A life story?
Born in '66. Navy brat. Moved every few years but not overseas. Every move was a drive across country. Few things suck more than being the new kid in a school halfway through the year where everyone already knows each other.
Youngest of three, by the time I was looking to leave the house, it was a good thing. Parents divorced shortly after I left the house but they weren’t really a married couple those last years anyway.
Joined the Navy since there was no money at home for college. Volunteered for submarines and nuclear power once my ASVAB and NFQT scores became known. Two years later in '86, I got to my submarine in Pearl Harbor and headed off to chase godless Commies in the Pacific. We chased things that go bump in the night and I received my first “combat medal” for unspecified actions. I also went to Captains Mast for “Dereliction of Duty” but it must not have been too serious since they fined me < $300 and kept me around. In '88 we went in the shipyard at Peal Harbor to change out major parts of the reactor plant. By the time we were coming back out the godless Commies had quit and the Navy was facing a 50% cut in manpower needs. I watched the good leaders start looking for jobs outside and decided I did not want to be left standing in a military full of people too dumb to find real jobs.
Got out in '90 and headed for college but I stayed with the Reserve to keep that door open and help pay for beer. Also brought along that cute girl I met while I was home on leave 18 months earlier. She was a US citizen born and raised over seas (beautiful sexy german accent!) and now she was headed to “my” college as a transfer student. We ended up in the same co-ed dorm building. Then the same co-ed bed. Decided to make it official. 18 months later our daughter was born. I put my college degree in a 1/2 time mode and started working full time to support my family. My wife took a year off for the pregnancy and newborn then went back to finish her degree. I found a better job working as a Navy contractor that helped pay for college. I also learned something about stealth technology and got to spend some time playing with really neat stuff.
Two years later I got a promotion that took us to Washington DC. Took a year off the degree to avoid the out of state tuiton nightmare. Got back into 1/2 college and full time work while paying for a mortgage, two cars, a stay at home working wife and our daughter. Finally got my daughter off to pre-school and my wife off to out of the house work when our second child was conceived. In '95 he was born and my wife stayed home with him for three more years. In the mean time, I kept at the degree and worked like a dog. I was traveling >%50 of the time, turning in homework by fax and watching lectures on video tape.
In '98 I finally finished my BSEE degree, got another major promotion and was liking life. Unfortunately, the military contracting world started to slow down so I looked around for other options. The “internet” was starting to take off and Information Technology was geting big so I looked for supporting industries that were not as dependent on military spending.
By 2000 I had a job in the Silicon Vally building satellites for telcoms. We rode that wave for a few years and watched the tech bubble bust and wipe out our neighbors. It was only a matter of time before the bubble burst would catch up with the satellite industry. I had kept my Navy Reserve connection all these years so I looked at some time in uniform helping the Navy get IT moved onto ships. Turns out I was not well qualified for that since I had not been keeping up with MSCE and CISCO certs but I did fit in nicely with a little Navy research lab that was working on robotics and needed an EE who could do everything from calculate torqe to program in machine code.
I accepted orders to active duty at the robotics lab in December of 2002 with no real expectation of ever leaving the lab. By the summer of 2003, things were getting busy with calls for new technology on the battle field in Iraq. We dept getting visits from people who were being escorted by 3 star Admirals. In the fall of 2003, I made rank to Chief and less than 30 days later was asked if I could field a “robotics repair team” to Iraq. Such a thing did not exist yet.
Since I was the only guy I knew in uniform who actually fixed EOD bomb robots as opposed to breaking using them, I figured I should train a few guys before I headed down range. By Jan of 2004, I had 12 sailors trained up ready to deploy. Interservice rivalry stuck its ugly head into play for awhile but eventually the Army got a clue and I finally took my team to Baghdad in April of 2004. I set up the shop, got the service running, put the systems and proceedures in place and started bringing in the sailors to run it. In less than 4 weeks we had returned more than half of the damaged robots to service ensuring that no EOD team would deploy without a working robot. By the end of six weeks we had a 24 hour a day operation that guaranteed “4 hours or less” turn around for a damaged robot or you get a new one. By the end of 8 weeks, we were the receiving end of “air ambulances” for robots coming in from all over Iraq. By the end of 10 weeks, not a day went by that we did not have a one star escorting some visitor through the facility.
I was back state side in less than three months with a whole new collection of medals from the Army and the Navy. I returned to Reserve status and spent the next few years training up sailors who then rotated through that shop and other locations or did training here stateside for deploying forces.
When I got back from Iraq, I did not want to go back to building satellites. Thankfully, my newly acquired skills made me a commodity in the world of underwater robotics and I found a position designing, building, operating and maintaing deep sea robots. I retired from the Navy in 2006 after 22 1/2 years of service, active and reserve. Decompressing from that life style and the combat tour in Iraq has been my primary focus since then.
My wife is still with me, I’m not sure why. My kids seem happy to see me and I do my best to give them more opportunities than I had. Robotics, sailing, horseback riding, war gaming are all interests but my family matters most. Not bad for 40+ years and I am looking forward to the next 40 right here.