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Send us a text (https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/tex...) A kid from Detroit peers into a recruiter’s window, falls for the shine of tiny tanks, and years later finds himself keeping real helicopters in the fight. That arc frames Nick’s 38-year journey across active duty and the Guard, from Fort Knox to the German border and night missions over Iraq. The details stick: flying low along a line that looked like color on one side and black-and-white on the other, learning to fly from the right seat one control at a time, and the gut-deep thump of a mortar that landed ten feet away and didn’t detonate. We walk through the messy middle too. Fort Bliss barracks that should have been condemned, aircraft waiting on parts that never came, and the strange whiplash of leaving life-or-death maintenance for civilian jobs that didn’t care if you were there by 8 a.m. The Guard becomes a second home: OH-58s give way to Cobras, then Chinooks, then Lakotas. Along the way, Nick earns his FAA A&P license, survives a gauntlet of exams and factory training, and helps a state fleet meet civilian standards. In Iraq, his unit hauls ice, Powerade, and hope for the 101st around Najaf, dumps flares under fire, and receives a colonel’s handshake and medals that still mean something. Later, a one-star’s handwritten note and ten coins arrive like a promise kept. The story widens in the final act. On joint staff during COVID, Nick helps stand up command-and-control, sees which systems work and which don’t, and then shifts to remote nights when his daughter’s cancer demands presence. Leaders step up, the Guard community closes ranks, and priorities sharpen. He recognizes the moment to retire—standing in a barracks mirror next to a fresh lieutenant—and returns to Fort Knox to close the loop where it started. What remains are the lessons: readiness lives in logistics and funding; pride lives in doing the job right; meaning lives in people who show up when it gets hard. If you’re curious about Army aviation, National Guard life, Chinooks and Lakotas, or the quiet decisions that define a career, this conversation delivers clarity and heart. Listen, share it with someone who loves military stories, and leave a review to help others find it. Support the show (https://www.zeffy.com/donation-form/p...) www.veteransarchives.org