Posted on Feb 17, 2018
What is the best lesson an NCO/Officer has ever taught you?
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What is the best lesson/piece of advice an NCO or officer has ever taught you? Personally, I would say the most impressionable advice an NCO has ever taught me was that at the end of the day, my military career is in my hands. My decisions reflect my career and at the end of the day, if I want something done (schooling opportunities, career advancement) to ALWAYS push and never give up.
What's the best advice you have ever received?
What's the best advice you have ever received?
Posted 7 y ago
Responses: 130
You need to make sure that your family comes first in all your decisions because if no matter if you do 4 years and get our or do 20+ and retire your time in the military will eventually come to an end and your family will be all you have left when your military career eventually ends.
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At my first duty station, during my very first debrief my SNCO gave me advice that I followed throughout my career. He stated, "You can't be a good leader if you're not a good follower" that click with me instantly because it made sense to me. I was lucky in my career because I had good NCO's & Officer's I respected, here is one more example that was profound to me once I became an aircrewman, my Commanding Officer told me "Whatever you do when people are around doesn't matter as much as to what you do when people are not around." While I have many other's these two were the ones that shaped who I was while I was servicing our great country.
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A Captain I served under was instructing a newly arrived Ensign to earn the respect of those who serve below deck. The Ensign looked perplexed and ask, "Why is that?" The Captain, amazed at his arrogance, sternly replied, "Because they're the ones who know the ship is sinking first!"
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Th best lesson I learned was early in Beast Barracks. We were in the middle of a uniform formation drill. There was no winning only persevering. The fact the entire process was not win able wasn't the point. The point that I took away was we were going to keep going regardless of the outcome and we were going to do it together. Keeping one's cool under pressure served me in good stead flying fighters and in the courtroom once I quit flying.
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That the work will always be there tomorrow no matter how late you stay that evening. I was always staying late trying to either get ahead or complete another task. It will eventually catch up with you...maybe not tomorrow, or next month, or next year, but somewhere along the line you will hit the wall.
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I was at PLDC in Bad Toelz and the Commandant of the NCO Academy popped into our class one day for a chinwag - Q&A session. Some bright spark in the class asked him "If you could go back in time and give yourself one piece of advice on the day you made sergeant, what would it be?"
The Sergeant Major -- for the life of me, I cannot remember his name but he was a CMH recipient - said this: "Never give an order you don't expect to be obeyed."
It took a few years and a lot of frustration for me to really understand the sheer depth and wisdom of that advice. Once I did, his words changed not only my style of leadership but life as well.
The Sergeant Major -- for the life of me, I cannot remember his name but he was a CMH recipient - said this: "Never give an order you don't expect to be obeyed."
It took a few years and a lot of frustration for me to really understand the sheer depth and wisdom of that advice. Once I did, his words changed not only my style of leadership but life as well.
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1LT (Join to see)
That's pretty tough to swallow. I can think of numerous times where an order is given because we are pressured to just "check the box" of one thing or another.
But having the mature leadership to navigate the situation into something realistic and effective, that's not always easy.
But having the mature leadership to navigate the situation into something realistic and effective, that's not always easy.
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Once I was feeling down because I was not able to make the top ranking(s) in one of the many measured categories that we were graded on - and my boat chief looked at me and said "Son, you got all the way from Momma's house through high school and college, got to the academy and (at this time) are almost going to graduate. You have made it already, just believe in yourself and keep pushing. If that's not good enough, then you have lost your own battle before it started". After that, I began to think more clearly and focus on the main goals, what was really important, and believe in my own abilities.
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“Be the change you want to see as an NCO” (when o was complaining about this shotbag NCO I had as an E4, he told me if I wanted to see better NCOs I should get my SGT and be the change I want to see as a NCO)
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