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Thursday, May 15, 2014

Why I Write (Like I do)



The story is the important part. The audience determines the words. I write nonfiction. The stories are true; you may not believe it, but they are. I lived them. They happened either to me or around me. I just tell them the way they originally happened.

My best guess is that the current trend of the fictionalization of nonfiction is my enemy. When I started to relate these stories to others, my audience was made up of people for the most part very similar to me. With the exception of a hand full of wives that might be temporarily in the immediate area, those that were listening were my contemporaries in the Army.

There was no need to elaborate about the Cold85 degrees below zero was 85 degrees below zerothey had all been there also. They knew and understood. I just had to say -85F and keep moving along. When I said I was responsible, I didn’t have to go into any more detail, they understood and knew exactly why and how.

After departing the Army, I found that I was part of a very small minority5 to 10% of those I associated with had any idea, concept, or understanding of the circumstances encountered in the stories I might tell. Nobody had even the slightest concept of -85F. If I said -112F, it struck no chord in their brain at all. Their Cold existed at another level that compared not one iota in relation to the Cold I spoke of. Very few had even the slightest concept of a GI and the depth of situations that one could get into. They had no idea of the hardships, troubles and responsibilities of conducting their daily business one day in a brick and mortar facility and the next a thousand or more miles away under canvas in an environment 180 degrees opposite of yesterday’s and completely hostile to all they held dear to themselves.

To enable the use of my stories as teaching and learning points, I had to find ways to enable their understanding. One of my first light bulbs was the revelation that everybody had played army as a child and they truly enjoyed hearing the stories as they were toldjust as they were with zero explanation or altering. My task was to make the story relevant to their situationthat association made it real to my staff and co-workers. Once it became relevant to them, each anecdote began to work as I intended them toexperiential learning and problem solving solutions that they could learn from and use to better their conditions in life.

The best feeling came to me when I might come upon a direct report doing something that resembled a solution we had discovered through our discussions of a particular anecdote and that guy or gal would, right out of the blue, say “Howard’s Law #3” and just keep on workingit would warm my heart and made it all worthwhile.

From the standpoint of Leadership and Management anecdotes, I haven’t written a new story in the last ten years. Everyone I put to paper has been locked away in memory since the day they took place and are just as fresh in my mind when I begin to recall the facts and circumstances as they were the first time I experienced or told them (or kept to myself depending on the circumstances or need) as they were the day (or night) they originally occurred. Oh, I have written new stories but not about Leadership and Managementthey’ve been about my grandchildren, my travels, memories of my youth or just streams of consciousness or thoughts on the everyday happenings occurring around us all.

Besides the foregoing, I have come across, maybe, more than my share of interesting and crazy people that have shaped my present and my future. My wife and kids, in addition to the community I now associate with, have never heard or experienced any of that of which I write. I choose to get down as many as possible before I can no longer remember the facts, the situation and the circumstances that arose in the creation of the accounts I have to share.

So, instead of applying all those fictionalization traits to my stories, I will continue to write them just as I have always told them and let the chips fall where they may.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Buffalo Hunting



I was watching a recording of the Animal Planet’s “Wild West Alaska” last evening where they told of one of Ken’s acquaintances, an Alaskan Native, that Ken had talked into bringing in a rifle to upgrade and “fix;” all in the hopes of Ken talking Jim, the owner, into tagging along on a buffalo hunt for this young native man to obtain food for a native village feastbut from Ken’s viewpoint, a day off from work.

The episode brought to mind one time at Fort Greely that I had the opportunity to come into contact with the local buffalo herd and how that all worked out.

I had been conducting a staff meeting in my command tent when we heard a ruckus outside. The five of us walked outside to see what was going on and that’s when we saw them. A big portion of the Fort Greely Buffalo Herd had just strolled through our area.

One of my guys, Fitz, came over and said: “Hey LT, one of them was looking inside the vestibule of your tent!”

I was really glad that the visitor had figured out it wasn’t his meeting and decided to stroll on away!

I wish I had taken out my camera when we first walked out of the tent, but getting a picture was the last thing on my mind at the time. I shot these two before they moved out of the area. This took place in February of 1974. The temp was hovering around -60ºF at the time.



Monday, September 16, 2013

The 2013 First Chapter Contest – Yellow Bird Editors



Dear John Howard,

Hello! And thanks so much for entering the 2013 Yellow Bird Editors First Chapter Contest. I'm writing to tell you that your manuscript, There's a Moose in the Guard Shack and Other Adventures in Leadership, was chosen as one of only three finalists in the memoir category. Congratulations!

We will soon announce your name along with the other finalists and winners on our website. As soon as that goes live on Monday morning please feel free to share this news far and wide.

Congratulations again! I hope I'll get the chance to read more of this fascinating memoir in the near future!


Best,
Sara Kocek

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Howard's Law


1- Truth, Faith and Confidence
2- Amateurs teach amateurs to be amateurs.
3- You can’t overwork me, but you can hinder the quality of my product.
4- When Leaders don’t set priorities, Followers do! (also known as Followship)
5- Bad news only gets worse with age.

Definition of Position Terms


I need to define a few terms that we will address over and over throughout the entirety of this publication. Some are obvious and one would usually think there would be no need for defining them; but we all come from different industries, backgrounds and levels of understanding. The best way to get a level understanding so we stay on the same sheet of music is for us all to have the same definition of these terms.
Manager
One who is responsible for directing and controlling the work and staff of a department, entity, section, etc; actively controls the resources and expenditures; and has authority and accountability over the planning, organization, directing of activities, development of personnel, mission establishment, objective determination, and analysis of performance data.
Supervisor
One who functions as the controller and guide for the work activities of a group of people; responsible for mission accomplishment and the gathering of performance data. Primarily found on the front line of the organization.
Leader
Someone who takes you in a new or desired direction largely through vision and motivation
Hierarchy of Organizational Positions
President
Vice President
Director
Manager *
Supervisor
Team Leader
* sometimes referred to as Superintendent in certain industries, often residing above Manager
Some notes on management and leadership:
The defined difference between managers and leaders can be simply stated as: Managers have subordinates and Leaders have followers.
Peter Drucker, who many consider to be the father of “modern management’ defined a manager’s job as: “is to direct the resources and the efforts of the business toward opportunities for economically significant results.”
Casey Stengel, long time manager of the “New York Yankees” and the “New York Mets” on the secret of managing once said: "The secret of managing is to keep the guys who hate you away from the guys who are undecided."
Dee Hock, founder and CEO Emeritus of Visa, discussing leadership once said: "Control is not leadership; management is not leadership; leadership is leadership. If you seek to lead, invest at least 50% of your time in leading yourself—your own purpose, ethics, principles, motivation, conduct. Invest at least 20% leading those with authority over you and 15% leading your peers."

Military Classes of Supply


Class I - Subsistence (food - Rations), plus gratuitous (free) health and comfort items.
Class IIGeneral Supplies: Clothing, individual equipment, tentage, organizational tool sets and kits, hand tools, unclassified maps, administrative and housekeeping supplies and equipment.
Class III - Petroleum, Oil and Lubricants (POL) (package and bulk): Petroleum, fuels, lubricants, hydraulic and insulating oils, preservatives, liquids and gases, bulk chemical products, coolants, deicer and antifreeze compounds, components, and additives of petroleum and chemical products, and coal.
Class IV - Construction materials, including installed equipment and all fortification and barrier materials.
Class V - Ammunition of all types, bombs, explosives, mines, fuzes, detonators, pyrotechnics, missiles, rockets, propellants, and associated items.
Class VI - Personal demand items (such as health and hygiene products, soaps and toothpaste, writing material,snack food, beverages, cigarettes, batteries, alcohol, and cameras—nonmilitary sales items).
Class VII - Major end items such as launchers, tanks, mobile machine shops, and vehicles.
Class VIII - Medical material (equipment and consummables) including repair parts peculiar to medical equipment. (Class VIIIa – Medical consummable supplies not including blood & blood products; Class VIIIb – Blood & blood components (whole blood, platelets, plasma, packed red cells, etc).
Class IX - Repair parts and components to include kits, assemblies, and subassemblies (repairable or non-repairable) required for maintenance support of all equipment.
Class X - Material to support nonmilitary programs such as agriculture and economic development (not included in Classes I through IX).
Miscellaneous - Water, salvage, and captured material.
FM 10-27-4 Organizational Supply and Services for Unit Leaders, United States Army and http://www.armystudyguide.com/content/army_board_study_guide_topics/Supply_Economy/supply-economy-study-guid.shtml

Time Conversion Chart – Military to Civilian


Military Time Civilian Time
0001 hrs 12:01 AM (1 minute after midnight)
0100 hrs 1:00 AM
0200 hrs 2:00 AM
0300 hrs 3:00 AM
0400 hrs 4:00 AM
0500 hrs 5:00 AM
0600 hrs 6:00 AM
0700 hrs 7:00 AM
0730 hrs 7:30 AM (note the use of minutes in the time)
0800 hrs 8:00 AM
0900 hrs 9:00 AM
1000 hrs 10:00 AM
1100 hrs 11:00 AM
1200 hrs 12:00 PM (noon)
1300 hrs 1:00 PM
1400 hrs 2:00 PM
1500 hrs 3:00 PM
1600 hrs 4:00 PM
1700 hrs 5:00 PM
1730 hrs 5:30 PM (note the use of minutes in the time)
1800 hrs 6:00 PM
1900 hrs 7:00 PM
2000 hrs 8:00 PM
2100 hrs 9:00 PM
2200 hrs 10:00 PM
2300 hrs 11:00 PM
2400 hrs 12:00 AM (midnight)