Without thinking, we're lucky to be alive

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. Don Branum
  • 50th Space Wing Public Affairs
Our office had a safety briefing with a different flavor before Memorial Day weekend. Every other safety or operational risk management briefing I have sat through since I enlisted six years ago was vanilla: “Don’t drink and drive. Only drive eight hours per day. Make sure you have whatever safety equipment you need for outdoor activities. See you next week.”

This briefing was a sundae instead. Each of us related a story about something we had done that might not have happened if we’d thought about it before doing it – simple risk management.

One of my co-workers shared a story of taking an impromptu mountain climbing trip. Since it was on such short notice, he didn’t bother taking any gear with him and didn’t do research into the area he’d be climbing. Five hours into the climb, he found himself on an almost nonexistent ledge with a sharp wind pushing up at his feet. “That was not a smart position to be in,” he told us. Having given himself no choice, he would either have to press on or turn around or make a five-hour climb back to his starting point.

My account was about fatigued driving. As a member of the honor guard at my last base, I was responsible for driving 11 people in our funeral detail to and from the ceremony. We finished the service and were on our way back; most of the Airmen quickly fell asleep, exhausted from the scorching heat and oppressive humidity.

I was just as exhausted, but too proud to admit it or ask someone else to drive. The van began to drift toward the right side of the road the second or third time my eyes drooped. Both I and my colleagues were extremely lucky I woke up when the front right tire scraped along the side of the pavement.

The most sobering story came from the next person in our circle, who told us about a kayaking trip he took on his 21st birthday. Again, the notice was short, and he didn’t give himself time to prepare. The river got choppy shortly after he and his friends began their adventure, and his kayak flipped. Rolling over on a kayak is a common occurrence, but he was not adequately trained to recover. After three failed attempts to right himself, he reached for the pull cord to get out of his kayak.

The pull cord was nowhere to be found. In his haste to prepare for the trip, he tucked the cord inside the rubber skirt of his kayak. “At the time, I thought, ‘That’s it, I’m dead,’” he said. He had been submerged for about 45 seconds.

He changed his mind a few seconds later and tore frantically at the kayak’s skirt to free himself. After struggling for several more seconds, he pulled himself out and swam to safety.

We each shared our own harrowing tale. As we listened, we took notes about what contributed to each person’s situation. We chuckled as we scribbled down “foolhardiness,” “lack of training” or “lack of preparation.”

Even as we laughed, though, we learned. Our group was small, but we each had a story that could have ended tragically.

The most important lesson I came away with is this: if you do not determine the consequences of your decision before you make it, you’ll be lucky to survive the experience. Risk management has to be more than a dusty copy of an Air Force instruction – it has to be more than an annual training requirement. It must be a constant and conscious method you use to make decisions.

It’s better to be smart than lucky. Be prepared: know your limits, know your surroundings and be safe. Your life depends on it.