PS Draft #3...MANY changes
Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2012 5:32 pm
In May 1998 I graduated from Topeka High School in Topeka, Kansas. I was raised in a strict religious home and church environment. I received repressive religious training that inculcated in me the belief that blind obedience based on limitless trust in church leadership, which had supreme knowledge of what was good for each individuals life within the congregation, was the principal way to live a good and holy life. My mother recently told me that she thought I was supposed to be a preacher, so college was never an important factor of how she raised me. To say that I lived in a black and white absolutist world would only begin to describe how I lived my life. This did not resonate in my mind though as the right way to live.
In an effort to break away from this environment I stopped attending church, and in May 2001 enlisted in the United States Army. Life without having my every move micromanaged was uncomfortable, so I thought I would find some solace in the structured environment of the US Military. This experience did not turn out as intended. I felt safe with the idea of being told what to do, and in the Army most places I could have gone would have provided this safety net for me. The Army however had other ideas and stationed me at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, a training post, and home of the Command and General Staff College, and Combined Arms and Services Staff School. At Fort Leavenworth officers out number the enlisted soldiers by about 5:1. It was now part of my job to correct officers that in any other environment would have been my commanding officer and beyond. With the exception of saluting the officers I treated Captains, Majors, Colonels, and Generals as though we were of equal rank, while also leading them through their short stay on post. It was a natural fit. I learned and grew into the system and into a leader quickly.
After my time in the Army I worked a few jobs to earn an income but never felt even slightly satisfied with where I was. The trajectory of my career looked as if it would be a long flat line as opposed to the upward trend I truly desired. In 2006 I took one or two classes and really did not apply myself, and my grades reflected it. The voices of the religious leaders in my childhood kept ringing in my head that college was just a waste of time and unimportant. I struggled with my desire to help others, making a comfortable income for my family and reconciling what my religious duty was.
A new pastor at a church I started attending in 2008 provided me with the resolution to my struggle. Using his life experiences as an example, he showed me it is possible to help others, make a good living and live a life that observes your personal and religious convictions. The three should not be exclusive to each other but rather inclusive with each other.
Life and the law are not just black and white. There are many shades of grey and room for growth within the law. In the long term I hope to effect the growth of the law and demonstrate it’s ability to be inclusive to all peoples of all statuses rather than to be rigid and exclusive of those of varying beliefs.
In an effort to break away from this environment I stopped attending church, and in May 2001 enlisted in the United States Army. Life without having my every move micromanaged was uncomfortable, so I thought I would find some solace in the structured environment of the US Military. This experience did not turn out as intended. I felt safe with the idea of being told what to do, and in the Army most places I could have gone would have provided this safety net for me. The Army however had other ideas and stationed me at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, a training post, and home of the Command and General Staff College, and Combined Arms and Services Staff School. At Fort Leavenworth officers out number the enlisted soldiers by about 5:1. It was now part of my job to correct officers that in any other environment would have been my commanding officer and beyond. With the exception of saluting the officers I treated Captains, Majors, Colonels, and Generals as though we were of equal rank, while also leading them through their short stay on post. It was a natural fit. I learned and grew into the system and into a leader quickly.
After my time in the Army I worked a few jobs to earn an income but never felt even slightly satisfied with where I was. The trajectory of my career looked as if it would be a long flat line as opposed to the upward trend I truly desired. In 2006 I took one or two classes and really did not apply myself, and my grades reflected it. The voices of the religious leaders in my childhood kept ringing in my head that college was just a waste of time and unimportant. I struggled with my desire to help others, making a comfortable income for my family and reconciling what my religious duty was.
A new pastor at a church I started attending in 2008 provided me with the resolution to my struggle. Using his life experiences as an example, he showed me it is possible to help others, make a good living and live a life that observes your personal and religious convictions. The three should not be exclusive to each other but rather inclusive with each other.
Life and the law are not just black and white. There are many shades of grey and room for growth within the law. In the long term I hope to effect the growth of the law and demonstrate it’s ability to be inclusive to all peoples of all statuses rather than to be rigid and exclusive of those of varying beliefs.