YOU ARE THE EXAMPLE
by Travis Dotson
When I was a first year Type 2 crewmember, I looked up to
anyone who had already been on a fire. They showed me what to pack and which
MREs to avoid. When I first got on the Shot crew, I watched the vets
demonstrate how to “act like a hotshot.” When I rookied as a smokejumper, I
emulated those with more “salt.”
Most of those folks had no idea how closely I was paying
attention to them.
Who’s watching you? Somebody is. Whether you know it or not,
someone is learning from how you behave. What do you want them to learn?
Have you ever heard someone say: “Man, I remember when I was
a sawyer. Best job I ever had. Wish I was still doing that!” And you think:
“Really? OK, here you go. You lug this stupid thing up the hill!”
It’s a pretty classic exchange. Lots of us have been on
either side of that conversation. People who remember their time on the saw as
their best job ever are obviously focusing on all the cool parts of the “good
old days.” We all do that.
Think about how you feel three-quarters of the way through
the season. At that moment, what are your feelings about coming back next year?
Fast forward to when it’s time to get your boots out of
storage after skiing, hunting, or traveling all winter.
As we grease our boots we remember all the great laughs, awesome
fires, and fat checks—not the personality conflicts, endless mop up, and base
80 pay periods.
People looking back on their saw time usually reminisce
about “having no responsibility.” I know what we mean when we say that, but
it’s just not accurate.
Recognizing Your Responsibility
We all have responsibility; but not all of us recognize it
in the moment. I certainly didn’t for a long time.
I remember when I realized it, though. I was a sawyer on the
crew when it finally dawned on me: “Those new crewmembers are watching me. I’m
giving them permission to do everything I’m doing.” (And if you knew some of
the things I was doing…well, that’s a different story!)
That realization was a real game changer for me. I had to
pause and think about what it meant. To be honest, I didn’t like it, it worried
me. It certainly didn’t change my behavior overnight—or much at all, for the
most part. But I finally understood what “set the example” actually means.
Just know you are being studied. Lead from where you are. Help
a rookie out, do quality work every time, and be smart after hours.
Eventually you’re going to have to deal with the behavior
you’ve modeled.
Dig on tool swingers.
***************************
Travis Dotson is a Fire Management Specialist with the
Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center and member of the NWCG Leadership
Subcommittee. The expressions are those of the author.
The article is reprinted from the spring
2013 edition of “Two More Chains.”
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