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    Defining success in today’s Army: A senior NCO’s success story, lessons learned

    Defining success in today’s Army: A senior NCO’s success story, lessons learned

    Photo By Sgt. 1st Class Jorden Weir | Army Master Sgt. Amber Chavez (left), the logistics noncommissioned officer in charge...... read more read more

    FORT CARSON, CO, UNITED STATES

    01.13.2016

    Story by Staff Sgt. Jorden Weir  

    10th Special Forces Group (Airborne)

    FORT CARSON, Colo. – What does it take to succeed in today’s Army? It’s a question that many Soldiers wonder, and one that has many different answers. Some of the obvious marks of success, leadership and professionalism are some givens. Yet it’s still a question that gets asked a lot, and although there is not a clear path to success, Soldiers often need only look at their senior leadership to know most of them possess the same traits for success. For Army Master Sgt. Amber Chavez, the logistics noncommissioned officer in charge at the 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne) at Fort Carson, Colorado, success has been earned through inspiration from others and her own personal inner drive.

    Chavez, an El Paso, Texas, native, was like many teenagers across the country, a high school student trying to figure out what to do after graduation, when she met a retired Army master sergeant while working a part-time job. It was this chance encounter that set her on her path to be a Soldier.

    “He was a former paratrooper and Golden Knight [U.S. Army Parachute Team member],” said Chavez, “and he opened my eyes to the different opportunities that the Army had in a way that the recruiters at the time just couldn’t.”

    Chavez, who was leaning toward a teaching career at the time and wondering how she could pay for college, suddenly saw the Army as a way to pave her own way toward her goal.

    She enlisted in the Army Reserve in her junior year of high school and attended basic training and Airborne school during the following summer. She served in the Reserve during her senior year, but was already falling in love with the idea of serving full-time. She went active for two years in 1998 before moving back into the Reserve component.

    She remained in the Reserve until Sept. 9, 2001, when she decided to transfer to active duty for good. According to her, it was divine intervention that led her back to full-time service just two days before the country was shaken to its core by the worst terrorist attack in U.S. history. It was then that she knew she had made the right choice.

    “I never considered myself a super Soldier by any means,” said Chavez, “but I have always had a knack for leading junior Soldiers, and I felt like this was where I was meant to be at this time in my life.”

    Chavez, who has deployed six times in five different countries, credits much of her success as a leader to her family. Her husband is an Army Soldier as well, and her mother-in-law is a veteran. Her husband and mother in-law have formed a foundation of support and mentorship for Chavez for the last 18 years. She said the biggest family-oriented challenges are determining the best career enhancement paths for both her and her husband.

    “Sometimes,” she explained, “it’s just as important to take a step back from your career and focus on family, so that your spouse or significant other can focus on their career.”

    She also credits her Army leaders for instilling a drive for higher education in her early on. When she was a private first class, her NCOIC pushed her into college and gave her the time she needed to complete her studies, while also fulfilling her duties to the Army. It’s something Chavez has continued with her own Soldiers.

    “Civilian education is paramount, whether you want to stay in or get out after your first contract,” Chavez said.

    One thing she does for her Soldiers is encourage them to take a college-level English class first, in order for them to develop effective writing and communication skills.

    “Lots of communication now is done through emails,” she said. “You have to be able to communicate effectively, using proper grammar and punctuation, if you want to be taken seriously in a professional environment. It’s an often overlooked skill, and it can put you head and shoulders above your peers if you can do it well.”

    Chavez has also taken a vested interest in her military education as well, dating back to the beginning of her career when she insisted that Airborne School be a part of her initial enlistment contract. According to Chavez, she had never seen herself as a paratrooper growing up, and it was just one of those things that came up while talking with the retired master sergeant who inspired her to be a paratrooper.

    “I still have a great respect for gravity,” she said. “But you just have to trust your equipment to get you through.”

    In addition to Airborne School, Chavez has also graduated from Air Assault School, Survival Evasion Resistance and Escape School, Level-C, as well as several courses in the logistics field, along with her required noncommissioned officer education system courses.

    Her biggest asset, according to those who know her, has always been her willingness to go down to the lowest level, no matter what her rank or position, and teach Soldiers. Even as a senior noncommissioned officer, she has never lost sight of what it was like to be a brand new E-5, sometimes overwhelmed and uncertain. It’s something she strongly recommends for leaders at all levels.

    “Don’t forget what it took to get where you are,” she said. “If you forget how to function at the lower level, how can you expect to lead?”

    Ultimately, she credits her success to those she has served with. “I wouldn’t be successful if I didn’t have Soldiers who went above and beyond, and leaders who went above and beyond. The key to being successful is realizing that it is always a team effort.”

    She also charges everyone to strive for excellence at all times, “No matter how small the mission or tasking is, you have to put forth your best effort, all day, every day. If you do that every day, you’ll find that the overwhelming obstacles in your way aren’t really obstacles at all.”

    And finally, she encourages everyone to remember why they became Soldiers in the first place.

    “If you have the right attitude, then success will come to you,” she said. “If you have the wrong attitude, you probably won’t live up to either your professional or personal goals. Remember that you came into the Army to serve and not to be served.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 01.13.2016
    Date Posted: 01.13.2016 16:46
    Story ID: 186221
    Location: FORT CARSON, CO, US
    Hometown: EL PASO, TX, US

    Web Views: 268
    Downloads: 2

    PUBLIC DOMAIN