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    Riding Time vs. Experience 0 Motorcycles
    USACRC Editor

    Riding Time vs. Experience

    I began riding motorcycles at the age of 12. That was 28 years and 15 motorcycles ago. I have always considered myself an experienced and safe rider because of the time I’ve invested in motorcycles. That remained my attitude until my last...
    Shock and Ow! 0 Home & Family
    USACRC Editor

    Shock and Ow!

    I was flat on my back on the basement floor when I heard my wife’s voice from upstairs saying, “What did you do?” Not wanting to worry her, I lied and replied, “Nothing!” She soon knew the truth, though, when I slunk...
    Haste Makes Waste 0 Aviation
    USACRC Editor

    Haste Makes Waste

    As aviation professionals, we all try our very best to accomplish the mission. Sometimes, this desire to produce the best results in a minimal amount of time works against us. This article highlights an instance where my desire to get the job...
    A Break in Standards 0 Aviation
    USACRC Editor

    A Break in Standards

    In a rush to get the bump aircraft run up, the PC passed in front of the weapon the door gunner was carrying and arrived at the aircraft an instant before the door gunner placed the weapon on the ground. Then, the inevitable happened. As the 240H...

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    Courting Injury

    Courting Injury

    CAPT. TRAVIS NIELSEN
    198th Regional Support Group
    Arizona Army National Guard
    Phoenix, Arizona

    My unit had been in Kosovo for two weeks of a nine-month tour, and I was looking forward to the many benefits of my first deployment as a National Guardsman such as full-time job experience and great pay. We were taking over for an aviation unit from Connecticut. This group enjoyed sports and competition and were hosting an end-of-tour basketball tournament on the camp. Of course, we, the spirited newcomers, assembled a team to play.

    I know you’re already thinking, “Here we go with another story about a basketball injury.” To some degree, you’re right. Midway through our second game, another player undercut my jump shot, causing me to land hard on the outside toe-end of my running shoes. I crashed hard to the ground. My right ankle ballooned instantly, the pressure chipped a bone, and for the next month, my whole leg looked like a scene from a zombie movie.

    My ankle — blue, black and yellow, suffocating in a bulky boot — looked and felt horrible. I worried I would be released from active duty, or REFRAD, after just arriving and wondered if I should ever play basketball again. Thankfully, the conditions allowed me to stay on the deployment, but it was too close for my professional comfort. I would spend the next six months rehabilitating my ankle and, in many ways, my safety mindset and reputation.

    I learned several lessons from this incident. First, accidents don’t always occur because of your own lack of skill. Sometimes, it’s someone else’s skill level that can be detrimental to your health. Thanks to my overconfidence in my years of experience playing basketball, I didn’t take the time to adjust my game to less-experienced players. Nevertheless, despite its infamy among off-duty accident statistics, I believe basketball has a place among Army recreational activities. Training on rules and techniques, enforcement of rules by vigilant referees, and using protective footwear can reduce injuries. These definitely would have lessened the probability of my accident.

    The second lesson I learned was the psychological toll these situations take. The incredible pain bothered me for weeks. The possibility of getting sent home drenched me in anxiety. The gaudy boot embarrassed me in every professional or social setting. Anyone experiencing an accident or injury can experience this emotional rollercoaster. It’s an unwanted stressor distracting you from giving your best effort toward the mission.

    The last important lesson I learned is that safety is a mentality that lines up directly with Army values. Even in a situation as innocuous as recreational basketball, it was my duty to take care of myself so I could continue the original mission I was there to perform. Leaders at all levels have to be there for the mission and their Soldiers, and having a mentality of safety will help them get that mission accomplished.

    • 4 April 2021
    • Author: USACRC Editor
    • Number of views: 674
    • Comments: 0
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