7 Years’ Time: A Sexual Assault Survivor’s Story
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by From the Green Notebook
1d ago
(David McNew/Getty) Editor’s Note: Today is Denim Day, an annual campaign observed worldwide to highlight misconceptions surrounding sexual violence. It began twenty-plus years ago, after the Italian Supreme Court justices ruled that a rape victim’s tight jeans were evidence of her consenting to the sex. The following day, women in the Italian Parliament came to work wearing jeans in solidarity with the victim. The story below was submitted anonymously. Unlike standard military briefings on sexual assault capturing statistics and legalities, this story captures the victim’s perspective. We pub ..read more
Visit website
3 Reasons to Attend The Next FTGN Writers Webinar
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by From the Green Notebook
1d ago
By Kevin Cutright I was one of about 15 attendees in From the Green Notebook’s webinar for prospective writers in early February. I joined because I admired some colleagues who had published items with them and I had some rough ideas of my own. I wasn’t entirely sure what to expect but was curious. The webinar exceeded my expectations, so much so that I’ve written this reflection piece (itself a product of the webinar). And, as you’ll see below, I’ve begun work writing an additional piece that I’m thinking about sending to FTGN for eventual publication.  From the Green Notebook plans to ..read more
Visit website
Questioning The Military Brain Drain
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by From the Green Notebook
4d ago
by Owen West Every so often an article declares that the military is suffering an avoidable exodus of its best junior officers. This argument has reappeared a dozen times since I joined the Marines in 1991. It’s misleading. Most officers who in their third billets demonstrate the stuff to convert into top-tier seniors remain in uniform. Brain Drain articles focus on officers. Enlisted men and women are *seen* to have faster, flexible promotion opportunities. I don’t know if this is true – or if the argument is repeatedly tabled by departing officers writing only what they know. Military promo ..read more
Visit website
Ep 112: Dr. Amishi Jha- How To Perform When Life Stresses You Out
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by Joe Byerly
6d ago
Dr. Amishi Jha joins Joe to discuss her book, Peak Mind: Find Your Focus, Own Your Attention, Invest 12 Minutes a Day . Amishi sheds light on the complexities of the brain’s attention system to help us understand how we can navigate and enhance our focus in stressful and demanding jobs. In this episode Joe and Amishi discuss:  How our attention shapes everything from emotions to relationships  Challenges in maintaining attention in an information-saturated age How the attention system works  The vulnerability of attention to stress and its impact on performance Insig ..read more
Visit website
Warrant Officers Need to Write Well Too
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by From the Green Notebook
6d ago
by Mike Lima  It’s not just officers who need to know how to write—it’s warrant officers too.  Warrant officers now have many roles, including staff officer positions and numerous duties as action officers. As a staff officer, the primary role is to support the commander in decision-making and implementation. We provide analysis, make estimates, and make technical recommendations. As action officers, warrant officers create projects and lead action on packages for senior decision-makers. Each staff member has specific duties and responsibilities within the staff structure, regardles ..read more
Visit website
Do What You Say You Can Do
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by From the Green Notebook
1w ago
By Jacob Loftice The best training guidance I have received is “be able to do the things you say you can do.” Having the capability to execute your assigned mission is central to a unit’s readiness. It can be tempting to treat aspirations as facts and oversell your unit’s capabilities. However, units that do this ultimately do themselves a disservice, missing opportunities to build and maintain true readiness. In an environment with ever-increasing demands on resources, finding training opportunities is critical.  The following discussion shares my former unit’s approach to building capa ..read more
Visit website
Leaders Shoot First – the Value of Leader Live Fires
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by From the Green Notebook
1w ago
by Reed Markham Have you ever felt that the more you teach your Soldiers with words the less they get it? Or even listen? I have witnessed brilliant and experienced leaders struggle to train their teams over the years, and wrestled with the same. It is hard to raise the entire group’s performance instead of just the talented and hardworking, without devoting excessive time, ammo, and energy, to the problem. My concern about this challenge grew as our unit approached its major training event – platoon live fires. However, there was a time in th ..read more
Visit website
The Importance of Looking Down The Ladder
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by From the Green Notebook
1w ago
By Joe Byerly In August of 2013, I hesitantly posted my first blog post on From the Green Notebook. I remember the moments after I hit the publish button – nothing happened. I’m not exactly sure what I expected, but in my young and naive mind, I believed that my musings would automatically go viral simply because I posted them on the internet. However, that wasn’t the case. Nobody showed up. After staring at the statistic that showed “0 views” for some time, I slid into the DMs of Steve Leonard (aka Doctrine Man) and asked him to share my post if he thought it was good. He graciously shared ..read more
Visit website
Harnessing the Power of Knowledge Management 
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by From the Green Notebook
1w ago
by Jakob Hutter Reinventing the wheel is often discouraged. But COL Schmidt, the Director of Army University Press at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, argues it’s crucial for leaders to make impactful decisions and drive meaningful change in their organizations.  COL Schmidt’s insights align with the Army’s emphasis on knowledge management (KM), aimed at improving efficiency and information retention within an organization. KM, outlined in ATP 6-01.1, aligns people, processes, tools, and organization to enhance shared understanding and mission success. It encompasses fostering a culture of know ..read more
Visit website
Three Hockey Books On Leadership
From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership
by From the Green Notebook
2w ago
By Dan Sukman  If you want to go somewhere fast, go by yourself. If you want to go far, go together. – Glen Sather  Sports often serve as a metaphor, and in many cases as a testing ground for real life. There are lessons we learn playing youth sports that we carry into adulthood that serve us well in our careers. Traits such as hard work, discipline, physical fitness, fair play, and teamwork apply not only to sports but in our roles as military leaders. While participation as an athlete can build these qualities, the mantle of coaching carries its own set of skills.  Following ..read more
Visit website

Follow From the Green Notebook | My thoughts on war, warfare, and leadership on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR