Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Dear Boss- Well, I Quit

The Air Force is currently conducting a Reduction In Force (RIF) to cut the budget.  Basically, they have too many people and are trying to figure out which ones to fire.  Unfortunately, the writing is on the wall that they won't be letting go of pilots like me.

I found a bit in the regulations that says I'm allowed to write a letter to the RIF board and state my case.  While most people would use this as an opportunity to wax poetic about why the Air Force should retain them, I... well, I went a different direction.

If it works out, I will consider this to be easily the best thing I've ever written.





MEMORANDUM FOR RIF BOARD L0411E/L0311E                        10 Aug 2011

TO:      CY11 Officer Reduction In Force Board
            HQ AFPC/DPSOS
            550 C Street West Ste 3
            Randolph AFB TX 78150-4710

SUBJECT:  CY11 Officer Reduction in Force Board - Lance Uppercutt

1.     I am writing to ensure the board is aware of an issue of concern.  Despite my records indicating to the contrary, my continued service would not be beneficial to the U.S. Air Force.  It is said that soldiers are men most apt for all manner of services and best able to support and endure the infinite toils and continual hazards of war.  I do not believe I can weather those inifinite toils any longer.  It is the core of an officer, not his actions, from which his subordinates draw their direction.  My actions have always been aligned with the interest of the service, but the core of my being betrays a weariness for the “dirty business” of war.  When motivation erodes, the structure of leadership and discipline cannot stand.  It is in the greatest interest of the Air Force that the tenets of basic order and discipline be maintained as there is deathly serious work at hand.  Despite excelling throughout my career, my continued service would be detrimental to those hallowed tenets. 

There is doubtless apprehension for prospects in a recalcitrant economy should a separation occur.  I, however, am not concerned.  I believe that intelligence and force of personality will win out in the end.  If I can’t find suitable employment, then I possess neither.  I hold education in the highest regard and welcome a respite from constant deployments and TDYs to further myself.  I can better serve this nation by pursuing endeavors in academia and in that pursuit regain the motivation to positively influence the future of this country.

Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, I am a volunteer.  This board has the unenviable task of deciding the fate of many careers.  Why cut short the service of an officer who prefers to stay in favor of keeping someone who has asked to leave?  A motivated officer in the wrong career field is better by an astounding margin than an unmotivated one in the correct career field.  With a handful of galvanized Air Force officers I truly believe there is no impossible task.  Please let me step aside and make way for those officers with the courage, honor, and drive that can positively impact and shape the Air Force and this country for years to come.

2.     As a result, I wish to convey to the board my desire to be separated from the Air Force.

3.     Thank you for your consideration in this matter.


                                                                        //Signed//
                                                                        Captain Lance Uppercutt
                                                                        123AS Training Flt/CC

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Back At It

Sorry for the long delay, my precious two readers from Germany.  I have decided to keep posting whatever I find time to write, even if it's just a stupid email to assuage the anger of an acquaintance.


What I have here is an email I sent to assuage the anger of an acquaintance.  As you may have noticed from my Athlete Profile (link along the top!), I go to a CrossFit gym.  During a recent workout I was caught shaving a rep or two.  I honestly didn't even know I had done this myself.  In my ridiculously fatigued state I had just lost count.  Instead of bringing it up at the time, the owner of the gym decided to be a complete dick to me for two weeks straight, even going so far as to set up a head-to-head rematch of the workout with me.  When I finally asked him what was up he told me his panties were in a twist because of the aforementioned rep shaving (that, again, I didn't even mean to do).  After a lecture about cheating at the gym (from a guy who uses steroids, by the way), I realized that I really didn't care either way.


This is what happens when one person (him) takes something insanely seriously and the other person doesn't really care at all.  The problem, I realized, is that I was going to have to deal with this guy outwardly being a dick to me for the foreseeable future.  Or take the easy way out an fake an apology.  So I apologized for something I didn't even purposely do.  


In the course of calling me a liar, this guy made me become one to get him off my back.


The email is below, if only because I think there's some decent stuff about morality in there.  Of course I included some veiled jabs at him, but I feel like there's already been way too much explanation.






Apology In Three Parts


Brian,

I write from Senegal.  That is apropos of nothing, but I thought it was an awesome way to start.

I'm sure you expected this at some point since we've been through all this before, but I'm writing to apologize for both my actions in the gym and then adamantly denying them to you.  It was neither right nor smart on my part.  I hope at some point you can accept this apology.  There will be a lot of rambling; skip to the last paragraph if you wish.



I.  To Assume Guilt

I can't sleep.  I haven't been able to for weeks.  It's only really an issue when I'm tackling paperwork or must fly for extended periods of time.  After we spoke it was worse than ever.  I previously used your gym as a way to stave off the depression of spending most of my twenties in shitty deserts five thousand miles away.  Evidently that was not working any longer.  I, much like Matt Damon's bi-polar character in The Informant!, refused to escape the comfy little fiction that I had created in my own head.  Almost how Barry Bonds refuses to admit he's taken steroids.  He's manufactured a world where he is his own ideal, and if that ideal is shattered, then so is he.  To everyone else it is cheating, but he's convinced himself that he is above that.  From the outside of this world it looks almost comical, from the inside it's too painful to let go of the fiction.  A sinking feeling manifests itself in the darkest corners of our ego, the parts that know if you played in the marching band or used to collect Magic: The Gathering cards or were on the academic challenge team.  It's the only part that knows the true you.  This is where that overwhelming remorse grows until you realize you are not what you say you are.
Guilt.
That is what I was feeling, only it had taken me too long to figure it out.  Guilt for being dishonest with you, then throwing it back in your face when you tried to get me to come clean.  It was more of a personal failing than a public one, but again, it's shattered the fictional world which I had made for myself.  That one in which I was still a decent man.

II.  Of Slippery Slopes

It's been happening for weeks.  A little after I came back from the last deployment.  There were new people in the gym-- bigger, stronger, faster.  But that wasn't it.  As I said and I still maintain, I am not incredibly competitive.  I couldn't stand to be.  It pays to be competitive at the top.  In the middle, it just makes you angry and strive for something that you'll never reach.  I'm not competitive, except with myself, that is.  And I was slipping.  My lifts were down.  My times were up.  I was gassed and nursing more than a few injuries.  The wonderful story that I told everyone with the fervor of an evangelical, how CrossFit makes you continually better, was proving to be a fallacy for me.  I was plateauing before the plunge.  Maybe it's because Nick was gone.  He and I were always close enough that we pushed each other, working out side by side until each of us was better (something I'm sure you echo with the loss of Chris).  That is most likely externalizing a personal failure, but whatever it was, I was losing ground fast.  I could no longer say that I was better than the year prior.
It began almost innocently enough.  I had never really been a cheater before.  Not on girlfriends, not in school, and not in financial dealings.  They say the first step is the hardest.  That's true unless you don't even know you're taking it.  Everyone over Sesame Street age can count.  It's hard to imagine the type of stress or strain that could lead one to forget, but it is possible.  I was exercising, only twenty to go.  OK, that's eight, six, and six.  Except I could only do seven on the next set.  Fine, I'll do seven then five.  Or seven then three then two.  Except it was four.  OK, almost there.  Four more then two.  Then I yelled TIME!  I lay on the ground gasping for air.  When it came back to me, I realized that in all the segmenting and creating rep schemes and wanting to vomit up a lung I had missed two reps.  I looked around.  Nobody seemed to notice.  No harm, no foul.  I went about my day.
But then it became easier and easier to do so again.  Realizing halfway through medball cleans that I had accidentally been counting two for one (there are two squats and two hip openings after all), and not knowing how long I had been doing it.  Was it just the last few reps, or the last ten?  Then it was fucking up the last double under as I called time, but not going back to fix it.  Then it just got to be pure laziness.  Do a big set, then do a couple more smaller ones.  Eh, that's probably good enough.  I didn't think it had made a big difference.  I was barely even counting anymore.  But my sloth had proven me deficient when you counted for me.  What I thought was probably pretty close was evidently not very close at all.  I was so entwined with this fiction that I was probably doing the correct (or at least very near the correct) number of reps, that when you set up the little sting operation, I had no qualms about attacking the workout again.  I figured that I would have a repeat performance.  Karma, along with a lack of sleep, nutrition, and hydration conspired against me.  I gassed.  Hard.  I had never bonked like that before, but I tumbled right off the cliff.  I wanted to attribute it to my sporadic sleep cycle, my disdain for the competitive throwdown in general, the fact that I didn't eat all day, or that I was too preoccupied with flying overseas that night.  I wanted to place the blame anywhere but where it deserved to be.  On me.  Evidently those reps that I was too lazy to count, what ended up being the last three or four or ten (who knows?) per round where the ones that made the workout worthwhile.  What could be worse?
Lying.  Compounding the personal failure of cheating myself into lying about it to you.  It's easy to see that men aren't born evil, but they aren't very many decisions away from becoming it.  Between an honest man and a deplorable one are many doors, more for some than others.  Each little lie or cheat or steal opens a door.  Each subsequent door gets a little easier to open from the experience of opening the last one.  Eventually, the honest man has passed through too many of these little doors and finds himself in a situation in which he cannot cope and reacts violently.  This is the slippery slope that creates criminals, or in my case, a liar.  I danced with semantics telling you that I had never intended to shave reps.  I would never purposely count to 27 and stop.  And that was true, I wasn't really counting at all.  Except that it was an obstruction to truth.  It was lawyering and helped me maintain the fiction that I so wanted to believe.  That one that said I wasn't a liar and a cheat.  That's how a simple thing like cheating became a slippery slope to lying and probably losing a friend.

III.  On Moving Forward

I don't know where this will lead me.  Hopefully it will make me work toward becoming a better person.  Humans, after all, are Pavlovian in many respects.  When we do something good and get rewarded, we want to do it again.  If we do this enough times it becomes our nature.  Conversely, if we do something bad and get disciplined, it should deter us from doing it again.  Except honesty and other complex moral decisions don't always work that way.  Many times it takes years for those lessons to bear their fruits.  In the meantime the liar and cheat may have become rich or the righteous man may have ben killed for his beliefs.  In these cases, it's hard understand the Pavlovian trigger, but it's there.  This negative consequence, my falling out with you, will hopefully prove vital toward keeping me on the straight and narrow in the future.
Whether that future holds CrossFit or working out at all, I can't say.  I have been finding it hard to go in the gym since that is the site of such a profound personal (and slightly public) failure of character.  I can say for certain that you have good people in the gym.  When becoming a cheater, you are paranoid.  You watch others, count their reps, and hope that you aren't the only one.  If you find another cheater but they call you out, you can counter-accuse.  For a while there is a strange truce.  You grow even to like the other cheater.  But their lie reflects your lie.  You worry if they're caught then you will be too.  So then you grow to hate them.  It's a strange twist of the psyche, but one that happens nonetheless.  In my counting phase I noticed a few cheaters.  Not as many as you would think, unless you think that I was the only one, in which case slightly more than you think.  By and large, however, the gym you run is an honest one, and it's these honest people that I hurt the most.  These are the people that cheer for you (even though I hate that part) when you're barely able to move.  These are the people that offer you advice when you need it.  But more importantly, these are the people who measure themselves against you.  People who are killing themselves in order to get better.  And by not counting my reps, whether I intended to or not, I made it harder on them.  My inability to see past myself rendered me unable to realize that I was hurting others and that was wrong.
I told you on the phone that this had happened once before in my gym back in Seattle.  It was a partner workout.  My partner hopped up and did his ten pull-ups, except on the last one his chin did not quite get over the bar.  He hopped down and said, ten.  I didn't say anything.  A few rounds later, the exact same thing happened on my last pull-up.  He nodded slyly and we moved on.  At the end of the workout, our coach came by and told us, you each owe me another pull-up, and to the team next to us, and you each owe me four kettlebell swings.  It was subdued but to the point.  We knew that our coach saw us as cheaters, and furthermore, that the other team knew we were cheaters too.  Praise in public, punish in private.  Unfortunately, this latest instance became slightly more heated and incredibly less private.  I'm not sure where that will leave me.  I can't be certain that I want to continue in an endeavor that tempts me to lie, whether it be for competition's sake, or just to make it stop quicker.  Even if standing up to that temptation is probably the quickest way to steel oneself against it.


To end, I want to say it again.  I'm sorry I cheated and I'm sorry I insisted I didn't.  It was laziness and stupidity and it was wrong.  I cheated myself and everyone else and failed to uphold the standards which should come so easily at this point.  Evidently the part of my CrossFit game that was failing was mental toughness, not physical acuity.  I'm sorry to you, and more importantly, I'm sorry to the other members.  I'm trying to move on, if not for me, then at least to sleep.  I hope you are able to do the same.  I would appreciate if you would keep this message private.  It was intended only for you, and probably more so, for me.  This was a personal failing, and one that does not need to be hashed out publicly.  Your discretion is appreciated.

Thanks for your time,
-cullen


p.s.  I still don't know what the fuck a yoga pushup is.



  

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

The Best of Cats... and Everything Else

Gawker has put up a couple of pretty awesome videos that sum up both the year in viral videos and viral cats.  The cats aren't viral, but their antics are.

Man, now all I can think about is viral cats.  Zombie Cat: the Meowening would be an adorable horror movie.






Tuesday, November 30, 2010

The Last Messenger



I had the good fortune of getting hooked up with a production company and working on an original story concept with them for about a year.  Things were looking great.  I had meetings in LA.  At Imagine Entertainment.  I met Emma Stone.  The company and I wrestled over content.  We hammered out a full story, put together a transmedia plan for eventual sequels, video games, and comic adaptations, and we finished a script.  Life was grand; my writing partner and I were about to take Hollywood by storm.  Of course, you can probably figure out how this ends.

The company fell apart through a financing debacle, and some very nefarious people guaranteed themselves a cozy little corner of hell.  Fortunately enough, I still have this script that I wrote with my buddy Ian.  We're not connected in LA, but then along came this little Amazon Studios venture, which gives us just as good a chance as anyone.  Feel free to follow the link and check it out.

http://studios.amazon.com/scripts/1263

Monday, November 22, 2010

Support the Troops. Protest the War.

The recent occasion of Veterans Day gave me pause and allowed me to reflect not only on my own service, but the service our fighting men and women provide as a whole.  What stood out in my mind, where recent memories lend to greater influence, was the disservice that we are currently conferring upon members of the military.

I speak of this nation’s laudable, though ultimately damaging, unwavering support for the military and all that they do.  No, it is not wrong to support the troops, but we must realize that support without borders is the reason the war in Afghanistan continues.  If we support everything about the military, including the war itself, we are punishing those that we intend to praise.

The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have claimed the lives of nearly six thousand American service men and women and injured thousands more.  The consequences ripple through our society, as the family and friends of these casualties must soldier on in their own way.  It is the current generation’s charge to provide a strong foundation for the future of our great country.  That foundation has noticeable cracks when good people, like those who choose to serve in a time of war, are lost forever.  Perhaps recent Medal of Honor recipient, Staff Sergeant Salvatore A. Giunta, put it best when he said, “I lost two dear friends of mine.  I would give this back in a second to have my friends with me right now.”   It seems the benefits no longer outweigh the costs.

The importance of the casualties is offhandedly downplayed with the simple axiom that we are an “all-volunteer force.”  I am only able to speak for myself, but I can tell you that is simply not true.  I graduated from Undergraduate Pilot Training in April 2005 and therefore incurred a ten-year commitment to the Air Force.   I signed on the dotted line because being a pilot was just the next in a series of sensible life choices.

What our UPT instructors failed to impress upon us was the grueling deployment requirements.  The Air Force reports that C-17 pilots are deployed, on average, 117 days a year.  This is in stark contrast to the reality of 200 days or more that most pilots endure.  The Air Force is not guilty of cooking the numbers, rather those numbers incorporate more senior officers that have given up flying the jet for career advancement in the form of flying a desk.  The line pilots pick up the slack and feel the crunch.  Furthermore, tracking these deployment numbers has been an inexact science.  Only recently have some units begun to accurately track these rates.

All of this time overseas has led to increased problems at home.  The military suicide rate, which before 2001 was half the national level, has increased to more than double the rest of the country.    Depression and the additional problems it causes, from alcoholism to domestic violence, are tearing apart the fabric of our armed forces.  I myself have battled with persistent depression for more than two years.  From discussion with colleagues I know that, though not always reported, my condition is not a rarity.

All of this has led to extreme levels of fatigue.  This, too, is something that the military tracks.  However, when investigating a mishap they normally review only that mission and twelve hours prior to it. The mental and physical fatigue that two protracted wars cause our soldiers extends well beyond half a day.  Again, I am only speaking from my perspective; I cannot begin to imagine the danger and fatigue that the boots on the ground regularly face.  One thing is for sure: our military is getting old before its time.

So are we a volunteer force?  Sure, but just because we signed a contract years ago doesn’t mean we don’t wish we could take it all back now.

The financial cost of the war is exorbitant.  We have no idea when it will finally be won.  The mission of bringing a stabilized democracy to a nation that has eschewed government for all of history cannot be completed overnight.  When will we, if ever, know when this war is complete?  When Afghanistan’s security forces finally take over in 2014?  When we have Bin Laden’s body?  When terrorism no longer exists?  What will it take?

Economic and sociopolitical reasons aside, we need to end this war because of the toll it is taking our troops.  The longest war in American history is only getting longer, and the ones paying the real price are the boots on the ground.  Public sentiment helped to drive us out of Vietnam.  I do not advocate turning on the troops as some did during Vietnam, but rather standing against the mission that they diligently and earnestly carry out.  We owe it to them.

So if you really want to be a patriot: Support the Troops.  Protest the War.

SNL: Not entirely terrible for once

Anne Hathaway hosted SNL this weekend, and besides looking like a droopy-eyed Picasso painting, she actually did some funny stuff.  here are two of the better clips from that show.

Visiting the Queen



Oy fink oy lohve da Queen using uh reaw British accent.

Black Friday