand a crabbing after I found some cages and shrimp for bait. It’s a good thing we had brought our own food because I didn’t catch a thing! Inside the house, there was a foosball table and a ping-pong table. Lots of good times together and of course good food! On my way out of town on Sunday I went through my brother’s town and went to his church where he the worship director.

I was back on the road, but with another extra bonus to my already extended Army work trip. I headed to Pennsylvania to visit my Army buddy Reece and his family. Reece, and Jack, who I mentioned earlier, went through basic training and officer candidate school together with me and consequently, we have endured a lot of shared hardship together and after those training and bonding even more good times!

On the way to Pennsylvania, I made a quick stop at Gettysburg and made a walk through the National Cemetery there. I definitely need to go back and really take it all in, but it was a cool stop nonetheless.

I made it to Reece’s family’s house just in time to help him made some jerky out of the deer he had just shot. That night we made some delicious venison jalapeno poppers too! The next day Reece and I had some fun messing around the property while we waited for our jerky to cure. He taught me how to ride a dirt bike and then we did some exploring on the wooded mountainous property they have there. We went out and walked through a mile-long train tunnel cutting into the side of a mountain. It was pitch black in there at night! Reece, his wife Sarah, and some other family and friends had a fun darts competition and a bunch of hanging out and time well spent. It was fun to play with their son, Hosea, again. He’s a big fan for some reason! I left early in the morning after one more venison breakfast and some goodbyes! So good to see them again! Blessed to have so many connections in so many places to have them work out so well for my road trip.

On the last leg of the road trip home, I stopped at Kinzua State Park in northern Pennsylvania, all of which is so beautiful. It was home to one of the largest train bridges in the late 1800s and it was used well into the 1900s and eventually fell out of use and was designated as a state park. Eventually, it got to the point where they closed it to foot traffic because it was unsafe. They were in the middle of restoring the bridge in 2003 when an F1 tornado destroyed the middle section of the bridge. The restoration then turned to securing the remaining portion and today it served as an observation deck with a beautiful sight of the valley and of the wreckage of the rest of the bridge below. I would love to go back with more time to take the hiking trails down into the valley to get a better view of some of the wreckage.

I did not intend for the road trip to last that long and honestly I didn’t plan for a lot of the fun stops that happened either, but Proverbs says, “A man’s heart plans his way, But the LORD directs his steps.” I am so thankful for the good times and the new experiences! I talked earlier on the blog about feeling stuck with the lack of control in my life and I am really proud of myself for letting go of my frustrations and living in the moment and enjoying the opportunities right in front of me despite of how COVID and other things out of my control have affected my previous plans. I pray the Lord will continue directing my steps!

An Unplanned Road Trip

Summer’s Gone

I have not done as good of a job at updating the blog as I would have liked, but I have an excuse and it’s school. I’m taking 18 graduate-level credits this semester and it is pretty draining. I am working towards my Master of Science in Administration with a leadership concentration. I only have so much mental bandwidth and unfortunately is goes to school instead of fun, creative thoughts that I might post here.

I have had some creative thoughts and ideas that I wanted to touch on here, but I really haven’t had time to really expand on them. If I do have some free time I try to spend it with family or friends and that’s what I’ve been doing.

All things considered, I’ve had a good summer! I had two weeks of annual training and then two and a half weeks of a warfighter exercise so I did lose about a month of summer to Army training. But I learned so much through those experiences and I made some good relationships. Aside from Army training and classes I made a couple of camping trips with friends and family and made it to a couple of weddings. Pretty recently I went tailgating in Wisconsin for their game against Central Michigan University and then this past weekend (10/12/2019) I went to Central Michigan’s homecoming and had a lot of fun with old college friends. Below is a mash-up of my summer photo highlights:

School has been going well and I actually had a really interesting emotional intelligence class during the summer. That class was actually valuable and I think I learned some stuff. For the most part, though I’ve been jumping through the hoops and not absorbing too much. I am a firm believer in Pareto’s principle which says that 80% of the result comes from 20% of the effort. An 80% is passing so if I can get away with 20% effort in the classes you better believe I’ll do it. Most of the classes are a waste of time anyway. If I want to be a better leader I would be reading biographies of great leaders and I would spend more mental bandwidth trying to lead as an officer in the Army National Guard. Instead, that mental bandwidth is going to classwork. As much as I complain about it I am excited that I’ve been given the opportunity to get a free master’s degree. Maybe someday it will get me where I want to go.

In lieu of my lack of creative thoughts, here is an assignment I did for a diversity class. I interviewed my Brazilian coworker Denis:

Diversity Interview

For the personal interview paper assignment, I chose to interview my coworker – Denis. Denis works as a welder at the guitar shop where I work. Denis is originally from Brazil where he met an American girl studying abroad. They fell in love and at first, she intended to stay in Brazil. However, Denis’s family encouraged him to follow her back to America where they believed there would be more opportunities for him. Denis doesn’t get to see his family much unless he travels to see them in Brazil. However, at the time of this interview, his parents had just left after visiting and staying with him for a month on their first trip to visit him in the United States.


Q: Growing up what was your perception of the work culture in Brazil? Do you think it was accurate?
A: “My perception of work culture in Brazil was that in order to do well, in whatever job it was, you needed to work hard. Growing up I watched my dad work hard and get ahead based on his work ethic. When I started working, I found that was true – hard workers were rewarded.”

Q: When you came to America what was your perception of the work culture? How has it changed since you’ve been here?
A: “When I came to America, I thought that you needed an education to; 1. Get a job, and 2. succeed. Now I know there are many jobs you can get without having an education but I think in order to really be successful in America, unless you get lucky, an education is necessary.”

Q: What are the biggest differences in work culture between America and Brazil and how do they affect you?
A: “I think the work culture in America is more easy going. People can have flexible schedules or time off depending on their situation. The pressure to work at a fast pace is less in America. Also, there’s not such a thing as a “sick day” in Brazil, unless you have a doctor’s note.”

Q: How did you feel when you worked with people from different cultures?
A: “I think it depends on the person. I’ve worked with Americans who are hard to get along with and I’ve worked with Americans who have become great friends. It really depends on the person, not their culture, I guess.”

Q: What were the benefits that you got from working with people from different cultures?
A: “Learning new working styles and understanding how someone else might approach a project differently from me.”

Q: What were the challenges that you faced with working with people from different cultures?
A: “Adapting to a different work philosophy was hard at first. In the beginning, language was the biggest challenge, obviously. Sometimes people don’t have the patience.”

Q: Have you suffered any discrimination or stereotyping based on your ethnicity?
A: “Yes, like I said before, some people are hard to get along with. If you’re having a bad day it’s easy to take it out on someone different from you. Or someone new to the company. Or someone you don’t respect for whatever reason. But that’s not only an American thing.”
Q: Has a shift in the US political climate ever caused any issues for you or does it cause any anxiety or concern?
A: “Not really. I believe if you came into this country the right way, you shouldn’t feel any anxiety or concern. I’m here legally, paying taxes like any American or other legal immigrant. I don’t use food stamps or government aid. That gives me peace.”

Q: Are there any obstacles that you have had to overcome? How did you overcome them?
A: “The language barrier took some time and practice. Also getting used to American customs – small things like greetings and goodbyes are different than in Brazil.”

Q: What was the hardest thing to adapt to when you moved to the United States?
A: “The climate was hard to adapt to because I came from a tropical country. Driving in the snow was tough at first. Being away from family and friends was hard and it never gets easier.”

Denis has faced discrimination as have many foreigners in America. However, Denis is able to take it in stride and stay focused on working hard and making the most of his opportunities here. He is fortunate to have the support of his American wife not only emotionally, but with a marriage visa. That makes his path to employment much easier than many less fortunate immigrants. Apart from dealing with discrimination and cold Michigan winters adapting to the language and the work culture has been difficult. However, Denis finds being away from friends and family the hardest, which is a good reminder that no matter where you are from there is always common ground and that our core values might actually be more similar than they are different.

…hope you enjoyed my homework more than I did! Hopefully, I can get back in the groove and think more creatively and post more often!

-Sam

Summer’s Gone

What’s New??

Back in Michigan! I’m home. I’m chilling in Saginaw on a Friday night at my house right now. It feels like my life has been a revolving door of big adventures that have kept me uprooted and unable to settle. I’ve been back in Michigan for probably 5 weeks now and it’s weird. I’m here and I’m living a normal life again, or at least what constitutes as normal for me. I do know that there will be another definite uprooting adventure for me in the future. I’m waiting on a top secret security clearance, which typically takes a year, and then I’m off to military intelligence school for close to 5 months. That’s more like it. Typical Sam. However, in the mean time Saginaw is the spot apparently!

So what am I doing with my time? In keeping with always trying to stay busy and living life with a good sense of urgency, I’ve dived head first into a master program. What’s it in you ask? It is a Master of Science in Administration with a leadership concentration. So it’s essentially the most generic degree I could have chosen. So why did I chose it? Another good question, but I’ll tell you why. I get $6,000 an academic year for schooling through the Michigan state tuition assistance program. I can also get a 40% tuition discount at my alma mater Central Michigan University (FIRE UP CHIPS!!!) as a military member. So with a 40% tuition discount, my tuition rate is $340 a credit. That means I can essentially take 15 credits (well 17.6 credits, but most classes are 3 credits so really 5 classes for 15 credits) an academic year at zero cost to me! So I don’t know what I may need a master degree for, but I’d rather not be 35 and find out that I have to relearn how to school. Since I’m not that far removed from taking classes and it’s free I’m taking advantage of the benefit! But still why such a generic degree? Wouldn’t an MBA look better? Yes, I see your point but there is no 40% discount on the MBA credits. So there, that’s how I made that decision.

The summer semester is the last semester of the academic year with it resetting for the fall semester when kids typically go back to school. So in order to take full advantage of that $6,000 of state tuition assistance for this year I am cramming five 3-credit grad level classes into my already busy summer. This summer I have two 2-week training periods for the National Guard as well as weekend drills. I’ll be locked up in June at some point and then in August at another point for some good old fashioned Army training. Oh, I didn’t mention all my classes are online, and could potentially be at the global campus in Saginaw. So what am I doing to live? To stay alive and keep the lights on I’m back to work at the guitar shop. I work 10 hour days on Tuesdays and Thursdays and that gives me enough (so far) to support myself if I’m living frugally.

If that wasn’t enough, I’ve started a new hobby! I’ve been going to Jiu Jitsu 4 times a week since I got to Saginaw 5 weeks ago. With my wrestling background and other martial arts background it’s a sport that really suits me. I became pretty comfortable with the pace and technique almost right away. That doesn’t mean there still isn’t a lot to learn! If I roll with anyone who is more than a beginner it feels like I’m playing checkers and they’re playing chess! In Jiu Jitsu a black belt can often take over 10 years to achieve. There is just so much technique and muscle memory involved.

I started going because of a high school buddy who has been going for the last 3 or so years. He kicks my butt, but him and all the guys there are really great and easy to get along with. I’m really appreciative of being accepted into the gym culture pretty quickly. It’s nice to have a new group of guys to hang out with who have a similar interest. Also, my boss from the guitar shop goes a couple of times a week! How many employees get the opportunity to try and choke out there boss after work?! That’s pretty cool!

And that is what my summer will likely consist of! I had a couple of wedding to attend, but it looks like my National Guard drill weekends fall on both of them. We’ll have to play those weddings by ear, but that is part of the commitment I made! I’m excited to keep progressing in Jiu Jitsu, but I’m probably even more excited to finish these classes! I’ll update the blog with more adventurous things that will hopefully be happening in the future!

What’s New??