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January 29, 2010

The lazy blogger recycles

I wrote this article as punishment in 2004 for almost killing myself and 4 others. It was never published. But I was able to find it on the "Approach" website in their vault, along with thousands of other unpublished articles. Still no way to share it, but could download a copy. Still can't share most of the stuff on their site. Sad, cause it's the Navy's Safety Center. I guess copy and paste are just as good as emailing, RSS-ing or sharing through Google Reader.

Enjoy.

Riddle Me This                                                                      

By LT Aaron Aschenbrenner, MH-60S

How far into this article are you going to read? Was it the aircraft that drew you in? The crafty title perhaps? Why do we read any of these stories? Ostensibly to learn from the mistakes or victories of others, but do we really take the lessons to heart? Could we simply be indulging our curious interest in the failings of others? 

hy do we write these articles? Do we really learn anything from the random alignment of other people’s stars that led to their near miss or flawless execution during that dual-engine flame-out? Couldn’t we save some money and just replace these articles with the obvious lessons contained in all of them: Don’t fly into the ground or water, pay attention, other folks can kill you too, know your systems, speak up, ask why, use your crew, you aren’t superman-hence the aircraft around you.

There you go, lessons that fixed wing and rotary folks can take something from. No more skipping that harrowing, but not particularly applicable night recovery to the back of an AFS (The ship that brings you food). Don’t we assume that helo guys skip the jet stories? Prop guys don’t care about autorotations. And just what catches the aircrew’s eyes? 

Why do we repeat stories whose lessons are self-evident?  Does anyone who has made it this far in life and this article take anything new from the fact that on a beautiful sunny afternoon in the Philippine Sea, I almost flew myself and four shipmates into the water for no other reason than I was stupid/arrogant/hubristic/over-confident enough to think that a descending left turn from 500 to 300 feet was the right time to start helping my copilot with some button pushing. Swear to God, I looked up, saw the water and was certain we were done. Even as I instinctively rolled wings level, pulled in power, and nosed it over just a touch, a chorus of “Power, power, power,” rang out.

Did someone reading the above just now realize, “Wow, I do that all the time, and maybe it isn’t so smart?” Now the usual, “Well, if it saves one person, or gets through to one person.” I guess that is a valid point, but still it doesn’t seem to necessitate a minute-by-minute explanation of that afternoon.

Is there a better way to reach people? Better than the shotgun approach, hoping that two or three “saved” per article per issue will add up to a decrease in mishaps? I don’t know. I just can’t shake that feeling of hollowness, where safety magazines are left about to present an atmosphere of “Safety always.” I suppose that is why we do safety surveys, and our favorite downward trending graph of mishaps would indicate that thinking about safety, implementing programs and controls, standardization, have made us safer members of the aviation community.

That being said, couldn’t we just make up harrowing adventures? What is the role of an Approach article? If we are just passing on lessons, society seems to get along with fables and myths as much as anything. Does the message mean that much more because a fellow P-3C pilot lost four engines? Don’t we just fall into the typical, “Glad it wasn’t me,” reaction? 

Maybe it’s like popular culture, where the constant exposure and repetition are the keys to slowly, but surely, getting the message across. Maybe it’s just cathartic for the author to share that moment of weakness, frailty, and fallibility, to remind the reader they too are not immune from—wait, why aren’t they?

I haven’t given you my entire bio. In all likelihood, you aren’t me, and we have little in common. Our stars aren’t the same; we don’t eat the same cheese. Maybe I was distracted with marital problems at the time. Maybe my bookie had been hassling me. Maybe I had been underachieving and was trying to show folks I could chew gum, pat my head, and dance a polka while making a descending right turn. Ah see, I went left; had I gone right, everything would have been fine.

Ultimately, the author figures out what message he wants to present, and then tells the story that way. Or, if it isn’t a flattering story maybe he doesn’t tell it. I think those stories are the key: The ones where we came up short of our own expectations and lived to tell about it. Being a band of highly compensated egomaniacs, who are trained and paid to do it all, and believe that anything, OK, most anything, is within the realm of our capabilities.

We need to be reminded that if we don’t watch it, if we don’t use CRM, if we don’t know our systems and consult the horoscope daily, we could be in for a hell of a surprise when we try to play submarine. Constant vigilance is tough. At the end of the day, we all make assessments as to when we can relax in the aircraft: Whether we are at the controls, or in back monitoring the sonobuoys. The only way we come home and make the landings equal takeoffs is by thinking, questioning, watching, aviating, navigating and communicating, and by using CRM—maybe all of these. At the very least, check what house the moon and Venus are in.

LT Aschenbrenner flies with HC-5.

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January 07, 2010

Thoughts on Lasagne

I like lasagne. When it is made at home. Sometimes. I don't ever order it at restaruants. I don't trust other peoples' interpretations frankly. My mom made lasagne, bless her, but I didn't like the ricotta cheese. Too crumbly. There is probably an authentic lasagne recipe out there. I don't care. This is how I'd make delightful lasagne.

First, lasagne is easy. Well simple in its make up. Layer of noodles, layer of sauce, layer of cheese, repeat.  Ingrediants: Lasagne noodles (2 pack), lots of cherry tomatoes, 1x red onion, 1x white, clove garlic, veg you can slice thin or other to put into sauce, meat (sausage, ground beef, whatever sounds good), 1 pt cottage cheese, 16 oz mozzerella, 2 bottles chianti or italian red wine of choice.

Noodles, well I don't bother making noodles. I'm too lazy. And I don't want to put all those noodle makers out of work. Be sure you start those first, they just take time.

Sauce, only question is meat or not. The base stays the same. Cherry tomatos, roasted in the oven (thanks, Aunt Liz). While they roast, chop as much garlic and onions as you like. At least 4 cloves garlic, I think. And one red and one white onion. Oil (olive, ev), garlic. Then onion. Then whatever other chopped veg you want (or meats if you want those). Maybe some peppers. Cook, then throw in tomatoes. Cook more, throw in some wine, reduce sauce, maybe some tomato paste to thicken if you are in a rush, otherwise, cook slow boil, til nice a thick, if it is runny, your lasagne will be runny.

While all that is cooking, I like to prep the veg that I slip in between the sauce and cheese. Thinly sliced zucchini, spinach leaf (not cooked, again, it'll just make it soupy, theres enough moisture to cook the spinach in place), thinly sliced egg plant (but you'll have to soak in oil and then roast, I've considered frying the eggplant, but just never followed through, probably no way to keep them crispy, maybe as last layer, just cheese on top, put in at last second).  Whatever thin layers of veg you can think of. Prep those and set aside.

Still reducing sauce, so do the cheese. Super easy. Mozzerella and cottage cheese. Grate the first then mix w/ second in big bowl. About 1 to 1. Bam, done.

Of course, you already cooked your noodles. So now you put it all together.

Noodles, sauce, thin veg, cheese, noodles, sauce, thin veg, cheese etc etc.

Cook at some temp, 375 F for 30 to 40 min.

Remove, let cool, must let cool to let it settle/not be so soupy.

Serve and enjoy.

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January 05, 2010

Back in the DDR

Ha, this is not a musing on that famed former half of Germany, a saucy salient of socialism that met its maker just 20 years ago.  It is instead a confession of confusion. I've spent the past year essentially applying for jobs in Afghanistan and in the development world in general. However, I have found that by this point in the game, the folks picking teams are more interested in experience and actuall skills and not just a generic ability to DOMINATE. Fair enough. As a plan X kind of guy, I've been looking at various schools, considering what I'd like to study, how to relate that to what I'd do in the future. Heard a podcast about the Sudan and stumbled on the field of Disarmement, Demobilisation and Reintegration or what to do w/ your military/militias once you decide to stop killing each other. Something I'd never really considered, but is a critical part of swords back into ploughshares.

Hey, great something that interests me, even sweet schools like LSE, King's College, School of Oriental African Studies, all in London, great place to launch research into real world challenges and to spin those into real work.  Of course what do I do in the mean time? Work at Taco Bell? Work some where for 6 mos? Or do a year plus and do the school later? You know, some real world experience and then a bit of study then back to work.

Ah life and its many paths. In this frosty season I guess it is appropriate to be conflicted about what path to take. Now which one is less trod...

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January 04, 2010

A new year

A time for reflection. Things done, things left undone. I read a lot this year. That was nice. I didn't get a job, that was more of a bummer. But after kvetching for months about the prospect of giving up my sweet flat in Stuttgart, my girlfriend finally talked some sense into me and I'm quite excited about the freedom and flexibility that not having a fixed abode will bring. Sure not having access to all my books and costumes will be a drag, but thats what the internet and second hand stores are for. Otherwise I have no great regrets for 2009. Frankly, it was a brilliant year, even if I did break my collar bone twice. Which makes me think that the key to a good year isn't a lack of bad things, but an enjoyment of all the other moments: boarder cross, camping, cave wine tasting, an outside sofa, friends, family, blah blah blah. Plenty of good times in 2009 and 2010, though murky, will certainly be a banner year. Now off to figure out how to podcast, gotta get into the future. This typing thing is for the birds.
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