by 1st Lt. Alicia Premo
45th Space Wing Public Affairs
11/19/2015 - PATRICK AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. -- Patrick
Air Force Base Honor Guard displayed the art and skill of providing
funeral honors during a demonstration Nov. 17 at Memorial Plaza at
Patrick Air Force Base, Florida.
During the demonstration, the honor guard conducted a military funeral
honors ceremony. The ceremony included a 20-person team that performed
pallbearing, a six-person flag fold, a color guard, a firing party, the
playing of Taps, and a flag presentation. Second Lt. Carla Stapleton,
Patrick AFB Honor Guard member and range control officer for the 1st
Range Operations Squadron, narrated through the different traditions in
the ceremony.
"Being able to serve on this team is a great honor. We represent five
services to the public, and provide closure as well as an image of
steadiness and strength to a grieving family. Performing military
funeral honors requires numerous hours of practice. We can spend many
hours practicing for a ceremony that will last five to 15 minutes," said
Stapleton.
The Patrick AFB Honor Guard is an organization, which is congressionally
mandated to provide military funeral honors for deceased Air Force,
Army Air Force and Army Air Corps veterans, retirees and active duty
personnel within the eastern half of Florida--from Volusia County to
Miami-Dade.
Patrick AFB Honor Guard consists of 45 active duty, Air Force Guard and
Air Force Reserve members and is a combination of 45th Space Wing, Air
Force Technical Applications Center, the 920th Rescue Wing, and the
114th Space Control Squadron of the Air National Guard.
Monday, November 23, 2015
Face of Defense: Sailor Rescues Man After High-Speed Crash
By Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Michael Lieberknecht Navy
Public Affairs Support Element East
NORFOLK, Va., November 23, 2015 — Navy Petty Officer 3rd
Class Tyler Swain, a fire controlman aboard the guided missile destroyer USS
Bulkeley, and his family were driving away from a Wells Fargo bank here when
they heard police sirens, Nov. 15.
As the family watched, a car moving at approximately 100 mph
collided with a truck during a chase involving two police cruisers. The truck
flipped into the air and landed on its side, atop a nearby SUV.
“As soon as I saw it happen, I just got out of my truck. It
was instinct,” Swain said.
Swain’s family pulled over and he and his mother, Frances
Swain, ran to the flipped truck. They looked in a window to check the condition
of the driver.
Frances opened the door, which was facing up. Tyler climbed
on top of the vehicle, pulled the man out from the truck, and led the man to
safety.
“The Navy has always taught us to help others. It doesn’t
matter if it’s Navy or a civilian; the military teaches you to help people in
need,” he said.
After the man was settled on the side of the road waiting
for police assistance, he thanked the Swains.
“He came over and shook my hand, thanked me, asked me my
name and wanted to tell me he appreciated everything I did,” Swain said.
The rescue took place the day before Swain began a 7-month
deployment to the U.S. 5th and 6th Fleet areas of responsibility as part of the
Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group.
“I thought it was pretty cool,” said Navy Petty Officer 2nd
Class Matthew McMeans, a fire controlman who works with Swain in the Bulkeley’s
aft Close-In Weapons System. “He told me the story, and I thought, ‘Heck of a
last day in port.’”
McMeans said Swain’s story was spreading around the ship,
but that Swain was humble about the experience -- a normal guy placed in an
extraordinary situation.
Volunteerism affects positive change
By Lt. Col. Stephen A. Simko, 349th Maintenance Group /
Published November 23, 2015
TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AFNS) -- Throughout our
military careers, we often talk of being a volunteer force, a subset of our
culture that has volunteered to serve our country in the profession of arms.
Without disrespect to anyone currently in uniform or those
that have served before me, I have always been in conflict over the
military/volunteer discussions. Granted, there were times in our past when the
draft was in place and a number of our nation's citizens were forced into
service. My conflict centers on the aspect that we are all compensated for our
service, we receive some amount of pay, housing allowances, bonuses at times,
medical benefits and a variety of other benefits throughout our career.
By definition, yes, we did all volunteer to serve our
country in the military. But when I talk about volunteerism, I am referring to
those that have given their own time and energy to serve others -- these are
the people I have the highest level of respect. It is this type of volunteerism
that I think each and every one of us owes to the various communities we live
in throughout our careers.
There are number of great quotes relative to volunteerism,
one that struck a chord with me is from Gandhi who said, "The best way to
find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others." As members of
the Air Force, we all live very busy lives, from our normal duty schedules, to
exercises, weekend duties, shift work, and especially deployments.
It is easy to fall into a mundane pattern of life. If
volunteer work isn't already part of your life, I would challenge you to start
out with finding just an hour a week to "lose yourself in the service of
others."
If you look at the microcosm of "any base USA," I
would argue that we easily make up the most diverse of skillsets per acre
anywhere in the county. Take that and match it up against the needs of just
about any community, and you should easily find a volunteer opportunity that
matches your specific skillset or interest. Volunteering doesn't have to be a
big, formal program or event; it is oftentimes a simple act we may take for
granted that is received with the most thanks. Tennis champion Arthur Ashe
stated it best: "Volunteer! Start where you are. Use what you have. Do
what you can."
Although the basic premise of volunteering is to help
someone else, there are a number of benefits the volunteer receives as well.
For starters, there are psychological benefits. Mark Snyder, a psychologist and
head of the Center for the Study of the Individual and Society at the University
of Minnesota, states that "people who volunteer tend to have higher
self-esteem, psychological well-being, and happiness. All of these things go up
as their feelings of social connectedness goes up, which in reality, it does.
It also improves their health and even their longevity."
In a recent study from Carnegie Mellon University, published
in the Psychology and Aging journal, adults over age 50 who volunteered on a
regular basis were less likely to develop high blood pressure than non-volunteers,
demonstrating a direct physical benefit of volunteering.
Although the physical and psychological benefits are real
and good for us, the reward I have found most beneficial is affecting positive
change in the lives of others. Most of my volunteer efforts have centered on
coaching youth sports and volunteering with Boy Scouts of America. Were those
opportunities challenging, time consuming, stressful and lots of work?
Absolutely. However, that is never what comes to mind when I look back on my
efforts.
The best memories that come to mind are that of a kid that
was very shy and afraid of camping on his first trip earning his Eagle Scout
five years later; or that 12 year old that was about to quit volleyball but
grew into the sport and went on to play collegiately; or even a former athlete
I coached at the middle school level that later joined the military.
There is no way of measuring the specific impact I've had
over the years on those I have served, but I like to think that I have at a
minimum been a positive role model to all those I have volunteered with.
In closing, former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill
stated, "We make a living by what we get. We make a life by what we
give."
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