Monday, June 8, 2009

Networking & The Best Gourmet Coffee Shop in Iraq

Did anyone tell you that networking takes time? Okay, well it does take time. There's a few things to keep in mind with... Everything. A little bit of effort toward anything every day, consistently, will yield results. Moreover, the more you work at it, the more efficient and effective you get.

Starting out at anything is kind of scary. Starting out with Social Networking is kind of scary. My moving out of my comfort zone is kind of scary... but, you can sit there and do nothing about it and complain that nothing's happening, or you get proactive. When I went to work in Iraq, the team I was with arrived at a totally new work site to support the Marines. Marines will be the first to tell you they don't get many luxuries - it's the basics and that's about it...if they are lucky. It's better today, today they are elite - first on the ground just about everywhere. They guard our embassies - and it's not just because they have the sharpest looking uniforms.

So, Iraq in the summer easily gets up to 110 - 120 degrees Farenheit. That's acceptable if you're out on the sand trying to get a tan. It's something else if you happen to be wearing 30 pounds worth of personal protective gear which was contracted by KBR for all of their civilian contractors and subcontractors. Ours consisted of an ugly blue vest with two very large, very heavy metal SAPI plates. Depending on your size, it ranged from 20 - 30 pounds. After six weeks of wearing those while working... I lost a good 30 pounds. In the heat, my record was drinking 18 liters of water in one day - and going to the bathroom once. Evaporates as fast as you can drink it. When we first got there, there weren't many refrigerators, virtually no air conditioning anywhere. We had warm water, sometimes hot - whatever it was, we had to drink it.

Terry, one of the guys in our group (he's on the left, that's me on the right), decided he would refurbish the basement of one of the old Iraqi bunkers. The basement amounted to a single dark set of stairs leading down 10 ft x 10 ft cement room with an air shaft that leads to the roof. It was filled with lots of old trash that had been sitting there for a good year... about two dozen bats and lots and lots of bat guano. That's poop. Bat poop. Cleaning that out? Gotta start somewhere - and he did. At first no one really helped, but the more he went at it the more others started lending a hand. Soon, Terry had a clean 10 x 10 room. Then he went about the requisitions process of trading a piece of copper wire for a favor, then he traded the favor for a small broken refrigerator... and so on and so on.

Two months later? Best Gourmet Coffee Shop in Iraq - for marines and civilians, even some army, to sit someplace cool, out of the sun, and have some cold water or some hot gourmet coffee. He had to fight for it, but soon everyone was fighting for it. There's nothing like seeing a grizzled old US Marine Sergeant Major, mean and tough as nails, who never smiles... get a nice cup of coffee, good coffee, and smile. We had pictures of it, sure they are still floating around somewhere - hard drive crash took mine out, might go looking for my backups. But, that's one story of thousands world wide - a little bit of effort, day by day, builds into something meaningful.

Now... about those 30 pound "bullet proof vests" - BulletBlocker's vests can do the same thing with the same level of NIJ Threat Level IIIA protection for under five or six pounds depending upon your size. Pretty close to the same weight that the Marines used, except better.

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